Thursday, May 22, 2008

N-Viro sludge unleashed on Nova Scotia

Nova Scotia had a disasterous sludge experience when Halifax sludge was trucked out to Inglewood Farms in Lower Truro a few years back. The province came up with some sludge rules, but these regulations are seen as inadequate to manage the material. For the past year, stakeholders have been meeting to review Nova Scotia sludge biosolids issues and make recommendations for better regulatory policies.

Nothing has changed.

The Province of Nova Scotia intended to require that Halifax sludge, treated through N-Viro technology, be certified as in compliance with the Fertilizer Act by requiring a 'letter of no objection' from the federal Fertilizer Section of the Canadian Food Inspection Agency.

The sludge material from N-Viro is sewage sludge mixed with cement kiln dust from Lafarge Brookfield. Unfortunately Lafarge Brookfield burns used oil and this leaves thallium and other toxic metals in their cement kiln dust.

The N-Viro sludge mix has been in storage through the winter.

Suddenly on Friday before the long weekend, the sewage sludge was sold to farmers even though there is no letter from the Federal regulator.

Even though stakeholders say that the Nova Scotia sewage biosolids are inadequate to protect farming, the environment and public health - that is all that is regulating this sludge. Indeed, since N-Viro and the province and the CFIA all refuse to provide testing results or a fertilizer label: no one knows what is in this stuff. Even Lafarge Brookfield refuses to send a Material Safety Data Sheet for their cement kiln dust.

Halifax; sewage sludge is once again on the way to farmland.
Buyer beware.

..............................................................


Nova Scotia Food Land - No Place For Sludge Toxins
Commentary - Fred Blois - May 22, 2008

It is important to consider that current waste water treatment plant technology was not designed to remove many of the nutrients, estrogenic compounds, pharmaceuticals, and personal care products present in waste water. Therefore, current technologies may be creating risks of unknown magnitude for public health, risks that could last for generations given the fact that many of the components found in biosolids are bioaccumulative and persistent.

This considered, the public is concerned that comprehensive testing is not required on the biosolids that are now being and are about to be land applied in Nova Scotia. Present regulations do not adequately address the need to test for the drugs, chemicals, a number of toxic heavy metals, and pathogens that are contained in many biosolids, which can pose serious detrimental environmental and public health threats. Furthermore, present regulations do not consider the potential synergistic and lipophilic effects of multiple contaminants that may be contained in the biosolids. Chlorine, for example, can combine with natural organic material found in dirt and soils to create a variety of carcinogenic chlorinated hydrocarbons, including toxins like chloroform and trihalomethanes. The absence of scientific evidence requiring biosolid testing does not mean that there is no risk involved in the practice of land applying biosolids, instead it shows that there is not enough evidence to deem it a safe practice.

The Halifax Regional Municipality has selected a method that combines an equal amount of sewage sludge and cement kiln dust in a patented process to create a biosolid which is then destined for disposal on agricultural land.
Independent testing of land applied biosolids created by Inglewood Farms and having a significant component of HRM sewage sludge in 2004 indicated some of the highest levels of
polybrominated diphenyl ethers (flame retardents) ever recorded in the world in addition to a long list of additional contaminants’.
.
Cement Kiln Dust is an industrial waste in the cement industry and as such it has the potential to be contaminated with heavy metals and other toxins. Samples of CKD sourced from Lafarge’s Pleasant Valley cement plant by Department of Environment and Labour (DOEL) staff in 2007, and tested by Maxxam Analytics, recorded the presence of 21 heavy metals in these samples. Of particular concern in these samples is the heavy metal Thallium, which was recorded at a level of 2.3 parts per million. This level exceeds the accepted parameters for contaminated soil in landfills, and yet it is a component of biosolids that are being applied to agricultural land and subsequently becoming part of our food chain. Thallium has recently been identified in milk which was the resultant of agricultural land contaminated by sewage sludge in Georgia.

The potential for the presence of both thallium and polybrominated diphenyl ethers in HRM biosolids is problematic for the dairy industry in particular as both of these substances are lipophilic. PBDEs present an additional concern given the fact they have the ability to cross the placental barrier and contaminate newborn children.





The land application of biosolids is an issue of immediate concern to the public. The Canadian Infectious Disease Society (C.I.D.S.) has called for a moratorium on the spreading biosolids across Canada until further studies were carried out to determine if the process was safe. Dr. Mark Miller, president of C.I.D.S. says:

"C.I.D.S. remains steadfast that the disposal of all bio-materials be done in a safe and efficient manner, and that studies be taken to insure that current disposal/spreading techniques are safe for
the human population. The fact that certain practices 'have always been done like this,' does not mean that they are necessarily safe in the present-day context.”

A growing number of scientists are questioning the rationale of land application of biosolids. Ellen Harrison, director of the Cornell Waste Management Institute, offers the following opinion:

“Agricultural land is too important to take the chance of spreading sewage biosolids from the city. There are just too many unknowns. Are we prepared to have contaminants spread on our soils that will basically be there forever? Often times, we just don’t know what the risks are.”

How does the consumer differentiate between food that is grown on land treated with biosolids and food that is not? In Nova Scotia, there is no means to identify which foods have been exposed to biosolids. Consumers have the right to know which foods are the resultant of land applied biosolids ,such foods should be labelled accordingly.

Nova Scotia's agricultural economy depends on the public perception that foods produced here are pure and grown on land that is free from contaminants that are commonly used in industrialized urban areas. If we allow the practice of the disposal of biosolids on agricultural
land to continue consumer confidence will be severely undermined. For the sake of public health, as well as that of our agricultural economy, we must not allow farmland to be polluted with a “witch's brew,” of unidentified materials. A healthy and prosperous farm community is of the utmost importance to all Nova Scotians.


Fred F. Blois


''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''
Chronicle Herald
Halifax Nova Scotia
May 22, 2008

Fertile ground


Since Mayor Kelly has such a superior and inexpensive fertilizer made from HRM sewage, I assume that it will be used on all public land in HRM including Point Pleasant Park, the Commons, and the Public Gardens. Perhaps it should be the only approved fertilizer for private lawns and gardens in HRM.

Tourism could promote a sewage tour: 1) Sewage plant in downtown Halifax, 2) Biosolids plant near airport 3) Old-fashioned picnic sitting on the grass on Citadel Hill.

You cannot beat cheap fertilizer, which is "safe for use on any plant."


Lloyd Burrows, Beaver Bank


http://www.thechronicleherald.ca/Search/1057412.html

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Saturday, May 17, 2008

There’s big profit in poop
HRM stands to make $350,000 a year selling treated sewage sludge
By DEVIN STEVENS
Sat. May 17 2008



Rae Wallin, right, president and CEO of N-Viro Systems Canada Ltd., shows Halifax Mayor Peter Kelly some of the systems at the biosolids processing facility in in Goffs on Friday. The plant treats sludge from the Halifax Harbour Solutions Project. (Darren Pittman / Staff)





It’s flushed down your toilet, flows to a sewage treatment plant, is trucked out to a plant near Halifax Stanfield International Airport, and as of Thursday, it’s being shipped out to farmers’ fields across the province.

The mayor of Halifax Regional Municipality says the city’s sewage will eventually be worth $350,000 a year.

"It’s very environmentally responsible," Mayor Peter Kelly said Thursday at the Aerotech Park biosolids processing facility in Goffs, near the airport.

"We have taken the solids out of (Halifax Harbour). It’s one that we’ve had complaints about over the years. You don’t see those floatables anymore downtown."

The mayor was taking a tour of the processing plant along with councillors Jim Smith (Albro Lake-Harbourview), Sheila Fougere (Connaught-Quinpool) and Andrew Younger (East Dartmouth-The Lakes). They learned that turning Halifax’s sewage into a soil additive is a complicated process. First, the solid waste is separated from the water, creating a type of sludge that is taken by truck to the processing plant, where it’s mixed with dust from a cement kiln and lime. The mix is dried in a rotary drum, raising the temperature and pH level. Then it’s stored at a controlled temperature for 12 hours. The mix is scrubbed to remove particles and acid, then biofiltered for odour control. It comes out the other end looking like grey soil and smelling a bit like cement mix.

The use of human waste in farmers’ fields is a contentious issue. The Cutten family of Lower Truro suffered huge financial loses after installing expensive sewage lagoons on their 160-hectare farm with the Environment Department’s blessing a few years ago. An environmental group raised concerns about the practice, and the department changed its mind in October 2004 and revoked the Cuttens’ permit to spread human waste on their fields.

Councillors and officials from N-Viro Systems Canada said Friday that the treated sewage qualifies as a class A or EQ product. That’s a fancy way of saying it’s the best quality available and is safe to use on any plant.

Samples are taken regularly and tested at an independent laboratory.

"It actually exceeds the quality of stuff that’s already being spread on fields across Nova Scotia," Mr. Younger said.

"It eliminates the concern that some people had that there would be some sort of risk associated with this."

The biosolids processing plant is part of the Harbour Solutions Project, intended to end the practice of dumping raw sewage into Halifax Harbour. Halifax and Dartmouth have allowed their sewage to flow into the harbour since the mid-1700s.

New sludge will eventually come from all three sewage treatment plants in metro Halifax. The plant on Barrington Street began operating in February, while the ones in Dartmouth and Herring Cove are expected to start up later this year.

Mr. Younger said he scuba dives in the harbour and has noticed the difference since the first plant began operating.

"I can tell you it’s a lot better now than it was before," he said with a chuckle.

"And that’s only with one plant on the go. So once all the plants are up and running, I think you’ll see a big difference."

Mr. Kelly didn’t shy away from the treated product, shifting it in his hands and at one point standing more than ankle-deep in it.

"It’s (a project) we knew was supported by the public," Mr. Kelly said. "It’s one that we knew had to be done."

The first truckloads of the sewage-derived soil additive went out to farms on Thursday.

Rae Wallin, president and CEO of N-Viro Systems, said the product is completely safe and free of toxins, and everything used to make it, even the air, is filtered and cleaned.

The city pays the Ontario company to take the sludge and shares the profits with the company.

Mr. Wallin said N-Viro charges farmers a few dollars a tonne right now but the price should rise to $12 to $14 a tonne as more farmers begin using the product. He hopes to eventually ship 35,000 tonnes a year.

"That’s after our market is developed," Mr. Wallin said. "We have to get the farmers here used to the product."

http://thechronicleherald.ca/Front/1056392.html

....................

Big profit in poop?
Maybe...but not from selling it.

In this story the Canadian CEO of N-Viro Systems Canada says he is charging farmers a 'few dollars' a tonne for this sewage sludge and cement kiln dust mixture. He doesn't name the product. But if indeed this stuff is sold to farmers with claims of soil or crop improvement, then it is required to meet the standards of the Fertilizers Act. But earlier this week the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) who regulates fertilizers and supplements, told Sludge Watch that the material has NOT been given a 'letter of no objection' to sale. It remains to be confirmed whether this material is being sold, and whether it meets the requirements of the Fertilizer Act.

The story describes the material as 'Class A' or 'EQ' product. Those are not terms used in the Fertilizer Act. That is the language of the land application of sewage sludge as waste under a province of Nova Scotia permit.

So is this regulated as fertilizer by the Feds or is this a provincial waste permit material that is distributed for free? The story doesn't really make it clear.

But you can find out just which agency is supposed to be regulating this stuff (if any):

1. Reach out to the City of Halifax and ask them if this material is distributed under provincial permit as biosolids or if it is managed under federal regulations as fertilizer/ supplement under CFIA jurisdiction. Ask them for a copy of the required fertilizer label. Ask them if the material is sold.

And while you are at it, find out about this 'big money in poop' claim. Ask the Mayor how much money the Halifax taxpayer is giving to N-Viro Systems...and ask how much the City has received back. Ask how much per ton the taxpayer is paying to receive cement kiln dust from Lafarge Cement in Brookfield. You will be amazed what the taxpayer is asked to pony up for industrial wastes.

Contact:
Mayor Peter J. Kelly
Halifax Regional Municipality
902-490-4010
kellyp@halifax.ca


2. Reach out to the Canadian Food Inspection Agency and see if they have provided a letter of no objection to the sale of the Halifax sludge material. Since the material can be distributed without any federal approval but must still meet all the requirements of the Fertilizer Act if it is sold, then you can make a complaint and ask the CFIA to investigate. Since no one has provided a label for this 'fertilizer', we must wonder whether it really is a legal fertilizer.

CFIA contact:

MP Gerry Ritz
Minister of Agriculture and Agri-Foods
Tel (613) 995-7080
Fax: (613) 996-8472
or write to him (postage free in Canada)
The Honourable Gerry Ritz
Minister of Agriculture and Agri-Food
Government of Canada
9th Floor, Sir John Carling Building
930 Carling Avenue
Ottawa, Ontario
K1A 0C5

or for details of Fertilizer regulations:
Kate Billingsley
Canadian Food Inspection Agency
(613) 221-7508 Fax:(613) 228-6629
billingsleyk@inspection.gc.ca

You might want to ask the Minister if spreading sewer sludge mixed with cement kiln dust on food lands is part of his "Food and Consumer Safety Action Plan"
http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/ahc-asc/media/nr-cp/2008/2008_08_e.html


4. Ask Rae Wallin of N-Viro Systems

Ask him to provide a copy of the label for this material, and ask him whether it is distributed as a fertilizer under the Fertilizer Act or if it is distributed free under provincial permit as 'biosolids'.
Ask him for a complete analysis of the material. Ask him to include the thallium levels.

Rae Wallin
N-Viro Systems Canada
(613) 348-3302. Fax: (613) 348-1050.
Email: wallin@recorder.ca , rwallin@sympatico.ca
helen.gallaugher@sympatico.ca

5. Ask the Province of Nova Scotia if they have provided a permit for the land application of this N-Viro process material from Halifax. Ask for copies of the tests they performed on the material.

Ministry of the Environment
Hon. Kerry Morash,
5151 Terminal Road
PO Box 697Halifax, Nova Scotia
B3J 2T8
Ph: (902) 424-4125 or 902.424.6647
Fax: 902.424.0575
E-mail: doehlfx.baidenls@gov.ns.ca
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

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Monday, February 11, 2008

CFI Infrastructure Opportunities Fund Acquires N-Viro Systems Canada Inc.
Acquisition to help Municipalities meet their Infrastructure Requirements

TORONTO, Feb. 11 /CNW/ - Corpfinance International Limited (The CFI
Group), a provider of equity and debt financings for the project finance
industry, today announced that the CFI Infrastructure Opportunities Fund (The
Fund) has acquired N-Viro Systems Canada Inc. for $15 million.
N-Viro is a leader in the bio-organic waste management industry and
currently operates facilities in Leamington, Sarnia, Niagara, Halifax and
Summerside. These are certified bio-solids management facilities and the post
treatment products they produce are marketed under the Federal Fertilizers Act
and Regulations.
N-Viro employs a patented process for the treatment and recycling of
bio-organic wastes utilizing alkaline byproducts. The N-Viro process
stabilizes and pasteurizes the wastewater sludge, reduces odours to acceptable
levels, neutralizes or immobilizes heavy metals and generates a product that
has an appearance similar to soil and which offers multiple commercial uses.
"We are excited by this acquisition as The Fund is now in a position to
offer an innovative and cost effective solution to the bio-solids waste
management challenge facing many municipalities across Canada" said Kevin
Andrews, President and CEO of the CFI Group. "N-Viro now has the support to
build, own and operate a bio-solids treatment plant that conforms to all
municipal requirements ensuring that even the smallest municipalities can have
access to this environmentally friendly technology without placing additional
stress on their already limited capital budgets. We plan to expand across
Canada using a "Hub" type system whereby multiple small municipalities can
share one bio-solids treatment facility."
"At CFI we've always believed that private participation in financing and
ownership is vital to the renewal of Canada's infrastructure. Through this
acquisition the CFI Infrastructure Opportunities Fund is helping to address
the infrastructure deficit facing Canada today" said Mr. Andrews.
The acquisition of N-Viro further diversifies the assets in the CFI
Infrastructure Opportunities Fund which currently include alternate sources of
renewable power generation, cogeneration and now bio solids. Investments
through the first round of financing of The Fund now support over $750 million
in new infrastructure developments across Canada.

About CFI Group
---------------
With over 20 years of experience and $5 billion of transactions, CFI
Group is a comprehensive, personalized financial services company able to
satisfy a full range of capital needs, from equity to sub-debt and senior
debt. CFI specializes in providing customized medium and long-term project
finance and infrastructure debt and equity financing solutions for private and
public corporations. The Company is based in Toronto, Ontario with offices in
Quebec and British Columbia.

In addition to its substantial lending capabilities CFI offers a wide
range of capital solutions through its subsidiary CFI Capital. CFI Capital
manages the CFI Infrastructure Opportunities Fund. The Fund, launched in 2004
is designed to meet the increased demand for financing for Canadian
infrastructure projects and Public Sector-Private Sector Partnerships

For more information on CFI Group, visit www.corpfinance.ca



For further information: David Bell, Managing Director, CFI Capital/CFI Infrastructure Opportunities Fund, (41..., dbell@corpfinance.ca or Rae Wallin, President, N-Viro Systems Canada Inc., (613) 3..., rwallin@sympatico.ca

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Thursday, April 29, 2004

American firm eyes biosolids from harbour cleanupBy Shaune MacKinlay ­ The Daily NewsA sewage sludge plant used to sit on a hill overlooking the English villageof Great Stambridge, Essex. First a small plant, then a much larger plantand now, no plant at all.It was touted as a state-of-the art facility that would rid the village ofthe stench of open sewage storage and instead use all that human waste, andmore from surrounding municipalities, to create a fertilizer-like product tosell to area farmers.Now the facility, which used a patented alkaline treatment technology of aToledo, Ohio-based company N-Viro, is just a bad memory in Great Stambridge.³The N-Viro company assured everybody that this product was a reallywonderful fertilizer and all the local farmers would actually be fallingover themselves to buy it barge pole,² said Ron Bailey, a member of the community group that foughtto get rid of the plant.The plant closed in 2001. N-Viro has moved on to new opportunities in NovaScotia, looking to become part of the Halifax Harbour clean-up project

smackinlay at hfxnews.ca

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Wednesday, April 28, 2004

Schuylkill County's Reiley Twp. Is Not Alone.

Upstate New York Communities Also Have an N-Viro/We Care Controversy

Following are two recent news stories from the North Countryman, a Denton Publications newspaper in Elizabethtown, NY. Reporter: Anne Hawkesby. Posted with permission)


Beekmantown Seeks Compliance in Waste Issue



By Ann Hawksby


Beekmantown - In response to complaints, the Beekmantown Codes Enforcement officer, Allan Corron, recently sent a certified letter to a Route 9 landowner, asking that he comply with their local laws pertaining to solid waste.

The town claims the landowner, Graham Laman, has allowed truckloads of processed human waste compost from the Clinton County Compost Facility in Plattsburgh to be dumped in a gravel pit on his property, which is in violation of their local laws.

According to Town Supervisor Dennis Relation, Laman has until Jan.21, 2004 to comply with Local Law Number One, prohibiting the deposit of waste in Beekmantown.

"It has been in effect for 25 years," Relation said, "and it was designed to cover all types of waste."

He listed several examples of what was banned under their town law, including solid or liquid waste.

Laman could be cited for the violation in the event that he was non-compliant.

The topic was discussed at the Clinton County Legislative meeting last Wednesday evening.

Legislator Joseph Giroux had been under the impression that the Town of Mooers had resolved their problem last September concerning composted waste being dumped on farmland without prior permission or approval.

Champlain area Legislator Celine Paquette set the record straight, telling her colleagues that she had been asked to sit in on Mooers town meetings. She told him to date nothing had been resolved, leaving residents and the town officials very frustrated.

That problem began when several area residents complained of late night truck traffic, followed by an offensive odor. The trucks were seen entering and exiting a dormant farm on the Bashaw Road.

Upon an investigation by local NYS Department of Environmental Conservation officers, it was determined that the trucks had hauled in compost from the Clinton County Compost Facility.

U.S. Filter was contracted by the City of Plattsburgh to run the compost facility. The firm uses the 'N-Viro' process to transform human waste sludge into a Class A biosolids compost. The process and product have been approved and permitted by NYSDEC.

The finished product is marketed by We Care Organics LLC, and moved by We Care Transportation LLC.

Giroux said he was concerned about the possibility of leaching, because the compost was being dumped on top of gravel.

"I'm concerned about them dumping all over the county," he said, "I guess it's not so bad if it's spread, but to stockpile it is not good."

Giroux said he was worried about contamination, and would be willing to come to the town's aide if requested.

Relation said to his understanding the compost was being stockpiled on the Laman property. He was unsure of the intent of the landowner or the trucking company.

"It was done kind of secretively," he said, adding that he and the code enforcement officer were still looking into the matter.


Clinton County Legislation Urged to Help Control Questionable Compost Dumping Practices

Special Meeting to be Arranged


By Ann Hawksby



Plattsburgh -- The Clinton County Legislators got an earful from angry town officials and homeowners during the first 45 minutes of their meeting last evening.

Both the Mooers and Beekmantown supervisors spoke of their problematic dealings with We Care's transportation and marketing companies, who were contracted to remove the composted human waste product produced at the Clinton County Compost Facility.

Legislators Joseph Giroux and Celine Paquette said they have been actively involved in their own investigations into the legalities of land spreading, dumping, and the use of the finished product.

Giroux told fellow board members that compost was being stockpiled, which was a potential problem, especially if they continue to do so without notice or permission.

Giroux also said handling the Plattsburgh area waste was something he understood, but questioned having sewage sludge brought in from other areas to be handled at the facility.

He said it was time the legislators stepped in rather than leaving the problems to be handled by the individual towns.

Paquette added to his list of problems.

She shared her frustrations in trying to find out about the safety and regulation of the material. She spoke of the numerous contacts she had made, including the NY State Department of Environmental Conservation, and other governing agencies.

"They are all very cooperative at first, then they set up walls," she said, "and they do change their stories."

"I have a whole folder full of information I have been compiling," Paquette said holding it up for all to see.

As the facts unfolded, it was established that the City of Plattsburgh owns the compost facility. U.S. Filter was contracted to run the plant, producing a waste-derived product called N-Viro. In turn, U.S. Filter then contracted We Care Transportation LLC, to do the transporting.

We Care actually has two companies involved, We Care Transportation, and We Care Organics. The latter markets the N-Viro material, their target customers - North Country farmers and landowners.

As Beekmantown Supervisor Dennis Relation spoke to the board of legislators on behalf of his community, he told them of a situation where We Care was stockpiling compost off Route 9 in Beekmantown.

Relation said it was being dumped, truckload after truckload on a gravel pit, which increases the danger of leaching.

But, more importantly, it was being done just about a mile or so from the shoreline of Lake Champlain.

Relation also told the board of a recent Stop Sale Order on the N-Viro product. It was issued to both U.S. Filter and We Care by the N.Y. State Department of Agriculture and Markets, because the product was being misrepresented as a liming agent.

"Now how do we know it hasn't been misrepresented as being safe?" he asked.

He asked if the towns could expect any degree of support or regulation of the compost facility and the companies involved, since the facility bears the name of the county.

After some discussion, County Attorney Dennis Curtin said he had not read the contracts lately, but believed the City of Plattsburgh would have the authority over the facility.

Curtin explained that county regulation is limited, as the county does not take part in the operations at the plant. When the facility was planned Clinton County endorsed the project so that they would be able to apply for grant money. Thus the project took on the name of the county.

Curtin also said no matter who regulates the facility; "their practices must comply with our State, Federal, and local laws."

He also suggested requesting that the city's environmental engineer provide detailed reports on the operations, testing, and practices at the facility.

The board heard from Mooers Town Supervisor John "Jack" Dragoon, who has been trying to deal with We Care owners since Labor Day.

Neither the Mooers local laws concerning dumping, nor the Zoning Board were able to make headway in controlling what We Care called "ordinary farming practices" on a Bashaw Road farm that had sat idle for over 10 years.

Referring to the problem in Beekmantown, Dragoon noted that Daniel Steenberge of the DEC told his town board there was to be no more stockpiling in his area of jurisdiction.

"Doesn't that include Beekmantown?" he asked.

"There's some big bucks behind this," Dragoon said, "I don't like to say this but someone's getting their pockets lined here."

"I have a lot more information and pictures available if anyone would care to see them," Dragoon told the board.

As a nearby resident, Keith Spires spoke, he too accused the trucking company and other agencies involved of "shadow dancing," and "dodging" questions and concerns.

Spires said he and 12 other residents have dug wells and are concerned about the possibility of contamination from the site.

Both he and Dragoon told the board that We Care had not complied with regulations concerning land spreading of the material, and when DEC investigated, they found no wrong-doing.

"I actually sent them (DEC) a map of the property," Spires said, "telling them where to look."

Spires said there is over three acres on the Bashaw Road farm that has a 12-18 inch layer of N-Viro spread over it.

"I want to know who I can sue in the future when this stuff leaches into my well and my property cannot be sold."

Legislative Chairperson, James Langely, Jr., ended the discussions with a promise to arrange a special meeting. His guest list will include the Clinton County Legislative body, the town officials, as well as representatives from the City of Plattsburgh, the DEC, and other agencies that he feels should be involved.


News and Headlines
... US Filter was contracted by the City of Plattsburgh to run the compost facility.
The firm uses the 'N-Viro' process to transform human waste sludge into a ...
www.budangst.com/news/News1056.htm

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Thursday, June 05, 2003

N-Viro International reports decreases in earnings, revenue

N-Viro International reports decreases in earnings, revenue

TOLEDO, OHIO (June 3) -- N-Viro International Corp. posted decreases in
revenue and net income for the first quarter and
attributed the downturn to inclement weather during the period.

N-Viro reported a net loss of $138,000 on revenue of $1.25 million for
the quarter ended March 31. Those figures compare
with net income of $24,000 on revenue of $1.42 million for the
corresponding quarter of 2002.

The later winter and spring delayed agricultural and topsoil product
sales, which negatively affected the company´s first-quarter
results, said Terry J. Logan, CEO of N-Viro International.

The Toledo-based company´s patented process uses lime and combustion
byproducts to treat and convert wastewater sludge
and other organic waste into agricultural and soil-enrichment products.
N-Viro International develops and licenses its
technology to municipalities and private firms.

Wednesday, March 06, 2002

FW: Land Application of Bio-Solids Draws Flak
Subject: Land Application of Bio-Solids Draws Flak


Headline News
Land application of biosolids draws flak; EPA neutralizes stance

WASHINGTON (March 4) -- A report due this year has resurrected
concerns regarding the safety of land-applying biosolids and has
gained the attention of at least one U.S. senator.
The Environmental Protection Agency may not have adequate
resources to manage the program, according to a draft report by the
EPA Inspector General´s Office on the land application of biosolids.
State biosolids coordinators are worried that the lack of financial
support available at the state and federal levels is affecting regulatory
oversight.
"At a time when there is public concern about pathogens and vector
attraction and allegations of human and animal death due to biosolids
land application, EPA is providing states with less support and
assistance," the report states.
The Inspector General´s Office finished the draft in October and plans
to release the final version some time this year.
The report raises the question of whether the EPA is committing
enough funding and manpower to the biosolids program. "The answer,
of course, is no on both levels," said Terry Logan, president of N-Viro
International Corp. of Toledo, Ohio. "No new blood coming in, and no
new resources."
N-Viro International licenses systems to wastewater treatment plants to
convert sewage sludge to Class A biosolids.
The EPA report caught the eye of Sen. Charles E. Grassley, R-Iowa,
who sent a letter to EPA Administrator Christie Whitman last month to
voice his concerns.
"As a farmer and senator who has many constituents living in rural
areas, I am especially concerned that EPA´s regulations could put
such people at risk," Grassley said in the letter. "It is also alarming that
the internal report suggests EPA´s policies and regulations for such
hazardous materials are not based upon thorough, scientific
examinations."
The EPA no longer promotes land-applying biosolids and is neutral on
the concept, the report states. During the Clinton administration, the
EPA supported the practice as a form of recycling. "State coordinators
are confused, concerned, and some are angered by EPA´s shift from
advocacy of land application to a practice-neutral position," the report
states. "The EPA has decided that regulators should not be
promoters."
Nationwide, there are about 140 people working on state biosolids
programs, but the numbers are deceiving, according to the report.
Twenty-four states have one or fewer full-time employees devoted to
biosolids. Five states -- Maryland, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Texas
and Wisconsin -- have 57 full-time employees, or 42 percent of the
total.
The EPA has less than the equivalent of 16 full-time employees at its
headquarters and regional offices devoted to biosolids issues. The
number of full-time employees responsible for enforcing the biosolids
program has been cut almost in half since 1998. In 1998, there were
seven employees involved in enforcement compared with less than
four in 2000.
In contrast, the generation of biosolids and the number of land
application sites have increased. "Increasing also are the potential for
improper land application and illegal dumping, which should be
identified and punished if necessary, and complaints from concerned
citizens relating to adverse effects, which should be investigated," the
report states.
Bob O´Dette, vice president for technical services for Synagro
Technologies Inc. in Houston, has a different take on the issue.
O´Dette said he believes the EPA´s use of its limited resources
elsewhere proves that land application is not a threat to the
environment. "They recognize the safety and benefits of biosolids
recycling," he said. "I have no doubt that they still support it and
believe that it´s the best thing to do."
There is no evidence that anyone has gotten seriously ill or died from
exposure to biosolids, O´Dette said. Many states have stepped up their
oversight of biosolids programs just as they have on other issues such
as water quality, he said.
"[Those] who are trying to stop biosolids recycling are going to spin
these things in their favor," O´Dette said. "We´re confident that if we
have a chance to give Sen. Grassley the correct information, he´s
going to be a supporter of biosolids and organic recycling."
Land-applying Class B biosolids is safe when it is done properly,
N-Viro´s Logan said. Small cities have effective programs applying
small amounts of digested material to land near treatment plants.
But large cities generating large amounts of sludge can create
problems. Some contractors and city crews move undigested biosolids
into other communities and store them on-site for weeks or months, he
said. They add just enough lime to the material to reach the proper pH
requirement for 24 hours.
"A lot of what I see today on Class B does not fall into that category,"
Logan said.
Sen. Grassley´s stance may be overstated, said Ned Beecher,
executive director of the New England Biosolids and Residuals
Association. "It isn´t a surprise that this senator suddenly wrote this
letter because a former aide asked him to sign this letter," Beecher
said.
David L. Lewis, a former research microbiologist who worked at the
EPA for 30 years, is at the center of the debate. He has testified in
court cases that the land application of biosolids resulted in at least
one death. Lewis, who claims the EPA accused him of violating ethics
rules and took away any opportunity for promotion, is serving as a
visiting scientist at the University of Georgia in Athens.
The National Whistleblower Center in Washington has sided with Lewis
and his fight against the EPA. Kris Kolesnik, executive director of the
NWC, served as director of investigations for Grassley´s Judiciary
Subcommittee and as a legislative assistant for the senator.