State issues warning about mulch made from old roofing shingles.Byline: Christian Wihtol The Register-Guard The state has issued a consumer alert to the public stressing that landscaping mulch mulch, any material, usually organic, that is spread on the ground to protect the soil and the roots of plants from the effects of soil crusting, erosion, or freezing; it is also used to retard the growth of weeds. made from asphalt roofing shingles shingles: see herpes zoster. shingles or herpes zoster Acute viral skin and nerve infection. Groups of small blisters appear along certain nerve segments, most often on the back, sometimes after a dull ache at the site; pain becomes may be toxic, and recommending how to dispose of To determine the fate of; to exercise the power of control over; to fix the condition, application, employment, etc. of; to direct or assign for a use. See also: Dispose the material. The state Department of Environmental Quality began distributing the fact sheet after The Register-Guard last week published articles on the problems posed by asphalt mulch. Since late 2000, manufacturing facilites in Springfield and Portland have made and sold the mulch from waste-petroleum-based shingles. Customers have included the state Department of Transporation in Portland and the St. Vincent de Paul Vin·cent de Paul , Saint 1581-1660. French ecclesiastic who founded the Congregation of the Mission (1625) and the Daughters of Charity (1633). Society of Lane County. In 2004, the DEQ DEQ Abbreviation for the Incoterm "Delivered Ex Quay." determined that the mulch contains toxins such as arsenic arsenic (är`sənĭk), a semimetallic chemical element; symbol As; at. no. 33; at. wt. 74.9216; m.p. 817°C; (at 28 atmospheres pressure); sublimation point 613°C;; sp. gr. (stable form) 5.73; valence −3, 0, +3, or +5. and polyaromatic hydrocarbons in concentrations higher than those considered safe for soils at residential and commercial settings. The agency directed Darold Smith, owner of the Springfield manufacturing site, to stop selling the mulch to homeowners and nonindustrial firms. Smith says that has in effect shut him down. He still has thousands of tons of the mulch at his 28th Street yard. He says he now gives it away. He disputes DEQ claims that the mulch can be harmful. No one knows just how much of the material has been used, or where, said Bob Barrows, a DEQ analyst. The material was most likely used in Lane and Marion counties Marion County is the name of seventeen counties in the United States of America, mostly named for General Francis Marion:
Metro Area are a Brooklyn-based dance music production team composed of Morgan Geist and Darshan Jesrani. , he said. The DEQ is distributing its consumer alert to the media and to a range of state and local agencies, he said. In the alert, the DEQ says the mulch is not "immediately hazardous" to people. "But people should avoid repeated exposure by getting it in their mouths or breathing the dust," the alert says. The agency advises homeowners and commerical property owners to avoid using the mulch and to remove it if it is in an area with frequent human activity. The ground-up asphalt is pretty easy to identify, so property owners don't need to test it, the DEQ says. People who remove the material should wear gloves, long-sleeved clothing, long pants and closed-toe-shoes, and moisten the material first to minimize dust, the agency says. They should put it in plastic bags and dispose of it with regular garbage that ends up at a landfill, the agency says. The agency advises against simply covering up the asphalt mulch with regular wood mulch. To see the consumer alert on the Web, visit: www.deq.state.or.us/lq/pubs/ factsheets/ConsumerAlert Bark.pdf To read Register-Guard articles on the mulch, visit www.registerguard.com and click on Saturday in the Last 7 Days section in the left-hand column. |
|
||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion