The Guardian Australia

Rare cancers, full-body rashes, death: did fracking make their kids sick?

- Eve Andrews

One evening in 2019, Janice Blanock was scrolling through Facebook when she heard a stranger mention her son in a video on her feed. Luke, an outgoing high school athlete, had died three years earlier at age 19 from Ewing’s sarcoma, a rare bone cancer.

Blanock had come across a live stream of a community meeting to discuss rare cancers that were occurring with alarming frequency in south-western Pennsylvan­ia, where she lives.

Between 2009 and 2019, five other students in Blanock’s school district were also diagnosed with Ewing’s sarcoma. (The region saw about 30 overall cases of the cancer during that time.) In the video, health experts and residents were talking about whether the uptick in illnesses was related to fracking. Blanock was riveted.

“I learned that night a few things that I would have never put a connection to,” she said. The next day she called the group that had organized the live stream. “I said: ‘I want to know more, I want to understand more.’”

Four years later, Blanock helped to launch Mad-Facts – Moms and Dads: Family Awareness of Cancer Threat Spike – as a volunteer group within Center for Coalfield Justice, a local organizati­on. Blanock and her cofounder, Jodi Borello, knock on doors in neighborho­ods where new wells are planned, attend public meetings in matching Mad-Facts T-shirts and host regular informatio­n sessions. It’s a support group for area parents who, like Blanock a few years ago, are just starting to learn about some of the more serious health risks of fracking.

***

Blanock’s home in Cecil Township, just outside Pittsburgh, is filled with tributes to Luke: his jerseys and baseball gloves adorn his father’s office; a drawn portrait, along with a rosary, hangs in the living room; a stone bench engraved with his name sits under a rhododendr­on in the front yard.

It’s also just a few miles from the site of Pennsylvan­ia’s first unconventi­onal well, which was constructe­d in 2004. Since then, fossil fuel companies have drilled more than 2,000 wells in Blanock’s Washington county alone.

Frackingen­tails cracking layers of earth with pressurize­d, chemical-laden liquid to access stores of oil and gas thousands of feet undergroun­d. Many of the chemicals used in that liquid, like benzene and formaldehy­de, are carcinogen­ic, and the extraction itself can stir up radium and other heavy metals in the shale’s subsurface, creating radioactiv­e waste that can contaminat­e watersheds.

The companies that drill in the region and officials who support the industry have long insisted that fracking is safe and well-regulated. But many residents, who have seen unfamiliar sicknesses invade their community over the past 20 years, now feel misled.

“We’re seeing more rare childhood cancers and brain tumors in adults,” said Borello, a mother of three, who lives in South Franklin Township, about 20 miles south-west of Cecil. “If you knew even one person 10 years ago with a brain tumor, everybody would be rallying around that person and trying to figure it out: ‘Oh my God, this is awful. How would this person get a brain tumor?’ Well, I can tell you probably 12 people off the top of my head right now that I know with brain tumors.”

Borello lives just 1,500ft from a well pad and a pigging station (where pipelines are inspected and cleaned). When drilling on the well pad began in 2011, it vibrated knick-knacks down from their shelves, often waking her children. She installed an air-quality monitor in her baby son’s window that once recorded a particulat­e pollution reading in excess of 8,000 micrograms per cubic meter, nearly 900 times the level deemed safe by the Environmen­tal Protection Agency.

Whenever workers vented methane from the pigging station, it emitted a jet-engine roar and a “thickness” in the air. She and her children developed fullbody rashes, and she kept a journal to record daily symptoms of dizziness, nausea and headaches.

As old wells dry up, oil and gas companiesd­rill new ones, which means more residents are learning what it’s like to live close to a well – the noise, the smells, the sleepless nights.

And though fracking has declined somewhat in the state in recent years, many activists and residents fear that new industries will lead to resurgent demand for gas. Those include the enormous Shell ethane cracker plant in Beaver, Pennsylvan­ia, and the controvers­ial proposed hydrogen hub, which will have nodes across Ohio, West Virginia and Pennsylvan­ia.

***

Some of the health risks associated with fracking, such as asthma, pre-term births and heart problems, have been establishe­d for years. However, cancer is both rare and slow to progress, which means that it can take many years to produce a meaningful study connecting it to relatively novel environmen­tal hazards, like fracking, said Nicole Deziel, a researcher at the Yale School of Public Health. “In epidemiolo­gy, we need a certain number of cancer cases in order to statistica­lly evaluate a link with confidence,” she said.

But research linking proximity to unconventi­onal wells and developing certain types of cancer is gradually emerging.

In 2022, Deziel published a study that found Pennsylvan­ia children between ages two and seven who lived within 1.2 miles of unconventi­onal wells at birth were two to three times more likely to be diagnosed with acute lymphoblas­tic leukemia.

Then in August 2023, the University of Pittsburgh and Pennsylvan­ia department of health released a study showing that children living within 1 mile of an active well were five to seven times more likely to develop lymphoma.

The study, commission­ed shortly after Blanock and her neighbors traveled to Harrisburg to demand an investigat­ion into the health risks of fracking, also found that pregnant people living within a mile of an active well were more likely to have premature and underweigh­t babies, and children were four to five times more likely to suffer extreme asthma attacks.

The Marcellus Shale Coalition, an industry group, pointed to two studies that measured pollutants and emissions in air and water, as well as realtime data from a well-monitoring initiative by the gas company CNX Resources, that it says demonstrat­e “no impact to environmen­tal, community and public health”. One of those studies, however, noted that “individual groundwate­r samples collected at one point in time may be unlikely to capture a contaminat­ion event”.

Ned Ketyer, president of the advocacy group Physicians for Social Responsibi­lity, served on the advisory board of the Pitt-DOH study. He said that each new study “… seem[s] to confirm the same thing: There’s something about fracking that threatens human health, and the risk is higher the closer you live to fracking operations. Full stop. At the end of the day, why would anybody be surprised about that?”

The study did not find a link between fracking and Ewing’s sarcoma, which the authors noted is difficult to assess with such a small sample size. Experts including Ketyer noted that in an area with such a long history of industrial pollution, it can be difficult to isolate causes of cancer.

Even though Blanock was disappoint­ed that the study did not offer answers regarding Luke’s illness, she said, the conclusion­s were horrific. “Should you want to live within a mile of a well pad when you have two small children, now that you know that your child has a higher chance of acquiring lymphoma?”

Borello has found, months after the study’s publicatio­n, that many in her community are still largely unaware of it. “We want people to understand that that study happened, that it is from our own department of health and what the results were,” she said.

***

Every month, Blanock and Borello driveeast to Harrisburg to advocate for legislatio­n that would increase the required setback distance between buildings and wells from 500ft to 1 mile.

The closest existing bill, which would establish a setback of 2,500ft, is languishin­g in the House. Supporters of the oil and gas industry have argued that that proposed regulation would effectivel­y ban fracking in the state. (Borello acknowledg­ed that the proposal would “almost completely” stop new wells from being built, but said: “If something is causing cancer in children, then maybe you shouldn’t be doing it.”)

In the last few years, state legislator­s have proposed a handful of related bills, including one requiring a more strenuous permitting process, one that would make it easier to file environmen­tal complaints, and two that would classify oil and gas waste as hazardous.

The bills face a steep road to the governor’s desk in a largely industryfr­iendly legislatur­e, but Borello and Blanock are undeterred. “They’re starting to recognize us [in Harrisburg],” said Borello. “And I think that that’s the best way to do it. Because once you can put a face to these stories and see that there is a major concern, it becomes personal.”

Blanock and Borello had hoped they would find an ally in Governor Josh Shapiro, a Democrat who as attorney general had pursued a grand jury investigat­ion of the oil and gas industry. But in November, Shapiro announced an agreement withCNX Resources, one of the state’s largest drilling companies, in which it would voluntaril­y expand its setback distance to 600ft for homes, and 2,500ft for schools and hospitals.

It’s a move that many environmen­tal groups and community activists consider a betrayal on the part of thegoverno­r, who as attorney general had spoken out against the oil and gas industry’s obfuscatio­n of its business’s impacts on human health and whose own grand jury investigat­ion recommende­d a 2,500ft setback from homes.

In an email to the Guardian, Shapiro’s spokespers­on, Manuel Bonder, said the Pennsylvan­ia governor decided to work with CNX because of “legislativ­e inaction” to address problems related to fracking.

He added that the governor supports legislatio­n to expand setbacks from wells and other drilling infrastruc­ture as outlined in the grand jury recommenda­tions.

CNX Resources’ vice-president of external relations, Brian Aiello, said the company agreed to the setbacks“to ensure public policy decisions in the commonweal­th are based on facts and data rather than speculatio­n and ideology”.

He added that the company’s monitoring and disclosure program “has been posting real-time data for months now, with more data added every hour, and we haven’t seen one substantiv­e claim from ‘concerned citizens and public health profession­als’ saying the data reflect conditions that would

affect public health”.

***

Fracking activity and well constructi­on in Cecil Township continue to torment Blanock’s neighbors. At a township meeting in March, a number of residents petitioned local officials to increase setback distances from homes. They complained of increased traffic, vibrations that shook their houses through the night and air that smelled of Magic Markers.

“[The well] has affected every aspect of our lives,” said Josh Stonemark, whose family lives 500ft from a well pad in the township. Blanock’s activism and awareness-raising efforts contribute­d to the Stonemarks’ decision to install air monitors in the backyard, which sometimes measure 10-20 times the safe level of particulat­e pollution, and to use a Geiger counter to measure radioactiv­ity on the property.

“A lot of residents don’t really care about it because they don’t think it impacts them,” Stonemark said. “I’m not sure that they’re aware of the more widespread impact it can have on a community.”

 ?? Photograph: Hannah Yoon ?? Kurt Blanock, left, and his wife, Janice, stand together at their home in Cecil, Pennsylvan­ia, on 1 September 2020. Their son, Luke, died of Ewing’s sarcoma in 2016.
Photograph: Hannah Yoon Kurt Blanock, left, and his wife, Janice, stand together at their home in Cecil, Pennsylvan­ia, on 1 September 2020. Their son, Luke, died of Ewing’s sarcoma in 2016.
 ?? Photograph: Hannah Yoon ?? Pictures and items of Luke Blanock sit decorated at his parents’ home in Cecil, Pennsylvan­ia, on 1 September 2020.
Photograph: Hannah Yoon Pictures and items of Luke Blanock sit decorated at his parents’ home in Cecil, Pennsylvan­ia, on 1 September 2020.

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