Fracking Emission Carcinogens Found in Denton Playgrounds

Categories: Environment

Playground1.jpg
Kevin Payravi
Several Denton playgrounds have been found to have unsafe levels of benzene.

A new report published by ShaleTest, an independent environmental research agency in Denton, found levels of benzene in several Denton parks that exceed the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality's long-term exposure limitations. Benzene is a carcinogen found in cigarettes, gasoline and is a common byproduct of oil and gas drilling sites.

McKenna Park is one of the playgrounds where unsafe levels of the chemical were found. The playground is located next to Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital of Denton, within a neighborhood, next to several churches and across the street from one of Denton's many Rayzor Ranch gas wells.

"The effects of benzene are well-known. It causes cancer at low exposure rates, in adults. And we're talking about a playground where children are going to play. So that's very concerning," says Calvin Tillman, a spokesman for ShaleTest. As a part of the Project Playground national initiative, the group collected air samples from several DFW playgrounds to test for potentially harmful air quality.

Wilma Subra, a chemist who is the consultant for ShaleTest,> says inhaled low doses of benzene over an extended period of time can cause any number of health problems. "This is one example of the chemicals that are associated with oil and gas processing being released into the air," she says. "You usually don't have drilling production on the playground, but there's no restriction on how close you can drill to a hospital, playground, home, things like that."

In 2013, the city of Denton passed an ordinance that prohibited fracking operations within 1,200 feet of homes, schools, playgrounds, or hospitals. But Dr. Adam Briggle, a bioethics professor at UNT, says the local law is flimsy at best, as it does not apply to any drilling site in operation before 2013. "Everything that existed was grandfathered under existing laws," he says. "The opposition is calling for responsible fracking, and in fact we have a responsible ordinance. But the problem is it doesn't apply to anything."

Briggle says the initial exposure to benzene was a much higher level than the current amount. That's to be expected, but the City assured residents that after the first jump in chemical production, exposure would taper off to TCEQ-approved levels.

"This study is troubling because it shows those emissions linger for years at a lower level, but still at level above what is considered safe," Briggle says. "There's no way to prevent these exposures in our community. They're vested under older laws, so it underlines the need for a ban."

The drilling near McKenna Park began in 2010, after a heated debate by residents failed to prevent the site. Dentonites consider this site the beginning of the local anti-fracking movement. Cathy McMullen, who lives close to McKenna, first became involved with the movement when she heard about operation.

"It's my neighborhood, I see kids playing down there all the time. In what world is this right? I don't know when we decided this was acceptable," says McMullen. "You look at the safe levels, and you realize they're established on adult men. It's concerning. Is this something you want to tolerate? And if it's not we're going to have to step up and demand change. We've been asking for a long time." Denton residents will have the chance in November to pass the first local ban in Texas against fracking operations.

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49 comments
zaboomafoo
zaboomafoo

What they don't tell you is that benzene is also found in most plastics, which are made from crude oil products. And this playground is made from a lot of crude oil...oops, I mean Plastic. You know that awesome "new car smell"? Yeah, that has a little benzene too...

ZenCushion
ZenCushion

It is perhaps important to note that benzene is a hydrocarbon molecule that is a component of crude oil -- albeit one of the more highly volatile components, hence its presence in gasoline.  Gasoline refineries just use gravity to separate hydrocarbons of different molecular weights (the lighter, more volatile forms rise to the higher levels).   Benzene is not a chemical that is unrelated to crude oil or natural gas hydrocarbons and that is only introduced by fracking, as it is naturally occurring (although drilling for oil and natural gas can certainly release hydrocarbons into the environment).

schermbeck
schermbeck

For the record the EPA and TCEQ use the same FLIR cameras to record VOC emissions from gas and oil facilities that are unseen with the naked eye for enforcement purposes. Moreover, heat signatures look very different than emission plumes from oil and gas sources. The latter often look like freakin' black and white-filmed forest fires. You shouldn't stand over your gas tank when you fill your car up for the same reason you don't want a kid exposed to these kinds of releases, even at "low level" - because small stuff adds up. If your argument is that traffic releases Benzene too, and that's bad news, you probably don't want to compound that exposure with even more Benzene from gas sources. The point is to try and limit exposure to toxic crap as much as possible, especially with kids whose immune systems are not mature.

michelle.province
michelle.province

Amazing to see how many people here refuse to connect the dots. Well, it's your children and not mine, enjoy your kid's Big Pharma cancer bill. 

bmarvel
bmarvel topcommenter

pak152, are you listening?

glenn.hunter
glenn.hunter

I would hardly call ShaleTest "independent." It's bankrolled by an activist outfit called Earthworks, which makes no bones about opposing fracking.

ThePosterFormerlyKnownasPaul
ThePosterFormerlyKnownasPaul topcommenter

Where are the control test points?  That is, a test point with no well but highways and an airport; a test point with a well and no highway, etc.


Take an air sample of a closed garage with an automobile parked in it overnight and it is likely that you will get higher benzene levels.


Not condoning air pollution, just want to be rigorous in forming a causality as compared to a correlation.

Beenjamman
Beenjamman

Yeah it must be the gas well without any motorized equipment! Couldn't be the interstate highway or the busy airport across the freeway.

riconnel8
riconnel8

There ya go....all you deniers that pooh poohed the activists...how do you feel about taking your child to the park now? 


My question is how much of this toxicity is relate the the birth defects we are now seeing...like autism?  How long can Koch and friends deny what's happening on an all too frequent basis?

pwindsor1979
pwindsor1979

But the ban will not help this problem, as the ban is on future wells. Why won't stiffer regulations for new wells suffice rather than an all out ban?

TimRuggiero
TimRuggiero

@schermbeck Thanks, Jim! Also for the record, and the haters, the exposure limits are for adult men with a maximum exposure time of 8 hours a day, not children. 

Chattering_Monkey
Chattering_Monkey

@bmarvel Hi Bill, its been a while.  The question is, are you being suckered in?  How did they prove that benzene is from fracking, and not other environmental factors in the area?  Did they test playgrounds that were not near "fracking" Surely your mind isnt that far gone

TimRuggiero
TimRuggiero

@glenn.hunter This would be incorrect. We are 'bankrolled' by our own personal funds, private donations and grants. 

TXsharon
TXsharon

@glenn.hunter Earthworks does not "bankroll" ShaleTest. ShaleTest is funded by donations from people who live in the oil & gas patch. This study was funded by Patagonia as is clearly stated on the study.

bmarvel
bmarvel topcommenter

@glenn.hunter The question, Glenn, is not whether the test is independent. The question is whether it measures something that is real and does it do it accurately. Would you please address that question?

dingo
dingo

@riconnel8 

How do you feel about your daily purchases of products made from Koch Brothers raw materials based upon your own quality/price comparisons?

Beenjamman
Beenjamman

@riconnel8  How do you feel about taking your kids to Eureka Park, where the wood has been treated w. arsenic?

TXsharon
TXsharon

@pwindsor1979 Because stiffer regulations have been tried in Denton, which had a unique way of permitting wells before the gas well division was established. They permitted by plats so over 30% of the city is available for unlimited fracking in perpetuity.

TXsharon
TXsharon

@Chattering_Monkey @bmarvel One thing they did is use a FLIR camera to document the emissions coming from the wells. Then they took the SUMMA sample in the path of those emissions.

glenn.hunter
glenn.hunter

@TXsharon @glenn.hunter From the ShaleTest website: "ShaleTest is a non-profit organization that collects environmental data and provides testing to lower income families and communities that are negatively impacted by shale oil and gas extraction." [In other words, TXSharon, they have a bias right from the get-go.] Further from the website: "Tim Ruggiero and Calvin Tillman founded ShaleTest in 2010. Based on the extraordinary need for this type of testing, the Earthworks organization agreed to act as ShaleTest’s fiscal sponsor." [So, maybe you could explain why the term "fiscal sponsor" doesn't mean they get their dough?]

glenn.hunter
glenn.hunter

@bmarvel I have no way to know that, Bill. That's what the reporter here is contending, I guess--but she also contends that ShaleTest is independent.

riconnel8
riconnel8

@dingo @riconnel8 I don't know about you but I have a whole list of Koch products that I try very hard not to buy. 

riconnel8
riconnel8

@Beenjamman @riconnel8 And arsenic is made by what chemical company?
  You know who developed anthrax?  Look it up.

bmarvel
bmarvel topcommenter

@glenn.hunter @bmarvel As we all learned as journalists, Glenn, sometimes the most accurate and important information comes from critics of a program. Our job is not done when when we identify the source of information. Our work is done only when we can get some idea of the methods and procedures used to gather the information and its likely accuracy. That involves legwork, multiple sourcing, and so forth. Otherwise, to identify a source as independent or not is of almost no use in helping citizens make decisions.

ScottsMerkin
ScottsMerkin topcommenter

@ThePosterFormerlyKnownasPaul @TXsharon Hey lookie here, we have a video showing heat emissions.  Did you use the camera to film the planes taking off from the nearby airport shooting plumes of emissions out of the engines?

glenn.hunter
glenn.hunter

@TXsharon @glenn.hunter I stand corrected, TXsharon. A fiscal sponsor doesn't bankroll another group outright, but rather is "a nonprofit, tax-exempt organization that acts as a sponsor for a project or group that does not have its own tax-exempt status. Grants or contributions are made to the fiscal sponsor which manages the funds." In other words, ShaleTest is joined at the hip with the anti-fracking nonprofit. (Now I'll shut up, because everybody else is probably bored by this back-and-forth.)  

TXsharon
TXsharon

@ScottsMerkin @ThePosterFormerlyKnownasPaul @TXsharon The FLIR GasFindIR camera shows volatile organic compounds. If you are trying to imply that the camera only shows heat, that is absurd. State and Federal regulators and the industry are spending millions of dollars on these cameras. Are you suggesting they are doing so merely to detect heat? That is so silly. And you guys are trying to make fun of me regarding science. 


MichaelLeza
MichaelLeza

Some people say that Glenn Hunter wants children to have cancer.

ZenCushion
ZenCushion

@TXsharon @ScottsMerkin 

It is perhaps important to note that benzene is a hydrocarbon molecule that is a component of crude oil -- albeit one of the more highly volatile components, hence its presence in gasoline.  Gasoline refineries just use gravity to separate hydrocarbons of different molecular weights (the lighter, more volatile forms rise to the higher levels).   Benzene is not a chemical that is unrelated to crude oil or natural gas hydrocarbons and that is only introduced by fracking, as it is naturally occurring (although drilling for oil and natural gas can certainly release hydrocarbons into the environment)


The "Fracking Emission" headline tends to suggest that benzene is introduced principally as an *input* to the fracking process, which is misleading.

TimRuggiero
TimRuggiero

@Chattering_Monkey @TXsharon @ScottsMerkin @ThePosterFormerlyKnownasPaul We are not implying anything; we are stating the facts. There are no other sources of the vast amounts of chemicals other than the leaking tanks and valves at the drill sites. I know the report is long, detailed and comprehensive, and there are dozens of FLIR videos to sort through and watch, but if you bothered to actually read any of it, you would come to the same conclusion we did-natural gas operations produce an enormous amount of pollutants and carcinogens. They have no business being next to children's playgrounds. 

TXsharon
TXsharon

@Chattering_Monkey @TXsharon @ScottsMerkin @ThePosterFormerlyKnownasPaul 

You are confused. 

ShaleTest is the group that released the report. 

Earthworks is the group you wrongly accused of funding ShaleTest. 

I only read the report, watched the videos and added 2+2. 

Keep up your silly arguments as the opposition grows because industry never takes action to improve things. They only put forth silly arguments that do not convince the public. 

ScottsMerkin
ScottsMerkin topcommenter

Your report targets frackers and in no way takes into account, or even considered other pollutant emitters in the area. Can you acknowledge that

riconnel8
riconnel8

@TXsharon @Chattering_Monkey @ScottsMerkin @ThePosterFormerlyKnownasPaul Not only does industry never take action to improve things they never do testing that is truly independent.  If you look at their testing you'll always find an oil advocate somewhere along the line.  It amazes me that the people in here wanting to devalue this report have no problem with the oil companies very biased results.

Chattering_Monkey
Chattering_Monkey

@TXsharon @ScottsMerkin @ThePosterFormerlyKnownasPaul What about the major interstate freeway that sits by the park that has emissions spewing Diesel 18 wheelers hauling ass by there 24 hrs a day?  Did yall video that?

MichaelLeza
MichaelLeza

ScottsMerkin you keyboard commandos never have any idea how stupid you are. It's like watching a puppy with brain damage eat another dog's Shit and then endlessly puke and re-eat it.

TimRuggiero
TimRuggiero

@ScottsMerkin There are no other constant pollutant emitters within 200 feet of these playgrounds. Yes, we target natural gas development operations, especially ones near schools, parks and homes. 

ScottsMerkin
ScottsMerkin topcommenter

@MichaelLeza So nothing to add but some shit talking. Ok Michael, go back to your wood art. 

dh68
dh68

@TimRuggiero, why did you not publish any readings for locations that aren’t near gas wells to give us some idea of the background level of benzene from other sources?Say, near a gas station, an airport, or along I-35?I suspect the reason is that the numbers wouldn’t look significantly different than the ones you took.  You can't possibly claim that all benzene in the air is due to fracking simply because there aren't any "constant pollutant emitters" nearby.

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