Denton May Become First Texas City To Ban Fracking

International Business Times

Published Jul 16, 2014 03:19PM ET

Updated Jul 16, 2014 04:00PM ET

Denton May Become First Texas City To Ban Fracking

By Meagan Clark - Even Texans are hotly debating fracking.

Fed up with what it claimed were serious health-related issues among the community’s children,  the Denton Drilling Awareness Group, a grass-roots group in a town of the same name, has managed to get the state’s first referendum on whether to ban further permitting of the controversial oil-drilling practice within city limits.

“Parents there had to keep their kids indoors for weeks because the toxic fumes were so overwhelming,” according to Adam Briggle, vice president of the community group that organized a petition to push a vote on the ban.  “Children got nosebleeds, breathing problems and headaches.  … we can either have fracking or we can have a safe and healthy city.”

After listening to hours of community testimony late into the evening, the city council of the North Texas college town voted early Wednesday to allow a public vote in November to determine whether Denton will become the first city in Texas to ban fracking.

"What you’re seeing is in Denton, folks who otherwise are completely supportive of the oil and gas industry --  all the sudden when it’s happening to their neighbor are turning around," Kevin Roden, the councilman who called for the ban and who has lived in Denton for 24 years, said. "I think there’s a reasonable way to develop these minerals. I don’t think the majority of the people who signed the petition are anti-fossil fuel."

The council could have immediately adopted the ban, but instead voted 5-2 against that option. According to the Denton Record-Chronicle, of the 500 people who attended the meeting, 155 filled out comment cards favoring the ban and 46 filled out cards opposing the ban.

Brad Davis, who lives in a ranch house in northwest Denton, where most of the fracking occurs, says he can see and hear the drilling from his back porch, “kind of a soft hum” and “bright lights at night.”

“It’s not nearly as loud as the train,” he said. “If you didn’t know what it was you might not notice.”

A ban in the community, which ranges from rural pastures to multistory apartment complexes and sits atop the natural gas-rich Barnett Shale, will be closely watched. At least 423 local governments nationwide have passed measures that ban or restrict fracking, the vast majority in the northeast, but only four in Texas, according to Food and Water Watch.

However, even if Denton residents vote to ban fracking, state authorities would likely claim that the mineral rights on properties cannot be taken away from the landowners.

Other measures to restrict fracking in Texas fall short of the proposed Denton limits. A measure passed in June 2010 in Flower Mound, Texas, requires oil and gas companies fracking in the city to disclose the chemicals it mixes with water and sand pumped underground. Bartonville, a wealthy community outside Dallas and where Exxon Mobil Corporation (NYSE:XOM) CEO Rex Tillerson has lived for years, tried to deny a fracking permit but was forced by the state to issue it in 2012, the Wall Street Journal reported.

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