Fracking Ban Overturned: Court Strikes Down Morgantown's Ordinance

March, 2017 - Charleston, West Virginia

<strong>Morgantown, W.Va.</strong> — The Circuit Court of Monongalia County, W.Va. entered summary judgment Friday overturning the City of Morgantown’s recently enacted ordinance banning horizontal drilling and fracking in and around the city. This type of ordinance is frequently referred to as a <strong>fracking ban</strong>. The Court determined that the drilling ban is preempted by the State's regulatory scheme and is therefore invalid, ruling in favor of Northeast Natural Energy (Northeast).<br /> <br /> Judge Susan B. Tucker's order came in a  lawsuit filed by Northeast shortly after the ordinance was enacted in late June. Northeast has two Marcellus natural gas wells at a decades-old industrial site across the  Monongahela River from Morgantown. The two wells were fully permitted by the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection three months before the ordinance was enacted.<br /> <br /> Northeast is represented by Spilman Thomas & Battle, PLLC lawyers <a href="~/Attorneys/R-Z/Walls,-James-A">James A. Walls</a> and <a href="~/Attorneys/D-H/Garrison,-Michael-S">Michael S. Garrison</a>, who are both skilled litigators with experience in the natural gas industry.<br />   <hr /> <span style="font-size: smaller;">About Spilman Thomas & Battle, PLLC<br /> Spilman Thomas & Battle is a full-service law firm with more than 135 attorneys. Founded in 1864, Spilman has offices in Charleston, Morgantown and Wheeling, W.Va.; Harrisburg and Pittsburgh, Pa.; Winston-Salem, N.C.; and Roanoke, Va. </span>

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