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25 Families Evacuated Over Uncontrolled Gas Leak At Ohio Fracking Well

Bethany McCorkle, a spokeswoman for the Ohio Department of Natural Resources, said crews lost control of the Monroe County well on Saturday.

The state spokeswoman said the situation was "uncommon." As if they actually knew what the long-term effects of fracking were when they took the money and threw the dice! Via Think Progress:

Twenty-five families in eastern Ohio have been unable to return to their homes for the last three days due to a natural gas leak at a nearby fracking well.

Households within a 1.5-mile radius of the well were evacuated this week after the well started leaking Saturday. Oil and gas workers weren’t able to control the leak, which is continuing to emit gas into the atmosphere. The well, which is owned by Texas-based company Triad Hunter, had been plugged about a year ago, but started leaking when workers restarted operations on it.

“Despite numerous precautionary measures taken in connection with the temporary plugging and abandonment operation, the well began to flow uncontrollably while recommencing production operations,” the company said in a statement.

Families have been allowed back into their homes during the day, but haven’t had access to them at night.

Bethany McCorkle, spokeswoman for the Ohio Department of Natural Resources, told the Columbus Dispatch that leaks like this aren’t common.

“This whole situation is uncommon in general,” she said. “A full investigation will give us more information as to what happened, what led up to the incident and why there was so much pressure.”

Right now, the well isn’t on fire, but the gas leak does pose an explosion risk. Earlier this year, a leaking natural gas well owned by Chevron caught fire in Pennsylvania, killing one contract worker. And last year, a gas well off the coast of Louisiana caught fire.

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