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RESOURCES

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GAS DRILLING 101:

Resources for Arlington Residents

We created a comprehensive resource guide to gas drilling for Arlington residents to answer all of your questions.

The guide covers:

  • The basics of fracking / gas drilling

  • The impacts on you and your family

  • What you can do about it


 

Fact sheets, webinars, articles, pollution complaint information, & more, to help you be an empowered & informed advocate for your family and community.

Drill Site Checklist

DRILL SITE CHECKLIST

Questions to Ask Drilling Operators Who Want to Frack in Your Neighborhood

Image by Backroad Packers

ENVIRONMENTAL  IMPACTS OF FRACKING
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EXPERT PRESENTATIONS ON ENVIRONMENTAL & HEALTH EFFECTS OF FRACKING HOSTED BY LIVEABLE ARLINGTON
Presentations

Please click on the box to view a recording of the presentation.

REFERENCES/ FUENTES: COMPENDIUM ON HARMS OF OIL & GAS INFRASTRUCTURE
References/ Fuentes

A coalition of public health and civic organizations led by Concerned Health Professionals of New York have compiled thousands of scientific articles documenting the health and environmental impacts of fracking in North and South America. This resource is called the Compendium of Scientific, Medical, and Media Findings Demonstrating Risks and Harms of Fracking and Associated Gas and Oil Infrastructure and is available in Spanish and English.

Una coalición de organizaciones de sanidad publica y civicas dirigido por Concerned Health Professionals of New York ha juntado miles de artículos científicos sobre los efectos en la salud y el medio ambiente del fracking en Norteamérica y Sudamérica. Este recurso se llama el Compendio de hallazgos científicos, médicos y de medios de comunicación que demuestran los riesgos y daños del fracking y es disponible en español y ingles.

Click here for the English version

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Haga clic aquí por la versión en español

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FACT SHEETS
Fact Sheets

Fracking & Childhood Cancers

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Children living near oil and gas wells face higher risk of rare leukemia, studies show

Published: July 17, 2025 8:27am EDT

 

Authors:

Lisa McKenzie, Associate Professor of Health, Department of Environmental & Occupational Health, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus

Nicole Deziel, Associate Professor of Epidemiology and Associate Professor of Environment and of Chemical and Environmental Engineering, Yale University

Acute lymphocytic leukemia is one of the most commonly diagnosed cancers in children, although it is rare. It begins in the bone marrow and rapidly progresses.

Long-term survival rates exceed 90%, but many survivors face lifelong health challenges. Those include heart conditions, mental health struggles and a greater chance of developing a second cancer.

Overall cancer rates in the U.S. have declined since 2002, but childhood acute lymphocytic leukemia rates continue to rise. This trend underscores the need for prevention rather than focusing only on treatment for this disease.

A growing body of literature suggests exposure to the types of chemicals emitted from oil and natural gas wells increases the risk of developing childhood acute lymphocytic leukemia.

We are environmental epidemiologists focused on understanding the health implications of living near oil and natural gas development operations in Colorado and Pennsylvania. Both states experienced a rapid increase in oil and natural gas development in residential areas beginning in the early 21st century. We’ve studied this issue in these states, using different datasets and some different approaches.

2 studies, similar findings

Both of our studies used a case-control design. This design compares children with cancer, known as cases, with children without cancer, known as controls. We used data from statewide birth and cancer registries.

We also used specialized mapping techniques to estimate exposure to oil and natural gas development during sensitive time windows, such as pregnancy or early childhood.

The Colorado study looked at children born between 1992 and 2019. The study included 451 children diagnosed with leukemia and 2,706 children with no cancer diagnosis. It considered how many oil and natural gas wells were near a child’s home and how intense the activity was at each well. Intensity of activity included the volume of oil and gas production and phase of well production.

The Colorado study found that children ages 2-9 living in areas with the highest density and intensity wells within eight miles (13 kilometers) of their home were at least two times more likely to be diagnosed with acute lymphocytic leukemia. Children with wells within three miles (five kilometers), of their home bore the greatest risk.

The Pennsylvania study looked at 405 children diagnosed with leukemia between 2009 and 2017 and 2,080 children without any cancer diagnosis. This study found that children living within 1.2 miles (two kilometers) of oil and natural gas wells at birth were two to three times more likely to be diagnosed with acute lymphocytic leukemia between ages 2 to 7 than those who lived farther than 1.2 miles away.

The risk of developing leukemia was more pronounced in children who were exposed during their mother’s pregnancy. The results of our two studies are also supported by a previous study in Colorado published in 2017. That study found children diagnosed with acute lymphocytic leukemia were four times more likely to live in areas with a high density of oil and natural gas wells than children diagnosed with other cancers.

Policy implications

To extract oil and natural gas from underground reserves, heavy drilling equipment injects water and chemicals into the earth under high pressure. Petroleum and contaminated wastewater are returned to the surface. It is well established that these activities can emit cancer-causing chemicals. Those include benzene, as well as other pollutants, to the air and water.

The U.S. is the world’s largest producer of oil and natural gas. There are almost 1 million producing wells across the country, and many of these are located in or near residential areas. This puts millions of children at increased risk of exposure to cancer-causing chemicals.

In the U.S., oil and natural gas development is generally regulated at the state level. Policies aimed at protecting public health include establishing minimum distances between a new well and existing homes, known as a setback distance. These policies also include requirements for emission control technologies on new and existing wells and restrictions on the construction of new wells.

Setbacks offer a powerful solution to reduce noise, odors and other hazards experienced by communities near oil and gas wells. However, it is challenging to establish a universal setback that optimally addresses all hazards. That’s because noise, air pollutants and water contaminants dissipate at different rates depending on location and other factors.

In addition, setbacks focus exclusively on where to place oil and natural gas wells but do not impose any restrictions on releases of air pollutants or greenhouse gases. Therefore, they do not address regional air quality issues or mitigate climate change.

Furthermore, current U.S. setback distances range from just 200 feet to 3,200 feet. Our results indicate that even the largest setback of 3,200 feet (one kilometer) is not sufficient to protect children from an increased leukemia risk.

Our results support a more comprehensive policy approach that considers both larger setback distances and mandatory monitoring and control of hazardous emissions on both new and existing wells.

Future research

More research is needed in other states, such as Texas and California, that have oil and natural gas development in residential areas, as well as on other pediatric cancers.

One such cancer is acute myeloid leukemia. This is another type of leukemia that starts in bone marrow and rapidly progresses. This cancer has exhibited a strong link to benzene exposure in adult workers in several industries, including the petroleum industry. Researchers have also documented a moderate cancer link for children exposed to vehicular benzene.

It remains unclear whether benzene is the culprit or if another agent or combination of hazards is an underlying cause of acute myeloid leukemia.

Even though questions remain, we believe the existing evidence coupled with the seriousness of childhood acute lymphocytic leukemia supports enacting further protective measures. We also believe policymakers should consider the cumulative effects from wells, other pollution sources and socioeconomic stressors on children and communities.

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THE HUMAN TOLL OF FRACKING

The human toll of oil and gas is staggering

From Halt The Harm Network

This is not a complete documentation of harms (not even close). One such resource on the human toll is the Fracking Compendium.

Low birth weight babies. Pennsylvanian children born within 1 kilometer (0.62 miles) of a fracking site were 25 percent more likely to experience low birth weight. That risk decreases the farther away a child is born. Low birth weight, defined as being born under 5.5 pounds, has previously been linked with an increased risk of childhood mortality and poorer educational outcomes. See Science Advances, Hydraulic fracturing and infant health: New evidence from Pennsylvania

Increased childhood cancer rates. Participants 0-24 years old, living in rural Colorado, and diagnosed with cancer between 2001-2013. For each child in the study, exposure was calculated by distance to oil and gas well counts. Overall, ALL cases 0-24 years old were more likely to live in the highest well count compared to controls. See Pubmed, Childhood hematologic cancer and residential proximity to oil and gas development

Asthma and breathing problems. Analysis of over 400,000 patients from the Geisinger health system found strong associations between fracking proximity and increased rates of asthma. See Jama, Association Between Unconventional Natural Gas Development in the Marcellus Shale and Asthma Exacerbations.

Deteriorating mental health. Studies examining the psychological impacts of fracking operations have revealed significant mental health consequences for affected communities. See this report from Environmental Health Project; Mental Health in Communities with Unconventional Oil and Gas Development (UOGD): A Summary for Health Care Providers, and reporting from Environmental Health News, Fractured: The stress of being surrounded.

Decreased life expectancy across populations. The most comprehensive mortality study to date examined over 15 million Medicare beneficiaries aged 65 and older living in major U.S. fracking regions from 2001 to 2015. Found that elderly people living near or downwind of unconventional oil and gas development had a 2.5 percent higher risk of premature death compared to those not living near such operations. See Harvard School of Public Health, Living near or downwind of unconventional oil and gas development linked with increased risk of early death

Economic stagnation in affected communities. The Ohio River Valley Institute's analysis of the 22 counties in Pennsylvania, Ohio, and West Virginia that produce more than 90 percent of Appalachian natural gas found that these counties lost jobs and residents at worse rates than other counties with similar data but no gas production. See Ohio River Valley Institute’s report, Fracking Counties Economic Impact Report.

Worker deaths and injuries. Justin Nobel's research, detailed in his book "Petroleum-238," documents how workers routinely handle radioactive sludge from brine production without adequate protection or knowledge of the hazards. See Allegheny Front, A new book takes on the dangers of radioactivity in the oil and gas industry

Beyond these documented impacts, we've witnessed;

Rampant use of undisclosed chemicals. Example 2025 Colorado release reports by Physicians for Social Responsibility and others details how oil and gas companies in the state pumped millions of pounds of secret chemicals into the ground without making legally mandated disclosures. See PSR Report, Oil & Gas Chemicals, Still Secret in Colorado, and CPR News, Chemicals used in fracking in Colorado underreported under new state law.

Widespread water and air pollution. Peer-reviewed research has identified many pathways through which hydraulic fracturing operations contaminate groundwater resources.

These contamination routes include pre-drilling, surface spills, accidents, well integrity failures, chemical migration between geological formations, methane migration, air leaks and permitted off-gassing, ineffective flaring, and produced water movement from disposal operations. See Desmog, Fracking Company Pleads No Contest in Iconic Water Contamination Case in Dimock, and University of Chicago, Surface Water Vulnerable to Widespread Pollution From Fracking, a New Study Finds

Systematic regulatory capture. This happens in every state. To give one example, it's evidenced by nearly 40 high-level officials switching between government and the natural gas industry in Pennsylvania. See Allegheny Front, The Blurred Lines Between the Gas Industry and Government and ProPublica's investigation of oil industry lobbying revealed systematic weakening of well plugging regulations across multiple states, and AJPH, The Environmental Protection Agency in the Early Trump Administration: Prelude to Regulatory Capture

Coordinated misinformation campaigns, front groups, and astroturfing. The industry employs sophisticated communication tactics to manipulate public opinion and create an illusion of grassroots support. These astroturfing efforts involve creating fake community groups, paying for favorable "independent" research, and deploying professional spokespeople posing as concerned citizens. These multi-million dollar campaigns specifically target vulnerable communities and intentionally sow confusion about scientific evidence. See Desmog, Gas Industry Lobbying Muscle.

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