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Who wants to frack under an Ohio state park? Those details are secret.


Morgan Hager of Meigs County has tape over her mouth while she protests during a meeting that was held by the Oil and Gas Land Management Commission to determine whether to let private companies bid for contracts on different parcels of land in Ohio.

The road to fracking under Ohio’s state parks and wildlife areas has been paved with secrecy, opponents say, and the application process is the latest example.

Sunday marked the deadline for companies to apply to extract for oil and gas under Salt Fork State Park in Guernsey County, Valley Run Wildlife Area in Carroll County and Zepernick Wildlife Area in Columbiana County.

But Ohioans won’t know who applied until after Ohio’s Oil and Gas Land Commission picks a winner. That’s because of a 2011 law that keeps the details of these bids confidential.

Fracking, or hydraulic fracturing, is a method that injects water, sand and chemicals into the ground to create new fractures in rocks and extract natural gas, oil and brine. The process can result in chemical spills at the surface, groundwater quality contamination and induced earthquakes, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.



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