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Conflict of Interest? Powerful Manhattan Pol Puts Frivolous Lawsuits, Personal Financial Gain Before NY’s Struggling Economy

Monday, January 17th, 2011 | 0 Comments | Tagged in: , , , , , , ,

In a scathing New York Post analysis today, Brendan Scott – the paper’s Albany correspondent – uncovers a remarkable and equally questionable connection between one of the state’s most powerful legislative leaders, and his personal financial interest in undercutting responsible natural gas development in the region. Under the headline “Shelly’s $hale game: His law firm pushes gas-drill ‘frack’ suits”, Mr. Scott reports this:

Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver leads the fight to block a type of natural-gas drilling in New York, his private law firm is in other states trying to drum up multimillion-dollar lawsuits against the practice, The Post has found.

The speaker’s massive Manhattan-based personal-injury law firm, Weitz & Luxenberg, plans a pair of public forums this week in Pennsylvania and West Virginia to “listen to the concerns of the community, share information and discuss legal options” about the gas-exploration phenomenon known as “hydrofracking” or “fracking.”

Silver (D-Manhattan) … has emerged as a leading foe to expanded natural-gas drilling, which proponents argue could improve New York’s energy independence and revive upstate’s long-stagnant economy.

Drilling advocates, government watchdog groups and even some Democrats say Weitz & Luxenberg’s anti-drilling push, which follows a similar forum last month in Pennsylvania, raises questions about the powerful speaker’s independence on the high-stakes issue.

“You have the speaker highlighting the alleged danger of hydrofracturing at the same time the law firm that’s paying him is out looking for clients interested in suing over the issue,” said a prominent Democrat who has frequent contact with Silver. “It’s further proof that we need a genuine ethics law in New York,” the Democrat said.

At the same time, Marcellus Shale Coalition (MSC) president took to the pages of several New York papers today to underscoring the enormous opportunity presented by the environmentally proven development of clean-burning shale gas for the Empire State. In her column, “Delaying drilling will hurt NY,” MSC chief Katyrn Klaber writes this in the Ithaca Journal, the Press & Sun Bulletin, and the Elmira Star-Gazette:

In Pennsylvania, Marcellus exploration created more than 88,000 new jobs over the past two years, with researchers from Penn State predicting that number will climb past 110,000 new jobs over the next 12 months. Some of these jobs go to the folks who drill the wells, naturally — but the vast majority are along the supply chain. Certainly there will be thousands of jobs created if New York decides to develop the Marcellus. Less certain is how many of those jobs will follow if Albany continues to delay.

We’re talking about the people who forge steel, manufacture pipe, produce sand, do environmental work, research deeds and operate hotels. Faced with the prospect of indefinite delay in New York, these folks have decided to move ahead in Pennsylvania instead — building facilities and opening offices less than a half-hour’s drive from New York’s border. Those jobs will remain in Pennsylvania, and the longer the delay, the better the chances they’ll be held by Pennsylvanians.

The short-term economic case for harvesting clean energy resources from the Marcellus is no less compelling — especially with 900,000 New Yorkers out of work, and the state dealing with a $9 billion gap in its budget. New taxes, pay freezes for state workers, consolidation of public schools — these are some of the tools that Gov. Andrew Cuomo has indicated he’ll use to get the state back on a path toward fiscal sustainability. Why not one more? Has there ever been a more important time to take advantage of these opportunities? Has there ever been a more obvious one?

And as New York continues to slow-walk the responsible development of the Marcellus Shale’s clean-burning, job-creating natural gas reserves, here’s what they’re saying about the overwhelmingly positive economic and energy security benefits associated with American oil and natural gas production across the nation, enabled by hydrofracturing:

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