One Pennsylvania Town Shows How to Properly ‘Zone’ Fracking


Pennsylvania is home to over 10,000 fracking wells, which forces communities to live with air pollution, water contamination, and an array of health problems linked to drilling.
The frackers want to drill more wells, and the state’s Democratic governor is not going to do anything to slow it down. But local communities are finding ways to fight back—and win.
The latest good news comes from Oakmont Borough, a small suburb of Pittsburgh along the Allegheny River. Residents there have waged a years-long battle against the fracking industry, which has been making a determined push into Allegheny County.
Fracking is a desperate industry looking for new profits
Putting fracking under local control
Oakmont stands up to surveyors
Here’s how it worked in Oakmont. In June 2017, a fracking company called Huntley & Huntley notified the borough that they were about to start ‘seismic testing,’ a process that involves setting off explosive charges in deep holes to measure the seismic waves, which can help indicate where gas may be trapped.
Oakmont residents didn’t like the sound of that, and we worked together to pass an ordinance to regulate this intrusive process. Soon after, Huntley & Huntley reversed course, and announced that they weren’t going to conduct the surveys as planned.
But they weren’t going away—and resident groups like Citizens to Protect Oakmont were ready to go bigger. They started meeting that summer to craft an updated zoning ordinance that would offer some protection from drilling. By December, they offered a list of suggestions, including a 2,000-foot setback from residential property lines and the removal of fracking from the Light Industrial district of the borough.
The Borough Council, however, considered a weaker set of rules, which could have opened up residential areas to fracking. Local residents weren’t having it; they were a force to be reckoned with at Council meetings, and in the end their tireless advocacy paid off: In February, the Council voted in support of the new ordinance.
What this victory means—here and elsewhere
Residents in other parts of Pennsylvania are ready to follow Oakmont’s lead.