jinman
Rest in Peace
- Joined
- Feb 23, 2001
- Messages
- 21,059
- Location
- Texas - Wise County - Sunset
- Tractor
- NHTC45D, NH LB75B, Ford Jubilee
And if they are working in the area, have a water test done by a reputable lab to conclusively prove the pre-existing water conditions.
Aaron Z
Great advice! You MUST know what you have before you can claim change. In our area, everyone with any type of problem blames it on drilling. Many of these wells have had problems long before drilling ever started. I know one person who complained of crummy water over 15 years ago, but all of a sudden now that there is drilling, his problems are due to the wells. I think not. My biggest concern with drilling and the aquifers is that drilling operations use millions of gallons for fracking operations. I think you have to closely monitor the water tables to be sure they don't get depleted. As far as pollution to aquifers, I don't trust injection wells. These are old wells that have quit producing and now they are allowed to inject salt water and "other" chemicals back into them. I'm concerned that the linings on these wells may be suspect. I believe most of the damage to ground water in our area has been due to injection well problems rather than to the drilling and fracking operations.