Fracking debate gets personal one week before historic Denton vote
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- Nicholas Sakelaris
- Staff Writer- Dallas Business Journal
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People on both ends of the fracking spectrum challenged the validity of the other's research Monday night at Brookhaven College in Farmers Branch.
The debate featured Calvin Tillman, the former mayor of DISH, against Philem McAleer, who directed the pro-industry film "FrackNation."
It comes just eight days before the city of Denton votes on a referendum that would ban hydraulic fracking in the city. If adopted Nov. 4, Denton would be the first city in Texas to do so.
Tillman, an Air Force veteran, said he was seeking the American dream when he bought rural land in the Denton County town.
That was until an ever-growing natural gas compressor station moved in next door, causing noise and odor pollution to spread onto his property. His children started having nose bleeds and other negative health effects, he said.
Much like the residents in Denton when drilling encroached on their homes, Tillman said he discovered the utility had eminent domain powers and couldn't be stopped. That turned the lifelong Republican who supported both Bush presidential campaigns into an activist.
"Talking out about the oil and gas industry just felt wrong," said Tillman. "Imagine my surprise that the minute I spoke publicly about the oil and gas industry, I was termed a left-wing, radical, un-American, tree-hugging environmental wacko who is now getting paid by Russia."
He monitored the noise, which he likened to a tractor trailer going through his yard, and later the city conducted an air quality test.
McAleer was quick to criticize the validity of these tests in "FrackNation" and again at the debate Monday because he said the woman who conducted the tests falsified her credentials.
"He hasn't produced one iota of evidence of his property being destroyed. His surface being destroyed," said the Irish-born McAleer. "This is not real science. This is emotionalism. This is anti-fossil fuels. Actually, this isn't anti-fossil fuels. It's for Russia fossil fuels, Middle East fossil fuels."
Tillman countered that McAleer is "all foam and no beer", saying he's misrepresented in "FrackNation," and was never interviewed for the film. He said he was afraid to bring his children to the debate because of comments McAleer has made in the past.
McAleer said he lives atop an abandoned oil well in Beverly Hills and hasn't had any ill side effects.
"I'm perfectly happy to live on an abandoned oil well," McAleer said. "The problem is I don't have the mineral rights."
He went on to say that supporting a fracking ban like the one in Denton sends millions of dollars to countries such as Russia, Iran and Venezuela.
Similar comments about Russia have been made by two members of the Texas Railroad Commission, the agency that regulates oil and gas in the state.
Nicholas covers the energy, manufacturing, aviation and transportation beats for the Dallas Business Journal. Subscribe the Energy Inc. newsletter
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