Real voices

Who it hurts most

Real experiences from landowners dealing with aging wells and the consequences of corporate irresponsibility.

Voices from rural Alberta

Real stories from landowners, municipal leaders, and advocates dealing with aging wells

Verified quotes from public interviews and news reports

Kara Westerlund

RMA President & Brazeau County Councillor

"Some municipalities are just trying to keep the lights on right now and employ the handful of people that they have left. I've got a municipality up in the north that's owed 34% of their revenue from one company's unpaid taxes."
Impact:Essential public services cut and at risk
Source:The Energy Mix (2024)

Bill & Sylvia Flesher

Brazeau County Landowners

"Now we're not getting any income from the wells. And we also can't utilize the space in the area that they were because they're still under lease. The big companies take the cream off the top, then as soon as there's a little bit less production, then they sell it to a smaller company that doesn't have the resources to be able to reclaim."
Impact:Lost income, can't use your own land
Source:The Narwhal (May 2023)

Tony Bruder

Twin Butte Landowner

"We actually toured them around the sites. They guaranteed us that something would happen in the next six months. We never heard back from them."
Impact:Government promises help, then disappears
Source:CBC News (June 2016)

Dwight Popowich

Alberta Landowner

"Farmers and landowners across Alberta like me trusted the oil and gas companies to clean up these wells on our lands once they've stopped producing, but many energy companies have betrayed Albertans and dumped their cleanup duties onto everyone else."
Impact:Companies broke their promise, now you pay
Source:CBC News (2025)

Daryl Bennett

Director, Action Surface Rights Association

"I'll be frank, from a landowner perspective: we want the wells cleaned up. And the original social contract was society can take our land, expropriate it, extract resources, with a guarantee you're going to clean up the mess."
Impact:They took our land, now won't clean up
Source:CBC News (February 2023)

Michelle Levasseur

2020 Economic Development Manager, Calmar Alberta

"Companies came, they drilled, they made millions of dollars and then they left. If I'm unable to help this community grow by creating jobs and development, then our community essentially could die."
Impact:Community economic development is stalled
Source:CTV News (November 2020)

Shirley Dorin

Landowner with unreclaimed well next to family home (2019)

"The flare is supposed to be lit at all times but it was not and it was expending gas. [My husband] would get up at night and it wouldn't be lit … so he'd go and light the flare. The Dorins blame their health complications on gas leaks from the well."

Why stories matter

Personal experiences drive policy change

Your story helps expose the real impact of aging wells on rural communities

Every story counts

Behind every aging well is a family, a farm, and a community dealing with the consequences. Your experience matters and can help prevent this from happening to others.

Document the crisis

Personal accounts provide evidence of the widespread nature of aging well problems across Alberta.

Influence decision makers

MLAs and policymakers need to hear directly from affected constituents about real consequences.

Build public awareness

Media coverage of individual stories helps urban Albertans understand the scope of the problem.

Common impacts

How aging wells hurt communities

Every story is unique, but these are the impacts we hear about most often.

Water contamination

Wells, creeks, and groundwater poisoned by leaking oil and gas.

Lost income

Can't farm contaminated land. Can't sell devalued property. Cleanup costs you can't afford.

Health problems

Headaches, breathing issues, and worse from hydrogen sulfide and benzene exposure.

Broken promises

Companies promise cleanup, then disappear. Regulators say they'll help, then don't.

Neighbour conflicts

Aging wells create tension between landowners and remaining oil companies.

Kids can't take over

Young farmers won't inherit land with massive environmental liabilities.

Your privacy

How we handle your story

Safe and secure sharing

We understand that sharing your story can feel vulnerable. That's why we've built privacy protection into every step of the process.

Privacy first

You control how much identifying information is shared. Choose to remain anonymous or use only your first name.

Secure storage

All stories are stored securely and only shared with your explicit permission.

Editorial review

Stories are reviewed for accuracy and impact before being shared publicly or with media.

Your story can make the difference

When Alberta MLAs consider the proposed Mature Asset Strategy in fall 2025, they need to hearfrom the people who live with the consequences of aging wells every day.

Real Voices

Stories from rural Alberta

Real experiences from landowners dealing with aging wells and the consequences of corporate irresponsibility.

Kara Westerlund

RMA President & Brazeau County Councillor

"Some municipalities are just trying to keep the lights on right now and employ the handful of people that they have left. I've got a municipality up in the north that's owed 34% of their revenue from one company's unpaid taxes."
Impact:Essential public services cut and at risk
Source:The Energy Mix (2024)

Bill & Sylvia Flesher

Brazeau County Landowners

"Now we're not getting any income from the wells. And we also can't utilize the space in the area that they were because they're still under lease. The big companies take the cream off the top, then as soon as there's a little bit less production, then they sell it to a smaller company that doesn't have the resources to be able to reclaim."
Impact:Lost income, can't use your own land
Source:The Narwhal (May 2023)

Tony Bruder

Twin Butte Landowner

"We actually toured them around the sites. They guaranteed us that something would happen in the next six months. We never heard back from them."
Impact:Government promises help, then disappears
Source:CBC News (June 2016)

Dwight Popowich

Alberta Landowner

"Farmers and landowners across Alberta like me trusted the oil and gas companies to clean up these wells on our lands once they've stopped producing, but many energy companies have betrayed Albertans and dumped their cleanup duties onto everyone else."
Impact:Companies broke their promise, now you pay
Source:CBC News (2025)

Why stories matter

Personal experiences drive policy change

Your story helps expose the real impact of aging wells on rural communities

Every story counts

Behind every aging well is a family, a farm, and a community dealing with the consequences. Your experience matters and can help prevent this from happening to others.

Document the crisis

Personal accounts provide evidence of the widespread nature of aging well problems across Alberta.

Influence decision makers

MLAs and policymakers need to hear directly from affected constituents about real consequences.

Build public awareness

Media coverage of individual stories helps urban Albertans understand the scope of the problem.

Your story can make the difference

When Alberta MLAs consider the proposed Mature Asset Strategy in fall 2025, they need to hearfrom the people who live with the consequences of aging wells every day.

The Real Impact on Rural Alberta

For years, Albertans have been sharing stories of how leaking and aging wells are damaging their health and ruining their land. The "Mature Asset Strategy" would accelerate the trend of oil and gas companies dining on profits, then dashing out on their cleanup costs, lease payments, and municipal taxes – leaving devastation in their wake.

Water contamination

Wells, creeks, and groundwater poisoned by leaking infrastructure. Damages drinking water and livestock. Crop yields and grazing land harmed for decades.

Lost income

Can't farm contaminated land. Can't sell devalued property. Cleanup costs you can't afford. Landowners face costly legal fights.

Health problems

Headaches, breathing issues, and illnesses from exposure to toxins like hydrogen sulfide and benzene.

Broken promises

Over $250 million in unpaid municipal taxes. Companies promise cleanup, then disappear. Regulators say they'll help, then don't.

Neighbour conflicts

Aging wells create tension between landowners, municipalities, and remaining oil companies.

Kids can't take over

Young farmers don't want to inherit land with massive environmental liabilities.

Here are some of those stories:

Kara Westerlund

RMA President & Brazeau County Councillor

"Some municipalities are just trying to keep the lights on right now and employ the handful of people that they have left. I've got a municipality up in the north that's owed 34% of their revenue from one company's unpaid taxes."
Impact:Essential public services cut and at risk
Source:The Energy Mix (2024)

Bill & Sylvia Flesher

Brazeau County Landowners

"Now we're not getting any income from the wells. And we also can't utilize the space in the area that they were because they're still under lease. The big companies take the cream off the top, then as soon as there's a little bit less production, then they sell it to a smaller company that doesn't have the resources to be able to reclaim."
Impact:Lost income, can't use your own land
Source:The Narwhal (May 2023)

Tony Bruder

Twin Butte Landowner

"We actually toured them around the sites. They guaranteed us that something would happen in the next six months. We never heard back from them."
Impact:Government promises help, then disappears
Source:CBC News (June 2016)

Dwight Popowich

Alberta Landowner

"Farmers and landowners across Alberta like me trusted the oil and gas companies to clean up these wells on our lands once they've stopped producing, but many energy companies have betrayed Albertans and dumped their cleanup duties onto everyone else."
Impact:Companies broke their promise, now you pay
Source:CBC News (2025)

Daryl Bennett

Director, Action Surface Rights Association

"I'll be frank, from a landowner perspective: we want the wells cleaned up. And the original social contract was society can take our land, expropriate it, extract resources, with a guarantee you're going to clean up the mess."
Impact:They took our land, now won't clean up
Source:CBC News (February 2023)

Michelle Levasseur

2020 Economic Development Manager, Calmar Alberta

"Companies came, they drilled, they made millions of dollars and then they left. If I'm unable to help this community grow by creating jobs and development, then our community essentially could die."
Impact:Community economic development is stalled
Source:CTV News (November 2020)

Shirley Dorin

Landowner with unreclaimed well next to family home (2019)

"The flare is supposed to be lit at all times but it was not and it was expending gas. [My husband] would get up at night and it wouldn't be lit … so he'd go and light the flare. The Dorins blame their health complications on gas leaks from the well."

Do you have a story to share?

If you've dealt with aging wells, unpaid taxes from oil companies, or cleanup promises that never happened, we want to hear from you.

Before the Legislature votes on the Mature Asset Strategy, MLAs need to understand what this $60 billion scam really costs rural Alberta families.

We're looking for:

Landowners

With aging wells on their property

Municipal leaders

Dealing with unpaid oil company taxes

Anyone affected

By broken cleanup promises

Your experience can help stop the Mature Asset Strategy giveaway.

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