YOUNGSTOWN -- Tuesday night it was protestors on the statehouse steps in Columbus and Wednesday night they're targeting Youngstown.
Youngstown is the site of 11 earthquakes in just the last 12 months.
Wednesday night, an important meeting was underway, a forum and an opportunity for people to voice their concerns.
Eleven earthquakes later, the latest registering 4.0 on the Richter scale, there are a lot of concerns, a lot of questions that this panel had to answer.
The meeting was well attended as residents are here, people who live within miles of the Northstar disposal well, the well which is believed to have caused those quakes.
Also here are members of the scientific community as well as citizens from a group called No Frack Ohio.
No Frack Ohio is calling for a statewide ban on what's called fracking, a process that blasts pressurized water, sand and chemicals underground to release gas and oil reserves.
The group also wants a ban on deep injection wells that hold drilling wastewater.
At the last fracking event, they were quite vocal with signs, holding a peaceful protest, but that is not the case today, as it's all about getting answers the meeting.
And that Northstar disposal well agreed to shut down a day before that Dec. 31 quake.
Ohio Oil and Gas maintains that there are about 180 wells, just like that one across the state and that this particular well is an isolated incident, that there havent been any other problems like this aat other sites.
Of course that's hard to hear for the people who say they've lived here for years and never have seen earthquakes before.
WKYC-TV