Hello, all! I'm in an Antero unit that went to sales on July 21. According to my contract, I'm supposed to begin getting royalties six months from the first day of the month after that, which would be February 1, 2015. I have heard that they are consistently late in paying royalties, and that they're behind on issuing division orders. Has anyone out there received a royalty (NOT signing bonus) payment from Antero? Anyone received a Division Order yet? Just curious if this is a good company to be dealing with. They seem to be a great producer. Thanks for anything anyone is willing to share. By the way, I'm in the Vorhies unit. The initial production numbers are up on their company presentation and they look pretty good!
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Permalink Reply by Paul Nickels on October 9, 2014 at 11:39am VERY familiar with that, Arnold : - ) Retired three months ago!
Permalink Reply by jason irvine on October 9, 2014 at 11:07am
Permalink Reply by jason irvine on October 9, 2014 at 11:08am
Permalink Reply by Carl Krebsbach on October 10, 2014 at 9:01pm What is the difference between a "Division Order" and a "Declaration of Unitization"? My parcels are covered by three Antero units:
Unit A started producing in Q2 of this year, but I have heard nothing from Antero.
Unit B is listed as "drilling" but I did get a "Declaration of Unitization" for my records from Antero.
Unit C is permitted only so far. Nothing from Antero yet.
A co owner and myself have each called Antero asking for a "Declaration of Unitization" for Unit A and both times they promised to send one to us but so far nothing....
Permalink Reply by The Hiker on October 11, 2014 at 2:02am Start working your way up the food chain with those requests. Put a pebble in someone's shoe, like the VP in charge of production Kevin Kilstrom 303 357 7345. His office will not be happy fielding tiresome requests that someone else in the organization is getting paid to handle, but isn't. Administrative assistant Errin Savat will answer the phone. Ask to speak with Kevin. Be a pebble.
I'm not sure about the difference between the DO and Dec of U, but I believe they are similar documents; I think the DO is a legal document, but the other is just informative....stating your acreage (as well as all others) in the unit, but I'm sure someone else on GMS can answer this question exactly.
Permalink Reply by Paul Nickels on October 11, 2014 at 2:40am The Division Order is definitely a legal document, Carl. As I understand it, it's the final description and confirmation of the acreage that is in a given frack plot, with all titles, royalty rates, etc. once again checked and signed off on by the attorneys, and all "decimals" allocated for the final time. I'm told they are long documents (hundreds of pages) and that they must be signed and returned to Antero BEFORE any royalties are paid, and that royalty payments typically follow submission of the DO by about two months. I just wish someone would reply who has actually received a DO, signed and returned it, and gotten royalties. Amazingly, judging by this discussion, no one seems to have gotten this far in Noble County!
Permalink Reply by Paul Nickels on October 15, 2014 at 12:18pm Good advice, Adam. It is definitely worth the money to pay an experienced attorney for a couple hours of his (or her) time to review a Division Order. It's their last opportunity to screw people out of what's coming to them, and to use their signature as an excuse. By the way, I'm guessing not too many people from Noble County read this board. Not a single one has responded to it with any information about their own experience with Antero or royalties. Oh, well!
Permalink Reply by bo boboski on October 15, 2014 at 12:36pm they don't have computers there?
Permalink Reply by Nancy Mosley on October 15, 2014 at 4:01pm Division orders: The National Association of Division Order Analysts has a website
http://www.nadoa.org/index.html
with some information. Under the Publications page, you can find the Model Form DO. Some kind person told me about this a few years ago when a company was trying to do what Adam said, add in a clause about costs being taken out. I downloaded the Model Form, filled it in, and sent it back with a letter saying I would not be agreeing to deductions that weren't in my lease, and the company accepted it and has not deducted costs.
You never know when you need this.
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