The fourth report in a series published by The Center for Rural Pennsylvania, a bipartisan, bicameral legislative agency that serves as a resource for rural policy within the Pennsylvania General Assembly. This report is the result of interviews with young people in areas that see heavy drilling. Their feedback can be summed as--they aren't much impressed by the shale drilling industry nor in working for it.
Variation in the role and coping mechanism of 4 ps beneficiaries in northern ...Alexander Decker
This document summarizes a study that analyzed the roles and coping mechanisms of poor families in Northern Samar, Philippines. It found that parents generally provide all family income and prepare daily food. Fathers have authority in family decisions and spending. Common coping mechanisms included sharing resources, fathers taking on extra work, and support from married children. The study used surveys and interviews of heads of poor families receiving a government assistance program to understand their functions and challenges in meeting basic needs with limited incomes.
This document is a proposal from Missouri State University for a GEAR UP grant to serve low-income middle and high school students in the Springfield, Missouri area. The proposal outlines that families in the target neighborhoods have significantly lower incomes and educational attainment levels compared to the city, state, and national averages. Students in the target schools also have lower test scores and receive little encouragement to pursue education beyond high school from their families. Many students feel pressure to work during high school to help support their families financially, making it difficult for them to complete their education and break the cycle of poverty in their communities. The proposal aims to coordinate resources to help address these academic and socioeconomic issues facing students in the target schools.
This document outlines a public relations campaign called "Changing the Faces of Homelessness" created by Minnesota State University Moorhead's Bateman Team called Family Ties. The campaign partners with Fargo Housing & Redevelopment Authority to raise awareness of homelessness and affordable housing issues. Through research, the campaign aims to change stereotypes about homelessness and inform the public about local housing services. The target audiences are millennials, young parents, and baby boomers. A communications plan details tactics to engage these groups on social media and declare February as "Home Matters Month" through a mayoral proclamation.
2016 Citizen's Committee for Children of New York - Community Risk RankingJonathan Dunnemann
This document summarizes a report from the Citizens' Committee for Children of New York that ranks New York City's 59 community districts based on their level of risk to child well-being. It analyzes data across six domains - economic security, housing, health, education, youth, and family/community - to determine where risks are most concentrated. The highest risk districts tend to be in upper Manhattan, the South Bronx, and central Brooklyn. It provides the overall risk ranking and profiles two example districts - Hunts Point in the Bronx, which ranks as highest risk, and Murray Hill/Stuyvesant in Manhattan, which ranks as the lowest risk.
This document provides an impact-predictability matrix and scenario matrix for analyzing scenarios for Honduras achieving UNDP millennium development goals by 2020. It includes analysis of key factors such as the influence of US policy on Honduran trade, the role of the judiciary in dealing with corruption and gang culture, and the impact of policies on issues like poverty, education, health, and the environment. Strategic options and implications for achieving the goals under different scenarios are also discussed.
An update to a study originally published in 2008. This new study (2012), titled "Selected Economic & Demographic Indicators in Particular Counties in the Barnett, Fayetteville and Marcellus Shale Play" is published by a consortia of colleges in northeastern Pennsylvania called the Institute for Public Policy and Economic Development. The data show the dramatic impact shale gas drilling has had in NE PA on employment and median income. It also shows counties where drilling does not happen have far less of an impact (no surprise there).
Williams, monica why hbcu presidents need entrepreneurial focusWilliam Kritsonis
This document discusses the importance of presidential involvement in fundraising at Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs). It notes that HBCU presidents need to develop an entrepreneurial spirit to encourage private fundraising, as public support is decreasing. The president's direct involvement in donor cultivation and stewardship is crucial to creating sustained giving. However, many HBCU presidents fail to engage donors. For HBCUs to survive, presidents must embrace fundraising and cultivate meaningful relationships with satisfied donors.
Variation in the role and coping mechanism of 4 ps beneficiaries in northern ...Alexander Decker
This document summarizes a study that analyzed the roles and coping mechanisms of poor families in Northern Samar, Philippines. It found that parents generally provide all family income and prepare daily food. Fathers have authority in family decisions and spending. Common coping mechanisms included sharing resources, fathers taking on extra work, and support from married children. The study used surveys and interviews of heads of poor families receiving a government assistance program to understand their functions and challenges in meeting basic needs with limited incomes.
This document is a proposal from Missouri State University for a GEAR UP grant to serve low-income middle and high school students in the Springfield, Missouri area. The proposal outlines that families in the target neighborhoods have significantly lower incomes and educational attainment levels compared to the city, state, and national averages. Students in the target schools also have lower test scores and receive little encouragement to pursue education beyond high school from their families. Many students feel pressure to work during high school to help support their families financially, making it difficult for them to complete their education and break the cycle of poverty in their communities. The proposal aims to coordinate resources to help address these academic and socioeconomic issues facing students in the target schools.
This document outlines a public relations campaign called "Changing the Faces of Homelessness" created by Minnesota State University Moorhead's Bateman Team called Family Ties. The campaign partners with Fargo Housing & Redevelopment Authority to raise awareness of homelessness and affordable housing issues. Through research, the campaign aims to change stereotypes about homelessness and inform the public about local housing services. The target audiences are millennials, young parents, and baby boomers. A communications plan details tactics to engage these groups on social media and declare February as "Home Matters Month" through a mayoral proclamation.
2016 Citizen's Committee for Children of New York - Community Risk RankingJonathan Dunnemann
This document summarizes a report from the Citizens' Committee for Children of New York that ranks New York City's 59 community districts based on their level of risk to child well-being. It analyzes data across six domains - economic security, housing, health, education, youth, and family/community - to determine where risks are most concentrated. The highest risk districts tend to be in upper Manhattan, the South Bronx, and central Brooklyn. It provides the overall risk ranking and profiles two example districts - Hunts Point in the Bronx, which ranks as highest risk, and Murray Hill/Stuyvesant in Manhattan, which ranks as the lowest risk.
This document provides an impact-predictability matrix and scenario matrix for analyzing scenarios for Honduras achieving UNDP millennium development goals by 2020. It includes analysis of key factors such as the influence of US policy on Honduran trade, the role of the judiciary in dealing with corruption and gang culture, and the impact of policies on issues like poverty, education, health, and the environment. Strategic options and implications for achieving the goals under different scenarios are also discussed.
An update to a study originally published in 2008. This new study (2012), titled "Selected Economic & Demographic Indicators in Particular Counties in the Barnett, Fayetteville and Marcellus Shale Play" is published by a consortia of colleges in northeastern Pennsylvania called the Institute for Public Policy and Economic Development. The data show the dramatic impact shale gas drilling has had in NE PA on employment and median income. It also shows counties where drilling does not happen have far less of an impact (no surprise there).
Williams, monica why hbcu presidents need entrepreneurial focusWilliam Kritsonis
This document discusses the importance of presidential involvement in fundraising at Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs). It notes that HBCU presidents need to develop an entrepreneurial spirit to encourage private fundraising, as public support is decreasing. The president's direct involvement in donor cultivation and stewardship is crucial to creating sustained giving. However, many HBCU presidents fail to engage donors. For HBCUs to survive, presidents must embrace fundraising and cultivate meaningful relationships with satisfied donors.
This document provides an executive summary of the 2012 State of Our Black Youth Report published by Indiana Black Expo, Inc. The report analyzes data on the health and well-being of Black youth in Indiana and 16 communities. Some key findings include that while some indicators like teen births and median income are trending better for Black youth, disparities still exist compared to other populations. Other indicators like families headed by single mothers, children in poverty, and infant mortality are trending worse. The report identifies recommended strategies and promising practices to address challenges.
RPA Spatial Planning and Inequality Fourth Regional Plan RoundtableJonathan Dunnemann
The document summarizes a briefing paper for a roundtable discussion on spatial planning and inequality in the New York metropolitan region. Some key points:
1) Income inequality in the region is at its highest in decades, with incomes declining for the bottom three-quarters of households since 1990 while rising for the top quarter. Poverty has also increased, especially in the suburbs.
2) The region has high levels of both economic and racial segregation. The percentage of lower-income residents living in majority lower-income neighborhoods has increased.
3) Past federal, state and local policies have often deepened inequality unintentionally, through practices like redlining and exclusionary zoning. Spatial planning choices around infrastructure,
As a result of the frustration of not being let join the top table of the Bretton Woods institutions, the BRICS grouping and its members have gone about setting up their own new IFIs in recent years, as an implicit challenge to the hegemony and financial control of traditional Western powers. While they have often used the language of South-‐South solidarity, and of transforming global dynamics to more genuinely address and include the needs and wants of the majority of the world living in the Global South, but many still see the BRICS financial projects as reflecting not a desire for radical economic transformation, but a wish to establish themselves as new hegemonic global powers, and assert the same control of international economic dynamics that Western powers previously had.
The Centre for Financial Accountability aims to strengthen and improve financial accountability within India by engaging in critical analysis, monitoring and critique of the role of financial institutions – national and international, and their impact on development, human rights and the environment, amongst other areas.
For more information visit http://www.cenfa.org Get in touch with us at info@cenfa.org
We also publish Finance Matters, a weekly newsletter on the development finance.
The archive can be accessed at http://www.cenfa.org/newsletter-archive/ To subscribe, email us at newsletter@cenfa.org
This document introduces the UW System Student Reps newsletter. It provides an overview of UW System Student Reps, which is the statewide student government representing students across the UW system. The newsletter will cover what student leaders are doing on the statewide level. It then profiles the current executive board members and their roles in advocating for students, educating others on student needs, and representing UW System students.
This document summarizes a journal article about the relationship between public university research and state economic development. It describes potential virtuous and vicious cycles in this relationship. The virtuous cycle involves increased federal research funding leading to more university discoveries, job growth, and increased state tax revenues that fund universities. However, a vicious cycle can also occur if states do not adequately fund universities. This can weaken universities' research competitiveness and the state's long-term economy. It can also exacerbate disparities between states with strong vs. weak university systems.
A policy brief authored by two graduate students from Ohio State University in the Department of Agricultural, Environmental and Development Economics. The brief outlines recommended steps Ohio should take (soon) to counter a shale energy boom/bust cycle in the state.
“What's in a Name? Serious Games vs Gamification”
Though serious games and gamification seem to have strong similarities in purpose, desire, and methodology, there are differences in these approaches that can lead to wildly divergent results. Discover what happens when a project is viewed through the “lenses” of serious game developers or gamification experts
Gamification involves applying game mechanics like constraints, rewards, and levels to motivate behavior. It can be used to innovate by imposing constraints that spur creativity to overcome limitations. Some examples of real-life games include airline mileage programs and Groupon, which gamify everyday activities. To gamify innovation, companies should view constraints as opportunities and focus on balancing constraints and rewards to encourage continual evolution.
In this session, Ms. Goodstein will present a case study of the Ad Council’s tooth brushing app/game Toothsavers, which launched this past January (http://2min2x.org/toothsavers/). The game is part of the Ad Council’s Children’s Oral Health campaign which targets parents of young children with the goal of getting kids to brush twice a day for two minutes. The case study will cover:
- Considerations for non-profits or social good campaigns when considering app development including cost to build, marketing and evaluation
- Best practices in designing an app for young children (and their parents)
- Lessons learned from our experience – what’s working and what’s not
This document summarizes key issues around the regulation of digital media. It discusses how digital technologies have disrupted traditional media business models and the increased demand for legal certainty in this area. It provides an overview of relevant South African legislation and regulations, including the Constitution, Copyright Act, Electronic Communications Acts, and others. It also discusses issues like defamation, intellectual property, privacy, and user-generated content that digital media companies need to consider.
This document discusses gamification in enterprise software. It begins by comparing key attributes of games versus work, then defines gamification as using game mechanics to engage users in solving problems. Examples of gamified systems like Nike+ and LinkedIn are provided. The document advocates gamifying enterprise software to engage digital native employees. It presents a player-centered design framework involving knowing players, identifying missions, understanding motivation, applying mechanics, and managing/measuring outcomes. Game mechanics like points, leaderboards, and badges are explained. The benefits of gamification in enterprises are increasing engagement and motivation.
The document provides an overview of resources for understanding and implementing the Common Core State Standards, including a focus on deeper student understanding, learning progressions versus the standards, early literacy and math progressions, vetting online tools, and reflecting on using learning progressions in the classroom. Key topics covered are common core shifts towards deeper understanding, differences between learning progressions and standards, examining early literacy and math progressions for guidance, and a process for evaluating online resources using a checklist.
This document discusses how gamification can be used in enterprises to increase employee engagement and innovation. It defines gamification as embedding game mechanics into work to motivate employees, customers, and partners. The document outlines why gamification is important given trends in gaming and engagement. It provides examples of successful business uses of gamification and discusses different game mechanics and psychological factors that can intrinsically motivate users. The document cautions that gamification requires more than just points and rewards, and that the goals and experience must be compelling for long-term impact.
This document discusses China's Golden Tax system for VAT invoicing (fapiao) and options for integrating fapiao data with ERP systems. It explains that the Golden Tax system requires businesses to issue fapiao using government-certified software and paper to track tax payments. Fapiao must include certain details and are issued in triplicate for record keeping. For companies with large fapiao volumes, integrating the Golden Tax system with their ERP can automate data entry and provide benefits like reduced errors and time savings.
Marta Rauch presented on strategies for tapping into enterprise communities through gamification. She began with best practices for developing enterprise communities, such as understanding user needs, providing valuable content, and rewarding contributors. Rauch then discussed how gamification can motivate users in social media and the benefits it provides to enterprises, such as increased engagement and productivity. Examples of successful gamified enterprise communities included leaderboards, badges, points systems, and status displays. Rauch concluded with tips for technical communicators on skills like understanding player motivation and providing feedback to guide players in gamified systems.
Ws innovation in action 2013 cgi and scania gamification presentation slideshareMartin Högenberg
This is the slide set we used for the Workshop in Innovation in Action yearly symphosium. We aimed for engaging people and to make them feel how it is to gamify a process. We did explore challenging innovative ideas around the future of bikes, bike 3.0!
This deck is based on a paper we wrote for the SAMRA 2011 conference. It's a short introduction to some of the ideas underlying the concept of "gamification".
It also details the results from a simple experiment we conducted to measure the effectiveness of gamifying an online community. We were restricted by a tight deadline and the existing capabilities of the online platform we partnered with, but the results are still pretty clear (although small base sizes makes it difficult to draw solid conclusions). To follow up these tantalising results, we are writing another paper for ESOMAR Congress that collects more numbers describing the effectivness of gamification.
I had a lot of fun illustrating the deck. Hope you enjoy reading it.
Gamification 101: Design the Player JourneyAmy Jo Kim
The document discusses designing player journeys in gamification. It defines key concepts like player, journey, dynamics, mechanics and aesthetics. Dynamics refer to time-based patterns and systems, mechanics make progress visible, and aesthetics evoke emotion. The document also discusses designing for different player types and stages, including novices, experts and masters. It provides examples of social actions players can take and notes different player motivations like competition, cooperation and self-expression.
We presented this deck at the ESOMAR Congress 2011 conference in Amsterdam where it was nominated for "Best Methodological Paper".
The meat of this deck is a collection of case studies showing the efficacy of gamification in various BUSINESS contexts. It took us ages to contact and collate these various examples, so hopefully having them all in one place will save you time.
A big thank you very much to the various folks who helped us put this piece of research together!
If you have any questions, comments, requests, or are interested in the original paper that this deck is based on, please feel free to drop us a line :)
Google Tech Talk given on January 24, 2011 in Mountain View, CA on gamification and how to get three »missing ingredients« right: meaning, mastery, and autonomy.
This document provides an executive summary of the 2012 State of Our Black Youth Report published by Indiana Black Expo, Inc. The report analyzes data on the health and well-being of Black youth in Indiana and 16 communities. Some key findings include that while some indicators like teen births and median income are trending better for Black youth, disparities still exist compared to other populations. Other indicators like families headed by single mothers, children in poverty, and infant mortality are trending worse. The report identifies recommended strategies and promising practices to address challenges.
RPA Spatial Planning and Inequality Fourth Regional Plan RoundtableJonathan Dunnemann
The document summarizes a briefing paper for a roundtable discussion on spatial planning and inequality in the New York metropolitan region. Some key points:
1) Income inequality in the region is at its highest in decades, with incomes declining for the bottom three-quarters of households since 1990 while rising for the top quarter. Poverty has also increased, especially in the suburbs.
2) The region has high levels of both economic and racial segregation. The percentage of lower-income residents living in majority lower-income neighborhoods has increased.
3) Past federal, state and local policies have often deepened inequality unintentionally, through practices like redlining and exclusionary zoning. Spatial planning choices around infrastructure,
As a result of the frustration of not being let join the top table of the Bretton Woods institutions, the BRICS grouping and its members have gone about setting up their own new IFIs in recent years, as an implicit challenge to the hegemony and financial control of traditional Western powers. While they have often used the language of South-‐South solidarity, and of transforming global dynamics to more genuinely address and include the needs and wants of the majority of the world living in the Global South, but many still see the BRICS financial projects as reflecting not a desire for radical economic transformation, but a wish to establish themselves as new hegemonic global powers, and assert the same control of international economic dynamics that Western powers previously had.
The Centre for Financial Accountability aims to strengthen and improve financial accountability within India by engaging in critical analysis, monitoring and critique of the role of financial institutions – national and international, and their impact on development, human rights and the environment, amongst other areas.
For more information visit http://www.cenfa.org Get in touch with us at info@cenfa.org
We also publish Finance Matters, a weekly newsletter on the development finance.
The archive can be accessed at http://www.cenfa.org/newsletter-archive/ To subscribe, email us at newsletter@cenfa.org
This document introduces the UW System Student Reps newsletter. It provides an overview of UW System Student Reps, which is the statewide student government representing students across the UW system. The newsletter will cover what student leaders are doing on the statewide level. It then profiles the current executive board members and their roles in advocating for students, educating others on student needs, and representing UW System students.
This document summarizes a journal article about the relationship between public university research and state economic development. It describes potential virtuous and vicious cycles in this relationship. The virtuous cycle involves increased federal research funding leading to more university discoveries, job growth, and increased state tax revenues that fund universities. However, a vicious cycle can also occur if states do not adequately fund universities. This can weaken universities' research competitiveness and the state's long-term economy. It can also exacerbate disparities between states with strong vs. weak university systems.
A policy brief authored by two graduate students from Ohio State University in the Department of Agricultural, Environmental and Development Economics. The brief outlines recommended steps Ohio should take (soon) to counter a shale energy boom/bust cycle in the state.
“What's in a Name? Serious Games vs Gamification”
Though serious games and gamification seem to have strong similarities in purpose, desire, and methodology, there are differences in these approaches that can lead to wildly divergent results. Discover what happens when a project is viewed through the “lenses” of serious game developers or gamification experts
Gamification involves applying game mechanics like constraints, rewards, and levels to motivate behavior. It can be used to innovate by imposing constraints that spur creativity to overcome limitations. Some examples of real-life games include airline mileage programs and Groupon, which gamify everyday activities. To gamify innovation, companies should view constraints as opportunities and focus on balancing constraints and rewards to encourage continual evolution.
In this session, Ms. Goodstein will present a case study of the Ad Council’s tooth brushing app/game Toothsavers, which launched this past January (http://2min2x.org/toothsavers/). The game is part of the Ad Council’s Children’s Oral Health campaign which targets parents of young children with the goal of getting kids to brush twice a day for two minutes. The case study will cover:
- Considerations for non-profits or social good campaigns when considering app development including cost to build, marketing and evaluation
- Best practices in designing an app for young children (and their parents)
- Lessons learned from our experience – what’s working and what’s not
This document summarizes key issues around the regulation of digital media. It discusses how digital technologies have disrupted traditional media business models and the increased demand for legal certainty in this area. It provides an overview of relevant South African legislation and regulations, including the Constitution, Copyright Act, Electronic Communications Acts, and others. It also discusses issues like defamation, intellectual property, privacy, and user-generated content that digital media companies need to consider.
This document discusses gamification in enterprise software. It begins by comparing key attributes of games versus work, then defines gamification as using game mechanics to engage users in solving problems. Examples of gamified systems like Nike+ and LinkedIn are provided. The document advocates gamifying enterprise software to engage digital native employees. It presents a player-centered design framework involving knowing players, identifying missions, understanding motivation, applying mechanics, and managing/measuring outcomes. Game mechanics like points, leaderboards, and badges are explained. The benefits of gamification in enterprises are increasing engagement and motivation.
The document provides an overview of resources for understanding and implementing the Common Core State Standards, including a focus on deeper student understanding, learning progressions versus the standards, early literacy and math progressions, vetting online tools, and reflecting on using learning progressions in the classroom. Key topics covered are common core shifts towards deeper understanding, differences between learning progressions and standards, examining early literacy and math progressions for guidance, and a process for evaluating online resources using a checklist.
This document discusses how gamification can be used in enterprises to increase employee engagement and innovation. It defines gamification as embedding game mechanics into work to motivate employees, customers, and partners. The document outlines why gamification is important given trends in gaming and engagement. It provides examples of successful business uses of gamification and discusses different game mechanics and psychological factors that can intrinsically motivate users. The document cautions that gamification requires more than just points and rewards, and that the goals and experience must be compelling for long-term impact.
This document discusses China's Golden Tax system for VAT invoicing (fapiao) and options for integrating fapiao data with ERP systems. It explains that the Golden Tax system requires businesses to issue fapiao using government-certified software and paper to track tax payments. Fapiao must include certain details and are issued in triplicate for record keeping. For companies with large fapiao volumes, integrating the Golden Tax system with their ERP can automate data entry and provide benefits like reduced errors and time savings.
Marta Rauch presented on strategies for tapping into enterprise communities through gamification. She began with best practices for developing enterprise communities, such as understanding user needs, providing valuable content, and rewarding contributors. Rauch then discussed how gamification can motivate users in social media and the benefits it provides to enterprises, such as increased engagement and productivity. Examples of successful gamified enterprise communities included leaderboards, badges, points systems, and status displays. Rauch concluded with tips for technical communicators on skills like understanding player motivation and providing feedback to guide players in gamified systems.
Ws innovation in action 2013 cgi and scania gamification presentation slideshareMartin Högenberg
This is the slide set we used for the Workshop in Innovation in Action yearly symphosium. We aimed for engaging people and to make them feel how it is to gamify a process. We did explore challenging innovative ideas around the future of bikes, bike 3.0!
This deck is based on a paper we wrote for the SAMRA 2011 conference. It's a short introduction to some of the ideas underlying the concept of "gamification".
It also details the results from a simple experiment we conducted to measure the effectiveness of gamifying an online community. We were restricted by a tight deadline and the existing capabilities of the online platform we partnered with, but the results are still pretty clear (although small base sizes makes it difficult to draw solid conclusions). To follow up these tantalising results, we are writing another paper for ESOMAR Congress that collects more numbers describing the effectivness of gamification.
I had a lot of fun illustrating the deck. Hope you enjoy reading it.
Gamification 101: Design the Player JourneyAmy Jo Kim
The document discusses designing player journeys in gamification. It defines key concepts like player, journey, dynamics, mechanics and aesthetics. Dynamics refer to time-based patterns and systems, mechanics make progress visible, and aesthetics evoke emotion. The document also discusses designing for different player types and stages, including novices, experts and masters. It provides examples of social actions players can take and notes different player motivations like competition, cooperation and self-expression.
We presented this deck at the ESOMAR Congress 2011 conference in Amsterdam where it was nominated for "Best Methodological Paper".
The meat of this deck is a collection of case studies showing the efficacy of gamification in various BUSINESS contexts. It took us ages to contact and collate these various examples, so hopefully having them all in one place will save you time.
A big thank you very much to the various folks who helped us put this piece of research together!
If you have any questions, comments, requests, or are interested in the original paper that this deck is based on, please feel free to drop us a line :)
Google Tech Talk given on January 24, 2011 in Mountain View, CA on gamification and how to get three »missing ingredients« right: meaning, mastery, and autonomy.
Enterprise gamification is a hot new idea that has great potential for benefit (and misuse). Common misconceptions create the risk of getting it wrong. We (Rypple) share some of our lessons learned on making it work.
Video: http://goo.gl/oKMFm // Are points and badges mere indulgences for the faithful looking for redemption in loyalty programs? In nine (and a half) theses, this talk will walk you through the history, definition, and issues of “gamification,” and point out what is worth salvaging for designers and researchers.
This document provides an overview of gamification concepts and techniques for making activities more engaging. It discusses using game techniques like rewards, status, and turning tasks into games to motivate behavior. Core concepts covered include intrinsic and extrinsic motivation, player types, progression systems, social engagement loops, and designing gamified experiences for novices, experts and masters. The document also provides examples from existing gamified systems like Foursquare and outlines exercises for designing player journeys, progression mechanics, and social engagement loops.
Report: Marcellus Shale Gas Development and Impacts on Pennsylvania Schools a...Marcellus Drilling News
The Center for Rural Pennsylvania, a bipartisan, bicameral legislative agency that serves as a resource for rural policy within the Pennsylvania General Assembly, has just published the third report in a series of studies commissioned on the Marcellus Shale and its impact on the state. Titled "Marcellus Shale Gas Development and Impacts on Pennsylvania Schools and Education", the report looks at whether or not the rapid development of shale drilling in the state has stressed local schools in areas with the most Marcellus Shale drilling. It was feared that with an influx of workers, and potentially families, local schools would see a spike in enrollment. The report says that hasn't happened. There was also a concern about dropout rates--perhaps kids leaving school early to work in the gas fields. That hasn't happened either. In fact, if anything, the Marcellus has contributed more money to the coffers of local schools. No negative impacts, lots of positive impacts from northeast shale drilling.
Research: The Impact of Marcellus Shale Development on Health and Health Care...Marcellus Drilling News
The second in a string of reports issued by the Center for Rural Pennsylvania. The report looks at whether incidences of certain health status indicators and demand for healthcare services changed in four heavily drilled PA counties during the years that Marcellus drilling activity increased. Although the report says initial results are "preliminary" and "not conclusive," so far it seems that heavily drilled locations have not seen an increase in people injured or harmed because of shale drilling.
This document provides recommendations for increasing graduation rates on Maryland's Lower Eastern Shore. It begins with an executive summary of the recommendations, which are to: improve funding for education and community programs; increase access to supportive services; establish safe, reliable, and funded transportation systems; keep education connected to the real world; and create opportunities to engage parents and families. The full report then provides more context and details on each recommendation. It discusses the need to take a regional approach and outlines the process used to gather input from local stakeholders to develop the recommendations.
Big Ideas for Small Business: Greater University Circle Small Business Study-...CleEconomicDevelopment
This document provides a summary of preliminary findings from a retail survey of 40 small businesses in neighborhoods near University Circle in Cleveland, Ohio. The key findings are:
1) The surveyed businesses fall primarily into four categories: barbershops/hair salons, convenience stores, art galleries/furniture stores, and food services. Most businesses are small, with an average of 3 employees.
2) The physical conditions of the business properties varies significantly, with over 40% deemed only fair or poor. Building condition correlates with neighborhood socioeconomic conditions.
3) Technology adoption among the businesses ranges widely, from some lacking cash registers to others using advanced systems like Square. Overall, technology appears to be utilized less often
This document analyzes the fiscal impact of charter schools on six school districts in North Carolina. It presents a framework for estimating the net fiscal impact (NFI) of charter schools, which is the reduction in per-pupil spending on variable costs for students remaining in public schools due to funding losses from students attending charter schools. The NFI depends on factors like fixed vs. variable costs, per-pupil funding amounts, and the share of students attending charter schools. It uses detailed budget data from 2015-16 to categorize district spending and estimate NFI under different scenarios. The results suggest Durham faced an NFI over $700 per pupil, while some non-urban districts like Iredell and Orange faced impacts from $
Enhancing Justice and Sustainability at the Local Level: Affordable Policies for Urban Governments
`
For more information, Please see websites below:
`
Organic Edible Schoolyards & Gardening with Children =
http://scribd.com/doc/239851214 ~
`
Double Food Production from your School Garden with Organic Tech =
http://scribd.com/doc/239851079 ~
`
Free School Gardening Art Posters =
http://scribd.com/doc/239851159 ~
`
Increase Food Production with Companion Planting in your School Garden =
http://scribd.com/doc/239851159 ~
`
Healthy Foods Dramatically Improves Student Academic Success =
http://scribd.com/doc/239851348 ~
`
City Chickens for your Organic School Garden =
http://scribd.com/doc/239850440 ~
`
Simple Square Foot Gardening for Schools - Teacher Guide =
http://scribd.com/doc/239851110 ~
Rural America faces significant economic challenges, with many counties experiencing high poverty, low education levels, and economic distress. Distressed rural counties, as defined by an index that considers unemployment, income, and poverty rates, are concentrated in the Delta, Cotton Belt, Appalachia, Texas border, and Native American reservations. While overall rural high school graduation rates are comparable to urban areas, adult rural populations often have lower levels of education due to youth out-migration. These economic realities highlight the need for rural communities to develop strategies to improve economic conditions and retain local talent, such as through increased entrepreneurial activity.
Rural America faces significant economic challenges, with many counties experiencing high poverty, low education levels, and economic distress. Distressed rural counties, as defined by an index that considers unemployment, income, and poverty rates, are concentrated in the Delta, Cotton Belt, Appalachia, Texas border, and Native American reservations. While overall rural high school graduation rates are comparable to urban areas, adult rural populations often have lower levels of education due to youth out-migration. These economic conditions present difficulties for using entrepreneurship as an engine for rural economic development.
This document discusses the interdependence between rural and urban areas and the importance of strengthening their connections. It provides examples of how improved broadband access can help level the playing field for rural communities by expanding access to healthcare, education, civic participation, and remote employment opportunities. One such example is Teleworks USA, which connects rural residents in eastern Kentucky with remote jobs nationwide through partnerships with local colleges and broadband infrastructure developed by the Peoples Rural Telephone Cooperative. However, rural areas still face challenges in competing with urban areas for resources and investments due to weaker institutions and civic capacity.
The document provides an introduction to the Defense Manufacturing Assistance Program (DMAP) which works with communities severely affected by Department of Defense downsizing to develop recovery strategies. It then analyzes Muskegon County, Michigan which has experienced job losses due to reduced defense contracts, noting its population, housing, poverty rates, and other demographic data to understand the economic challenges it faces. DMAP will use this community assessment to create an advisory plan to help Muskegon County diversify its economy and promote future growth.
Enhancing Justice and Sustainability at the Local Level: Affordable Policies ...ElisaMendelsohn
This document summarizes research on policies cities can implement to promote both sustainability and social equity. It discusses case studies of community gardening, urban agriculture, green energy programs, reuse centers, and locally-oriented green businesses. The report finds that while few cities explicitly connect sustainability and equity goals, some have had success promoting both through partnerships between government, non-profits and community groups.
This document provides an introduction to the Glendale Mountain View Community Learning Center (CLC) and the Glendale neighborhood in Salt Lake City, Utah. It describes how Glendale was originally developed as a suburban community but became more diverse as the white middle class population left. The CLC aims to improve education, personal development, family support, community development, and family/community engagement. It works with local schools and organizations to provide educational and social services for families. The CLC represents a $4.4 million investment to help children succeed academically and address health issues in the community.
Planning and Zoning for Solar in North Carolina - Pandzsolar2014Hossam Zein
The document provides an overview of solar energy planning and zoning in North Carolina. It discusses the growth of the solar industry in the state and defines key solar technology terms. The summary is:
Solar energy development is growing rapidly in North Carolina, driven by falling costs and state incentives. There are two main types: solar photovoltaics (PV) convert sunlight to electricity, while solar thermal uses sunlight as heat. PV systems are composed of cells made into panels and arrays, which can be linked into large solar farms of multiple megawatts. Proper planning and zoning aims to facilitate responsible solar development while addressing potential land use impacts.
Community Adaptation to Flooding in a Changing Climate:
Municipal Officials’ Actions, Decision-Making, and Barriers. By Gretchen Gary and Shorna Allred, Cornell University, and Elizabeth LoGiudice, Allison Chatrchyan, Rosemarie Baglia, Theresa Mayhew,
Dianne Olsen, and Marilyn Wyman, Cornell Cooperative Extension.
This document provides a summary of a student research report on a 45 square block area in Grand Rapids, Michigan. The report examines topics such as business, crime, education, environment, housing, transportation, non-profits and community assets in the target area. For the crime section, it finds that violent and sexual crimes negatively impact housing values and recommends strengthening relationships between police and neighborhood watch programs to reduce such crimes. It also recommends expanding after-school programs that empower youth and provide alternatives to criminal activities. Community events that encourage bonding and a closer-knit community are suggested to reduce crime rates and positively impact perception.
The Fiscal Externalities of Charter Schools: Evidence from North CarolinaAnalisa Sorrells
This paper aims to quantify the fiscal externalities (negative financial impacts) that charter schools have on traditional public school districts in North Carolina. Using detailed budget and enrollment data from one urban and five non-urban school districts experiencing growth in charter schools, the authors estimate the "net fiscal impact" of charter schools under different assumptions about fixed and variable costs. Preliminary results suggest charter schools impose significant fiscal burdens on the studied districts, including a negative impact of over $700 per student in the urban Durham district, equivalent to around $25 million total. Fiscal impacts in some non-urban districts are also substantial, in the range of $200-$500 per student. The paper seeks to inform policy responses to ease the fiscal pressure
This document provides a summary of a community action plan developed for Martin and Dresden, Tennessee to strengthen their local food systems and economies. The plan was developed through a technical assistance process involving workshops and meetings with over 80 community stakeholders. The document outlines the agricultural history and economy of the region, current challenges around access to healthy food and poverty rates, and key organizations involved. It then describes the workshop and planning process, which resulted in the development of five community goals to guide future actions around local food and economic development.
Mobility, Economic Resilience, & Substance Use Disorder Workshop #2RPO America
On December 01, 2020, the second workshop in the Mobility, Economic Resilience, and Substance Use Disorder series focused on Southeastern Kentucky occurred. The workshop focused on rural transportation opportunities.
Similar to Report: Youth Perspectives on Marcellus Shale Gas Development: Community Change and Future Prospects (20)
The document summarizes five key facts about the recovery of US shale oil production:
1) Rig counts have increased by 90% since bottoming out in May 2016 and are up 30% year-over-year, signaling increased drilling and production capacity.
2) While decline rates remain steep, production profiles have increased substantially due to technological advances, meaning aggregate supply will be stronger.
3) Preliminary data shows that net new shale supply turned positive in December 2016 for the first time since March 2015, recovering just 7 months after rig counts increased.
4) Increased drilling activity is supported by a large stock of drilled but uncompleted wells, demonstrating the recovery and expansion of the shale sector.
5)
Quarterly legislative action update: Marcellus and Utica shale region (4Q16)Marcellus Drilling News
A quarterly update from the legal beagles at global law firm Norton Rose Fulbright. A quarterly legislative action update for the second quarter of 2016 looking at previously laws acted upon, and new laws introduced, affecting the oil and gas industry in Pennsylvania, Ohio and West Virginia.
An update from Spectra Energy on their proposed $3 billion project to connect four existing pipeline systems to flow more Marcellus/Utica gas to New England. In short, Spectra has put the project on pause until mid-2017 while it attempts to get new customers signed.
A letter from Rover Pipeline to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission requesting the agency issue the final certificate that will allow Rover to begin tree-clearing and construction of the 511-mile pipeline through Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Ohio and Michigan. If the certificate is delayed beyond the end of 2016, it will delay the project an extra year due to tree-clearing restrictions (to accommodate federally-protected bats).
DOE Order Granting Elba Island LNG Right to Export to Non-FTA CountriesMarcellus Drilling News
An order issued by the U.S. Dept. of Energy that allows the Elba Island LNG export facility to export LNG to countries with no free trade agreement with the U.S. Countries like Japan and India have no FTA with our country (i.e. friendly countries)--so this is good news indeed. Although the facility would have operated by sending LNG to FTA countries, this order opens the market much wider.
A study released in December 2016 by the London School of Economics, titled "On the Comparative Advantage of U.S. Manufacturing: Evidence from the Shale Gas Revolution." While America has enough shale gas to export plenty of it, exporting it is not as economic as exporting oil due to the elaborate processes to liquefy and regassify natural gas--therefore a lot of the gas stays right here at home, making the U.S. one of (if not the) cheapest places on the planet to establish manufacturing plants, especially for manufacturers that use natural gas and NGLs (natural gas liquids). Therefore, manufacturing, especially in the petrochemical sector, is ramping back up in the U.S. For every two jobs created by fracking, another one job is created in the manufacturing sector.
Letter From 24 States Asking Trump & Congress to Withdraw the Unlawful Clean ...Marcellus Drilling News
A letter from the attorneys general from 24 of the states opposed to the Obama Clean Power Plan to President-Elect Trump, RINO Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnel and RINO House Speaker Paul Ryan. The letter asks Trump to dump the CPP on Day One when he takes office, and asks Congress to adopt legislation to prevent the EPA from such an egregious overreach ever again.
Report: New U.S. Power Costs: by County, with Environmental ExternalitiesMarcellus Drilling News
Natural gas and wind are the lowest-cost technology options for new electricity generation across much of the U.S. when cost, public health impacts and environmental effects are considered. So says this new research paper released by The University of Texas at Austin. Researchers assessed multiple generation technologies including coal, natural gas, solar, wind and nuclear. Their findings are depicted in a series of maps illustrating the cost of each generation technology on a county-by-county basis throughout the U.S.
Annual report issued by the U.S. Energy Information Administration showing oil and natural gas proved reserves, in this case for 2015. These reports are issued almost a year after the period for which they report. This report shows proved reserves for natural gas dropped by 64.5 trillion cubic feet (Tcf), or 16.6%. U.S. crude oil and lease condensate proved reserves also decreased--from 39.9 billion barrels to 35.2 billion barrels (down 11.8%) in 2015. Proved reserves are calculated on a number of factors, including price.
The document is a report from the U.S. Energy Information Administration analyzing oil and gas production from seven regions in the U.S. It includes charts and tables showing historical and projected production levels of oil and gas from each region from 2008 to 2017, as well as metrics like the average production per rig. The regions - Bakken, Eagle Ford, Haynesville, Marcellus, Niobrara, Permian, and Utica - accounted for 92% of domestic oil production growth and all domestic natural gas production growth from 2011-2014.
Velocys is the manufacturer of gas-to-liquids (GTL) plants that convert natural gas (a hyrdocarbon) into other hydrocarbons, like diesel fuel, gasoline, and even waxes. This PowerPoint presentation lays out the Velocys plan to get the company growing. GTL plants have not (so far) taken off in the U.S. Velocys hopes to change that. They specialize in small GTL plants.
PA DEP Revised Permit for Natural Gas Compression Stations, Processing Plants...Marcellus Drilling News
In January 2016, Gov. Wolf announced the DEP would revise its current general permit (GP-5) to update the permitting requirements for sources at natural gas compression, processing, and transmission facilities. This is the revised GP-5.
PA DEP Permit for Unconventional NatGas Well Site Operations and Remote Piggi...Marcellus Drilling News
In January 2016, PA Gov. Wolf announced the Dept. of Environmental Protection would develop a general permit for sources at new or modified unconventional well sites and remote pigging stations (GP-5A). This is the proposed permit.
Onerous new regulations for the Pennsylvania Marcellus Shale industry proposed by the state Dept. of Environmental Protection. The new regs will, according to the DEP, help PA reduce so-called fugitive methane emissions and some types of air pollution (VOCs). This is liberal Gov. Tom Wolf's way of addressing mythical man-made global warming.
The monthly Short-Term Energy Outlook (STEO) from the U.S. Energy Information Administration for December 2016. This issue makes a couple of key points re natural gas: (1) EIA predicts that natural gas production in the U.S. for 2016 will see a healthy decline over 2015 levels--1.3 billion cubic feet per day (Bcf/d) less in 2016. That's the first annual production decline since 2005! (2) The EIA predicts the average price for natural gas at the benchmark Henry Hub will climb from $2.49/Mcf (thousand cubic feet) in 2016 to a whopping $3.27/Mcf in 2017. Why the jump? Growing domestic natural gas consumption, along with higher pipeline exports to Mexico and liquefied natural gas exports.
This document provides an overview of the natural gas market in the Northeast United States, including New England, New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania. It details statistics on gas customers, consumption, infrastructure like pipelines and storage, and production. A key point is that the development of the Marcellus Shale in Pennsylvania has significantly increased domestic gas production in the region and reduced its reliance on other supply basins and imports.
The Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission responded to each point raised in a draft copy of the PA Auditor General's audit of how Act 13 impact fee money, raised from Marcellus Shale drillers, gets spent by local municipalities. The PUC says it's not their job to monitor how the money gets spent, only in how much is raised and distributed.
Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission Act 13/Impact Fees Audit by PA Auditor...Marcellus Drilling News
A biased look at how 60% of impact fees raised from PA's shale drilling are spent, by the anti-drilling PA Auditor General. He chose to ignore an audit of 40% of the impact fees, which go to Harrisburg and disappear into the black hole of Harrisburg spending. The Auditor General claims, without basis in fact, that up to 24% of the funds are spent on items not allowed under the Act 13 law.
The final report from the Pennsylvania Dept. of Environmental Protection that finds, after several years of testing, no elevated levels of radiation from acid mine drainage coming from the Clyde Mine, flowing into Ten Mile Creek. Radical anti-drillers tried to smear the Marcellus industry with false claims of illegal wastewater dumping into the mine, with further claims of elevated radiation levels in the creek. After years of testing, the DEP found those allegations to be false.
FERC Order Denying Stay of Kinder Morgan's Broad Run Expansion ProjectMarcellus Drilling News
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission denied a request to stay the authorization of Tennessee Gas Pipeline Company's Broad Run Expansion Project. The Commission found that the intervenors requesting the stay did not demonstrate they would suffer irreparable harm if the project proceeded. Specifically, the Commission determined that the environmental impacts to forest and a nearby animal rehabilitation center would be insignificant. Additionally, conditioning authorization on future permits did not improperly encroach on state authority. Therefore, justice did not require granting a stay.
projet de traité négocié à Istanbul (anglais).pdfEdouardHusson
Ceci est le projet de traité qui avait été négocié entre Russes et Ukrainiens à Istanbul en mars 2022, avant que les Etats-Unis et la Grande-Bretagne ne détournent Kiev de signer.
#WenguiGuo#WashingtonFarm Guo Wengui Wolf son ambition exposed to open a far...rittaajmal71
Since fleeing to the United States in 2014, Guo Wengui has founded a number of projects in the United States, such as GTV Media Group, GTV private equity, farm loan project, G Club Operations Co., LTD., and Himalaya Exchange.
17062024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
Find Latest India News and Breaking News these days from India on Politics, Business, Entertainment, Technology, Sports, Lifestyle and Coronavirus News in India and the world over that you can't miss. For real time update Visit our social media handle. Read First India NewsPaper in your morning replace. Visit First India.
CLICK:- https://firstindia.co.in/
#First_India_NewsPaper
Federal Authorities Urge Vigilance Amid Bird Flu Outbreak | The Lifesciences ...The Lifesciences Magazine
Federal authorities have advised the public to remain vigilant but calm in response to the ongoing bird flu outbreak of highly pathogenic avian influenza, commonly known as bird flu.
ग्रेटर मुंबई के नगर आयुक्त को एक खुले पत्र में याचिका दायर कर 540 से अधिक मुंबईकरों ने सभी अवैध और अस्थिर होर्डिंग्स, साइनबोर्ड और इलेक्ट्रिक साइनेज को तत्काल हटाने और 13 मई, 2024 की शाम को घाटकोपर में अवैध होर्डिंग के गिरने की विनाशकारी घटना के बाद अपराधियों के खिलाफ सख्त कार्रवाई की मांग की है, जिसमें 17 लोगों की जान चली गई और कई निर्दोष लोग गंभीर रूप से घायल हो गए।
12062024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
Find Latest India News and Breaking News these days from India on Politics, Business, Entertainment, Technology, Sports, Lifestyle and Coronavirus News in India and the world over that you can't miss. For real time update Visit our social media handle. Read First India NewsPaper in your morning replace. Visit First India.
CLICK:- https://firstindia.co.in/
#First_India_NewsPaper
Shark Tank Jargon | Operational ProfitabilityTheUnitedIndian
Don't let fancy business words confuse you! This blog is your cheat sheet to understanding the Shark Tank Jargon. We'll translate all the confusing terms like "valuation" (how much the company is worth) and "royalty" (a fee for using someone's idea). You'll be swimming with the Sharks like a pro in no time!
16062024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
Find Latest India News and Breaking News these days from India on Politics, Business, Entertainment, Technology, Sports, Lifestyle and Coronavirus News in India and the world over that you can't miss. For real time update Visit our social media handle. Read First India NewsPaper in your morning replace. Visit First India.
CLICK:- https://firstindia.co.in/
#First_India_NewsPaper
Slide deck with charts from our Digital News Report 2024, the most comprehensive exploration of news consumption habits around the world, based on survey data from more than 95,000 respondents across 47 countries.
लालू यादव की जीवनी LALU PRASAD YADAV BIOGRAPHYVoterMood
Discover the life and times of Lalu Prasad Yadav with a comprehensive biography in Hindi. Learn about his early days, rise in politics, controversies, and contribution.
केरल उच्च न्यायालय ने 11 जून, 2024 को मंडला पूजा में भाग लेने की अनुमति मांगने वाली 10 वर्षीय लड़की की रिट याचिका को खारिज कर दिया, जिसमें सर्वोच्च न्यायालय की एक बड़ी पीठ के समक्ष इस मुद्दे की लंबित प्रकृति पर जोर दिया गया। यह आदेश न्यायमूर्ति अनिल के. नरेंद्रन और न्यायमूर्ति हरिशंकर वी. मेनन की खंडपीठ द्वारा पारित किया गया
Why We Chose ScyllaDB over DynamoDB for "User Watch Status"ScyllaDB
Yichen Wei and Adam Drennan share the architecture and technical requirements behind "user watch status" for a major global media streaming service, what that meant for their database, the pros and cons of the many options they considered for replacing DynamoDB, why they ultimately chose ScyllaDB, and their lessons learned so far.
Recent years have seen a disturbing rise in violence, discrimination, and intolerance against Christian communities in various Islamic countries. This multifaceted challenge, deeply rooted in historical, social, and political animosities, demands urgent attention. Despite the escalating persecution, substantial support from the Western world remains lacking.
18062024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
Find Latest India News and Breaking News these days from India on Politics, Business, Entertainment, Technology, Sports, Lifestyle and Coronavirus News in India and the world over that you can't miss. For real time update Visit our social media handle. Read First India NewsPaper in your morning replace. Visit First India.
CLICK:- https://firstindia.co.in/
#First_India_NewsPaper
On the Wrong Track | Recent Increasing Train Accidents in India | News
Report: Youth Perspectives on Marcellus Shale Gas Development: Community Change and Future Prospects
1. Executive Summary
This research examined the perspectives of youth in Pennsylvania communities that have experienced
active Marcellus Shale natural gas development. The data were gathered during focus group discussions
with educators and youth in 2013 in the northern tier Pennsylvania counties of Bradford and Lycoming,
and the southwest counties of Washington and Green. These focus groups were conducted as part of a
larger, multi-sector case study assessment of Marcellus Shale development impacts. The focus groups
discussed Marcellus-related community change, workforce development, youth career, educational and
residential aspirations, and the ways in which schools were perceived to be affected by and/or
responding to Marcellus-related community change. In this research, the focus was on several particular
topical areas, including youth perceptions of community change, curricular offerings and workforce
development in response to Marcellus Shale development, and youth aspirations for future residence,
educational attainment and career paths, and how these aspirations may or may not be shaped by the
changes youth see around them that they associate with gas industry development.
The main themes that emerged from these focus groups are as follows:
The gas industry, in many place, has affected what youth see as the unique, close-knit rural
character of their home communities.
Traffic has dramatically increased and so have concerns about road conditions and driving
safety. Unprompted, students in all discussions spoke at length about these issues.
Youth spoke about what they interpreted as fragmentation of land, and destruction of natural
areas, with direct impacts on wildlife and their ability to enjoy the local natural amenities.
Youth expressed uncertainty about the investment that the gas industry had in local areas.
While noting examples of local philanthropy by gas companies, far more often, students talked
about the industry presence and characterized industry workers as transient and lacking
commitment to the affected localities.
Relatedly, youth also expressed uncertainty about the longevity of the gas industry and
economic impacts. While not using this language, their discussion often made reference to the
likelihood of a post-boom “bust”.
Students expressed relatively moderate to low interest in obtaining gas industry work after
leaving high school. Even though many of the students had friends or family members working
in the industry and acknowledged the near unprecedented earnings for someone just coming
out of high school, there were concerns regarding work longevity, stability, and injury. Concerns
YOUTH PERSPECTIVES ON MARCELLUS SHALE GAS
DEVELOPMENT: COMMUNITY CHANGE AND FUTURE PROSPECTS
The Marcellus Impacts Project Report #4
2. The Center for Rural Pennsylvania Page | 2
related to shift-hours, travel, and possible relocation were noted as being particularly
incompatible with a family friendly work environment.
Youth reported that industry recruitment efforts contained messages discouraging post-
secondary educational attainment, and, that given the potential wages, college was seen by
many as a “waste” of time, money and opportunity.
3. The Center for Rural Pennsylvania Page | 3
Table of Contents
About This Project:........................................................................................................................................4
Study Counties......................................................................................................................................4
Marcellus Shale Activity........................................................................................................................5
Classifying Counties by Marcellus Shale Activity ..................................................................................6
Data and Methods ........................................................................................................................................7
Youth Perspectives on Natural Gas Development and Community Change................................................8
Increased Traffic and Concerns about Road Safety ..................................................................................9
Lights, Noise and Environmental Concerns ..............................................................................................9
Newcomers to Shale Gas Communities..................................................................................................11
Youth Perspectives on the Local Economic Impacts of Marcellus Shale Gas Development ......................14
Natural Gas Development and Youth Aspirations for the Future...............................................................14
Uncertainties of Gas Industry Employment............................................................................................16
Conclusions .................................................................................................................................................17
Acknowledgements.....................................................................................................................................18
References ..................................................................................................................................................19
Appendix A: Unconventional Wells Drilled by County and Year, 2005-2013 .............................................20
Appendix B. Marcellus Activity County Typology Definitions for Pennsylvaniaa
........................................21
Appendix C: Youth Focus Group Protocol...................................................................................................22
This project was sponsored by a grant from the Center for Rural Pennsylvania, a legislative agency of the
Pennsylvania General Assembly.
The Center for Rural Pennsylvania is a bipartisan, bicameral legislative agency that serves as a resource for rural
policy within the Pennsylvania General Assembly. It was created in 1987 under Act 16, the Rural Revitalization Act, to
promote and sustain the vitality of Pennsylvania’s rural and small communities.
Information contained in this report does not necessarily reflect the views of individual board members or the
Center for Rural Pennsylvania. For more information, contact the Center for Rural Pennsylvania, 625 Forster St., Room
902, Harrisburg, PA 17120, telephone (717) 787-9555, email: info@rural.palegislature.us, www.rural.palegislature.us.
4. The Center for Rural Pennsylvania Page | 4
About This Project:
The Marcellus Shale Impacts Project chronicles the effects of shale-based energy development in
Pennsylvania by focusing on the experiences of four counties with significant extraction and production
activity – Bradford, Lycoming, Greene, and Washington counties. The project examines social and
economic changes in these counties within the context of regional and statewide trends. A series of nine
reports describes the research results as follows: (1) population, (2) health, (3) education, (4) youth, (5)
housing, (6) crime, (7) local government, (8) local economy, and (9) agriculture.
Study Counties
Bradford, Lycoming, Greene, and Washington counties are studied in this project. They have
experienced some of the highest levels of Marcellus Shale development in Pennsylvania, yet they have
diverse populations, histories, economic bases, and geographic locations. These differences allow
comparisons that facilitate understanding of the potential effects of Marcellus Shale development
across the commonwealth and by region. The regional comparisons are defined based on adjacency to
the four study counties. The northern tier contains 12 counties: Bradford, Lycoming, and the 10
neighboring counties of Clinton, Columbia, Montour, Northumberland, Potter, Sullivan, Susquehanna,
Tioga, Union, and Wyoming. The southwest region consists of six counties: Greene, Washington, and the
four neighboring counties of Allegheny, Beaver, Fayette, and Westmoreland.
All four study counties are classified as rural by the Center for Rural Pennsylvania with population
densities of less than 284 people per square mile.
Table 1 offers an overview of selected characteristics from 2000 for the four study counties as well as
counties in the surrounding region and the state. These data provide important context for
understanding differences between the counties and regions prior to Marcellus Shale development. As
Table 1 shows how the counties and regions differ across indicators. In the northern tier, Lycoming’s
population was nearly twice that of Bradford’s, and Lycoming County had a slightly higher
unemployment rate than Bradford County. The percentage employed in mining was very small in 2000
in both northern tier counties, although a larger percentage of people were employed in the industry in
Bradford (0.6 percent) than in Lycoming (just 0.1 percent). The two counties had comparable median
household incomes.
In the southwest, the differences between Greene and Washington are more pronounced. Greene had
the smallest population of the four counties (40,672) and 6.7 percent of employed individuals in the
county were working in mining. The unemployment rate (9.2 percent) was more than 3 points above the
state’s average (5.7 percent), and the median household income ($41,972) was well below average for
the region ($52,004) and the state ($55,460). In contrast, the median household income in Washington
County was just over $10,000 higher than in Greene. Only 1.3 percent of the employed work in mining
and the unemployment rate was notably lower (5.3 percent).
The two counties of the southwest had more diversified economies than counties of the northern tier. In
Bradford and Lycoming, the same three industries (Manufacturing, Health Care and Social Assistance,
and Retail Trade) employed around half the population (52.4 percent and 47.4 percent, respectively
(Census 2000). In contrast, just over one-third of the working population in Greene County worked in
the same three industries (Health Care and Social Assistance, Retail Trade, and Educational Services).
5. The Center for Rural Pennsylvania Page | 5
Washington’s top three industries (Manufacturing, Health Care and Social Assistance, Retail Trade, and
Manufacturing) employed 41.7 percent of the working population.
Table 1. Pre-Marcellus characteristics of study counties in 2000
Population
People
per square
mile
%
employed in
Mining
%
Unemployed
Median Household
Income
(adjusted for inflation
to 2012 values)
Northern Tier* 47,968 83 0.6% 6.0% $47,071
Bradford 62,761 55 0.6% 5.5% $48,451
Lycoming 120,044 97 0.1% 6.3% $47,038
Southwest* 370,881 505 1.8% 6.6% $47,901
Greene 40,672 71 6.7% 9.2% $41,972
Washington 202,897 237 1.3% 5.3% $52,004
Pennsylvania 12,281,054 274 0.3% 5.7% $55,460
The northern tier region contains 12 counties: Bradford, Lycoming, and the 10 neighboring counties of Clinton, Columbia,
Montour, Northumberland, Potter, Sullivan, Susquehanna, Tioga, Union, and Wyoming. The southwest region consists of six
counties: Greene, Washington, and the four neighboring counties of Allegheny, Beaver, Fayette, and Westmoreland.
Source: Social Explorer Tables (SE), Census 2000, U.S. Census Bureau and Social Explorer. * County average, includes study
counties.
Marcellus Shale Activity
Table 2 shows the number of unconventional wells drilled in the Marcellus Shale each year in the six
Pennsylvania counties with the highest total number of wells drilled between 2005 and mid-year 2013
(Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection).
Table 2. Six counties with the most wells drilled and wells drilled each year, 2005-2013*
county name 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012
2013*
mid-
year
Total,
by county
Bradford+
1 2 2 24 158 373 396 164 66 1186
Washington+
5 19 45 66 101 166 155 195 120 872
Tioga 0 1 0 15 124 273 272 122 13 820
Lycoming+
0 0 5 12 23 119 301 202 89 751
Susquehanna 0 1 2 33 88 125 205 191 102 747
Greene+
0 2 14 67 101 103 121 105 54 567
Total wells drilled in top six counties: 4943
Source: Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection, Office of Oil and Gas Management.
*Data through June 30, 2013 (accessed July 4, 2013);
+
Study counties.
The four study counties have experienced significant Marcellus Shale well drilling and account for half
(3,376) of the 6,833 unconventional wells drilled in the commonwealth. The two counties located in the
southwest, Washington and Greene, experienced more well development through 2008 than the other
counties. Bradford County experienced significant growth starting in 2009. Despite the late start,
6. The Center for Rural Pennsylvania Page | 6
Bradford County quickly surpassed all other Pennsylvania counties with nearly 400 new wells drilled in
2011, for a total of 1,186 by June 30, 2013. Lycoming similarly experienced more new drilling activity in
2011 than occurred in the southwest and had the highest number of new wells drilled in 2012.
Figure 1 shows the cumulative number of wells drilled from 2005 to 2012 in each of the study counties.
Although some wells may no longer be in production by 2012, and some have not yet been put into
production, the lines reveal overall trends in the counties and across regions. The northern tier counties
(Bradford and Lycoming) had steeper increases in the past 3 years, whereas those in the southwest
(Washington and Greene) had more gradual but steady increases in the number of wells drilled.
In 2012, the pace of new drilling slowed in Bradford and Lycoming, likely due to the declining price of
natural gas. In contrast, drilling in Greene and Washington counties in 2012 was on par with the
previous year. This may be because gas in southwestern Pennsylvania tends to be “wet” gas, meaning it
contains more marketable compounds (liquid natural gases such as butane and propane) that can
generate higher revenues than “dry” natural gas (i.e. methane) alone. Even so, mid-year figures suggest
that new drilling activity across all four counties in 2013 may be comparable to 2012. A table listing well
counts for all counties in Pennsylvania is in Appendix A.
Classifying Counties by Marcellus Shale Activity
To further understand the effects of Marcellus Shale activity, the analyses compared counties based on
their level of Marcellus Shale activity using a five-category county typology. The typology was created by
combining several definitions based on estimated shale value and actual development activity, including
publicly available maps of the thickness, depth, and thermal maturity of the shale (McLaughlin et al.,
2012). This typology also differentiates urban counties because the population and economic dynamics
in these counties are fundamentally different from that of rural counties.
Source: PA Dept. of Environmental Protection, Office of Oil and Gas Management (accessed July 4, 2013).
7. The Center for Rural Pennsylvania Page | 7
In Pennsylvania, the number of wells is highly concentrated in a small number of counties. There are 7
counties (including the four study counties) that account for 90 percent of the total number of wells
drilled through June 30, 2013. These 7 counties are classified as “core” counties with high drilling
activity, and are shaded with the darkest gray in Figure 2. The other four typology categories are: “core”
counties with low drilling activity, 2nd
tier counties (with lower quality shale and limited drilling activity),
urban counties with potential or some Marcellus Shale development, and those counties with no
Marcellus Shale. For a full description of the typology, see Appendix B.
Data and Methods
In each of the four study counties, the researchers used end of 2012 well count data from the
Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection to calculate the number of Marcellus Shale gas
wells drilled within each school district. The researchers then identified the the three districts with the
most drilling within each county, and then randomly selected one district per county for fieldwork.
In these districts, focus groups were conducted with district educators and with youth. The educators
included superintendents, principals, teachers and district employees, such as business managers, bus
drivers and guidance counselors, who could provide valuable perspectives on Marcellus-related
community change and impacts on schools. Administrators at each of the four districts were asked to
identify a group of between six and eight 11th
graders, with an even gender mix, representing more or
less demographically “typical” students within the district. These student focus groups cannot be
considered to include students “statistically representative” of 11th
graders in the district as they were
not considered a random sample. However, the youth focus groups are notable for the consistency
across districts in the views and experiences the students expressed. In all but one focus group, no
school administrators were present. In the focus group in which administrators were present, the
students were notably more positive in their assessments of Marcellus community impacts. It is
impossible to know whether the attitudes and opinions expressed in this case were influenced by the
way the district administrators chose student participants and/or their presence at the focus groups.
While in most school districts one educator focus group and one youth focus group were held, one of
the districts arranged two youth focus groups, and another district arranged two educator focus groups.
8. The Center for Rural Pennsylvania Page | 8
This resulted in a total of five youth focus groups and five educator focus groups across the four-county
study area. These were supplemented by two additional focus groups conducted with groups of school
district superintendents at two separate Intermediate Unit meetings. Intermediate Units are comprised
of multiple school districts, formed for the purpose of coordinating shared educational services.
Intermediate Unit 1, in the southwest, covers Washington, Green and Fayette counties, while
Intermediate Unit 17 covers Tioga, Bradford, Lycoming and Sullivan counties. One focus group was also
held at the southwestern Career and Technical Center with vocational educators. In total, 13 focus
groups were conducted with 36 youth across four counties and 47 educators and administrators across
seven counties.
The research used the information from the focus groups as well as some quantitative data from the
Pennsylvania Department of Education, and the federal Department of Education’s National Center for
Education Statistics (NCES). However, the focus was principally on the perspectives gathered through
the youth focus groups. It should be noted that the focus group information has limitations as it is not
representative. The youth focus groups, in particular, represent the views of young people within four
school districts, purposefully selected by school administrators in response to the request to recruit
young people who were more or less representative of the larger student body within their schools. At
the same time, many of the themes that were discussed were consistent across these communities and
focus groups, despite the geographic differences across study sites.
All of the youth participants provided candid opinions regarding both the benefits and the problems
associated with the development of the Marcellus Shale in their communities. In only one focus group –
the discussion held in a Washington County school district – were students unanimous in their opinion
that the shale gas industry had represented a clearly positive development for their community. In the
other school districts, opinions were very mixed and often mostly negative. While youth welcomed new
economic opportunities and growth, they also expressed concern about road and public safety issues,
environmental damage, and changes in the atmosphere of their community. Additionally many
expressed uncertainty about the Marcellus Shale industry, its longevity, and the capacity of the industry
to provide safe, local and stable employment. In the sections that follow, youth perceptions of
Marcellus-related community change are discussed, along with how this change may or may not have
impacted their school experiences. Finally youth aspirations for the future in light of local industry-
related change are also examined.
Youth Perspectives on Natural Gas Development and Community Change
All four districts in which youth were interviewed are considered rural and/or small town residential
area, even though the district in Washington County is less than an hour’s drive from Pittsburgh and the
Lycoming County district is in relatively proximity to Williamsport. Across all districts youth tended to
describe their communities in similar ways, using descriptors like “small town,” “rural,” “everybody
knows everybody,” “close-knit,” and “quiet.” Also across all districts youth frequently mentioned the
qualities of small town and rural lifestyles and their attachment to the local community. One girl said
“from living in the city whenever I was younger to moving out here, it’s a lot different. There are a lot
more things you can get used to out here, peaceful, quiet, it’s real nice.”
All four groups, however, were able to describe marked changes that had occurred in their communities
over the last 4 years or so, changes that they attributed to Marcellus Shale development. For many
young people, however, the peaceful qualities of the communities in which they live have been
disrupted, at least to some extent, by Marcellus Shale development. Interestingly, a recurring theme
across the sites was the concern that the changes were affecting the rural character of the locality in a
process of what students described as “urbanization,” connected to the erosion of the local rural
9. The Center for Rural Pennsylvania Page | 9
character. In Greene County, a student said, “The place now looks like you’re in the middle of the city.
There’s so many people. There’s so much going on.” Another Greene County student later described
what he saw as the disappearing rural character of the local area, and said “On our neighbor’s hill, we
went up and you look out and you could see six drilling things, just looking around and it’s crazy. It’s like
a city at night. All of it lights up.” And in Lycoming County, a student said “It’s turnin’ the whole area
pretty much into a city.” The increased activity was often in the form of increased heavy truck traffic and
new arrivals to the area in the form of gas industry employees and occasionally extended families and
children.
Increased Traffic and Concerns about Road Safety
One of the most visible changes the youth spoke about was in traffic, road conditions and their
perceptions of road safety. This included multiple mentions of vehicular accidents involving or
associated with gas industry traffic, roads damaged by heavy truck traffic (or delays caused by road
repair), and traffic slowdowns. Several students talked about the extra challenges this caused as they
were becoming newly licensed drivers. A student in Bradford County told us, “It’s scary for us because
we just got our licenses. I’ve had mine for a while, but most of us just got our licenses. Before, it was just
like, “Oh, just drive safe.” Now, it’s watch out for people cuz they drive crazy.” Similarly, in Washington
one youth recounted, “it’s just so many different people around here just speeding down all these
roads. I’ve seen a lot of accidents with these pipeliners. A real close friend of mine was in a—rolled his
truck over because there’s a line of pipeliners on the wrong side of the road just getting around these
bends real fast. I mean, it boosted the traffic up a lot. There’s been a lot of accidents.” Some of the
students attributed some of the blame to carelessness on the part of gas industry traffic. In Lycoming
County a student said, “They think they own the road. They don’t pay attention to any other drivers,”
and in Greene County another said, “they come up here with different companies and they just do
whatever they want, drive as fast as they want, however they want, wherever they want. They have no
respect for the road or any of us out here.”
In Bradford County, a student talked about his experiences volunteering as an emergency responder and
the uncertainties that road conditions caused regarding delays in response times.
“I usually have a five to eight minute response time at the station, but due to the traffic,
they can have the road closed. That can increase my time from 8 to 15 minutes before I
can get to the ambulance, and that time is taken away from response time for the
patient, so we can’t get there as quickly. If the road is blocked, I’ll have to call in and say,
‘Hey, I can’t get through here. I need someone else to fill for me,’ so that takes more
time. It’s really impacted response times for me especially.”
Uniformly across all groups the increase in traffic and road safety concerns emerged as one of the
foremost ways of describing the most noticeable community changes.
Lights, Noise and Environmental Concerns
One of the most contentious areas of debate about Marcellus Shale gas development in Pennsylvania
has been the concern around environmental impacts and especially problems with water
contamination. The students in these focus groups, without specific prompting, raised these issues, but
mostly in terms of land use and the ways in which land had been “fragmented” by drilling pads and
pipeline construction. This, they felt, was having an adverse effect on wildlife (in addition to multiple
mentions of increased incidence of wildlife roadkill) and reduced their own ability to enjoy the natural
amenities of the surrounding area. In Greene County a student said:
10. The Center for Rural Pennsylvania Page | 10
“Any time the weather’s nice, I’m outside, walking around or on a four-wheeler. Even
lately, I love being in the woods, and it’s almost like ever since the industry came into
the county, there’s just less woods around. The land is just pretty much gettin’ tore up.
So to speak, they put it back, but it’s just there’s almost not the same feeling in the
county as what there was 5, 6 years back.”
In Lycoming County, the following exchange was recorded:
Student 1: There’s no wildlife cuz they’re taking it away from—yeah.
Student 2: Drilling everywhere and noise.
Student 3: They’re puttin’ up animal fences, and—
Student1: It’s like they’re way different than what it was a few years ago.
Student 3: They’re fencing us off in a way.
Moderator: Fencing you off how?
Student 3: They’re splitting every little area up. It’s not the same.
In both of these examples, students talk about not only the changes they see in the nearby landscape,
but also how those changes have affected the very nature of the areas in which they have grown up due
to what they interpreted as the destruction of wildlife habitat, reduced access to forest lands, and
changes in the appearance of natural areas. As a student from Lycoming County told us, “There’s
nothing to do in this town anymore cuz they took away our mountains.”
While students often spoke about the landscape changes they had seen, they spoke less frequently
about specific instances of environmental damage that they attributed directly to Marcellus Shale
industry activities. In one instance though, a female student talked about babysitting for a local family
whose house had, the student claimed, been affected by methane migration into the well water as well
as other contaminants. She said“(when) I first started babysitting for them, I had to learn, they had one
of those gas lights that goes off if the levels get too high. They had to teach me if this goes off, we have
an emergency bag, and where all their stuff was to get out cuz the house could…”
Moderator: This is when you were babysitting?
Student 1: Mm-hmm. It was a little scary. I was nervous, but, I mean, it never happened.
We weren’t allowed to use their water in their house. They had one of those
filter—
Student 2: Tank?
Student 1: tanks, and the people had to come every so often and change their water. We
weren’t allowed to, only for washing dishes and stuff. When I was trying to give
the little girl a bath, she would get burn marks on her arm sometimes from the
water. It was just scary.
More frequently students described the effects of noise and light pollution. This included lights from
well pads, the noise from truck traffic and compressor stations, and occasionally the noise made by gas
workers in towns working third shifts. In Bradford County, a student said “My uncle’s on the borough
council, and he said they’ve been getting a lot of complaints cuz they get up so early and they rev their
engines and stuff and it wakes people up, especially the old folks.” Similarly in Greene County a student
related, “I used to live in a quiet, like you couldn’t hear anything, and now all you hear is the beeping
from the trucks. It was like I had a little town right over my house because it’s just always lit up. It’s loud,
11. The Center for Rural Pennsylvania Page | 11
and if I have to leave anywhere, I have to leave a few minutes earlier because I know that the trucks will
be moving a lot.” Another from the same district explained, “it’s just all these wells are so close together
that anywhere that you live or anywhere that you’re at, you can hear one. The closer you get, the louder
it is. So maybe people don’t like the constant roar.”
Newcomers to Shale Gas Communities
Students often described their rural communities as places where “everybody knows everybody.” This
sense contributes to the close-knit nature of these communities and others like them. It also, however,
makes the arrival of new faces all the more noticeable, and the strong sense of “belonging” within a
small rural community can also create an equally strong sense of who falls outside of the social
boundaries of community. Students described their unease at suddenly not knowing many of the faces
they saw in their towns. In Bradford County, a student said, “When I was younger there was, you knew, I
knew everybody who was my neighbor. Now, I don’t know half the people who live on my street cuz
they’re all either gas well people or I just haven’t met them because I’m getting older” and in Lycoming
County another student said, “There’s no more actual families. This used to be a town that everybody
would raise their kids in, and everybody would be friends with friends, quiet. You could let your kids go
out and play and not lock your doors. The past few years, you’ve had to lock your doors. There’s been
break-ins and stuff.”
Gas workers and to a lesser extent their families, coming from places like Texas and Oklahoma, were
often described as outsiders. While several students said that the gas workers they met were friendly
and “nice,” youth more frequently tended to regard newcomers with ambivalence and as people who
had no attachment to the local community and its residents. In Lycoming County, the following
exchange was recorded:
Student 1: They don’t care about the inner people that actually live here and whatnot, so
it’s like—
Student 2: Just cuz they have a job here, and they move with their job, but when they’re
here, it’s like there is—
Student 3: I think it—
Student 1: They treat it like it’s trash, like it’s not theirs so they can just do whatever to it.
Student 3: I think it divides up a lot of people cuz a lot of people have TAFT tee shirts and
stickers for their cars and stuff like that against the gas line.
Moderator: What does that mean?
Student 3: “This ain’t freakin’ Texas.” [Laughter] A lot of people get that on their vehicles
now. There’s some of ‘em in the parking lot.
While no student related any personal experiences or experiences of others they knew with unsafe
interactions with out-of-state gas workers, they often described low-level anxiety about who their
neighbors were. This anxiety was more often expressed by girls, like the female student from Bradford
County who said:
“Well, they live down the street from me, and I work at the hotel, which is really close.
It’s a restaurant in town, and they have a bar connected. A lot of them—I’ll walk home
from work at night, and they’ll be coming home from the bar and they’re walking
12. The Center for Rural Pennsylvania Page | 12
around tipsy. I mean, it’s just a little scary. They ruin the yards cuz I know there’s an
apartment building at the bottom of my house, or my street, that two old ladies used to
own but they passed away. Nobody was there, so their apartment was auctioned off, so
these gas guys all came and that house got auctioned to—there’s six or seven of them
living in a two apartment house. They’ve got trucks everywhere and it’s muddy.”
In several of the school districts, notably in Bradford and Greene counties, students also talked about
the housing shortages created by the influx of new workers, and also the increases in rental prices.
“With all the people coming in from Texas,” one student told us, “it runs up the housing, real estate, and
all the renters. Most of ‘em rent, but you know what I mean, it just runs up rent. People who do rent
their homes can get a lot more, so people who are from here can’t afford, to compare it with the people
from Texas, to even have a place to live.”
There has been little evidence from statewide data to suggest that there have been marked changes in
student populations in most districts within high drilling activity areas (see Topic Report #3 on
Education). In most districts where drilling has occurred, enrollments have continued to decline as they
were before Marcellus Shale natural gas development began. This may be because many of the out-of-
state workers who came to work in the gas fields either came as single men or left families elsewhere.
Yet, in several of the focus groups students talked about new faces in their schools. A student from a
school district in Bradford County said, “When we were in elementary school, having a new student was
like ‘holy cow!’ and everybody wanted to be friends with them, and a week later you knew their whole
life story. Now I don’t even know half the kids in my grade anymore.” Students also noted the transient
nature of peers from out-of-state gas worker families. In Washington County, focus group participants
spoke about a number of students who had entered the district from places like Texas over the last few
years, noting that about half of those students had since left the district. In Bradford County, a female
student said, “Yeah, I’m used to being really eager cuz I like meeting new people, so I used to be really
eager and be like, ‘Hi, I’m Janet and stuff,’ but now I don’t do it so much cuz I don’t really think they’re
gonna be there that long.” In Lycoming County, the following exchange with a female student occurred:
Student: I made a really good friend last year, year before. Last year. She went to our
school, and her mom was in charge of one of the wells. She had to move down
here with her mom from Texas. Other than that, I haven’t had anything good
come from the gas line.
Moderator: Is she still around?
Student: No. She moved back to Texas after mom—the pad they were working on got
dropped, so they moved back to Texas.
This is consistent with what educators also related. They tended to describe initial expectations
regarding spikes in enrollments as new students entered the districts along with gas worker families.
Instead, what most districts experienced was generally fewer new students enrolling, but increased
levels of student transiency. This also is largely borne out by state-level data. Table 3 shows total
enrollments in the four case study districts as well as their surrounding counties for the academic years
2005-06 and 2010-11. During this time period, statewide enrollments dropped by slightly more than 2
percent. Over the time period covering the initial expansion of the Marcellus Shale industry, none of the
four case study counties experienced enrollment increases, and three of the four experienced declines
exceeding the state average. The declines in those counties exceeded the state average, including
Greene County, with a nearly 8 percent decline. In both regions, only Beaver County experienced net
enrollment gains.
13. The Center for Rural Pennsylvania Page | 13
Table 3. Total School District Enrollment with Net Change, 2005-06 and 2010-11 for Selected Counties
Number of Students Change from 05/06 to 10/11
2005-06 2010-11 Net Change Percent Change
Pennsylvania 1,830,684 1,793,284 -37,400 -2.04%
Southwest Region
Greene 5,855 5,387 -468 -7.99%
Washington 30,105 29,576 -529 -1.76%
Adjacent Counties
Allegheny 163,943 149,281 -14,662 -8.94%
Beaver 29,907 33,698 3,791 12.68%
Fayette 19,757 18,348 -1,409 -7.13%
Westmoreland 54,322 51,722 -2,600 -4.79%
Northern Tier Region
Bradford 10,736 9,904 -832 -7.75%
Lycoming 17,497 16,834 -663 -3.79%
Adjacent Counties
Clinton 4,864 4,655 -209 -4.30%
Columbia 10,841 7,268 -3,573 -32.96%
Montour 2,607 2,537 -70 -2.69%
Northumberland 13,010 12,546 -464 -3.57%
Potter 2,809 2,573 -236 -8.40%
Sullivan 777 630 -147 -18.92%
Susquehanna 7,955 7,023 -932 -11.72%
Tioga 6,232 5,671 -561 -9.00%
Union 4,184 4,061 -123 -2.94%
Wyoming 4,415 3,991 -424 -9.60%
Source: Pennsylvania Department of Education
Net enrollment change, however, can hide the overall volume of student enrollments and withdrawals.
An educator from Bradford County explained:
“Five or 6 years ago when this began, as a teacher we were hearing rumors or
predictions that maybe our enrollment would explode as far as number of people
moving in. That's never happened. I think there's a lot of revolving door that's kinda
going, so we got a lot of kids in, and then they've moved out. There have been kids that
have moved into the district, but I don't think we ever saw an explosion like maybe we
were expecting.”
In a focus group with northern Pennsylvania superintendents held at an intermediate unit meeting,
questions were asked specifically about how expectations of gas-industry-related school and community
change matched what schools actually experienced. Speaking specifically about enrollment change,
another administrator said:
“Yeah, but (enrollments were) already declining. It was already declining. The rate of
decline was greater than the rate of these new kids coming. People didn't think that that
was going to happen. They thought that all these kids were going to come and it was
going to overpass the rate of decline. It was already declining before the industry came
here.”
14. The Center for Rural Pennsylvania Page | 14
Youth Perspectives on the Local Economic Impacts of Marcellus Shale Gas Development
In only one district in Washington County, youth seemed united in their general opinion that Marcellus
Shale gas development represented a net positive change for the community. These youth primarily
spoke about the positive economic benefits they had seen for their families and others in the
community. “The pipeline is what paid for my dad’s new truck,” one student told us. “It was definitely
needed. It really helped us out in that aspect. We actually have the ability to go out and do stuff that we
couldn’t do before.” “There’s gonna be a lot more money,” another student said. “It’s gonna be a – I
don’t wanna say richer area, but it’s not gonna be as bad as it was.” These students spoke about the
benefits they had seen for many of the local small businesses. In this respect, there were similarities
across all districts, as students in all focus groups had, to one extent or another, described some aspects
of local economic expansion and/or segments of the local population, principally landowners,
experiencing marked economic benefits. In Bradford County students described the impacts on small
businesses and hotel development.
With the exception of the student group from Washington County, in all other focus groups some
students expressed concerns about the creation of new “haves and have-nots” and also uncertainty
about the longevity of the economic activity associated with the Marcellus Shale industry. Some of the
youth spoke about farmers within their community, and sometimes family members or family friends
who had been able to financially save their farming operations with the assistance of windfall revenues
from gas leasing income. However, others spoke about how those without the possibility of leasing land
were largely left with the drawbacks of local gas development (such as increased rental prices and
decreased housing availability), without any of the benefits. Students also expressed uncertainty
regarding the longevity of industry-associated employment and the economic ripple effects of gas
development activity. Bradford County has already experienced several fluctuations in drilling activity as
the Marcellus Shale industry in 2012 increasingly focused efforts in the southwest part of the state to
drill for “wet gas.” When asked what they projected for their community’s future one student said, he
didn’t know what the future might hold. “It could be booming or it could be a ghost town.” This
statement reflected the uncertainty present in the other focus groups.
Natural Gas Development and Youth Aspirations for the Future
Many areas in which Marcellus Shale natural gas development has occurred with the greatest intensity
are places like the rural communities of the northern tier that have long endured stagnant economies
and limited opportunities for youth. In the past, there truly were very limited opportunities for young
people who wished to stay in the area and secure family-supporting jobs. In other places of relatively
intense Marcellus Shale development, such as the southwest region, economies and labor markets are
somewhat more diversified because of the proximity to the Pittsburgh metropolitan area. The
development of the gas industry is seen more as an addition to the already diverse portfolio of
industries and employment opportunities. Regardless, the research team was interested in how the
development of the gas industry might have influenced the future educational, career, and residential
plans of youth within areas with significant Marcellus Shale gas development. They asked questions
about the career aspirations the youth in the focus groups, and what these youth heard from their
peers.
One question the research team asked was whether the Marcellus Shale industry and the proliferation
of new – and often lucrative – economic opportunities might encourage postsecondary enrollment,
particularly within STEM fields such as geology and engineering, or whether it might discourage college
enrollment given the costs of paying for post-secondary education while simultaneously foregoing
current labor market opportunities. The students, for the most part, talked about a variety of plans for
15. The Center for Rural Pennsylvania Page | 15
life after graduation, including military service, entering the local workforce, getting post-secondary
vocational credentials or going to college. Surprisingly, relatively few students expressed the intention
to take advantage of employment directly associated with the Marcellus Shale industry (and of those,
only males), although several saw their career paths, such as in health care, as influenced by new
consumer and service demands associated with the changing labor market and demographic conditions.
While several students described knowing or hearing about women working within shale gas industry
jobs, these jobs were mainly associated with office work.
The students in all four districts spoke at length, however, about how employment opportunities in the
industry had shaped the future plans of friends and family members, especially those who did not
consider themselves to be college-bound. In Bradford County, the following exchange was recorded:
Student 1: That’s what a lot of people talk about that aren’t going to college. They’re gonna
go work for the gas company.
Student 2: That’s what my brother does right now. He graduated 2 years ago. He just
bought a new truck cuz he’s loaded apparently cuz I guess they make a lot of
money.
A similar back and forth was heard in Lycoming County:
Student 1: An 18-year-old kid coming out of high school, saying “here’s $20 an hour, or you
can go to college.”
Student 2: He’s gonna say, “Yeah, gimme the money!” [Laughter]
Student 1: Rather go get the money than sit in class.
In several focus groups students talked about peers they knew who had dropped out of school to obtain
employment. State-level data do not suggest spikes in dropout rates associated with local Marcellus
Shale industry activity (see Report #3 on Education). However, both students and educators described
this happening, such as in Bradford County:
Student 1: We have a lot more kids drop out.
Moderator: Really?
Student 2: Yeah.
Student 1: Oh, yeah. Drop-out rates [fading voice].
Moderator: The companies will hire people who drop out?
Student 1: Yeah.
Student 2: For the most part, I think. I think they have to get a GED, but they do that after
work.
Moderator: They do that while they’re working?
Student 2: Yeah, normally.
And in Washington County a student related, “I know last year we had a lot of graduates go straight to
working on the wells because that’s where the business, you know, that’s where their job openings
could be. They didn’t have to waste time at school. They just went right in and started making good
money for being an 18-year-old that just graduated.” In several of the focus groups, students spoke
about experiencing direct industrial recruitment, suggesting that the information they received clearly
16. The Center for Rural Pennsylvania Page | 16
indicated that a college degree was not a requirement for entering the Marcellus Shale industry
workforce. In Lycoming County, a student said:
Student: I went to (a different, nearby school district) the past two years, and Halliburton
comes directly to the school every year and recruits the high school graduates
as soon as they graduate. They offer ‘em a job right outta high school so they
pretty much tell ‘em, “You don’t have to move forward, we’ll give you a job with
money and some’n’ to do right out of that. You don’t have to go back to school.”
Moderator: Do you know what kind of jobs those are?
Student: Labor. Labor jobs.
In the same focus group another said:
“Yeah. Down there, they bring in the trucks. They have the people that—one year they had—I
think it was like a president or a CEO of this branch down in this area. He came down and he
talked to us and showed us a big video of how they drill, and then he told us they replant
everything. Then, the next year, they came up with a truck and showed everyone that and said,
“You start out, this much money now, right outta high school. You don’t even have to think
about it. Show us your diploma, and you have a job.”
Even for students who do consider themselves college-bound, the lure of well-paid positions is
tempting, as another student from Bradford County said, “I’ve already had an offer when I turn 18. I can
start out making $3,000 a week from just as an assistant, and you don’t even need a degree for that. I
still want to go to college and everything, but I might do that over the summer.” Several spoke of people
they knew who planned to work for the gas industry to make money to pay for college, but they also
noted that for those who choose that path, it might be difficult to go to college after having been out of
school for a few years and in the workforce.
There was relatively little discussion in any of the focus groups about the overall value of a college
education with regard to the Marcellus Shale industry. In Washington County, however, one student
related that a college degree could be a good investment because “then you can make even more
money than what you’d be able to as just a laborer” and jobs requiring post-secondary degrees might
hold the possibility of not needing to work as many hours, especially after having a family. That way,
“You can actually enjoy life instead of just working away.”
Uncertainties of Gas Industry Employment
A recurring theme across nearly all focus groups was what students saw as the downsides to working in
the Marcellus gas industry, despite potentially lucrative employment. First, students expressed
uncertainty about the overall longevity of the industry and the associated jobs. Second, of the jobs that
appeared to be the most immediately available, students expressed wariness about the safety and
overall viability of those jobs, especially given the long hours, working conditions, and possibility that
what initially may have seemed like a “local” job may involve frequent relocations and perhaps moving
out of state. As a student in Bradford County said, “When the gas moves, they’re gonna have to move
with it.” A Greene County student said:
“I’ve noticed that a lot of people want to get into the drilling and things, but if you think about
it, once they’re done drilling here, you have to move. You have to go with them. You have to
follow them if you’re gonna probably stay with the company and get involved with it. So there
are some people that have been like, oh, I’m gonna go to school to be a teacher so I can stay
17. The Center for Rural Pennsylvania Page | 17
around here and teach or they’re eventually gonna have to move away if they’re getting
involved with the drilling and the sites and the operations.”
From the perspectives of many of the youth, what may have initially appeared as local employment
prospects may not provide the guarantee of remaining local after all. In Bradford County, a student
talked about working at a local hunting preserve where some gas workers stayed briefly. “I’m close to a
couple of the guys,” he said. “They go all over the place. They’ll be here for a week, and then go down to
Louisiana for a month, and they come back up here. They were telling me to stay out of the life because
it’s terrible because you never know where you’re going, and you never know what you’re doing.” Still
other students spoke about accidents on drilling rig worksites, the time spent away from families, and
the potential for workplace injury, such as this exchange from Lycoming County:
Student 1: Yeah, my brother worked there, and twice he had something wrong with his
eyes from all the chemicals up there. His eyes glued shut and he had to go to
the hospital, and he couldn’t see anything for a couple of days because of the
fumes up on the pads and stuff.
Student 2: It’s so loud, they make you wear ear things on the inside and on the outside. My
dad’s only worked for this company for, like, two months, but you could be
talkin’ face to face; he can’t hear you.
Overall, while students recognized the sometimes significant work opportunities within the industry,
even those that may not require the time and financial investments of college, their enthusiasm for
these opportunities was clearly mixed. Only a handful expressed direct interest in the possibility of
obtaining gas industry jobs.
Conclusions
The development of the Marcellus Shale by the natural gas industry has been heralded as one of the
most significant economic boons for Pennsylvania in decades. The governor’s office has consistently
expressed support for the gas industry and has supported industry-friendly policies to encourage its
growth, a primary justification being the economic and job creation benefits for Pennsylvanians for
generations to come. What opinions do young people, who represent Pennsylvania’s next generation of
working adults, have about gas development, the ways in which it has reshaped their communities, and
how it may or may not be impacting their thoughts about their futures? Youth perspectives and
outcomes are seldom considered in research on natural resource development-related community
change. This report therefore offers an important look at how young people – the next generation of
working-aged adults – see their futures in relation to the development of Pennsylvania’s Marcellus Shale
industry.
Young people, such as those who participated in this study, represent the future generation of
Pennsylvania residents and its workforce. It is important to better understand the perspectives of young
people as they enter adulthood and how youth evaluate local change associated with the gas industry
and what that change means to their communities and their future.
While the youth in these focus groups did not constitute a true random sample of Pennsylvania youth in
areas experiencing Marcellus Shale development, they nonetheless expressed frank opinions about the
changes they had witnessed in their hometowns and what these changes meant to them. It is important
to note that what is presented in this report may or may not reflect gas industry hiring practices,
workforce conditions, or environmental impacts. Nonetheless, the opinions do represent the way the
respondents interpret changes in their communities, and these perspectives are notable for their
relative consistency across districts, counties, and indeed regions of the state. If these perspectives are
18. The Center for Rural Pennsylvania Page | 18
indeed more or less representative of youth opinions statewide, the implications should be troubling for
state policy makers and for the gas industry itself. While only a handful of youth in the focus groups had
unequivocally negative opinions of the gas industry, the vast majority of students spoken with had
clearly ambivalent feelings about the changes they had seen taking place in their communities, changes
that in certain respects have made local areas less attractive as places to live, work and raise a family.
Acknowledgements
Report authors: Kai A. Schafft and Catharine Biddle, Pennsylvania State University
The Marcellus Shale Impacts Study Project Team
Kathryn J. Brasier, Associate Professor of Rural Sociology
Lisa A. Davis, Director of the Pennsylvania Office of Rural Health and Outreach Associate Professor of
Health Policy and Administration
Leland Glenna, Associate Professor of Rural Sociology
Timothy W. Kelsey, Professor of Agricultural Economics and Co-Director of Penn State’s Center for
Economic and Community Development
Diane K. McLaughlin, Professor of Rural Sociology and Demography
Kai A. Schafft, Associate Professor of Education and Director of Penn State Center on Rural Education
and Communities
Kristin Babbie, Graduate Assistant in Rural Sociology
Catharine Biddle, Graduate Assistant in Educational Leadership
Anne DeLessio-Parson, Graduate Assistant in Rural Sociology
Danielle Rhubart, Graduate Assistant in Rural Sociology and Demography
Namrata Uberoi, Ph.D. candidate in Health Policy and Administration
The project team gratefully acknowledges support from the following: the Department of Agricultural
Economics, Sociology and Education in the College of Agricultural Sciences at Penn State; the
Pennsylvania Office of Rural Health; the Department of Education Policy Studies in the College of
Education at Penn State; The Pennsylvania State Univeristy Children, Youth, & Families Consortium; and
the Penn State Institutes for Energy and the Environment. We also thank Penn State’s Survey Research
Center for their assistance with the focus groups. Several individuals contributed to the project through
background research, data collection and analysis, including Matthew Filteau, Mark Leach, Kylie Davis,
Kirsten Hardy, and Kaitlyn Chajkowski. We appreciate their hard work.
We gratefully acknowledge the members of our advisory committees who provided us with important
insights at key points in the project and gave us access to data sets. We also thank the community
members and county commissioners who shared their experiences through focus groups and interviews.
We greatly appreciate their time, assistance, and insights. The authors maintain responsibility for any
errors.
19. The Center for Rural Pennsylvania Page | 19
References
Dell, Ben P., Noam Lockshin, and Scott Gruber. 2008. “Bernstein E&Ps: Where Is the Core of the
Marcellus?” Report published by Sanford C. Bernstein & Co., LLC, a subsidiary of
AllianceBernstein L.P. New York, NY.
DEP Office of Oil and Gas Management: Wells Drilled by County. Pennsylvania Department of
Environmental Protection. http://www.depreportingservices.state.pa.us/. Accessed on July 4,
2013.
McLaughlin, Diane K., Molly A. Martin, April L. Gunsallus, Kathy Brasier and Kelly D. Davis. 2012. “Does
Marcellus Shale Natural Gas Extraction Contribute to Increasing Inequality Among
Pennsylvania’s Families and Communities?” Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Rural
Sociological Society, Chicago, Il., August.
Social Explorer Tables: Census 2000 (SE), Social Explorer; U.S. Census Bureau.
http://www.socialexplorer.com/ Accessed July 12, 2013.
Wrightstone, G. (2008). Marcellus Shale Geologic Controls on Production. Texas Keystone Incorporated.
http://www.papgrocks.org/wrightstone_p.pdf. Accessed October 8, 2012.
21. The Center for Rural Pennsylvania Page | 21
Appendix B. Marcellus Activity County Typology Definitions for Pennsylvaniaa
Category Geological Definition Activity level Counties
Core Counties
with High Drilling
Activityb
(N=7)
More than 50% of the
land area is in the core
Marcellus formation
Annual average
64 or more
Marcellus wells
2005 to 2010
Bradford, Fayette, Greene, Lycoming,
Susquehanna, Tioga, Washington
Core Counties
with Low Drilling
Activity
(N=12)
More than 50% of the
land area is in the core
Marcellus formation
Annual average
less than 64
Marcellus wells
2005 to 2010
Armstrong, Cambria, Cameronc
,
Clearfield, Clinton, Elk, Indiana,
Jefferson, Potterc
, Somerset,
Sullivanc
, Wyoming
Counties in the
Marcellus 2nd
Tier
(N=19)
1%-50% land area is in
the core and 25% or
more land area is in the
less viable areas (2nd
tier
or gray areas in Figure 2)
Not applicable
Bedford, Blair, Butler, Carbon,
Centre, Clarion, Columbia, Crawford,
Forestc
, Lawrence, McKean, Mercer,
Monroe, Montourc
, Pike, Schuylkill,
Venango, Warren, Wayne
Urban Counties
in the Marcellus
Shale--Core or
2nd
Tier
(N=6)
Marcellus Core or 2nd
Tier
and identified as urban
by the Center for Rural
Pennsylvania
Not applicable
Allegheny, Beaver, Erie, Lackawanna,
Luzerne, Westmoreland
Counties with No
Marcellus Shale
(N=23)
25% or less viable
Marcellus land area or no
Marcellus land area
Not applicable
Adams, Berks, Bucks, Chester,
Cumberland, Dauphin, Delaware,
Franklin, Fultonc
, Huntingdon,
Juniata, Lancaster, Lebanon, Lehigh,
Mifflin, Montgomery, Northampton,
Northumberland, Perry, Philadelphia,
Snyder, Union, York
a
See McLaughlin, et al. 2012.
b
Note this category includes all four study counties.
c
These counties are excluded from those analyses that use American Community Survey (ACS) three-year
estimates, as their populations are too small to be estimated.
*For more on maps, see the Penn State University Marcellus Center for Outreach and Research
(http://marcellus.psu.edu) and Dell, Lockshin, and Guber (2008).
22. The Center for Rural Pennsylvania Page | 22
Appendix C: Youth Focus Group Protocol
INTERVIEW PROTOCOL FOR YOUTH FOCUS GROUPS
LOCAL-LEVEL CHANGE:
Tell me a little bit about this community. What is it like to grow up here? How would you describe it to
someone who’s not from here?
When did you first become aware of Marcellus Shale development? How did that happen?
[Core Question]: In what ways, if any, has your community changed since the beginning of Marcellus
Shale gas drilling? What about the county in general?
[probe] What do you see as some of the positive benefits? What do you see as some of the
concerns or challenges? (ask for examples)
[probe] How has Marcellus Shale development changed things for your family? What about your
friends and their families? (ask for examples)
[probe] How are people in your community reacting to local changes connected to Marcellus
Shale development? What are their main concerns? (Or say: What are people most
worried about?) (ask for examples)
POST-SECONDARY PLANS & ASPIRATIONS:
[Core Question]: As juniors or seniors about to finish high school, are you planning to stay in the area
after you graduate? Why/why not?
[probe] What do you see yourselves doing in the next 5 years? The next 10 years?
[Core Question]: Have your future plans changed because of the Marcellus Shale development
happening here? Why/why not? Have your friends’ plans changed?
[Probe] In areas with lots of Marcellus Shale development a lot of times you hear people say
things like “Anybody who wants to get a job around here can get a job.” What do you
think about that? How true is that around here?
[Probe] Do the same job opportunities exist here for both men and women?
23. The Center for Rural Pennsylvania Page | 23
SCHOOL SUPPORT FOR POST-SECONDARY ASPIRATIONS:
[Core Question]: In what ways has your school helped you to think about what you’ll do after you finish
high school?
[probe] In what ways has your school helped provide the preparation or training to take
advantage of job opportunities available locally? What about local opportunities directly
connected to the Marcellus Shale industry?
[probe] How could your school better support your future plans? (classes, curriculum, programs,
guidance, advising, etc.)
[probe] Have you heard of other schools you think are doing it better? What are they doing?
WRAP UP/LOOKING FORWARD:
What do you think opportunities will be like for students graduating from your high school in 5 years? In
10 years?
Is there anything we haven’t talked about relating to the Marcellus Shale development in your area that
you want to talk about or you think is important to know?
24. The Center for Rural Pennsylvania Page | 24
The Center for Rural Pennsylvania Board of Directors
Chairman
Senator Gene Yaw
Vice Chairman
Senator John Wozniak
Treasurer
Representative Garth D. Everett
Secretary
Dr. Nancy Falvo
Clarion University
Representative Rick Mirabito
Dr. Livingston Alexander
University of Pittsburgh
Dr. Theodore R. Alter
Pennsylvania State University
Stephen M. Brame
Governor’s Representative
Taylor A. Doebler III
Governor’s Representative
Dr. Stephan J. Goetz
Northeast Regional Center for Rural Development
Dr. Karen M. Whitney
Clarion University
The Center for Rural Pennsylvania, 625 Forster St., Room 902, Harrisburg, PA 17120
(717) 787-9555 www.rural.palegislature.us
September 2014