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Human waste fertilizer raises health concerns

Biosludge spread on fields near Channahon

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After reviewing soil maps, the IEPA has decided to cut the amount of allowable biosolids in half in the field east of the neighbors because of the infiltration rate of the soil, said Hutton.

It’s the same field where the residents worry about flooding and run off.

Illinois municipalities combined produce 375,000 to 400,000 tons of sludge every year and 75 percent of it is used on land application for farming or land reclamation, Hutton said. In Will County 150 fields use sludge, he estimated. In Kankakee, it’s about 175 fields.

Spreading companies such as Stewart get paid around $15 per cubic yard to haul away the treated sludge from the Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Chicago. Farmers benefit by getting free fertilizer, saving them thousands of dollars a year in costs.

Budd believes the biosolids industry has become more about making a profit than about using organic fertilizer and the health of local residents.

“There’s an enormous amount of money here,” she said.

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