There are actually guidelines to be followed when they spread sludge. I can tell you that that doesn't mean anything at all. We have proof of that. My husband and I took a tape measure and we started from our well water cap and measured across the road to right behind our mailbox where we saw the first clumps of sludge that had been spread. Mind you, this is where they'd always spread the sludge up to - right behind our mailbox. I don't recall the exact numbers, but I do recall they were at least 60 feet closer to our well than they were supposed to be, and that it'd been done that way at least 7 years already.
Whoa! Wait a minute, you say! Contact the MN Pollution Control Agency! Guess what. They support this practice. I was even told, "prove it" when I voiced my concern that the sludge spreading could be contaminating my well water at the very least. I don't know about you but I don't have $$ to do all the testing that should have been done. The sad part is that they know that, too.
Last summer I made a pretty little sign and posted it at the end of my driveway. I'd appreciate it if everyone pops in at the site featured on the sign to learn more about this problem that isn't happening just here in Minnesota. It's all over this country. Next time you see piles out in a field similar to the ones in the above photo, don't assume it's an innocent pile of ash, especially if they're accompanied by the horrible odor of a rotting animal carcass (which I was told by the treatment facility is a matter of whether or not it's been "treated" with enough chemicals). The site link is http://www.sludgefacts.org/ .
I had to come back and post for my own information... Yesterday morning they spread the sludge, which, by the way, had doubled to about a dozen piles. Wouldn't you know it then rained?!? It seems that they spread it right before a rain, and I mean RIGHT before (2 hours in this case). So between the extreme heat and extra humidity - phew, what a foul smell!
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