
© Eric Albrecht | Dispatch file photo
The federal government is considering, again, opening Wayne National Forest to fracking.
Oil and gas companies have formally expressed interest to the U.S. Bureau of Land Management in hydraulically fracturing about 31,900 acres of the Wayne.
The bureau is reviewing those requests to see if the federal government owns the mineral rights beneath those sections of the forest, and it plans to assess potential environmental risks.
In the meantime, though, the bureau also has scheduled three public meetings to see what the public thinks about those plans.
"It's kind of a scoping meeting to tell people we've got expressions of interest from industry, and potentially, we could see leasing in these areas," said Kurt Wadzinski, planning and environmental coordinator for the bureau's Northeastern States District, which includes the Wayne.
For environmental groups and residents throughout southeastern Ohio, though,
it is a battle that has been fought before.Four years ago, oil and gas companies told the bureau they wanted to drill for oil and gas beneath the Wayne.
Environmental groups and local residents were outraged, and, eventually, the bureau pulled the proposal.The areas that oil and gas companies have proposed for drilling are
similar to the ones proposed in 2011.
Roxanne Groff, a township trustee in Athens County who has opposed oil and gas drilling in the Wayne, said her concerns from the 2011 proposal haven't gone away.
"The concerns have even multiplied, because we know that fracking is problematic," Groff said.
" And even though the industry continues to say it hasn't caused any problems, we know that to not be true."Oil and gas companies filed documents called "expressions of interest" with the Bureau of Land Management as a first step to opening the Wayne to fracking. The documents are public records, but the bureau did not make them available on Tuesday.
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