Fair Shake and Fractracker Alliance are asking you to take action and raise awareness of spreading brine wastewater on roads to protect our communities’ health and environment from chemical contamination. If you see this being performed in your community, notify Fair Shake here. It would be helpful to us to know which township or borough the spreading was observed in and if a specific company was performing the spreading. Your contributions will help us obtain further information on this practice to help stop it going forward.
Winning on Environmental Issues Starts with Participation in Your Community
A key part to effectively make your voice heard is early and vocal participation in municipality-level public meetings in which decisions are made. In many cases, if a decision is made during a public meeting which you did not attend, you may be barred from later bringing an appeal of the decision in court, regardless of how erroneous the decision made is.
Getting to the Bottom of Composting Toilets
As more people become aware of adverse impacts to local streams and groundwater, brought about by development, they are considering alternative technologies to reduce those impacts. One alternative gaining interest is the composting toilet to replace conventional flush toilets. However, composting toilets can present a challenge to those charged with approving permits and applying building codes. To unmuddy the waters, we offer some basic information about these cost- and environment-protecting products.
PRESS RELEASE: Court Rulings Restore Appeals of Compressor Station Air Permit
A Guidebook for Navigating Legal Barriers to Accessible Waterways
Our fundamental right to clean water rests on three cornerstone waterway characteristics: fishable, swimmable and accessible. The barriers that exist to achieving each of those cornerstones come in social, cultural and legal forms. Today, we are releasing a guidebook to address legal barriers to accessible waterways in the Delaware River Basin.
Becoming a Steward of your land: Why estate planning is important for all individuals.
When the topic of estate planning is brought up, many people tend to think of the traditional nuclear family, maybe a hefty amount of assets, and the drafting a will or trust based on those variables. But given the opportunities that estate planning provides, we at Fair Shake ELS view this area of law as becoming a steward of the land— on smaller scale.
Jennifer Clark, Esq., joins Fair Shake Environmental Legal Services' new Philadelphia Office
Jen joins Fair Shake Environmental Legal Services as a Staff Attorney in our new Philadelphia, Pennsylvania location. She started her early professional career as an engineer with Armstrong World Industries and The Boeing Company, working mainly in developing and improving manufacturing processes. While at Boeing, she became interested in advocating for people on an individual level and started attending law school in pursuit of that endeavor. In law school, Jen participated in the Environmental and Natural Resources Law Clinic at Widener University which she found combined her passion for advocacy and her love of the natural world.
Remarks of Emily A. Collins on the Petition of Petros Development Group for a Conditional Use to construct a new housing development at 1870 Akron-Peninsula Road. PC-2020-29-CU
In response to the Planning Director’s comments in the media that the proposed development is a better land use than electroplating or some of the other things that could go on this property, it’s simply a legal falsehood that the City has to grant a conditional use permit and allow this proposed development to move forward.
East Pittsburgh Borough Rescinds Merrion Oil and Gas Well Conditional Use Approval
On October 22, 2020, the East Pittsburgh Borough Zoning Hearing Board voted to affirm the Borough Council’s earlier decision to rescind approval for a natural gas well pad proposed on the U.S. Steel Edgar Thompson property, just outside the City of Pittsburgh.
60 Day Notice of Intent to Sue Sunoco Pipeline LP for Mariner East II Pipeline Violations
Contact: Tim Fitchett, Attorney tfitchett@fairshake-els.org
On October 6, 2020, Clean Air Council (CAC), through counsel, filed a 60-day notice of intent to sue Sunoco Pipeline L.P. (SPLP) for violations of its Erosion and Sedimentation Control permits related to the Mariner East II pipelines.
Fair Shake Environmental Legal Services of Pittsburgh, PA, which is representing Clean Air Council in this matter, filed the notice outlining an alleged pattern and practice of preventing professional geologists (PGs) working on the pipeline from properly inspecting and investigating environmental conditions, including subsidence, near the pipeline. The Notice of Intent to Sue contends that:
● SPLP prevented the PGs from talking with drillers, depriving them of required information.
● SPLP prevented PGs from reporting potentially dangerous subsidence outside of an arbitrarily determined boundary.
● SPLP failed to adequately monitor subsidence incidents that were reported.
● SPLP required the PGs’ reports to be editable and altered those reports before submission to regulatory agencies.
● SPLP required the PGs to conform their findings with those of the Utility Inspectors, regardless of their actual findings.
Given the limitations placed on PGs and the potential alteration of their reports, CAC contends that SPLP has violated their Erosion and Sedimentation permits. Those permits require that SPLP submit true and accurate reports to the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection to ensure compliance with the Clean Streams Law.
“Sunoco is so scared of what its scientists will find in investigating its pipeline construction that it’s muzzled them and doctored their reports” said Joseph Minott, Executive Director and Chief Counsel of Clean Air Council. “Building pipelines based on fake science is dangerous and fraudulent.”
The Notice of Intent to Sue can be found here.







