Update: NPR on the personal story of Bob and Lisa Parr (audio)

Equipment installed by Aruba Petroleum at a natural gas well near Decatur, Texas. Bob and Lisa Parr sued Aruba, calling its drilling sites a nuisance to the family's health. A jury awarded the family $2.9 million.

Equipment installed by Aruba Petroleum at a natural gas well near Decatur, Texas. Bob and Lisa Parr sued Aruba, calling its drilling sites a nuisance to the family’s health. A jury awarded the family $2.9 million.

Today we have an update from NPR on last week’s personal story of Bob and Lisa Parr, who last week were awarded a judgment of $2.9 million against Aruba Petroleum for creating a nuisance on their property.

If you are receiving this via email, or if the media player below doesn’t load, you can click here to listen to the update. This may take a minute to load.

 

Transcript follows:
A Dallas jury recently awarded nearly $3 million to a family who said they were poisoned by a natural gas drilling operation near their North Texas ranch. The verdict, reached on April 22, is being called a landmark by opponents of the drilling technique, called hydraulic fracturing or “fracking.”

Bob and Lisa Parr have been telling their story for a while. They even appeared in the anti-fracking documentary Gasland II. But since the verdict, Lisa Parr says it feels like she’s been telling it nonstop.

“I started feeling bad. I blew it off as flu,” she says. But months went by, and she kept feeling sick.

“I had a rash throughout my body,” Lisa Parr says. “My lymph nodes stuck out in my neck like the size of pecans. There was four of them on each side.”

Bob Parr and their daughter eventually developed symptoms as well, including dizziness, nosebleeds, rashes, stomach problems and difficulty breathing.

The doctors treating Lisa Parr decided the cause was something in the environment. The family talked to neighbors, one of whom kept a log of spills and leaks at nearby natural gas sites.

“When they showed me those dates, I flipped back, and those were the dates I was either in the emergency room or at a doctor’s office,” she says.

The Parrs sued several nearby drilling companies. Of those suits, all but one was dismissed or settled out of court. Bob Parr says one remaining company, Aruba Petroleum, never offered to settle. “They were kind of the main player there next to our house,” he says.

He believes Aruba was responsible for the family’s illness. Last week, a jury agreed.

“It is rare for any case to go to the jury in a civil case, just simply because most settle,” he says.

When it comes to drilling companies, those settlements often include gag orders, meaning the people involved can’t talk about their experiences.

“[Aruba Petroleum] apparently decided to draw the line, which as it turns out was not necessarily a very good decision,” McGarity says.

In a statement after the verdict, the company expressed its disappointment, saying it’s in compliance with Texas air quality rules. But that doesn’t necessarily matter, because the Parrs filed a nuisance claim. It’s the same kind of suit that’s sometimes brought against unruly neighbors, even if they haven’t been charged with a crime.

“The interesting aspect of the nuisance claim is that it is specifically in addition to the public law,” says professor Hannah Wiseman, who studies fracking regulations at Florida State University.

She says nuisance claims are increasing in parts of the country where oil and gas drilling happens near people’s homes.

“They allow this very broad argument that property use has been unreasonably interfered with, and I think they in part fill in what some people see as gaps in the regulatory regime,” Wiseman says.

She expects more nuisance claims, especially in places like Texas, where regulations are relatively lax. The Parrs’ lawyer is already getting calls from other property owners.

As for the Parrs, they say they never set out to fight fracking, just one irresponsible company. A judge still needs to sign off on the verdict. If that happens, Aruba Petroleum is expected to appeal.

About davidjkatz

The Moses family has lived on the Stillwater River since 1974, when George and Lucile Moses retired and moved to the Beehive from the Twin Cities. They’re gone now, but their four daughters (pictured at left, on the Beehive) and their families continue to spend time there, and have grown to love the area. This blog started as an email chain to keep the family informed about the threat of increased fracking activity in the area, but the desire to inform and get involved led to the creation of this blog.
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