So I know some people at the CO-OP and am definitely going to bring this to their attention. Seriously people, DON'T buy these tomatoes!
Thankfully Artvoice has been keeping up on this continuously developing story. They haven't ever made mention of these tomatoes as far as I know. Here is their latest story.
Meanwhile, In Lewiston: Dangerously High Radiation Levels
by Geoff Kelly & Louis Ricciuti
Chemical Waste Management proudly reveals dangerously high radiation levels
On the Friday after Christmas, whence all news stories go to die, Chemical Waste Management released the results of a radiation survey of its landfill in the Town of Lewiston.
The survey was performed by the URS Corporation, and CWM spokesperson Lori Caso proudly claimed that no significant hotspots had been detected: More than four million samples were taken and evaluated, and 99.85 percent of the samples had registered less than 16,000 counts per minute, which is the self-determined standard CWM uses to decide whether a spot warrants further investigation or remediation.
Doing the math, that means more than 4,000 samples registered above 16,000 counts per minute.
And in any case, 16,000 counts per minute is quite high-640 times what most health physicists would consider a normal level of radioactivity. It's even high by landfill standards: A few years ago, at the BFI-Allied (previously CECOS) landfill on Pine Avenue in Niagara Falls, the maximum acceptable radiation level was set at 1,000 counts per minute. That standard was later raised by the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation to accommodate "asphalt fill" materials from a Porter Road repaving project that set off BFI-Allied's radiation detection gate alarms at 1,500 counts per minute.
In 2002, defense contractor SAIC performed a radiation survey of the Lewiston Porter Central School District Campus, not far from CWM. SAIC used a standard of 8,000 counts per minute to determine whether a hotspot warranted further investigation. SAIC found levels ranging between 7,000 to 13,000 counts per minute of radioactive emanation, with an anomalous "rock" found on the property behind the elementary school that registered at 38,222 counts per minute. Health physicist Dr. Rosalie Bertell said of the Lew-Port findings, "Rather than calming the public, this should cause outrage."
To put CWM's 16,000 counts per minute in context, we called Tedd Weyman of Toronto's Uranium Medical Research Center. Weyman said "normal" radiation levels in Toronto are 35 to 45 counts per minute. In Baghdad, which the US military has contaminated with depleted uranium munitions, radiation levels range from 25,000 to 75,000 counts per minute.
"What's being found around the schools at Lewiston Porter is, from a scientific perspective, extreme, shocking, and profound," Weyman said. "These rates are higher than what is allowed at any nuclear facility."
He added, "This is a catastrophically serious situation and a human health crisis. These rates are against the law."
-geoff kelly & louis ricciuti
(e:joshua), we live in Buffalo and it really isn't possible for me to grow my own produce. I did try to grow tomatoes on my porch this summer but it was a bad year for them and I only got to eat about two of them. The green house is across the street from the dump and a little further down the street maybe 200 yards or so is where all of the tons of radioactive effluent was dumped into the earth and later "cleaned up". Maybe a 1/4 of a mile or so from that is where Chemical Waste management receives and treats all of the toxic waste from the entire N.E. region. If you want to go and eat the tomatoes by all means eat your heart out.
I admire Geoff Kelly and Louis Ricciuti for their continuous reporting of something that has been going on in our region since WWII. To call him an asshole when he is just trying to make people aware of the dangers this poses to the area does not really speak so much of yourself. Why don't you take a drive out there Josh and take a trip around the LOOW, you just might learn for yourself why these guys are so passionate about this issue and you might not treat them as if they were crazy alarmists making it all up. I am telling you Josh that I felt sick from being there. Nobody can tell me that it is safe to eat the tomatoes they grow there, live around the border or attend classes there. No, it is not a death sentence, as we know from many fine (e:strip)pers who are alive and well, but it just does not make any sense to be so close to toxic chemicals and radioactive waste no matter how well they say they have disposed of it.
p.s. ditto leetee, can i have that bean dip recipe too!?
you know, growing up I was always convinced that our property was contaminated and I would end up growing a sixth toe or something.
(e:lib) - how far is the H2GRO greenhouse from this dump? Depending on the fuel being stored there, particularly if it is depleted, it may not be effected at all.
Ok this has nothing to do with the tomatoes - (if you are really scared, grow your own for Christ's sake) -
What drives me crazy about this, is this:
"In Baghdad, which the US military has contaminated with depleted uranium munitions, radiation levels range from 25,000 to 75,000 counts per minute."
Geoff Kelly has a point about Waste Mgmt, but as far as Iraq goes, he needs to qualify this shit or shut the fuck up. I am absolutely, 100% tired of assholes like this. It is well known that the US has coated anti-armor munitions with depleted uranium - it is very effective - but to suggest that if you visit Baghdad, Iraq and can expect to encounter 25,000 to 75,000 counts per minute? Nonsense. Geoff Kelly can't prove it either.
People are so extraordinarily ignorant about latent radioactivity with depleted uranium, and radiation in general. Take a look at the exposure you get from an x-ray - if this absurd crap makes you panicky, then surely you'll never use modern medicine again to diagnose an injury you can't see. Get a CT scan on your chest and it is equivalent to natural radiation exposure for 3 years - OH MY GOOOOOODD!!!!!!!! one one one :::link:::
Generally speaking - if people are afraid of radiation they should hope to die ASAP, as they are exposed to it every single day.
I will definately never buy them. Thanks for the notice.