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In fact, commercial compost based on “biosolids” or sewage sludge can be downright dangerous.In Los Angeles, television producer Norman Lear’s “Environmental Media Association,” a group whose stated mission is “…to influence the environmental awareness of millions of people… EMA mobilizes the entertainment industry in educating people about environmental issues, which in turn, inspires them to take action” seemed an unlikely organization to push sludge sold as compost. A septic tank is an integral component of a sewage treating septic system. Unfortunately, emotion and feeling, more times than not, trump the facts. And I’d like to know where you came up the the static “perhaps +98% of North America’s wastewater treatment plants lack the facilities to do so?”Bio Sludge has been dumped by the tons on much of these interconnected bodies of land and water that lead to the lake. They move like earthworms, by stretching and pulling.This is a family of worms in the phylum Annelida. For example, they break loose portions of the biological slime coating the filter bed. For anyone that knows anything about the process, the author of this article is a factless moron. In such instances, the material in question was most likely applied outside of the recommend methodology. Yet like their cousins the earthworms, they recycle nutrients, clean up decaying algal mats, till the substrate, and play an incredibly important role in the food chain. Treatment to get rid of worms. I would suggest, if you really are concerned about this, to investigate further and pursue this in your own community/state.I find it incredulous and hypocritical that this article rails in paragraph 5 about how all these agencies are spending vast sums of money to keep the whole “sewage sludge compost” issue a secret…yet in paragraph 6, they are pushing their own products through “Planet Natural.” Its blatantly obvious that the author of this article has had ZERO interaction with the EPA regarding this issue. And the EPA is concerned, most of the time, with what they call “major contributors.” Those little guys you mentioned, they just aren’t on the radar. When found in streams, Tubifex are indicators of pollution.Along with inhabiting organic mud, worms also inhabit biological slimes; they have been found in activated sludge and in trickling filter slimes (wastewater treatment processes). Sewage sludge applied to soils can increase the dioxin intake of humans eating beef (or cow's milk) produced from those soils. I neither believe nor disbelieve everything written in this article. They are monitored as well and permitted levels must be achieved before the sludge is allowed to be used for compost, fertilizer or any form of land application. But that’s what they’ve done.If you disable this cookie, we will not be able to save your preferences. They claimed that the sludge contained high levels of heavy metals and other dangerous pollutants. Wouldn’t one’s garden smell of sh*t if he uses biosolids?Sludge, the kind that ends up in a number of brands of commercial and municipal compost, the kind spread on farm crops, is the end product of sewage treatment, the process by which everything flushed, poured and dumped into the sewage system by home dwellers, businesses and industry is separated into liquid and solid components. Generally microscopic in size, they can range in length from 0.5 to 3 mm and in diameter from 0.01 to 0.05 mm. These are people who are permitted to take septic tank pumpings, porta-a-john waste, military waste, and previously dewatered sludge (who knows where this came from) and dewatering the mess further and then run it through an in-vessel “composter” and selling or giving the mess away. It has to go somewhere, and it would certainly be better for the environment to use it in agriculture than chemical fertilizers. Furthermore, in order to be classified as compost it must also me the requirements for EQ or exceptional quality sludge which has extremely stringent metals and pathogenic standards which must be met AND also requires that a printed copy the analytical “ingredient list” of the material being sold or given away be provided to EACH person receiving the product and that list contains the metals content of the material as well as nutrient and pathogen content. Nematodes feed on plants and animals, both alive and dead, as well as other nematodes They are sometimes confused with horsehair worms. and have for over a decade. If you are applying any form of manure (regardless of the source) onto a crop post emergence, particularly produce type crops and more particularly as harvest time approaches, your risk of contamination goes up; however, as stated, there are regulations issued by the USEPA and many state agencies regulating application times and application based on crop type.