Texas farmers claim company sold them PFAS-contaminated sludge that killed livestock

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Texas farmers claim company sold them PFAS-contaminated sludge that killed livestock
theguardian.com

A Texas county has launched a first-of-its-kind criminal investigation into waste management giant Synagro over PFAS-contaminated sewage sludge it is selling to Texas farmers as a cheap alternative to fertilizer.

Two small Texas ranches at the center of that case have also filed a federal lawsuit against Synagro, alleging the company knew its sludge was contaminated but still sold it. Sludge spread on a nearby field sickened the farmers, killed livestock, polluted drinking water, contaminated beef later sold to the public and left their properties worthless, the complaint alleges.

The PFAS levels independent testing found on the farm were “shockingly high”, said Kyla Bennett, policy director for the Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility nonprofit, which is assisting in the analyses.

The farms’ drinking water was found to be contaminated at levels over 65m times higher than the federal health advisory for PFOS, one kind of PFAS compound, a Guardian calculation indicates, and meat was as much as 250,000 times above safe levels, the lawsuit alleges.

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Imagine that, buying cheap sludge from a waste plant in an unregulated capitalist state had negative outcomes?

Wow!

Yea, they aren't victims they're victims and morons. Momma always said not to buy unregulated sludge and apply it to all your assets without independent testing. Momma knew her shit.

Morons are still victims whether justified or not.

The capitalist owner class wants you to blame the victims, like you just did.

I dont pity Texas for making Texas what it has become. I lived there for 25+ years, and those victims endorse the system that crushes them. They would defend Abott and Paxton with violence from the criminal charges they flee so desperately.

You can't cheap out on your sludge. You don't have to buy the overpriced European sludges that charge for the brand name, but at least find a local artisan that does small-batch sludges.