News
CNN MONEYLINE
HAZARDOUS HARVEST
Part 1 of 3
More than a bad smell?
June 25, 1997: 8:53 p.m. ET
Moneyline Special Report: sewage sludge could affect every American
http://money.cnn.com/1997/06/25/busunu/hazard_one_pkg/
From Correspondent Bill Dorman
NEW YORK (CNNfn) - Sludge.
Usually thought of as mundane, stinky and belonging in a septic tank, the slimy stuff is
now unavoidable and could affect the food supply and the health of every American.
U.S. residents generate 22,000 tons of sludge every day, and by federal law, that sludge
can no longer be dumped in the ocean. The Environmental Protection Agency now
reclassifies that waste as "biosolids," and farmers spread it on their pastures.
One farmer made a home video to show how he thinks sludge killed more than a hundred
of his cows.
"We had the vet for her this morning. And the vet says there's something toxic in her,"
farmer Bob Ruane said. "She don't know what it is. She says to take the cow to the
slaughterhouse right away because the cow is going to die."
State and federal officials say they studied the case and found problems with the way Bob
Ruane ran his farm, but no demonstrable link between the cows' deaths and sludge.
Ruane's evidence is largely circumstantial. He says the cows got better after he stopped
feeding them corn grown with sludge. A lawsuit is pending.
Whether or not sludge killed Bob Ruane's cows, the federal government is pushing the
use of sewage sludge as fertilizer. And it's spreading across the country.
Farms in eastern Colorado use sludge to grow wheat for human consumption. In
Frenchtown, N.J., Bill Pandy uses it on his crops grown mostly for animal feed.
"I've never seen any adverse effects on my cows, on me … using it, on plants, on wildlife,
on anything," Pandy said.
But there's one small problem.
"It smells. It has an offensive odor," he said.
No doubt about it, sludge production is a dirty business.
It's made from everything you flush down the toilet, and everything industries put down
the drain. The EPA does set limits on nine heavy metals, such as arsenic, cadmium, and
lead. But the agency does not regulate or even monitor the levels of potentially deadly
dioxins in sludge.
There are no regulations for PCBs and no monitoring for pesticides. The EPA is not
testing sludge on a nationwide basis. The last comprehensive national study ended in
1989, and the agency scrapped plans for a new study last year.
"They're not testing for the chemicals or the synergetic effect of all these chemicals
coming together and becoming more potent," said Charlotte Hartman, national
coordinator for the National Sludge Alliance. "What are we talking about here? We're
talking about toxic soup."
A threat is posed not just to food grown with sludge. but to the land and the groundwater
wherever sludge is applied.
"It was banned from ocean dumping because of its threat and risk to the water and marine
life," said Stephen Lester, science director for the Center for Health, Environment and
Justice.
"How can you take the same material and say that now it is safe to …apply on farmland?"
he asked. "That just makes no common sense, let alone technical sense."
In New Hampshire, eight towns have either banned or sharply restricted sludge farming.
The rolling White Mountains may seem like an unlikely place to talk about industrial waste,
but some area residents are worried about sewage sludge that's trucked in from out of
state.
The concern on a June night in the town of Webster is whether to continue a moratorium
on spreading sludge on farm land.
"There isn't a farmer in this state that goes down to the grain store and says to the man
behind the counter, 'I want some fertilizer. I want lead. I want arsenic. I want cadmium. I
want mercury. Give it to me in a big bag, because I'm going to spread it on my fields and
make my crops grow,'" said Charlie Reid, an organic farmer at the town meeting.
But federal sludge policy is not about crop growth, and it is not about agriculture. The
policy is driven by the economics of waste disposal.
"Our cost on the application sites run about 4 to 5 cents a gallon," said Dennis Palmer,
executive director of the Landis Sewerage Authority. "If we were hauling off-site, to
another disposal site, it would be closer to 10 to 12 cents a gallon."
Consider that the United States produces 8 million tons of sludge a year. Recycling
sludge is much cheaper than legally dumping it. The savings run from $100 to $600 a ton.
The potential savings nationally could approach $5 billion a year. But to Bob Ruane,
those savings come at a greater cost.
"I would say to any farmer right now, 'Don't even think of it. Don't even consider it,'"
Ruane said. "They'd be making a big mistake. And I know this from experience."
In part two of Moneyline's special report, Bill Dorman will report from Colorado on what could be a
precedent-setting stretch of federal sludge policy: an EPA plan to take waste from a hazardous, toxic
Superfund site near Denver and turn it into government-approved fertilizer.