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 For  Immediate Release, May 15, 2015 100 California Officials Ask Gov.  Brown for Fracking Moratorium  Letter Highlights Fracking's Water  Contamination During Devastating Drought                ANAHEIM, Calif.—  More than 100 mayors, city council members and other local officials from  dozens of communities want Gov. Jerry Brown to halt fracking to protect  California’s water supply from contamination during a devastating drought.  In a letter being unveiled today at a press conference at the Democratic State Convention  in Anaheim, officials warn Gov. Brown that fracking and other dangerous oil  production techniques “will exacerbate many of our environmental threats,  particularly local air and water pollution and climate disruption.”   “Fracking  pollution threatens the air we breathe and the water we drink, and Latino  communities are especially at risk,” said Robert Rivas, San Benito County  supervisor and supporter of San Benito County’s new fracking ban. “Thousands of  Latino children in California go to school near fracked oil wells. We need Gov.  Brown to halt fracking to give every child in California a better chance at a  healthy life.”   Joining  Supervisor Rivas at today’s press conference are Jose Gurrola, Arvin city  council member; Eduardo Martinez, Richmond city council member; and Elliot  Gonzales, Long Beach sustainability commissioner.  The  officials’ letter, which highlights fracking pollution’s threats to  California’s water during a devastating drought, comes after state regulators  admitted allowing the oil industry to dump billions of gallons of oil waste  into protected underground water supplies across the state, from Monterey to  Kern and Los Angeles counties.   About half  of all new wells in California are fracked, according to the California Council  on Science and Technology. Fracking, or hydraulic fracturing, is the dangerous  process of blasting enormous quantities of water laced with toxic chemicals  into the ground to release oil and gas. It has been linked to air and water  pollution across the country.  Fracking in  California has generated vast volumes of wastewater that contains high levels  of cancer-causing benzene and other dangerous chemicals, according to oil  companies’ own tests. Toxic oil waste fluid is also being dumped into unlined  pits and used to irrigate crops in the Central Valley.   Citing the  need to protect communities and public health, the letter urges Gov. Brown to  put a moratorium on fracking pending further study of air and water pollution  and the damage to the climate caused by the controversial technique.  Californians  Against Fracking is a coalition of about 200 environmental business,  health, agriculture, labor, political and environmental justice organizations  working to win a statewide ban on fracking and other dangerous extraction  techniques in California. Follow @CAagainstFrack on Twitter.The Center for Biological Diversity is a national,  nonprofit conservation organization with more than 825,000 members and online  activists dedicated to the protection of endangered species and wild places. |