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Pipeline opponent wins Chester County seat in state House

Danielle Friel Otten says a pipeline being built yards from her back door motivated her to run

  • Susan Phillips
Crews work to stabilize sinkholes in a West Whiteland Township, Chester County neighborhood on March 3. The sinkholes appeared  near a construction site for the Mariner East 2 pipeline.

Eric Friedman / Submitted

Crews work to stabilize sinkholes in a West Whiteland Township, Chester County neighborhood on March 3. The sinkholes appeared near a construction site for the Mariner East 2 pipeline.

Danielle Friel Otten was elected state representative for the 155th district in November 2018.

A prominent pipeline opponent from Chester County will be heading to the state House of Representatives next year. Democrat Danielle Friel Otten beat incumbent Republican Becky Corbin to represent the 155thdistrict in a race largely defined by community opposition to Sunoco’s Mariner East pipeline project.

Friel Otten says she never thought about running for office until Sunoco began building its Mariner East pipelines 50 feet from her back door.

“There was a group of us who sat around our patio last summer and we talked about what can we do, what are our next steps,” said Friel Otten, “and we agreed that we needed to get people to step up and run.”

Mariner East 2 construction has led to drilling mud spills, sink holes, and contaminated water wells in Chester County.

Friel Otten says frustration battling the pipeline project, concerns about safety and the response from local politicians led her and her neighbors to run for office.

“We need people who make better decisions for our communities and who have the courage and fight when something’s not ok,” she said.

She says she rejected any corporate money for her campaign, and raised $250,000. Last year, pipeline opponents in Chester County got elected as township supervisors and local school board members.

Friel Otten will be joined by 14, possibly 15, new suburban Philadelphia Democrats in the state House and Senate. Many of those have taken a strong stance against new pipelines.

Friel Otten says in Harrisburg she will work to make Pennsylvania a leader in renewable energy.

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