Challenging the EPA fertilizer rule. (Safe Food and Fertilizer).Most consumers would never even stop to wonder what's in their fertilizer. Why should they? Fertilizer is benign, right? Wrong. Industrial waste from steel mills, mines, foundries, aluminum manufacturers, tire incinerators, coal-fired power plants, and film processing plants often makes it way into commercial fertilizers under the auspices of recycling. Many fertilizers for sale for use on lawns, flowerbeds, golf courses, school playgrounds, and parks may in fact be derived from hazardous and other toxic industrial wastes that may include lead, arsenic, mercury, cadmium, and dioxins. Even the US Environmental Protection Agency Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), independent agency of the U.S. government, with headquarters in Washington, D.C. It was established in 1970 to reduce and control air and water pollution, noise pollution, and radiation and to ensure the safe handling and (EPA EPA eicosapentaenoic acid. EPA abbr. eicosapentaenoic acid EPA, n.pr See acid, eicosapentaenoic. EPA, n. ) is uncertain how much fertilizer is from waste-derived sources. Safe Food and Fertilizer is dedicated to informing communities of these practices and organizing efforts to ban this practice. While guarantees for the active ingredients in a bag of fertilizer are readily available on a label, the source of the ingredients and level of contaminants is not. Home gardeners, landscapers, groundskeepers, and other users may unknowingly be putting themselves and others at risk. As if allowing this method of disposal to occur were not bad enough, the EPA is expanding such fertilizer's use to farms. Under a final rule issued on July 24, 2002, zinc-containing hazardous wastes will be excluded from the definition of solid waste when used as fertilizer--including on farms--provided they meet certain metal concentration standards. Many of the heavy metals heavy metals, n.pl metallic compounds, such as aluminum, arsenic, cadmium, lead, mercury, and nickel. Exposure to these metals has been linked to immune, kidney, and neurotic disorders. that will be recycled into fertilizers are highly toxic highly toxic Occupational medicine adjective Referring to a chemical that 1. Has a median lethal dose–LD50 of ≤ 50 mg/kg when administered orally to 200-300 g albino rats 2. substances. Lead exposure may cause behavioral problems, learning disabilities, seizures, and even death. Mercury may also cause neurological abnormalities in children, including cerebral palsy cerebral palsy (sərē`brəl pôl`zē), disability caused by brain damage before or during birth or in the first years, resulting in a loss of voluntary muscular control and coordination. , and severe deformations in animals. Arsenic and cadmium may damage internal organs, skin, and nerve functions. The rule would allow these heavy metals to be applied to farms and gardens in concentrations that exceed the limits set for disposal of the hazardous wastes in lined and monitored landfills. Safe Food and Fertilizer, with the assistance of the Western Environmental Law Center The Western Environmental Law Center is a public-interest, nonprofit organization headquartered in Eugene, Oregon, that was started in the early 1990s by public interest attorneys Michael Axline and John Bonine. , challenged EPA's rule on October 22, 2002. The petition for review, filed in the DC Court of Appeals, challenges both the rule and the EPA's statutory authority to promulgate To officially announce, to publish, to make known to the public; to formally announce a statute or a decision by a court. such a rule under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act The Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA), enacted in 1976, is a Federal law of the United States contained in 42 U.S.C. ยงยง6901-6992k. It is usually pronounced as "rick-rah" or "Wreck-rah. (RCRA RCRA Resource Conservation & Recovery Act of 1976 RCRA Resort and Commercial Recreation Association ). The RCRA, which was intended to end reliance on land disposal, requires that hazardous wastes be disposed in a manner protective of human health and the environment, and be accounted for from "cradle to grave." Patty Martin, former mayor of Quincy, Washington and the founder of Safe Food and Fertilizer, is very concerned. "Over the past few years, the government's own studies show that heavy metal levels in children's diets have risen," says Martin. "Rather than taking steps to reduce the toxic burden on children, however, the EPA is illegally authorizing a practice that will put our children at even greater risk from exposure to lead, arsenic, and other toxic heavy metals." With over 110 billion pounds of fertilizer used annually in the United States, even trace amounts of these heavy metals add up quickly when released into the environment year after year. For example, if every fertilizer contained 10 parts per million parts per million mg/kg or ml/l; see ppm. of lead, over 1.1 million pounds of that substance would be dumped into the environment each year. The volumes are staggering when you consider multiple toxins, repeated applications, and decades of use. Safe Food and Fertilizer is a grassroots organization advocating a ban on the use of industrial wastes in fertilizer and animal feeds, and for establishment of national standards on fertilizers regardless of origin. "National standards," Martin insists, "must be protective of our most vulnerable populations (developing fetuses) in order to be protective of us all." Take action: Visit SFF's Web site: www.safefoodandfertilizer.com For the complete story on the struggles of former mayor Martin and local farmers, read Fateful Harvest, the True Story of a Small Town, a Global Industry, and a Toxic Secret. Duff Wilson chronicles their discovery of the use of toxic waste toxic waste is waste material, often in chemical form, that can cause death or injury to living creatures. It usually is the product of industry or commerce, but comes also from residential use, agriculture, the military, medical facilities, radioactive sources, and in fertilizer, and the backlash they suffered as the industry-led townspeople tried to shut them up ... unsuccessfully! |
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