the "Headline That Caught My Attention or the WTF" thread

Nothing like not being able to have some nice backstraps for dinner...

Maine issues ‘do not eat’ advisory for deer harvested near PFAS contaminated fields in Somerset County​

pressherald.com/2021/11/23/maine-issues-do-not-eat-order-for-deer-harvested-near-pfas-contaminated-fields/

By Dennis Hoey and Edward D. Murphy Staff Writer November 23, 2021
AP640840840845-1-1637708600-1024x884.jpg


State officials said they have found high levels of “forever chemicals” in some deer harvested in the greater Fairfield area and on Tuesday issued a do-not-eat advisory for deer harvested in the region.


Map from the Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife

Fairfield has been the focal point of state testing for per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, also known as PFAS. The do-not-eat area includes all of Fairfield, but also extends into parts of Waterville, Norridgewock, Skowhegan, Oakland, Smithfield, Clinton and Benton.

The advisory area includes farm fields that have been contaminated by spreading municipal or industrial sludge for fertilizer that contained PFAS. The substances – used in products ranging from non-stick cookware to carpets, food packaging and firefighting foams – are known as “forever chemicals” because they are very slow to break down and can be found in soil, water, plants and animals. These chemicals can increase the risk of certain types of cancer, elevate blood pressure during pregnancy, can cause liver and kidney problems, and can impair the immune system.

The Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife, working in conjunction with the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention, said Tuesday that it has detected high levels of PFAS in five of eight deer that were taken in close proximity to fields that had extremely high PFAS levels. Those deer had levels high enough in their meat to warrant a recommendation not to eat more than two or three meals a year.
The advisory area extends 5 miles out from the Ohio Hill Road area because that location was found to have high PFAS levels, and studies have shown deer can travel up to 5 miles during seasonal migration. The Kennebec River is a barrier to deer movements, so the advisory area does not extend east of the river.

Three other deer were tested from fields with lower PFAS levels that were two miles away. While those deer had lower PFAS levels, they were still high enough to warrant a recommendation to eat less than one meal per week. Out of an abundance of caution, the IF&W decided to issue a do-not-eat advisory for all deer in the area of the Fairfield PFAS sites.

Hunters who have already killed deer in the area should not eat the deer, and instead dispose of them in the trash or landfill, state officials said. Anyone who has already hunted a deer in the advisory area can reach out to the state and the department will offer them an additional deer in the 2022 hunting season.

The advisory area includes multiple farm fields. Deer feeding in those fields have ingested the chemicals and now have PFAS in their meat and organs, according to the state. Sludge from paper mills or wastewater treatment plans were applied as fertilizer to those fields. The sludge contained high levels of the “forever chemicals,” unknown to the farmers who spread it for years.

“Recent testing of deer harvested in the area show elevated levels of PFAS in both the meat and liver of deer,” IF&W Commissioner Judy Camuso said in a statement. “We take the elevated levels seriously and advise people not to eat deer that were harvested in these areas.”

A map of the advisory area can be found at www.maine.gov/ifw/docs/FairfieldAdvisoryArea.pdf and more information is available from the MDIFW at 207-287-8000 or [email protected]

Mark Latti, spokesman for the IFW, said in an email Tuesday night that the state does not yet know how widespread the PFAS contamination could be, raising the possibility that deer harvested in other parts of Maine may be contaminated with the chemical.

“Out of an abundance of caution, we enlarged the Fairfield deer advisory area so that it had easily defined and recognizable borders,” Latti said. “We do not know how widespread the issue is, so we plan to expand our testing in order to determine how widespread this issue is.”

Paper mills have used a lot of PFAS – and in some cases still do – in the coatings that keep grease or liquids from soaking through picnic plates, takeout food containers, pizza boxes, microwave popcorn bags and fast-food wrappers.

According to records compiled by the Maine Department of Environmental Protection, which licensed and regulated the land application of sludge, eight paper companies spread more than 500,000 cubic yards of paper mill waste in Maine between 1989 and 2016. That is a conservative and potentially incomplete figure, nor does it include the hundreds of thousands of cubic yards spread by wastewater treatment plants, some of which process paper mill sludge and wastewater.

The findings in Fairfield may represent just the tip of the iceberg as to how widespread PFAS chemicals are n Maine.

State environmental regulators announced in October that they were preparing to launch a statewide investigation to find additional “forever chemical” hot spots stemming from Maine’s decades-long use of municipal sludge and paper mill waste as farm fertilizer.

Earlier this year, the administration of Gov. Janet Mills worked with the Legislature to set aside $30 million to test for the class of chemicals known as PFAS and to install filtration systems on contaminated water systems. The state also will offer assistance to farmers whose land or water is found to harbor unsafe levels of the “forever chemicals” and begin cleaning up sites.

The Maine Department of Environmental Protection began hiring and training 17 new staff members – 11 permanent and six temporary positions – and brought on subcontractors to assist with the mammoth task of sampling and testing. The DEP officials had to decide which of Maine’s 500-plus sludge application sites should get top priority for testing.

David Madore, Deputy Commissioner for the Maine DEP, said in an email Tuesday night that the state agency has identified 34 Tier I sites that will be tested for forever chemicals. On the list made public Tuesday are the towns of Dayton, Gray, South Windham, Westbrook, Auburn, Bowdoinham, Lewiston, Gorham, Minot and Skowhegan, to name a few. Sampling is already in progress at sites in Benton, Chelsea, Unity Township and Presque Isle, Madore said. The DEP has conducted some limited sampling in Bowdoinham, Knox and Leeds.

Sampling depends on gaining the owner’s permission to access a specific site, Madore explained. He said that the DEP is working closely with the Maine Department of Agriculture, Conservation and Forestry to identify sites that are currently being used for the production of agricultural products.

Tier I sites, which are the priority for testing, are those sites where 10,000 cubic yards or more of sludge was applied to the land, where homes are within a half mile of the application site and where PFAS is likely to be present in the sludge based on evaluation of known sources or contributors of wastewater at a given treatment facility. Madore said the DEP has designated four tiers and testing could continue through 2023.
 

Wow. Imagine that. Kyle Rittenhouse Not Guilty of killing two white guys in self-defense. and these three a-holes guilty as all get out...

Damn white privilege and our racist justice system.
Even snow effing white wouldn't get off a murder she filmed...if not for that those boys would be out...not even arrested!!!!!!!!

Yet the men weren’t arrested until more than two months after the shooting when a video Bryan filmed of the encounter went viral, sparking national outrage.
 
Even snow effing white wouldn't get off a murder she filmed...if not for that those boys would be out...not even arrested!!!!!!!!

Yet the men weren’t arrested until more than two months after the shooting when a video Bryan filmed of the encounter went viral, sparking national outrage.

You could say the same about Kyle. If it wasn't for video they'd have hung him.
 
You could say the same about Kyle. If it wasn't for video they'd have hung him.
maybe....but historically the justice system has been biased against blacks and for whites

When blacks cheered OJ it had nothing to do with him being innocent. They took it as some kind of pay back for all the innocent ones found guilty. I never met a black person yet say OJ didn't do it
 
maybe....but historically the justice system has been biased against blacks and for whites

When blacks cheered OJ it had nothing to do with him being innocent. They took it as some kind of pay back for all the innocent ones found guilty. I never met a black person yet say OJ didn't do it

I have…
 
maybe....but historically the justice system has been biased against blacks and for whites

When blacks cheered OJ it had nothing to do with him being innocent. They took it as some kind of pay back for all the innocent ones found guilty. I never met a black person yet say OJ didn't do it
Prosecutors and law enforcement railroad people all the time. Ethnicity doesn't really matter that much, other than maybe it's easier to do it to people who can't afford an attorney, but there's a reason for the fifth amendment.
 
Least they aint got Covid
But wait!! There's MORE!!!

New Hampshire, Vermont asked to test deer for COVID-19​

pressherald.com/2021/11/26/new-hampshire-vermont-asked-to-test-deer-for-covid-19/

Associated Press November 26, 2021
CONCORD, N.H. — With hunting season underway, wildlife agencies in New Hampshire and Vermont have started testing for COVID-19 in white-tailed deer, as antibodies for the virus have been found in deer in other states, according to a government study.

“We collected blood samples this year during the five busiest days of the hunting season,” said Dan Bergeron, the deer biologist with the New Hampshire Fish and Game Department. “We have biologists at biological check stations and collect ages and weights annually. This year, we also had them collect blood samples.”

New Hampshire and Vermont were approached by the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service about testing the white-tailed deer population as part of its national research on the spread of COVID-19 among the species.

Maine is monitoring the tests from other states, but is not actively testing deer for COVID-19. Separately, the state said it detected high levels of PFAS, or per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, in harvested deer in the Fairfield area.
In its study, released in July, the inspection service tested 481 deer in Illinois, Michigan, New York and Pennsylvania and found COVID-19 antibodies in 33% of the samples.
“We do not know how the deer were exposed” to the virus, the study said. “It’s possible they were exposed through people, the environment, other deer, or another animal species.”

The study said that based on available information, the risk of deer and other animals spreading COVID-19 to people is low. It also said there were no reports of clinical illness in the deer populations surveyed, and that captive deer “experimentally infected” with the virus as part of a USDA Agricultural Research Service study didn’t show clinical signs of illness.
 
In instances like this, I LOVE it when my hunches are correct. Years ago when the debate about Stem Cells was all the rage, I said the first real treatment would be for Type I Diabetes, and it looks like it's happening.

No great foresight there. Insulin-producing cells do their job without any neural connections or anything special, they just do their job, which meant as soon as someone could get stem cells develop into Islets of Langerhans, the insulin producing cells, BINGO!!

A Cure for Type 1 Diabetes? For One Man, It Seems to Have Worked.​

A new treatment using stem cells that produce insulin has surprised experts and given them hope for the 1.5 million Americans living with the disease.

A Cure for Type 1 Diabetes? For One Man, It Seems to Have Worked.
 
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