Guest guest Posted November 11, 2008 Report Share Posted November 11, 2008 this is an american article but gives you a pretty scary nightmre or two http://www.carlaemery.com/News.htm Where Do the Toxics Go? I've learned about four places they go. I think you need to be informed about this. Into the Road Tar--A road worker told me that it was routine to mix toxic wastes into road tar for the purpose of disposing of it. In Maine, I encountered a community which was fighting this policy for its local area. Into the Cement--A pretzel company mechanic in Ohio told me that his plants' toxic wastes (heavy metal powder, etc.) were handled by a toxic waste specialist. He had toured the facilities of that company. They told him they trucked the toxic wastes to Oklahoma where they were mixed with the foundation material which would be distributed to become cement. A lady told me that she and her husband had moved into a new home which had bare cement basement and walls. She wanted to know why she couldn't store food in the basement. She said she put a bag of flour on the basement floor--and it developed a really weird smell. She said that vegetables she put in the basement rotted. It made me wonder if the toxics in the cement might be a factor. I think that if they're going to put toxics into house cement, people should at least be forewarned, better yet given a choice whether they want that kind of cement or not. In regard to the woman who said her vegetables `rotted' in the basement: I think I may know what actually happened. In most cases, the root cellar, or the cellar, has to be vented. My ex-son-in-law built a `root cellar.' We told him it should be vented, but he was a know-it-all, so he told everybody it didn't need to be vented. Consequently, all of his vegetables rotted. Everything was spiled: potatoes, squash, turnips, etc. Why the bag of flour in the basement had a weird smell is another question, isn't it? Victor Thayer, Sr., Cortland, N.Y. Into the Fertilizer--Federal guidelines allow industrial producers of toxic wastes to pay fertilizer producers to take the stuff off their hands by mixing it in with the fertilizer they sell to farmers and gardeners. Yes, you read that correctly. I heard about farmers in Eastern Washington who developed severe health problems and whose ground became poor for growing crops because of toxics in Cenex bulk fertilizer which they had no warning was there. I personally talked to an individual in Eastern Colorado who had run into the same problem with Cenex fertilizer. In Maine, I heard that toxics also may turn up in bagged fertilizer in garden stores. The lady told me it was supposed to be on the label if the fertilizer had toxics in it. In Missouri, I met a lady who saw an ad for " black dirt " and ordered two truckloads to be put on her garden. After delivery, she realized that the " dirt " she had paid for was actually ground-up municipal garbage, because it was full of tiny bits of ground-up metal, glass, and plastic. (Obviously, you must now be more careful than ever about what you allow onto your land.) Into the " Road Salt " --Drinking beverages out of aluminum cans is a bad habit that the public schools promote. Making the cans in the first place consumes much electricity (usually made by coal burning). Recycling them is a far more polluting industry. The waste from aluminum can recycling is tons of salt laced with heavy metals that were in the paint on the cans: lead, zinc, cadmium. Formerly, the company had trouble finding places to stow some 50 truckloads of this industrial waste. Not a problem any more. They sell the stuff as " road salt " to counties and municipalities. It's the cheapest " road salt " available, so their business is good. The waste water manager of Grand Rapids, Michigan, told me that, because of this " road salt, " the storm runoff in the city is now way out of EPA limits for waste water--and a zillion times, or so, too toxic for drinking water. The Seattle Times reported that Northwest Alloys, an ALCOA subsidiary in Addy, Washington, recycled their smelter's " hazardous waste " by means of a relationship with another company which " sold it as a fertilizer and road de-icer. " It was labeled as " CalMag " when sold as a fertilizer. When sold as a de-icer, it was called " Road Clear. " OLCOA is said to have saved more than $17 million in toxic disdisposal costs by this deceitful method of disposal. (This situation came to light when an Oregon farmer's red clover crop died after being " fertilized. " Loophole: Toxic Wastes Can Be Declared " Products " and Toxic Waste Laws No Longer Apply! The Seattle Times, a major West-coast daily, did a 12-page special on the subject of toxics turning into " products " such as " fertilizer " and " road salt. " They titled it " Fear in the Fields. " (Reprint available from Seattle Times, P.O. Box 70, Seattle, WA 98111- 0070, $1 for p h. Or view the article on http://www.seattletimes.com.) Their investigators found this to be a " growing national practice. " They discovered factories which were required by law to collect dangerous wastes such as those containing lead, cadmium, arsenic, dioxins, or low-level radioactive waste can get rid of it most cheaply by giving it, or even paying " fertilizer " manufacturers to take the waste. That is legal! The moment the toxic waste is redefined as a " product " - such as fertilizer or an ingredient in road tar, or in road salt - it is no longer covered by the toxic waste laws. The cheapest way for companies to get rid of their toxics is now to declare them " fertilizer " and spread them on rented or owned land. There are hundreds (thousands?) of trucks loaded with toxic wastes now driving through this loophole every day spreading toxic substances on agricultural land. I told this to a group in Clare, Michigan. A lady in my audience said, " I know just what you're talking about. My husband is an electrician whose company is often called in to do jobs for Dow Chemical in Midland, Michigan. They have a building there where they work with stuff so poisonous (I think it's dioxin) that the workers all wear paper suits and breathe through respirators. There is a big ceiling fan. If they get a spec of it on their skin, they have to have blood tests from the plant nurse every week for several weeks. If a worker gets a spot the size of a quarter on his skin, he will die. When they get done with the stuff, it is shipped out from the plant as 'fertilizer.' " A young man who sometimes does field work for a big dairy company told me that regulations state that any farm worker who is spreading fertilizer must work in an air-tight tractor cab. When I told this to a group of folks in Winlock, Washington, a man in the audience raised his hand. He told us a nearby chemical company sends from ten to fifty tanker trucks a day loaded with " fertilizer " from their plant and spreads the stuff over a nearby rented field. He said, " The grass looks sick. The cows look sick. The calf crop this year was awful, but it's legal. " Number of Cases of Pediatric Cancer Rising--A Minnesota mother whose first child was born with cancer told me that the rate for childhood cancers is soaring. (Infants and children are more vulnerable to toxics in the environment than adults.) She said it took her three months to get in for her son's checkup (he's doing well now) at the Minneapolis children's hospital. She asked her doctor why the office was so busy. Her doctor said, " We can't keep up with it. We hired three pediatric oncologists last year, and three more this year. We still can't keep up with the number of new cases. " " Why are there so many new cases of childhood cancer happening? " my friend asked her. " We're looking at the chemicals. They're everywhere, " the doctor replied. Spreading lowlevel radioactive wastes (in Gore, Oklahoma, it is being sprayed as a " liquid fertilizer " over 9,000 acres of grazing ground), dioxin? (whatever that Dow stuff is), and heavy metals are certainly adding to those " chemicals everywhere. " The person who spreads it may be in a sealed cab, but the neighbors downwind have no such protection. Nor do the people who eat the food thus produced. Needed Legislation - " How can we know what is in that bag of fertilizer? " people ask me. At this time, there is no way to know if anything toxic is in it. The government only requires the labeling of plant-nutritive ingredients like nitrogen and phosphorus. The toxics in there don't have to be listed. In terms of labeling, you're safer with a pack of cigarettes than with a bag of " fertilizer. " THE GOVERNMENT SHOULD REQUIRE ALL FERTILIZERS TO CARRY WARNING LABELS IF THEY CONTAIN TOXIC WASTES. Consumer Self-defense--Get your water tested by a private (not government) water testing service. If you garden and live in an agribusiness area, get your soil tested too. Don't move to a place surrounded by agribusiness fields. Persons exposed to aerial spraying, and perhaps also toxic fertilizer, have told me that their health improved dramatically when they moved away from agribusiness neighbors. When is a Superfund toxic dump not a Superfund toxic dump? Answer: After it has been mixed with Denver sewage sludge and spread over a large wheat field. The government is pushing farmers in many areas to accept sewage sludge wastes as fertilizer to spread on their acreage. I was told that near Winlock there are about a half dozen rural properties where urban sludge is regularly spread on fields. Some owners accept the sludge as a business proposition. Real farmers, however, tend to be worried about what the sludge might contain and often refuse to accept it on their fields. (In some areas the government is trying to force them to accept it.) Also, not all sludges are alike. The sludge from a totally household community might be great stuff. However, the sludge from an industrial center (or a superfund site) might be cause for great concern. The Seattle Times reported that the government plans to " clean up " the Deer Trail, Colorado superfund site by sending the liquid waste ( " a brew of industrial solvents, petroleum oils, pesticides and radioactive material " through sewage " treatment " --at which time it will be mixed with sewage sludge. It will then be spread over a 50,000-acre wheat farm owned by Denver's Metro sewage agency The report said the EPA has a plan to use this same method to " clean up " other Superfund sites. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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