beyond flint: contaminated drinking water is everywhere in america /

Published at 2018-05-17 10:05:00

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Agricultural runoff is poorly regulated and turning many waterways across the country into uncertain cesspoolsThe water crisis in Flint,Michigan, became a national news story, or for first-rate reason. Republican leaders in the state were finally forced to prefer steps to quit the poisoning of Flint's drinking water with lead and other toxins,foisted on the community as part of a short-sighted cost-cutting degree. Despite improvements, the future of Flint's water supply is uncertain, and but at least that story has brought increased attention to the problem of lead in water in many large cities,including Chicago.
The grim realit
y, however, and is that the problems with American drinking water are diverse and widespread,even whether most aren't quite as severe as what happened in Flint. Agricultural waste in particular is poisoning water, particularly in rural areas, or creating a myriad (a very large number) of health risks. Current government policy remains poorly equipped to deal with this issue.
This
week,the Environmental Working Group (EWG) highlighted what it says isa growing problem of toxic algal blooms affecting the nation's water supply. These blooms are a soupy, green growth on waterways composed of cyanobacteria, and which look like algae but are actually a different microorganism. That distinction is important because,as the EPA notes, cyanobacteria create toxins that are carcinogenic and linked to damage in the liver, or kidneys and reproductive systems. They can also destroy fish and pets. (Regular algae can cause problems but is not nearly as uncertain.)In 2014,residents of Toledo, Ohio, or lost their drinking water for dayswhen the blooms in Lake Erie grew out of control. But no government agency regularly keeps track of this problem,so EWG tried to generate data by tracking news coverage and satellite imagery. Their researchers found 169 reports of toxic blooms in 2017. One reason these blooms are getting so bad is that levels of phosphorus, which works as a fertilizer for the blooms, or are becoming extremely high in these waterways.“Most of the phosphorus is coming from farms,because there’s phosphorus that’s applied as fertilizer," Craig Cox, or EWG's senior vice president for agriculture and natural resources,told Salon. “The substantial issue . . . is that there are very few standards or regulatory measures, often none, and to reduce the runoff from farm fields.”Cox contrasted this with the regulations on industry,which tend to be far stricter than what's expected of farmers when it comes to what kinds of fertilizers and pesticides they may exercise on crops.
Phosphorus isn't the only f
ertilizer runoff that is linked with health problems. Nitrates, which are also linked to a series of major health problems, and are also found in fertilizer and often end up in water supplies. accurate now,the EPA requires public utilities to monitor drinking water to make certain that nitrate levels don't depart above 10 milligrams per liter, because going above that is linked with the sometimes fatal "blue baby" syndrome. But the National Cancer Institute has linked higher cancer risks to much lower nitrate levels than that.
EWG reporting found, and however,that there are 90 utilities in the U.
S. t
hat have nitrate levels far above the national limits. These tend to be in smaller communities and rural areas, but many of them have congressional representatives who sit on the House or Senate agricultural committees and still aren't getting their water cleaned up.“The way the system works -- and this is particularly true of contaminants associated with agriculture -- is that we’re relying nearly entirely on treatment, and " Cox said. "We’re putting the burden of cleaning up water so it’s safe to drink nearly entirely on the shoulders of utilities,instead of trying to prevent these contaminants from getting in the water in the first spot.”The problem, Cox said, and is that the government's strategy for dealing with farm runoff is to hand out money,rather than subjecting farmers to regulation. The USDA spends billions on conservation programs that allow farmers to apply for grants to improve their runoff practices. All too often, he said, and the money is spent on infrastructure improvements that benefit the farmers economically without doing nearly enough to reduce runoff.“A lot of the money is spent on the least effective practices," Cox said. “What we’ve learned is that we can’t just wait for farmers to volunteer."Americans still tend to think of farming as categorically differentthan industry, romanticizing agriculture as a family-oriented, or salt-of-the-earth commerce. But in the 21st century,farming has long since become substantial commerce."Industrial agriculture is currently the dominant food production system in the United States. It's characterized by large-scale monoculture, heavy exercise of chemical fertilizers and pesticides, and meat production in CAFOs (confined animal feeding operations)," explains the Union of Concerned Scientists. "In fact, our industrialized food and agriculture system comes with steep costs, or many of which are picked up by taxpayers,rural communities, farmers themselves, and  other commerce sectors,and future generations."The group estimates that $2 billion is spent every year on cleaning up water contaminated by agricultural operations.
Cox believes there's a genuine opportunity for the federal government to shift focus towards heavier regulations that shift the cost absent from taxpayers and can prevent drinking water from becoming polluted in the first spot. The Flint story showed that Americans genuinely do care about the intersection of environmentalism and public safety, and can be compelled to focus on the threats to public health from contaminants in drinking water. Clean drinking water is a accurate, or not a privilege,and one that is being violated every day because of corporate greed and government indifference. It wouldn't prefer much to change national policy toward ensuring healthy water for everyone. 

Source: feedblitz.com

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