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http://www.dailyfinance.com/story/michelle-obamas-toxic-veggie-nightmare-white-house-organic-gar/19114069


Michelle Obama's toxic veggie nightmare: White House organic garden
polluted with sludge
ALEX SALKEVER Posted 10:00 AM 07/30/09 Healthcare

When First Lady Michelle Obama planted an organic vegetable garden on
the White House lawn in March 2009, she hoped to both set an example
of healthy eating and to grow tasty edibles for her daughters and
husband. But Michelle's organic dream has been dashed by a nasty toxic
legacy lurking in the soils of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. It turns out
that a previous Presidential gardening team had used sewage sludge for
fertilizer.

This is a fairly common practice with one huge problem. Sewage sludge
tends to be laced with anything that people pour down the drain and
often contains heavy metals. Not surprisingly, the National Park
Service tested the dirt beneath Michelle's garden and found the plot
has highly elevated levels of lead averaging 93 parts per million.
That's below the 400 ppm that the Environmental Protection Agency says
is a threat to human health. But I'd wager that Sasha, Malia and
Barack won't be getting arugula or tomatoes from this garden any time
soon.


The likely source of the toxic sludge that has ruined Michelle's
garden? The Clinton White House apparently used a sludge-based product
to fertilize the lawn during the 1990s! Aside from casting a shadow on
the first White House vegetable garden since Eleanor Roosevelt resided
there, the sludge ensures that Michelle's garden will never attain
organic status. Organic certification processes strictly prohibit the
use of sludge as a fertilizer substitute.

The White House has sought to downplay the issue, and a number of
experts have pointed out that 93 ppm of sludge in soil is somewhat
normal for older urban locales. However, the EPA recommends not
growing food in soil that has 100 ppm. Several major food producers,
including H.J. Heinz and Del Monte, won't accept produce grown in
sludge. That's despite decades of U.S. government efforts to encourage
farmers to use solid sewage wastes in lieu of traditional fertilizer
products.

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