Toxic Waste Being Put Into Fertilizer
Winding Up in Your Food
One of my nutrition friends
in Seattle, David Vaughan, describes this story as one of the most
devastating health problems of the century. The health implications of this
story are astounding.
I agree. The potential
health implications of this story are indeed astounding.
This is one amazing story.
I have included an Amazon
review that describe the problem.
From
Publishers Weekly
Patty Martin, a housewife,
mother of four and mayor of the small farming town of Quincy, Wash., began
to notice a pattern of failing crops, infertile topsoil and rare diseases in
her community in the early 1990s.
When she asked tough questions
about the pattern, she received evasions and resistance from some local
businesses and farmers, which only made her dig deeper. Martin found that a
product manufactured with sludge from a waste pond in town, sold as
fertilizer and spread on local farms, stunted crops, destroyed quality
topsoil and left high concentrations of such heavy metals as cadmium,
chromium and beryllium not usually present in fertilizers.
As Martin pursued links between
fertilizers, hazardous waste and public health risks, she became
increasingly unpopular in the town she was trying to protect.
Growing beyond the conflict in
Quincy, Wilson's investigation (which led to a 1997 series of articles that
were nominated for Pulitzer Prize consideration) revealed that under
prevailing state and federal laws, polluting industries throughout the U.S.
saved millions of dollars by sending hazardous waste to fertilizer makers
who in turn recycled the toxic chemicals into a product sold to farmers and
consumers without disclosing what was in it.
In the resulting outcry,
Washington State became the first to insist that fertilizer companies
provide detailed chemical analyses of their products. Wilson's copious
reporting and Patty Wilson's example make a convincing case for a national
policy on hazardous materials recycling.
Agent, Elizabeth Wales. (Sept.
13) Forecast: This lucid presentation of the facts will stir the passions of
readers already concerned about environmental issues, but those accustomed
to more gut-wrenching accounts of similar transgressions, like A Civil
Action and the film Erin Brockovich, won't be drawn in as easily.
Duff
Wilson has worked as an investigative reporter for the Seattle Times
since 1989. He has been nominated five times for a Pulitzer Prize and
has won more than thirty other journalism awards. Wilson lives near
Seattle with his wife and two children.
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