Life in the Northern Tier
When Tammy and Matt Manning found a rent-to-own home in Franklin Forks, Pennsylvania in 2010, they were excited for what was to come. They had never owned their own home before. Their two daughters, three grandchildren, and Tammy’s father moved in with them.
Shortly after, WPX Energy began drilling for natural gas. Not even a year into moving into their new home, grey water came out of the kitchen faucet. Their granddaughter, Madison, whose bedroom was located directly above the kitchen sink, woke up several nights a week vomiting.
The water tested positive for high, unsafe levels of arsenic, barium, methane, and other dangerous chemicals. The Mannings are convinced this was a result of hydrofracking, a controversial process used to extract natural gas from deep in the ground.
The family could no longer drink or cook with the water supplied to their house. Showering in it was a risk, although they had no other choice. High levels of methane filled the home, so much so that they had to stop using their gas stove, for risk of explosion. They showered with the window open, even in the cold winters, so that they wouldn’t pass out.
Once a week, Matt drove across state lines to New York where he would fill plastic gallon jugs with tap water from his mother’s.
They lived like this for months, until WPX Energy began delivering water to a tank outside of their home once a day, along with two other residences in the town. While they didn’t admit fault to contaminating the family’s water, they claimed they were being good neighbors.
Despite the family’s situation, the majority of the community is favor of fracking. Gas companies looking to drill promised good-paying jobs, a surplus of clientele for local businesses from gas workers, and financial gain to landowners willing to lease their land.
The town held public meetings where the Mannings did not feel welcome. They claim they have been verbally harassed in public and tailgated to work by gas workers. Fighting to end fracking nationwide and getting WPX Energy to take responsibility for the contamination of their water became a full-time job for the Mannings.
A glass of tap water is pictured in the Manning home on February 4, 2012. Shortly after the beginning of hydrofracking in the town, the family's water came out of the faucet grey, testing positive for high levels of arsenic, barium, methane, and other chemicals.
Matt Manning looks out his car window as he drives home from picking up jugs of clean drinking water from his mother's home in New York on May 12, 2012.
A sign encouraging gas companies to drill is left at the entrance of a property in Franklin Forks, PA on May 12, 2012. Many residents in the area support hydrofracking because of the promise of jobs, financial gains from the leasing of private land for drilling, and an increase of business from gas workers.