from left: June Beal, Michael Long, Joan John and Marigrace Butela, all of Dunbar, listen as Adam Garber speaks at a workshop Saturday hosted by the PennEnvironment Research and Policy Center to help people organize around Marcellus Shale gas issues.
Among 25 people who assembled at the Carnegie Library in Connellsville Saturday, Phyllis Carr was on the "after" side of the Marcellus Shale industry: Her family has been falling ill, she said, since two gas wells and three compressor stations began operating on a property 250 feet away from her home in Lake Lynn, Fayette County.
The others were still "before" and turned out to learn skills to protect their properties, groundwater and the streams they fish in.
Organizers from PennEnvironment and Earthworks held the training session, one of many being planned through the spring, to help people organize and present a case to legislators for stricter gas drilling regulations.
The group included fishermen, water-quality professionals and several environmental activists.
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