How fracking companies exploit Amish farmers
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Its no secret that fracking companies engage in some shady behavior. But a report in The New Republic reveals just how low theyll sink in the rush to exploit natural gas: Energy companies in eastern Ohio home to the worlds largest Amish population and billions of dollars worth of oil and gas reserves have been convincing Amish farmers to sign away drilling rights to their land for far less than theyre worth, knowing that because their religious tradition frowns on lawsuits, the landowners will have little recourse for justice once they realize theyve been duped.
Lloyd Miller, for example, an Amish farmer near Millersburg, Ohio, said an agent from Kenoil offered him $10 an acre to drill for shale gas on his 158 acres, promising it was the best deal around. Strapped for cash at the time, Miller and his wife said yes, figuring, Hey, thats $1,500 we didnt have, Miller explained. But they soon found out many non-Amish farmers in the area were leasing drilling rights for as much as $1,000 an acre. Miller consulted with a lawyer, who told him the agent had committed fraud by promising that $10 an acre was the best he could get. The Millers had grounds to sue but thats something that, in accordance with their Amish beliefs, theyd never do. Of the Kenoil agent, Miller said: Hes got to live with his conscience.
The New Republic explains:
Their prohibition on the courts derives from the portion of the Sermon on the Mount where Jesus instructs his followers to turn the other cheek, and if they are sued for their coats, to give up their cloaks, too. The Amish interpret this to mean that the court is no place to right wrongs. In 2011, for example, after the Securities and Exchange Commission charged a local man, Monroe L. Beachy, with running a Ponzi scheme that wiped out nearly $17 million in Amish retirement savings, a committee representing his some 2,500 Amish creditors asked a judge to dismiss his bankruptcy case so that they could resolve his debts amongst themselves.
Lest youre tempted to give fracking companies the benefit of the doubt, a lawyer for Columbia Gas Transmission Corp. told The New Republic that the Amish restriction on litigation is a known fact to us.