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Dirty dirt

Lead contamination citywide
By ASHLEY RIGAZIO  |  May 17, 2006

Environmental researchers testing the city’s soil for lead are finding that not all is well beneath May’s bursting blooms: some properties are contaminated by as much as three times the “acceptable” level of the heavy-metal contaminant.

About 70 Munjoy Hill properties were recently tested as part of one project, a partnership between the city of Portland, the University of Southern Maine, and the Maine Department of Environmental Protection.

The East End is the third Portland neighborhood to be tested — soil testing has already occurred in the West End and Bayside areas, where researchers discovered high lead levels.

According to the DEP, the highest acceptable concentration of lead in soil is 375 parts per million (ppm). But tested properties have levels as high in some cases as 1000 ppm, according to Samantha Langley-Turnbaugh of the USM department of environmental science.

As of press time, test results from Munjoy Hill were incomplete, but are expected to be in line with the results from the previous testing elsewhere.

“We are starting to send out some of those findings to property owners as they come in,” said Lisa Belanger of Portland’s health and human services department. “If it is similar to other neighborhoods we have tested we will not be surprised to find a considerable lead burden.”

So what does this mean for the earthy residents of one of Portland’s greenest neighborhoods?

First, the community’s celebrated gardens are at stake — toxic levels of lead contaminate fruits and vegetables. While it would take years of steady consumption to affect an adult, children are particularly vulnerable to the ingestion of toxins.

Even small amounts of lead can cause behavioral problems and learning disabilities in children, and lead poisoning interferes with the development of a child’s nervous system. Because concerned residents were so numerous, the study’s organizers limited tests to homes of the most at-risk group, children under the age of five.

Belanger says the city plans to organize a neighborhood meeting for concerned Munjoy Hill residents to discuss the final results and “relatively low cost means” to ensure the safety of the community. The meeting has not yet been scheduled.

“People should be aware of [the high lead levels] to take steps to limit their exposure,” said Langley-Turnbaugh. “It’s an educational effort.”

While ground covers and grass can be used as protective measures, those leading the study are most excited about using phytoremediation. The process removes detrimental agents like lead and arsenic naturally and efficiently with plants. Spinach is especially effective, absorbing up to 100 ppm of a contaminant over a planting season.

The USM research team plans to establish three or four phytoremediation spinach gardens in Munjoy Hill. After the spinach is harvested, the soil will be re-tested to gauge improvement.

“[Phytoremediation] has been an effective means of removing lead from soil, depending on the lead burden,” said Belanger. “It doesn’t mean that you’ll remove all the lead from the soil but it is a means we are exploring.”

Our advice to East End residents: don’t eat the spinach.

  Topics: This Just In , Culture and Lifestyle, Earth Science, Environmental Science,  More more >
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Dirty dirt
Lead contamination of our soils is a pervasive problem facing industrial countries around the globe, especially here in the US. Often times the lead in our soil is the direct results of the fall out from our use of leaded gasoline. Although lead is no longer used in automobile fuel it is still used in jet fuels. Other sources of lead in our soils are lead paint and pesticides once widely used in orchards and current contamination from industries that still use lead in their products. Lead has a very long half life (depending on its Isotope, (205)Pb= 3x10to the 7th power years, (210)Pb=20.4 years) and once in our soils it stays there until it is taken up by green leafy and root vegetables and incorporated into our food chain or by hand to mouth activities of children and adults who play and work in the soils adding to the body burden of toxins for those who play in, work with or eat the food grown in contaminated soils. The cost of removing lead from soils can be very expensive and is a burden that often to much for individuals to carry. The industries that used lead in their products were well aware of the toxic effects of lead and it is these industries that must now be called to task to fund the clean up of their toxics from our soils, water and homes. Today here in Maine lead is still being dumped into our land, rivers and air from a number of sources including our pulp and paper mills and our waste to energy incinerators. For more information on current sources of lead contamination please check out the "Right To Know" website at; www.rtknet.org go to their databases, Toxic release inventory, geographic area, 2004 summary for Maine and check the box for a specific chemical, in the next window type in Lead*, this will show you many of the industries in Maine that are currently adding to the environmental and body burdens of lead in Maine. These companies as well as those who are past offenders owe us the duty of removing lead from our environment and any non-essential lead from their product where safer alternatives are available. These companies also owe the people of Maine the cost of education/ outreach and remediation programs needed to increase the awareness of lead hazards and to protect us from lead poisoning. Lead belongs in the bowels of the Earth, not in the bellies of our Children! Sandra J. Roseberry,Vice President/ Lead Poisoning Prevention Specialist American Lead Poisoning Help Association, ALPHA www.ALPHAlead.org Consultant to CESC www.CESCkids.org 100 Wild Rose Lane South Berwick, Maine 03908 Phone; 207-319-7664 Cell; 603-312-9939 Email; Seapoint416@comcast.net
By Sandra Roseberry,ALPHALead.org on 06/21/2006 at 2:50:20

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