Sludge Watch ==> What's in it? Sewage Sludge Cause for Concern - Virginia
Maureen Reilly
maureen.reilly at sympatico.ca
Sat Sep 30 15:33:45 EDT 2006
Opinion
Virginia - Daily Press
What's in it?
Until we know, sewage sludge is a cause for concern
September 29, 2006
The nationwide alarm over E. coli is a reminder: Dangerous substances lurk
in the excrement of living organisms, and they can threaten human health.
That is an important lesson for Surry and Isle of Wight and Middlesex
counties and every locality where sewage sludge is spread. It's a lesson the
General Assembly of Virginia should take to heart.
Let us be careful about the differences between the E. coli scare and the
things that scare people about sludge. The strain of E. coli that has caused
so much sickness and at least one death isn't likely to be found in sludge.
It lives in the digestive tracts of some cattle and creates problems for
humans when it contaminates their food due to sloppiness when animals are
butchered, or when contaminated manure is used on food crops or contaminated
water irrigates fields.
The sludge used to fertilize farms and timberland comes from a different
source: sewage treatment plants. They process whatever goes down the pipes
in homes, offices and factories, and they end up with two products: water
and solids. The cleaner the plants get the water - and they strive to get it
clean, before discharging it into rivers and bays - the more contaminants
may concentrate in the solid matter left behind.
But just as animal manure can contain E. coli, sludge from treatment plants
can contain whatever was present in the waste of the humans and factories
that was processed: toxins, metals, bacteria, viruses, parasites,
pharmaceuticals. The content of one batch can differ from the next,
depending on what was going down the drains at any particular time.
Yes, sludge is treated - but treatment doesn't eliminate all pathogens. And
changing its name - calling it "biosolids" - doesn't change its nature.
Governmental regulation and oversight of sludge are so inadequate that the
question "Is it safe?" can't be answered with any scientific confidence. Nor
is there proper oversight to make sure sludge is adequately treated, or
sufficient research to resolve questions about its safety.
In its eagerness to push sludge as fertilizer, the Environmental Protection
Agency has been downright negligent. Its own inspector general concluded
that the EPA really can't assure the public that its current practices are
adequate to protect public health. It requires testing for only nine
substances, mostly metals, ignoring the many thousands that could
contaminate sludge. It has gone for years without inspecting an application
of sludge in Virginia.
The state has done no better. The Department of Health has been
lackadaisical in exercising its responsibility, rarely bothering to inspect
whether sludge is applied according to state standards. The Department of
Environmental Quality's willingness to accept the EPA's defensive position -
that there is no definitive proof that sludge isn't safe - is disappointing,
as there's no proof that it is safe.
That leaves localities in a bind. The General Assembly has denied them the
right to refuse sludge and allows them only to test and monitor. They should
wrest every bit of protection they can from that, with local ordinances and
programs that keep a close and skeptical eye on what's going on in their
borders.
Last year, one of the big sludge providers expanded its operation in Surry
County from 100 to 4,000 acres, and it's trying to add more. In Isle of
Wight County, several permits to spread sludge were recently granted.
All this with the questions unanswered: What's in it? Is it safe?
More information about the Sludgewatch-l
mailing list