The Chronicle
October 11, 2011
The weekly student newspaper at The College of Saint Rose in Albany, New York
Activists Speak Out at Common Council By CHAD GAMBOA Journalism II A group of more than a dozen activists crowded the Common Council meeting Monday evening to voice their concern about hydraulic-fracturing or ‘fracking’ in the city of Albany and the surrounding region. No city legislation has been passed yet regarding fracking. All of the grievances were addressed during the public commentary part of the meeting, which was extended an extra half hour. The move was an attempt to raise awareness about what many Albany residents think about fracking before the council votes on the matter October 17. Still, the number of protesters attending the meeting, many of whom were students, firmly captured the attention of the council. “Ordinances have been introduced to ban fracking and also to keep their cuttings, the solid fracking waste, out of the Rapp Road Landfill,” said Siobhan Burke, co-founder of Capital District Against Fracking. “We’re seeing fast water withdrawals from municipal water resources being sold into Pennsylvania for drilling operations where that water is permanently contaminated and then being sent back to New York state municipal water treatment plants in order to process it,” said Burke. “Essentially what we’re addressing is the fact that Governor Cuomo banned fracking in the New York City and Syracuse watersheds,” said Daniel Morrissey, founder and director of Water
Equality, a group which works with local and state organizations to permanently ban fracking in New York state. Hydraulic fracturing is the process used by “gas producers to stimulate wells and recover natural gas from sources such as coalbeds and shale gas formations,” according to the Environmental Protection Agency Despite the potential benefits of hydraulic fracturing, the EPA has said that fracking has the potential to affect “drinking water resources, public health, and environmental impacts in the vicinity of these facilities.” “Radiation that’s locked up in the shale bed gets into the water supply…through the natural liniments and cracks and fissures in the earth,” said Morrissey. “It’s pulled up by people’s drinking wells, their water wells and they can light their water on fire, and they ingest it when they drink that water.” The Common Council still needs to study the issues surrounding the fracking question, said Dominick Calsolaro, a member of the Common Council. “I think when we weigh everything it may not be all that advantageous when you look at the environmental impacts.” The presence of activists at the Common Council meeting was a wise move, said Barbara Smith, a council member. Their presence makes council members aware of the issues while they contemplate a decision that “will affect everybody in the city and the surrounding region.”
News
Volume LXXX Issue 8
A Day in the Life of a Pine Hills 5th Grader
Chad Gamboa works with fifth-graders at the Pine Hills Elementary School By CHAD GAMBOA, TENNY SNYDER, KAYLA MATTEO, MICHAEL BELLIZZI, THOMAS MCDONALD, and SCOTT LAWSON Journalism II Fifth grade students at Pine Hills Elementary School welcomed visiting journalism students from The College of Saint Rose Thursday during a special workshop in teacher Lucy Gould’s fifth grade writing class. After nearly a month into the school year, students talked about their favorite classes and activities.
Along with learning the fundamentals of journalism, students served as sources in a story about what it means to go to school in the Pine Hills community. Here’s what the students had to say: For Prethe Mohiuddin, Social Studies is appealing because “you get to learn a lot of new things,” like “the theory of the land bridge” during the Ice Age. Classmate Mehreen Khan likes Social Studies because “you get to learn about the past.” Science class is especially attractive to Adam Bruce because he studies different rocks including the ones he doesn’t have in
Arts & Opinion
CAILIN BROWN
his own rock collection. One mathematician in the group, Zack Maycock, said: “The reason I like math is because I like to solve problems and I’m really good at math.” Diamond Tibbs likes math too, because she thinks counting is fun. Art student Maxwell McNulty and his classmates are participating in a contest with the Holiday Lights in the Park project, sponsored by the Police Athletic League. Winners of the top three designs have their creations turned into real light displays, Continued on Page A3
Sports
15th anniversary of the Capital Region Buddy Walk. See Page A2
Chris Suprenant reviews American Horror Story. See Page B5
Is boxing out for the count? See Page D10
Photos from Campus Fire Safety Day. See Page A4
Comedian Mark Hardy performs at Saint Rose. See Page B6
Cross country sweeps at Golden Knights Joust. See Page D12