New to SquareState? Learn how to play here.
Wanna see your ad here? email ads@... you know the rest.



The Progressive Political Blog for Colorado
(HOME)

[mobile edition]
Got a hot tip?


SquareState Ads


About
The progressive community blog on all things Colorado. Blogging since 6/17/2005.

You're encouraged to join. This blog is what we make it.

About/Disclaimer

by: Brahman Colorado

12/20/08 @ 10:54:28 AM MST


( - promoted by Aaron Silverstein)

Since May of this year, I have tried no less than six times to write this diary. I haven't had all the facts or references to document what I know. It became so personal a journey for me that I found myself immersed in a struggle to get the information on a small rural county fighting to preserve it's great natural resources of land, water and pristine beauty and my desire to move there.

It is the struggle of one the poorest counties in historic Southern Colorado against the oil and gas industry, drilling for Methane gas in Huerfano County.

A place that has been the crossroads of the Ute trail, Camino Real, Taos trail and the Santa Fe trail bordering the Sangre de Cristo mountain range at the base of the Spanish Peaks. The Peaks have traditional and religious significance to American Indian tribes including the Comanche and Ute. Summer thunderstorms, which often form near the summits, were evidence the rain gods worked their magic on the peaks. The common Indian names are "Wahatoya", Huajatolla" or Guajatoyah", roughly interpreted as "breasts of the earth".

A place where rivers, streams and water sheds have supported a rich diversity of life for thousands of years.

IMG_1376

Brahman Colorado :: Onshore Drilling - A Colorado Tragedy
This spring when I lost my business and was forced to sell my house, I decided to regroup and find 35 acres down close to our best friends in Walsenburg, Colorado. For 15 years we have gone down to their large and isolated undeveloped property at the foot of Wahatoya; where he has a trailer, shed and water well in the cedar, pinon and juniper forests at the base of the mountain. I always loved opening the well head and firing up the pump so I could taste that delicious sweet well water that took me back to my childhood memories of drinking good cold sweet well water on the farms and homesteads of my great grandparents. Hmmm...there is nothing like it in the world.  We often walked the adjoining parcels of BLM and private land imagining that we too could buy a slice of heaven for ourselves nearby.

Land and water are hot topics in Colorado and the interior West.

We hired a local realtor in June and began searching the beautiful Cuchara valley, La Veta and Badito areas. I was immediately enchanted with the history, topography,  wildlife, plants and hispanic culture unique to this area. After 3 months we found 35 acres on a ridge that swept down to the Huerfano creek valley across to the Wet mountains with stunning vistas of the Sangre de Cristos, the Spanish Peaks at the foot of Mt. Maestas and Silver Mountain. It was already feeling like home with a 25 mile drive to town.

But trouble was bubbling in paradise.

Rumors were emerging of water wells blowing up from methane drilling, livestock deaths and fouled water ways. Methane seeps, as they are called, are where pockets of gas follow underground geologic formations and fissures escaping into the atmosphere. Seeps kill vegation, wildlife and humans as it is oftentimes odorless and colorless. The locals were not talking and I couldn't find any articles or information.  The bar tenders avoided the topic and homeowners shrugged off my questions. The realtor always struggled with my inquiries.

" Our community is very divided," she explained. "divided between the 2500 jobs and the money that is generated by the oil and gas industry and the environmental impact of all the drilling in the county."

"Folks are concerned about the water in this area."

On the eve of submitting a contract to buy 35 acres, I came home to Denver and googled "Huerfano county methane gas" and came across this article:

THE COLORADO OIL AND GAS CONSERVATION COMMISSION had issued 6 months earlier a cease and desist order for Petroglyph Oil and Gas to stop the devastating practice of dewatering and drilling in Huerfano County.

I was shocked.In the days and weeks and months that have followed a clearer more candid picture of the situation and the effects of coal and methane gas drilling have begun to unfold. The story has gone from a local story to a more regional story. Hopefully it will become a national headline.

We halted our real estate contract and got back our earnest money. We were so very disheartened.

Next I came across this article from the Huerfanoworld.net in June.

Unlike traditional oil and gas drilling, coal bed methane operations target relatively shallow coal seam strata that contain EPA defined drinkable water. In the process of removing the methane gas molecules that are adhered to the coal the industry performs a fracing process. This process dewaters the coal seam, removing the pressure to allow the methane to detach from the coal. The pressures in the coal seam can be as high as 300 psi from the trapped water.

Once the water is removed, the methane is allowed to migrate to the surface. This takes place through the conduit of the methane gas well, but sometimes the gas escapes into domestic wells or natural or induced fractures in the subsurface layers.

3 weeks ago this article was written in the Pueblo Chieftain on November 27th 2008:

Rep. John Salazar says the area's coal-bed methane gas problems are appalling... U.S. Rep. John Salazar has asked Gov. Bill Ritter to become personally involved in what he calls unsafe methods being used to extract coal-bed methane gas in Huerfano County.  

Salazar said,

that discharging water from the mining operations into the Cuchara River has hurt agriculture producers who depend on the river for both irrigation and watering cattle.

"They have lost a large number of cattle and the crops they use to feed their stock, thereby making it difficult for their farm to survive."

Furthermore:

residents are still complaining that coal-bed methane has migrated into their wells and that some wells are drying up. Farmers and ranchers also are expressing fears that drilling for coal-bed methane could contaminate groundwater.

Yesterday was a terrible day for my friends. They were scheduled to meet with officials from the county and state, oil company reps and an independent lab to take samples and test their water well. The well has been hissing methane gas for awhile now. The smell of rotten eggs fills the well head as the generator and pump spew a foul smelling stream of water.

A circular patch of trees has died at what they suspect as a methane seep nearby on the property. A lot of ranches are for sale now in the area.

I cried this fall standing on the ridge of the property we had tried to buy as I closed my eyes and said goodbye to the land. I cried yesterday with my friends. Their newly poured foundation of their dream home sits idle in the Colorado snow this winter at the foot of Wahatoya next to their fouled water well.

I hope the new Secretary of the Interior and his brother hear the cries of the people of Huerfano county.

The Salazar family has lived nearby for 12 generations! It would be a shame to trade the short term benefits and profits of gas drilling for the sustainable and natural resources of water.

Like thieves in the night, these oil corporations will take the profits and leave a mess for the tax payer and poor citizens of Huerfano county and Colorado to clean up. The track record and denial of these greedy corporations is abysmal in Colorado. The ignorant chanting of "Drill baby Drill" this summer at the Republican convention made me especially mad. These people are just a bunch of ignorant assholes.

The hundreds of drilling holes pock marking the strata of fractured coal seams cannot be repaired a mile down. The dewatered caverns of methane coal beds has been pumped up into the watersheds of the area polluting the streams. Deadly methane gas is escaping from seeps and holes in the ground because oil companies can walk onto your property and drill a hole without your permission because they own the mineral rights below the surface.

It is an environmental disaster in Huerfano and Las Animas counties and I'm not sure the Salazars, Udalls, Obama or Ritter or the Gas commission can fix the real problems here. They are up against some pretty haughty villians.

I am not sure that I will be able to stand in a Colorado thunderstorm and feel the cold mountain rain on my face anymore and imagine in my mind that the Gods of Wahatoya must be weeping too.

Tags: , , , , , , , (All Tags)
Print Friendly View Send As Email
The Gods of Wahatoya Are Weeping (4.00 / 3)
for the land now lost.  Thank you for writing this.

Think of the many jobs which the people of Eastern Kentucky, West Virginia, Wester Virginia or Georgia saw as their mountain homes and water were destroyed.  Think of the many who have died in West Texas when H2S leaked into the land or the salt water pans spread there from drilling action.  And, yes, think of those whose land has been destroyed by mineral right holding firms without controls over their behavior.

There can be technical ways of cleanly extracting energy, but they may be more costly than common practice permits.  These, along with equalized severance taxes with reservations for remediation, should be mandated.

Maybe it is time for the people to re-embrace regulations rather than complaining about them.  Their elimination certainly hasn't done much good for anyone but those collecting 8-figure bonuses.

Like those who hoped to hand their hot potato, toxic mortgage bonds, greed took over  those in your valley.  I'm sorry.


Amazing diary. Thanks. n/t (4.00 / 1)


I second that (4.00 / 2)
The Salazar family has lived nearby for 12 generations! It would be a shame to trade the short term benefits and profits of gas drilling for the sustainable and natural resources of water.

I wish Salazar would comment on that.

and again, for the record:

Like thieves in the night, these oil corporations will take the profits and leave a mess for the tax payer and poor citizens of Huerfano county and Colorado to clean up. The track record and denial of these greedy corporations is abysmal in Colorado. The ignorant chanting of "Drill baby Drill" this summer at the Republican convention made me especially mad. These people are just a bunch of ignorant assholes.

Thanks for your research and most of all, your sincerity. Its very difficult to be aware of such awful destruction and be one of the few willing to pay attention to it. Bravo.


Spreading it around (4.00 / 1)
Have taken the liberty and posted your piece on Outta the Cornfield because it is important to raise awareness and also as a property owner in Hueferno County this is important to me.

Tragic. (0.00 / 0)
The greed has driven many in our state to support these industries that contaminate the land & water and jeopardize the health of the residents in these areas.  Garfield County is another county overrun by O&G with local government mostly ignoring or not measuring the warning signs.  
Tragic.

ACTION - VOICE - SPICE
Visit my new blog Green Chile Democrats


Menu

Make a New Account

Username:

Password:



Forget your username or password?


Blog Roll
What we read
- Andrew Hyde
- Code Neon Blue
- Colorado Dems Blog
- Colorado Independent
- Colorado Pols
- Congresspedia
- Coyote Gulch
- CritterThink
- DemNotes
- Democracy For Colorado
- Dem Conv. Watch
- Denver Ozone
- Ed Stein Ink
- Employee Free Choice - CO
- Great Education Colorado
- Green Chile Democrats
- Junction Daily Blog
- Lefty Blogs
- Liberal and Loving It
- Liberal Latina
- Mario Solis-Marich
- New Era Colorado
- Outta the Cornfield
- Politics West
- Progress Now Colorardo Blog
- RafaelNoboa.net
- Raw Story
- Rocky Mountain Activist
- Scholars and Rogues
- The Seminal
- Think Outside the Cage
- Senate Guru
- Ultimate Politics
- Unbossed
- Wash Park Prophet
- WeatherDem - the blog
- Wide Streets (northern colorado)

What We Listen To
- AM 760 - Boulder's Progressive Talk
- KCFR 1340 AM
- KUNC 91.5 FM
- KGNU 1390AM Denver, 88.5FM Boulder
- KRFC 88.9FM Northern CO

Politician Blogs
- Morgan Carroll
- Pam Bennett for Aurora

Get Involved
- Democrats Work
- Progress Now
- Progress Now Action

Powered By
- SoapBlox



Colorado Reference
Maps (via COMaps.org)
Current:
- US Congress
- State Senate
- State House

2010 Elections
- Michael Bennet CO-Sen
- Andrew Romanoff CO-Sen
- John Flerlage CO-06
- Amber Tafoya HD4
- Jennifer Coken HD4
- Steve Harvey HD28

Past Elections

2008 Elections
- Mark Udall CO-Senate
- Diana DeGette CO-01
- Jared Polis CO-02
- Betsy Markey CO-04
- Hal Bidlack CO-05
- Hank Eng CO-06
- Ed Perlmutter CO-07

- Joe Whitcomb SD23
- Jan Hejtmanek HD20
- Anna Lord HD21

- Coloradans for Middle Class Relief
- Opposes Amendment 47

- Protect Colorado's Future
- Opposes Amendments 47, 49, 54

- Protect Families Protect Choices
- Opposes Amendment 48

2006 Election
US Congress:
- CD 1: Diana DeGette
- CD 2: Mark Udall
- CD 3: John Salazar
- CD 4: Angie Paccione
- CD 5: Jay Fawcett
- CD 6: Bill Winter
- CD 7: Ed Perlmutter

Governor:
    - Bill Ritter
Treasurer:
    - Cary Kennedy
CU Regent-at-large
    - Steve Ludwig
Legislature:
    - Colorado State Sentate
    - Colorado State House

State Board of Education:
- CD 2: Evie Hudak
- CD 4: Bob Schaffer
- CD 7: Karen Middleton


Drinking Liberally Denver
2nd and 4th Wednesdays
7:30 PM @ Skylark Lounge
140 S. Broadway
Denver, CO
 
Denver South Metro
2nd & 4th Thursdays
of Each Month
start-time varies
Lansdowne Arms
9352 Dorchester St
Highlands Ranch, CO
 
Centennial
Every Monday
7pm
Bistro Al Vino
15352 East Ida Suite E
Centennial, CO
 
Boulder
1st & 3rd Thursdays
of Each Month
7:00 PM
Murphy's Grill
2731 Iris Ave.
Boulder, CO
 
Boulder - Downtown
2nd Tuesdays
of Each Month
7:00 PM @ Pearl St Pub
1108 Pearl St.
Boulder, CO
 
Colorado Springs
2nd Tuesdays of Each Month
7:30 PM
The Margarita at Pine Creek
7350 Pine Creek Rd.
Colorado Springs, CO
 
Castle Rock
Fourth Wednesdays
5:15pm
Pegasus Restaurant and Bar
313 Jerry Street
Castle Rock, CO
 
Longmont
1st & 3rd Wednesdays
of Each Month
7 PM @ Redzone
540 S Main St
Longmont, CO
 
Ft. Collins
2nd & 4th Thursdays
of Each Month
5PM - 7PM
The Crown Pub
144 South College Avenue
Ft. Collins, CO
 
Berthoud
1st & 3th Thursdays
of Each Month
5:30 pm
Wayside Pub
505 Mountain Avenue
Berthoud, CO
 
Cañon City
1st & 3rd Wednesdays
of Each Month
5:30 PM @ McClellan's
413 Main St.
Cañon City, CO
 
Greeley
2nd Tuesdays of Each Month
6:30pm
Kress Cinema & Lounge
815 8th Ave.
Greeley, CO
 
Frisco
2nd Wednesdays
of Each Month
7pm @ Po' Boys
620 Main Street
Frisco, CO
 
Carbondale
3rd Saturdays
of Each Month
7pm @ Pour House
352 Main Street
Carbondale, CO
 
Avon
4th Wednesdays
of Each Month
5:30pm @ Loaded Joe's
82 E Beaver Creek Blvd
Suite 104
Avon, CO
 
Grand Junction
1st Wednesdays of Each Month
5pm @ Kannah Creek Brewing Company
1960 N 12th St
Grand Junction, CO
 
Durango
3rd Thursdays of Each Month
6pm @ Joel's
119 W 8th St
Durango, CO

Active Users
Currently 1 user(s) logged on.

RSS Info

RSS Feed





Add to My Yahoo!



Add to Newsgator

Add to Feed Lounge

Add to Pluck

Add to Feedster

Add to Bloglines

Add to My MSN

Add to My AOL

Add to Rojo

Site Stats



Listed on BlogShares

view site stats

Search




Advanced Search


SquareState.net is wholly owned by SoapBlox Network, Inc.
Powered by: SoapBlox