Fracking Your Future: Campus Drilling Extends Far Beyond Pennsylvania

picture-7018-1583982147.png
on

The oil and gas industry plans to perform hydraulic fracturing (โ€œfrackingโ€) on college campuses in Pennsylvania, just as it currently does in close proximity to K-12 schools nationwide.ย 

But as NPRย demonstrated in a recent report, that’s just the tip of theย iceberg.

โ€œMore than a dozen schools in states as varied as Texas, Montana, Ohio and West Virginia are already tapping natural resources on college campuses,โ€ the report explains. โ€œThe University of Southern Indiana recently started pumpingย oil.โ€

Like Pennsylvania – which has seen higher education budget cuts totaling over $460 million since Republican Gov. Tom Corbett took office in 2010 – nearly all of these states have faced massive cuts in their most recentย budgets.ย 

Texas, led by Republican Gov. Rick Perry, saw a $1.7 billion funding cut in its most recent budget cycle. Indiana, led by Republican Gov. Mitch Daniels, was hit with $150 million in higher education cuts in its most recentย budget.

Montana, led by Democratic Governor Brian Schweitzer, was handed $14.6 million in higher education cuts in the most recent budget. And West Virginia, led by Democratic Governorย Earl Ray Tomblin, saw $34 million evaporate from its higher education war chest in its most recent budgetย cycle.

Fracking on Campus a New Fundraising Mechanism, But โ€œYou Can’t Drinkย Moneyโ€

Fracking on cash-strapped college campuses in these states has become a new fundraising mechanism and a way to padย endowments.

โ€œโ€ฆ[W]e can put the revenue toward encouraging gifts to the endowment,โ€ Kristin Sullivan, a spokeswoman at University of Texas-Arlington toldย NPR. โ€œThis is a finite resource. You have to be very wise about how you allocate thatย revenue.โ€ย 

The costs associated with fracking on university grounds, though, go far above and beyond revenue it brings into vastly under-funded schools. The climate and ecological costsย are also a huge part of any honestย equation.ย 

Or put much more simply, โ€œyou can’t drink money.โ€

Photo Credit:ย Wikimedia Commons |ย EMBaero

picture-7018-1583982147.png
Steve Horn is the owner of the consultancy Horn Communications & Research Services, which provides public relations, content writing, and investigative research work products to a wide range of nonprofit and for-profit clients across the world. He is an investigative reporter on the climate beat for over a decade and former Research Fellow for DeSmog.

Related Posts

Analysis
on

Fact checking Conservative leader Pierre Poilievreโ€™s revisionist narrative of how the Liberals ruined everything.

Fact checking Conservative leader Pierre Poilievreโ€™s revisionist narrative of how the Liberals ruined everything.
on

A lawsuit charges National Grid, a major gas utility, with mismanaging a toxic industrial site near two densely-populated residential neighborhoods.

A lawsuit charges National Grid, a major gas utility, with mismanaging a toxic industrial site near two densely-populated residential neighborhoods.
on

New findings from an alliance of NGOs challenges the belief that climate falsehoods are confined to social media.

New findings from an alliance of NGOs challenges the belief that climate falsehoods are confined to social media.
on

Local officials are considering developer Balicoโ€™s plans to build the biggest gas-fired power plant in the U.S. in over a decade.

Local officials are considering developer Balicoโ€™s plans to build the biggest gas-fired power plant in the U.S. in over a decade.