Here is my analysis of the Report,
broken down by statutory question and answer, or non-answer as the case
actually is. Here is a LINK
to the Report, should you want to follow along.
1. Are citizen-reported health symptoms associated
with the land application of biosolids [i.e. BS]?
First, as a fairly obvious starting point, we should
take a quick look at what it is the question asks. Or, more to the point
the "expert panel" should have started here. Too bad they didn’t.
The question asks about an association between reported symptoms and BS.
It does not ask about a cause and effect relationship between BS and human
illness. Unfortunately, the expert panel was not quick enough to see this
fine point and off they went on a goose chase – the goose being
causality. Instead of chasing gooses, what they should have done was to
see if they could establish a temporal and geographical association with
BS and symptoms.
So let’s answer the question for them, since they
obviously missed it. Is there an association? Yes, of course there is, and
there can be absolutely no doubt of that. You don’t need a PhD to figure
that out; you don’t even need a frontal lobe. There are dozens, if not
hundreds, of documented cases in Virginia of individuals’ symptoms being
temporally and geographically associated with land application of BS. For
instance, the County Administrator of Appomattox County once told me that
she went out to investigate a citizen’s complaint of sludge and as she
got out of her car she became so overwhelmed by the oder she almost blew
lunch and had to get back in the car. Nausea is a symptom, and this is but
one example out of hundreds of anecdotes that definitely establish an
association between BS and human symptoms.
Want hard data – as in peer-reviewed, published
studies?
On July 14, 2008 I reported in The Gutter Grunt’s
Anti-BS Blog the results of a BS study done by Khuder et al. at University
of Toledo and reported in Archives of Environmental &
Occupational Health 62:5, 2007. A .pdf version of the report is here: LINK.
Khuder’s data leaves next to no doubt that there is an association
between land-applied BS and symptoms. Here is their conclusion:
Results revealed that some reported
health-related symptoms were statistically significantly elevated
among the exposed residents, including excessive secretion of tears,
abdominal bloating, jaundice, skin ulcer, dehydration, weight loss,
and general weakness. The frequency of reported occurrence of
bronchitis, upper respiratory infection, and giardiasis were also
statistically significantly elevated. The findings suggest an
increased risk for certain respiratory, gastrointestinal, and other
diseases among residents living near farm fields on which the use of
biosolids [i.e. BS] was permitted.
In addition, Khuder et al. found that the incidence
of multiple sclerosis was 14x higher in individuals living within 1 mile
of sludged fields.
It was also a significant association when in the
late1980’s Bob Waters, a former SF 49ers quarterback came down with
another neurological disease, ALS - amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, Lou
Gehrig’s disease. Waters died of the disease, as did two of his
teammates from the 49ers 1964 season, Matt Hazeltine and Gary Lewis. The
prevalence of ALS in the population is far, far less than MS (50 per
100,000 v. 1171 per 100,000), and the odds of three members of a group of
about 70 people having ALS are "astronomically small." The only
suspicious factor anyone could find was that 49ers practice field had been
sludged with a commercial BS product, Milorganite, for about a decade
prior to the 49ers using it.
So the question now becomes: Why didn’t the
"expert panel" answer the question before them? Well, because
the "experts" on the panel decided to answer another question,
one that they knew could not be answered. The question the "expert
panel" actually addressed was this: Is there a causal link between BS
and illness? Nobody asked them to investigate a causal link, and, more to
the point, nobody funded them to investigate a causal link. It would take
a million dollar budget and a lab of 20 technicians and epidemiologists to
answer that question for just one contaminant. So it’s not surprising
that what the "expert panel" came up with was:
In the past 18 months, the Panel uncovered no
evidence or literature verifying a causal link between biosolids [i.e.
BS] and illness, recognizing current gaps in the science and knowledge
surrounding this issue. Report, pg 7.
As I say, pigeon poop – exactly, what the pro-BS
"experts" on the panel wanted. Synagro hacks then twisted that
conclusion into a propaganda campaign. On their Virginia Biosolids [i.e.
BS] Council website, the Synagro hacks spun the report as follows:
Biosolids [i.e. BS] Safe Says Expert Panel
The Expert Panel created by the Virginia General
Assembly has concluded that the land application of biosolids [i.e.
BS] represents little risk to human health or the environment and that
biosolids [i.e. BS] should be viewed as a valuable resource. LINK
This is a falsehood. The "expert panel"
came to no such conclusion. At most, the panel concluded there is not
sufficient evidence to say one way or the other whether or not BS is safe.
Synagro’s tactic is a logical fallacy used by all progaganda machines.
It’s called "argument from silence." It is a claim that a
proposition (here the proposition that BS causes illness) is proven false
because there are no data to support it. The claim that the Report
concludes that BS is a valuable resource had nothing to do with land
application. That claim was with respect to burning BS for energy.
Keep in mind that a Synagro VP in Detroit has just
pleaded guilty to bribery of city officials, and another Synagro VP in
Baltimore has been placed on paid leave while the FBI investigates her.
Remember also that the Virginia Biosolids Council, to which the Report
refers again and again, is nothing more that a shill for Synagro, as I
reported in detail some time ago, in Spew #1. LINK
2. Do odors from biosolids [i.e. BS] impact human
health and well-being and property values?
Again, the "results" of the investigation
of this question was: "insufficient data." How much data do
you need to reason that your property is going to lose value when the BS
trucks start rolling in next door?
Interestingly, the "expert panel" had the
chance to generate some data on the issue.
The Panel determined that it did not have the
resources to undertake a valid study of the impact of biosolids [i.e.
BS] [i.e. BS] on property values. Two Panel members volunteered to
investigate the property value issue to determine if such an
association existed. These two members worked with the Virginia
Association of Realtors to conduct an on-line survey, which produced
results that the Panel considered inconclusive based on sample
selection and validity of the questions asked. The Panel could not
make any determination as to whether or not biosolids [i.e. BS] odors
had any impact on property values. Report, pg 13.
You just gotta’ wonder who buried these data. We
would certainly like to see the results of that survey.
3. To what degree do biosolids [i.e.
BS]-associated contaminants accumulate in food (plant crops and
livestock)?
As you will have guessed by now, the answer to this
question was "insufficient data." But in this case the
"expert panel" itself, not the just Synagro hacks, is being
specious, if not out right dishonest. Here’s what the
"experts" concluded:
As long as biosolids [i.e. BS] are applied in
conformance with all state and federal law and regulations, (e.g.,
within contaminant limits, loading rate constraints, application site
criteria, site access restrictions), there is no scientific evidence
of any toxic effect to soil organisms, plants grown in treated soils,
or to humans via bio-accumulation pathways from inorganic trace
elements (including heavy metals) found at the current concentrations
in biosolids [i.e. BS]. Report, pg 15.
Do you see the subterfuges? There are 3. First, the
conclusion is predicated on a fact that has never been proven: that the
sludgers follow the law. The only way to prove this predicate is to test every
single of load of BS that is spread to see which contaminates it contains
at levels above legal limits. If even one load has even one contaminant in
excess of the legal limit, then the conclusion is invalid. Do any loads of
BS spread in Va. have one or more contaminants in excess of legal limits?
I’d bet both my law license and my driver’s license on it.
The second subterfuge is the ole’ argument from
silence. The conclusion is not that BS is safe – it is that there is no
evidence of toxic effects. Of course, there is no evidence of a lack of
toxic effect either. That’s the point the whole ABM (Anti-Biosolids
Movement) is making.
The third subterfuge is that the conclusion is
restricted to inorganic trace elements, which are just one facet of the
whole complex problem, whereas the question had no such limitation.
The fourth subterfuge (I know. I said 3, but this
one is for extra credit.) is that the qualifier "inorganic trace
elements" is itself qualified by "found at the current
concentrations in biosolids." Hello, "expert panel," this
is the basic problem: nobody knows what the "current
concentrations" are unless every load of BS is tested. Don’t you
get it???
4. To what degree do biosolids-associated
contaminants affect water quality?
This question is not a statutory question, it was
concocted by the "expert panel". Statutory question #3 was
actually a 2-part question. The second part was: Can BS affect water
quality? "Can," as in "is it possible?" The subterfuge
here is that "can" is not equivalent to "to what
degree." Again the "expert panel" has chosen to modify the
statutory question to make it one that is not possible to answer without a
lot – and I mean a lot – of funding. Then the "expert
panel" can beg off giving any answer at all other than their standard
"no evidence" answer.
But here again they are entirely disingenuous. Here
is a part of their answer:
Regarding contaminant limits, the levels of
regulated inorganic trace elements (including heavy metals) found at
the current concentrations in biosolids [i.e., BS] are often an order
of magnitude lower than the risk-based limits in the regulations. This
was confirmed in the data submitted to the Panel by 15 wastewater
treatment plants. Report, pg. 16.
Again, the ruse is on. The "expert panel"
restricts the response to "regulated inorganic trace elements,"
ignoring that BS has a lot more problems than inorganics and ignoring the
whole universe of non-regulated inorganics. Second, the response asserts that inorganics "are often" an
order of magnitude (i.e. 10x) lower than the regulation limits. "Are
often" ????? Sure, we’d have to agree with that. The inorganic
contaminants are undoubtedly often below the set limits. But they are
often 10x higher than the limits, too, and it is in the being 10x higher
that people get hurt.
Most of the response to this question focuses on N
and P. I’ll leave it to nutrients expert Dr. Lynton S. Land to evaluate
that discussion other to say that the "expert panel" was not
able to reach any consensus with respect to N and P. The
"expert panel" was, in fact, not able to reach a consensus on
much of anything.
As for the other thousands of contaminants in BS:
However, there is very little research to date
on other constituents, their transport mechanisms, and how they might
affect water quality. While certain contaminants have been found in
land applied biosolids, [i.e., BS] mere presence will not in itself
cause water quality impacts without a means to reach ground and
surface waters. Report, pg. 19.
Now, that is very helpful. One does not need an
"expert panel," to figure out that contaminants that are in BS
have to be able to get to the water before they can contaminate it.
5. What are the effects of an accumulation of
biosolids-associated contaminants in wildlife?
The first point to ponder with this question is that
it is a clear admission by the General Assembly that BS contaminants
accumulate in wildlife. I'm not sure I have seen any government
admit that before.
As for the answer . . . well, we are used to the pattern
of deception and evasion, and the response to this question is no
different. The response is that there is good news and there is bad news.
The good news is that there are "studies indicating a positive effect
on wildlife populations as a result of the use of biosolids [i.e. BS] to
restore wildlife habitat."
But, hold on – the question was not about wildlife
habitat. It was about the accumulation of toxins in wildlife. So the good
news is totally irrelevant to the question, meaning that there is only bad
news, which is: "other studies have suggested potential long-term
negative health, reproductive, behavioral and population viability impacts
from the exposure to compounds and contaminants that are ubiquitous in
multiple environmental media including biosolids." Report, pg. 20.
See what they’ve done? They try to make it sound
like, oh, yeah, no problem with BS, specifically. The contaminants are
ubiquitous. Talk about BS bs. How "ubiquitous" are cadmium,
mercury, lead, and radioactive isotopes? I would put down good money on
the bet that what the studies they are referring to showed was long-term negative effects of BS
on wildlife. Period. But the pro-sludge "experts" demanded the
spin.
With respect to this question, the "expert
panel" noted that is sent out questionnaires to 43 wastewater
treatment plants, and 15 responded by sending data. (5 responded by saying
they do not land apply BS.) And these data, according to the "expert
panel", demonstrate that "an extensive history of the compliance
regarding levels of regulated parameters is available." Report, pg.
22.
But hang on a sec.’ What does it mean when your
response rate is less than 50%? It means that the majority of WTPs are
probably so dirty they don’t want to share their data with anyone, much
less a state agency that can shut them down. And when you look at the
appendix of the Report you see that only 9 WTPs provided any data from Toxicity
Characteristic Leaching Procedure, which tests for hazardous materials
such as pesticides, herbicides, PCBs, etc. That’s a 21% response rate (based on the whole 43 surveyed because TCLP data are not collected only by
those spreading BS on land).
And why did the "expert panel" have to beg
for the data to begin with? Isn’t it public information? Isn’t it
information that the state has and that should have been made available to
the "expert panel" before they even started their discussions?