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The money from drilling won't cure state shortfalls, but every office is being asked to find new revenue or face cuts, including parks. Arkansas parks director Greg Butts said his state received about $200,000 in initial bonus payments by signing the deal allowing natural gas directional drilling under Woolly Hollow, cradled in the Ozark foothills. The lease doesn't allow drilling on park property. On land sitting above massive natural gas reserves like the Marcellus shale, which spreads over four states including Ohio, new drilling techniques have created a lot more opportunities for companies like Oklahoma City-based Chesapeake Energy Corp. "In our home state, in fact, one of our larger royalty owners is the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation," said spokesman Jim Gipson. "Many public entities are seeing that there is significant opportunity to create economic value from natural gas resource development while simultaneously protecting the environment." Some states have balked, with lawmakers in Kentucky and Ohio allowing state-park drilling proposals to die this year. Looking solely at proceeds from drilling, some say, is missing the bigger picture and the greater harm. In Pennsylvania, however, a state ban on surface drilling in state parks was unable to thwart private drilling in Goddard State Park because the company, Pittsburgh-based Vista Resources, owns the mineral rights. Most state park directors still see drilling as contrary to their mission of leaving the land as pristine as possible, said Philip McKnelly, executive director of the National Association of State Park Directors. Once that line is crossed, park officials say, there is no going back. Right now, there is a huge glut of natural gas because of the recession and the new drilling techniques. Prices have plunged as a result. There is apprehension from some park directors that with any economic rebound, the pressure to drill on public lands will only grow stronger. ___ On The Net: National Association of State Park Directors:
http://www.naspd.org/ Interstate Oil and Gas Compact Commission:
http://www.iogcc.state.ok.us/
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