Posts Tagged ‘group’

Columbia County group offers gas drilling lease negotiator

Offer extended to interested landowners in Ross and Fairmount townships.

ROSS TWP. – For a limited time, landowners looking for a natural-gas drilling lease have a commitment-free offer to get a low-cost lease negotiator.

The Columbia County Landowners Coalition has a secured a consultant from Texas to negotiate a deal, but he’s starting soon and only doing it once.

The consultant, who has experience with fossil-fuel wells in the Midwest, is charging $1 per acre and expects to begin negotiations at $2,900 per acre for sign-on bonuses and extraction royalties of 18.75 percent, the executive committee of the Southwest Ross Township Property Group announced at a meeting on Tuesday evening.

Those figures exceed the usual for contracts inked in this region.

The Ross group, led by the committee of eight volunteers actively researching the situation, has been holding meetings to explain issues regarding gas leases and sign up landowners within its borders. It’s focusing on a roughly 10,000-acre region and hopes to amass a no-commitment membership of at least 4,000 acres within there.

The Columbia County offer is extended to interested landowners in the vicinity, including the Ross Township group and one in Fairmount Township. Landowners can sign up at the coalition’s Web site, but they must act soon.

According to the Ross group, the coalition expects to begin negotiating in a matter of weeks and hopes to have a contract to sign by the fall. And the consultant, who is doing a favor for a friend, plans to return to retirement after completing the deal.

If it sounds too good to be true, the suspicion might be warranted. The Ross committee acknowledged that the timetable is more rushed than they’d prefer, but they argue that there’s no commitment and people can opt out if they dislike the negotiated deal.

According to the committee, the Columbia County group is moving quickly because sign-on bonuses are considered regular income, and the group fears the changing political climate next year will mean tax increases for upper tax brackets.

What’s next?

The Southwest Ross Township Property Group is holding its next informational meeting at 7 p.m. July 29 at the Sweet Valley fire hall on Main Road.

Copyright: Times Leader

Tunkhannock joins gas-lease group

By Rory Sweeneyrsweeney@timesleader.com
Staff Writer

TUNKHANNOCK – The Tunkhannock Area School District will join a landowners group that is uniting to negotiate natural-gas leases.

The decision was made by a unanimous vote of the school board Thursday evening at a work session.

The school district owns about 200 acres, all of which will be available for leasing.

It intends to join the already 900-member Wyoming County Landowners Oil and Gas Lease group, which controls 47,000 acres, according to group members.

The group has agreed to accept no offer less than $2,700 per acre, board President Jack Tomlin said.

That represents an influx of about $540,000 into the district’s coffers, and about $126.9 million for the group’s members.

Because the board wasn’t able to make a decision by the admission deadline created by the group, it will be put on a waiting list for the next round of member approvals, he said.

He said the board had individually sought offers from gas companies for its land, but had found the process untenable. The group’s $30 entry fee and access to legal representation made joining economical, he said.

“Part of it is there is no obligation to sign” any lease offered, he said.

The school’s holdings include four elementary schools, an administration center, a secondary school and a tract of empty land in a nearby township.

Jim Harvey, a member of the group, said just a month ago the agreed upon lease price was $2,100. At that rate, the district would stand to gain $420,000, and landowners would receive nearly $100 million.

As a taxpayer, Harvey was pleased with the board’s decision.

“It’s a huge chunk of money. It could be a free gift,” he said.

However, he was concerned that the pristine land could be polluted and ruined by drilling.

Jim Greenley, a fellow taxpayer, pointed out that opportunities to lower school taxes shouldn’t be missed.

“Our millage just went up tonight,” he said. “It might go down now.”

Copyright: Times Leader