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Human waste fertilizer raises health concerns

Biosludge spread on fields near Channahon

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Neighbors are concerned about students at nearby schools, Channahon Junior High and Galloway Elementary, as well as the Channahon Park District. Students routinely jog on the road and have been seen running through the fields.

Jeff Hutton, Illinois EPA Environmental Protection Specialist, said biosolids do contain trace levels of chemicals, such as copper, cadmium and arsenic. But the treatment and processing of the sludge reduces them to non-toxic levels. Whatever level is deemed toxic for plants, the IEPA arbitrarily reduces their allowable level by 50 percent more, he said.

Hutton, who has been with the IEPA for 25 years and is considered the agency’s “sludge guy,” said biosolids were first regulated by the US EPA in 1975, and were used in agriculture before that.

“It’s probably been going on before the agency was in existence,” Hutton said. “It’s a good fertilizer. There are micro nutrients in sludge that are not found in other fertilizers.”

State and national studies by the EPA have found no evidence of toxic levels of chemicals leaching into water supplies, said Hutton.

Spirit Farms, which leases the farmland from Don Hammond, chooses to use the organic nitrogen found in biosolids as the nutrient source for their corn crop, said Michelle Stewart, owner of Stewart Spreading.

“Regardless of the farmer or farm, the soil needs to be fertilized each crop year in order to maintain or improve the soil quality and soil fertility,” Stewart said. “This is a standard farming practice in row crop agriculture, otherwise the crop yield would not be productive.”

When biosolids are applied the accompanying smell is unbearable, said resident Pearl Addington.

“I have asthma and I can’t even leave my house,” she said. “I am scared (because) I can’t breathe.”

During an application, about 70 trucks line up along Canal Road to dump the biosolids, said Budd. Each truck makes several trips.

Stewart Spreading targets between five and 10 dry tons per acre of farmland, said Stewart.

The EPA requires incorporating the material into the soil immediately to help with the smell. But it lingers and reappears during subsequent rains.

“There’s still going to be an odor,” Hutton said. “Odors are hard to quantify.”

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