lframerica.com Blog

April 16, 2008

Vista High Student Diagnosed With TB

Filed under: Uncategorized, Schools, Health Threats, State & Local, California — Administrator @ 3:50 am

http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/northcounty/20080414-1525-vista-tb.html

SAN DIEGO – A Vista High School student was diagnosed with tuberculosis, prompting county health officials Monday to notify classmates, faculty and staff who may have been exposed.School officials have notified about 120 students, teachers and staff that were potentially exposed to the disease between March 1-28, according to the San Diego County Health and Human Services Agency.

“Tuberculosis is in our community,” said Dr. Wilma Wooten, the county’s public health officer. “Fortunately, it is curable. We want the public to be informed about TB, in hopes of keeping the disease from spreading.”

Symptoms of active TB include persistent cough, fever, night sweats and unexplained weight loss, according to the HHSA. Most people who are exposed to tuberculosis do not develop the disease.

There were 280 cases of tuberculosis reported in San Diego County in 2007, according to the HHSA. So far, there have been 46 cases of the disease reported locally this year.

March 28, 2008

Mexican Military Invasion

http://www.allamericanblogger.com/2324/media-finally-notices-mexican-military-crossing-our-border/

MSNBC Report

March 27, 2008

Senate To Debate Lifting Ban On HIV-Positive Visitors to U.S.

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/03/24/MNOCVP3C6.DTL

Despite contributing billions to the international battle against AIDS, the United States remains one of only 13 nations - including Iraq, Qatar and Armenia - to ban HIV-positive foreign visitors and immigrants.

Public health officials and advocates are calling on the U.S. government to lift the long-standing travel ban for foreigners with HIV, calling it draconian and politically motivated.

Congress appears to be listening. The Senate is expected to debate the ban this month as part of President Bush’s popular, global AIDS relief package.

The United States has faced harsh criticism internationally for having one of the most restrictive immigration policies for HIV-positive foreigners, particularly in comparison with other Western nations. Under U.S. law, foreigners with HIV are not permitted to immigrate to the United States, or even visit temporarily, unless they qualify for narrowly defined waivers.

The Senate Foreign Relations Committee passed an amendment this month to the $50 billion AIDS funding bill that would mark the first step toward lifting the ban, which dates to 1987. Rep. Barbara Lee, D-Oakland, has sponsored a House version of the amendment.

Some public health and human rights advocates said the ban’s repeal is overdue.

“There is no scientific basis whatsoever for the travel ban, and there never has been,” said Dr. Mark Kline, head of retrovirology at the Baylor College of Medicine in Houston and director of the school’s AIDS International Training and Research Program. “It was a political decision.”

The ban has damaged the country’s reputation, critics say. It prompted a boycott by prominent AIDS advocacy and research groups, which have not held a major international conference in the United States since the early 1990s.

“It’s kind of embarrassing when we’re one of only 13 countries in the world that doesn’t allow visitors to come who are HIV-positive,” said John Nechman, a Houston immigration lawyer who specializes in immigration cases involving HIV-positive clients. “And we’re talking about Sudan, Iraq, Saudi Arabia - some pretty despotic areas of the world.”

Under federal law, the U.S. secretary of Health and Human Services has the discretion to determine what constitutes a “communicable diseases of public health significance” that would bar a noncitizen from entering the United States. The federal health agency now lists eight diseases - including HIV, tuberculosis, leprosy and gonorrhea - as basis for denying admission as a tourist or immigrant.

The federal health agency added HIV/AIDS to the list in 1987, prompting backlash from the international AIDS community. In 1991, health agency officials proposed lifting the ban on people with HIV and other sexually transmitted diseases, which led to protests by conservatives.

In 1993, Congress took discretion over AIDS admissions away from health agency officials, passing legislation that specifically banned people with HIV under the Immigration and Nationality Act.

According to U.S. State Department statistics, 938 immigration applicants were denied admission to the United States in 2007 because they had a communicable disease. However, of those applicants, 478 were later allowed entry after receiving waivers from the federal government. State Department spokesman Steven Royster said there was no breakdown of applicants’ diseases available.

The United States does not require HIV tests for all foreign visitors - only for people planning to immigrate permanently. However, short-term visitors are asked in the visa application process if they have a communicable disease.

Martin Rooney, a 47-year-old HIV-positive activist from Surrey, British Columbia, was turned away Nov. 17 at the Peace Arch port of entry on the northern border with Canada. At the port, a U.S. Customs and Border Protection inspector saw Rooney’s Canadian medical disability card, he said, leading to questions about his HIV status.

Rooney said he was detained, fingerprinted and checked against an FBI database before being told to return to Canada and apply for an HIV waiver. He has not been back to the United States since.

“This has been a major, major inconvenience,” he said. “I absolutely cannot do a damn thing in the U.S. now.”

Helen Kennedy, executive director of Egale Canada, which advocates for gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender Canadians, said the HIV travel ban is harmful.

“I know of a lot of people who have been turned away because they are HIV-positive,” she said. “It encourages us to go further in the closet. It makes people lie on their forms, and that is not something we want to do. I think it’s time - beyond time, actually, to have the ban lifted.

Bans on HIV travelers

The United States is one of 13 countries with a law that bans travel and immigration for people with HIV. The others:

– Armenia

– Brunei

– China (although the country has proposed lifting its ban)

– Iraq

– Qatar

– South Korea

– Libya

– Moldova

– Oman

– Russian Federation

– Saudi Arabia

– Sudan

Source: Houston Chronicle

March 26, 2008

What Was Milan Krivsky Up To?

http://www.wsoctv.com/news/15467867/detail.html

Eyewitness News Reporter Rene Romo spent the day in Hickory tracking down more details on the man arrested for having a blue light and driving an SUV that resembles a law enforcement vehicle, both felonies.

N.C. Highway Patrol troopers have now contacted several federal and state agencies because they are afraid what Milan Krivsky is not telling them.

Krivsky, who’s from the Czech Republic, and is charged with operating a vehicle that resembled a law enforcement vehicle after first being pulled over for speeding along I-85 on Saturday, is expected to make his first court appearance on Monday.

Troopers said the SUV Krivsky was driving had been outfitted with blue lights, video cameras mounted to the dashboard, a siren, a radar gun, and even a department of homeland security sticker.

Several local and federal agencies are now investigating where Krivsky has been and what he’s been up to.Records from a Hickory motel show he checked into the Royal Inn on January 30th and checked out Feb. 6.

“He kept to himself,” said motel employee Andy Hall after recognizing Krivsky from a Gaston County jail mugshot.
“He didn’t want anybody around.”

Hall said that he entered Krivsky’s room to clean up and noticed a lot of electronics, some of which were covered up by blankets.

State troopers also said Krivsky recently signed a two-year lease agreement at a Newton apartment complex. Eyewitness News went to that apartment complex on Sunday. The management office is closed until Monday.

http://www.wsoctv.com/news/15492093/detail.html 

Eyewitness News has learned that a European man who was allegedly driving a sport utility vehicle outfitted like a police car has been accused of eluding police in the past.

Now Gaston County authorities have asked the Center of Missing and Exploited Children to check and see if Milan Krivsky or his unusual Jeep appears in their databases in Missouri or West Virginia. Those are the last two states where he is known to have lived before he was pulled by troopers in Gaston County this weekend.

Gaston County troopers said they called police in Lewisburg, W.V., and learned that officers there suspected Krivsky was producing fake vehicle registrations. They said after they questioned him, Krivsky disappeared and his room was professionally cleaned. Police said they found out that his apartment had externally mounted cameras allowing him to see people just outside.

On Saturday authorities seized dash cameras, a siren, a blue light and other electronic equipment from Krivsky’s Jeep Grand Cherokee. Federal Bureau of Investigation agents plan to go through his laptop computer. Troopers said it contained pornographic images of what could be minor boys.

Krivsky was stopped near Belmont on Saturday afternoon for speeding on Interstate 85, the Highway Patrol said. That’s when, they said, they discovered equipment that made the Jeep look like an undercover police vehicle, complete with a Department of Homeland Security sticker on the back window.

They said what was even more disturbing was what they found in a duffle bag — gloves, a box cutter and duck tape.

Troopers said information found in the SUV show that Krivsky has traveled the country and has worldwide connections. They said he did not reveal that he was a citizen of the Czech Republic. They found that information on his passport and visa.

Krivsky is being kept in jail on an immigration hold.

http://news14.com/content/headlines/593488/-scary-find–made-in-gaston-co-/Default.aspx 

GASTONIA — A trooper in Gaston County said he stopped a man for speeding on Interstate 85, but discovered a lot more once looking inside the vehicle.  The trooper said Milan Krivsky had identification from several states and a West Virginia registration.

When the trooper looked inside the SUV, he says he found a radar gun, video monitor, digital video and audio equipment, laptops, cell phones and blue lights. Other items found inside, such as various kinds of tape and cutting devices, could also be a cause for concern.

“There’s a lot of disturbing things we found inside of the vehicle,” said Trooper J.J. Letcavage. “I would definitely fear the worst, anywhere from a possible abduction to physical harm. I have no doubt in my mind that that would be a capability of this guy.

Letcavage continued, “We found three different types of duck tape as well as box cutters…along with black gloves.  That’s definitely a scary find.”

There was also a Department of Homeland Security sticker on the rear of the SUV, and a CIA button inside.

The trooper says the FBI, Immigration Control and DHS have all been notified. Krivsky is charged with speeding, operating a fictitious law enforcement vehicle and possession of a blue light.

The towing company, Heafner’s Towing and Recovery, granted News 14 Carolina access to the vehicle in question.


March 25, 2008

Now, Here Come The Mexican Airplanes

Filed under: Uncategorized, NAU, SPP, U.S. Security, World News, Mexico, National Threats, United States News — Administrator @ 8:32 pm

Controversial SPP moves towards North American air traffic control system.

http://www.wnd.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=57073 

The U.S. has built nine navigation system for Mexico and Canada under the controversial Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America in an apparent first step toward establishing the satellite infrastructure needed to create a North American air traffic control system.

READ FULL ARTICLE 

March 24, 2008

Security And Prosperity Partnership of North America (SPP): Security and Prosperity For Whom?

Filed under: Uncategorized, SPP, United States News — Administrator @ 9:21 pm

http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=8375

In March of 2005, the leaders of Canada (Paul Martin), the U.S. (George W. Bush), and Mexico (Vicente Fox) signed an agreement called the Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America (SPP). The SPP is about securing prosperity for a rich elite, while taking what remaining power the people have, through democratic sovereign institutions, and placing that power in a few hands of unelected, unaccountable bureaucrats whose strings are pulled by global corporations and banks. However, in discussing the SPP, we must first go back a little further than 2005 to the origins from which it arose.

The same group that on their own website admits to being the predominant force in Canada behind NAFTA, the Canadian Council of Chief Executives (CCCE) — Canada’s most powerful interest group made up of the CEOs of the 150 largest corporations in Canada, many of which are subsidiaries of foreign, predominantly American, corporations — in January of 2003, issued a press release announcing the creation of their North American Security and Prosperity Initiative. In this, they proposed five main changes to be undertaken in the North American political-economic landscape: “Reinvent borders, maximize regulatory efficiencies, negotiate a comprehensive resource security pact, reinvigorate the North American defense alliance, and create a new institutional framework.”

Several months later, in November of the same year, the CCCE issued a short document titled, “Paul Martin urged to take the lead in forging a new vision for North American cooperation.” In this document, they stated that, “all of the CCCE’s 150 member CEOs are involved in this ambitious two-year initiative,” in which Thomas D’Aquino, president and CEO of the CCCE, “urged that Mr. Martin champion the idea of a yearly summit of the leaders of Canada, Mexico, and the United States in order to give common economic, social, and security issues the priority they deserve in a continental, hemispheric, and global context.”

Apparently, Martin was listening, because one of the signatories of this letter was none other than a vice chairman of the CCCE and then-CEO of Canfor Corporation, Canada’s largest softwood lumber producer, David L. Emerson. Emerson would go on to be Martin’s Minister of Industry.

When the CCCE’s two-year initiative ended, it formed a new task force, called the “Independent Task Force on the Future of North America” in conjunction with the Mexican Council on Foreign Relations and the U.S.’s most powerful think tank, the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR), founded by the Rockefeller and Morgan families in 1921.

This task force released a statement on March 14, 2005 entitled, “Trinational call for a North American economic and security community by 2010.” In the Trinational Call, it was recommended that the North America nations create “a community defined by a common external tariff and an outer security perimeter,” and to “harmonize” the areas of energy, security, education, military, immigration, resources, and the economy.

Nine days after this recommendation was issued, Bush, Martin, and Fox signed the Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America (SPP), and in the joint statement explained it would, “implement common border security and bioprotection [enhanced surveillance] strategies, enhance critical infrastructure protection, implement a common approach to emergency response, implement improvements in aviation and maritime security, combat transnational threats, enhance intelligence partnerships, promote sectoral collaboration in energy, transportation, financial services, technology, and other areas to facilitate business, [and] reduce the costs of trade.” The SPP agreement oversees the creation of SPP “working groups” in each country, which have a mandate of overseeing “harmonization,” or “integration,” in over 300 policy areas.

Two months later, in May of 2005, the Independent Task Force on the Future of North America released a document titled, “Building a North American Community,” of which Canadian Task Force members included D’Aquino, Wendy Dobson, professor at University of Toronto and former president of the C.D. Howe Institute, Allan Gotlieb,(former Canadian Ambassador to the United States as well as being Chairman of the CCCE), and John Manley, former Liberal deputy prime minister.

The report’s recommendations included initiatives to establish “a common security perimeter by 2010, develop a North American Border Pass [North American ID card] with biometric identifiers, expand NORAD into a multi-service defense command,” share intelligence, develop Mexico’s energy resources, “harmonize” areas of energy, education, military, foreign policy, immigration, health, expand “temporary” migrant worker programs, and adopt a common external tariff.

In 2002, based in Montreal, the North American Forum on Integration (NAFI) was formed, which, according to their website, “aims to address the issues raised by North American integration as well as identify new ideas and strategies to reinforce the North American region,” and hold “NAFI organized conferences which brought together government and academic figures as well as business people.” The first conference was held in Montreal in 2003, the second in 2004 in Mexico, of which was stated on the organization’s website: “About 200 participants and conference speakers took part in the conference, [including] former Energy Minister, Mr. Felipe Calderon,” the current President of Mexico.

NAFI later organized a ‘mock’ North American Parliament, called the Triumvirate, which allows 100 Canadian, American, and Mexican university students “to better understand the North American dynamic” — the first of which took place in the Canadian Senate in May of 2005, hosted by the Triumvirate president and former ambassador Raymond Chrétien, the son of Jean Chrétien. Participating Canadian universities included Carleton, McGill, and yes, Simon Fraser University. The board of directors of NAFI includes Stephen Blank, a member of CFR and Robert Pastor, CFR member and co-chair of the Independent Task Force.

In January of 2006, the Council of the Americas and the North American Business Council issued a report titled, “Findings of the Public/Private Sector Dialogue on the Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America,” which called for the establishment of a “North American competitiveness council” to advise governments on the implementation of ‘deep integration.’ The Chairman of the Council of the Americas is former banker David Rockefeller, and top executives from J.P Morgan, Merck & Co., Chevron, McDonald’s, Shell, Citigroup, IBM, Ford, PepsiCo, Microsoft, GE, Pfizer, MetLife, Wal-Mart, Exxon Mobil, Credit Suisse, General Motors, Merrill Lynch, and individuals from the U.S. Department of State.

In March of 2006, a second SPP summit was held, this time with Bush, Fox, and newly elected Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper. The press release (which can be found at spp.gov, “Report to Leaders August 2006”) announced the formation of the North American Competitiveness Council (NACC), which “provides a voice and a formal role for the private sector” whose job is to advise the SPP ministers in their respective governments. Current Canadian SPP ministers are Maxime Bernier (Foreign Affairs), Jim Prentice (Industry) and Stockwell Day (Public Safety, ha!).

The NACC is run out of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and with the Council of the Americas, and is made up of corporate leaders from each of the three countries. In Canada, these corporations include Manulife Financial, Power Corporation of Canada, Ganong Bros. Ltd, Suncor Energy, Canadian National, Linamar Corporation, Bell Canada Enterprises, Home Depot, and the Bank of Nova Scotia. U.S. companies include Campbell Soup, Chevron, Ford, FedEx, GE, GM, Lockheed Martin, Merck, Procter & Gamble, UPS, Wal-Mart, and Whirlpool.

On September 12 to 14, 2006, business and government representatives from the three North American countries met in secret, with no media coverage, at the Banff Springs Hotel and convened the North American Forum. Judicial Watch, a U.S. public watchdog group got declassified government documents through a Freedom of Information Act request and made the documents available on their website. These documents reveal the discussions and membership in the secret meetings. The Canadian co-chair of the meeting was former Alberta premier Peter Lougheed, and Canadian participants included Day, D’Aquino (also a member of the NACC), all NACC corporate representatives, and John Manley. In the released documents, under the forum discussion on “Border Infrastructure and Continental Prosperity,” chaired by John Manley, a startling quote was revealed: “While a vision is appealing, working on the infrastructure might yield more benefit and bring more people on board (‘evolution by stealth’).” What exactly are they evolving by stealth? Oh right, our country.

On the Canadian government’s SPP website, a list of priorities is provided which gives recommendations to be implemented by date, and then tracks their status. Under Aviation Security: “For aviation security purposes, each country has developed, is developing or may develop its own passenger assessment (no-fly) program for use on flights within, to or from that country to ensure that persons who pose a threat to aviation are monitored or denied boarding, within 24 months (June 2007).” On June 18, 2007, Canada instituted our very ‘own’ no-fly list.

On May 8, 2007, The Montreal Gazette reported that “Canada is set to raise its limits on pesticide residues on fruit and vegetables for hundreds of products. The move is part of an effort to harmonize Canadian pesticide rules with those of the United States, which allows higher residue levels for 40 per cent of the pesticides it regulates,” and that “Canadian regulators and their U.S. counterparts have been working to harmonize their pesticide regulations since 1996, as part of the North American Free Trade Agreement. Now the effort is being fast-tracked as an initiative under the Security and Prosperity Partnership.”

The Vancouver Province reported on January 22, 2008, that “B.C. is about to become the first province to use a high-tech driver’s license. For an extra fee, it will enable drivers to cross the border into the U.S. without a passport and still comply with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security concerns,” and that “the enhanced driver’s license or EDL has a radio-frequency identification chip that will broadcast a number linked to a computer database, allowing a border guard to assess data and flag security issues as drivers approach the booth.” Introduced by Gordon Campbell and Stockwell Day, this is the “biometric” card as recommended under the SPP — essentially, a North American ID card.

There is also much discussion of a common currency for North America, often called the “Amero,” much like the euro for the E.U. The Fraser Institute published a paper entitled, “The case for the Amero.” The C.D. Howe Institute followed that with the publication, “From fixing to monetary union: options for North American currency integration.” In May of 2007, as reported by The Globe and Mail, David Dodge, then-governor of the Bank of Canada, said, “North America could one day embrace a euro-style single currency.” The Globe reported in November of 2007 that Stephen Jarislowsky, board member of C.D. Howe, told a parliamentary committee, “Canada should replace its dollar with a North American currency, or peg it to the U.S. greenback.”

The SPP is not about “security” or “prosperity” (except for the very few over the many), but is rather about forming a North American Union. When Vicente Fox recently appeared on The Daily Show, Jon Stewart asked him about NAFTA, of which Fox stated, “NAFTA’s been good. As a matter of fact we should have a new vision, go further, integrating,” and Fox went on to discuss the “solidarity” of the European Union. When asked if he wanted a North American Union, and if it would include Canada, Fox said, “Long term, yes.” On May 16, 2002 Fox spoke at Club 21 in Madrid, and stated, “Eventually, our long-range objective is to establish with the United States, but also with Canada, our other regional partner, an ensemble of connections and institutions similar to those created by the European Union.”

Mussolini has been attributed as once saying, “Fascism should more properly be called corporatism because it is the merger of state and corporate power.” Gandhi once said, “A democrat must be utterly selfless. He must think and dream not in terms of self or party but only of democracy.” So are those behind the SPP listening to, Gandhi or Mussolini?

Tuberculosis Cases Soaring in Seattle

SOURCE:  http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/health/355858_tb21.html

100,000 in King County Have Latent TB

By Tom Paulson

Running counter to a nationwide overall decline in tuberculosis rates, TB cases in Seattle and King County have increased and, in 2007, reached a 30-year-record high of 161 active disease cases — three-quarters of them among people born in other countries.

Tuberculosis, a contagious respiratory disease, today infects one of every three people on the planet and can remain dormant for many years before emerging as illness. About 100,000 King County residents have dormant, or latent, TB infection.

“It’s very concerning,” said Dr. Masa Narita, head of TB control for Public Health — Seattle & King County. It is also evidence of the global nature of infectious disease, Narita said, and should serve as a reminder that 2 million people still die from TB every year.

“It is still one of the biggest killers,” he said. In 2006, Seattle and King County officials had reported a 16 percent increase, with 145 active TB cases then.

State public health officials also announced Thursday an overall increase of 11 percent in 2007 in reported TB cases statewide, to a total of 291 new cases, with 55 percent in King County.

“This should be a red flag for everyone, including other states,” said Kim Field, head of TB control for the state Department of Health. Seattle is an international city, Field said, with a large immigrant population and travelers from all corners of the world.

Changes in the TB trends often show up first in port cities with high rates of foreign travel, she said, foreshadowing future increases in other communities. Most of the new cases, 75 percent, are being identified among immigrants from Southeast Asia, Africa, former Soviet states and Latin America, Field said.

“But there is still a significant amount of ongoing cases related to earlier outbreaks among the homeless, especially in King County,” Field said. TB is everywhere, she said, but remains largely neglected when compared with other higher-profile, comparable health threats such as AIDS or malaria.

Dr. Tesfai Gabre-Kidan, an infectious-disease specialist in Seattle who emigrated here from Ethiopia in the 1970s, said TB is a huge problem in developing countries. In Africa, Gabre-Kidan said, the AIDS pandemic has helped to both fuel the spread of tuberculosis while inadvertently obscuring the fact that many reported AIDS deaths are actually TB deaths.

“Here in this country, we used to be very active in attacking the threat of TB,” he said. “But we have now let our guard down.”

Gabre-Kidan acknowledges that many immigrants bring their TB infections with them when they move here. But perhaps the high rates of active disease seen among the local immigrant populations are attributable not so much to this simple arithmetic, he said, as to the fact that so many of them lack access to adequate, preventive health care services.

“I think this could also be a root cause,” Gabre-Kidan said.

In addition to the local increase in TB cases, public health officials are generally concerned about the increasing number of cases of TB that are resistant to treatment. Although only a handful of cases of multidrug-resistant TB (MDR-TB) have been identified in this region, many experts warn that lack of aggressive containment of TB worldwide will lead to a spread of TB strains that are difficult, if not impossible, to treat.

If the moral or community health implications of the ongoing TB problem here is not enough to convince people that this is a serious problem, Narita noted that failure to prevent the spread of this disease will be very costly to taxpayers.

Given the current drugs available to treat TB, Narita explained it can take anywhere from nine months to several years of therapy to clear the infection and cure the disease. Every single patient with routine TB costs about $10,000 to treat, he said, and drug-resistant cases can cost as much as $250,000 dollars per patient.

Harborview Medical Center and the health department already work with area clinics, schools, churches and other organizations to test and then treat people diagnosed with TB.

But Narita said it would require screening a half-million people to try to find all of those with dormant infections and still would be a challenge to identify all infected.

“This is a major health problem for the world,” he said. “And we see it reflected here.”

ABOUT TUBERCULOSIS

TB is an infection that most severely attacks lung tissue and is caused by an airborne class of microbes known as mycobacteria.

When a person with the illness coughs, the bacteria can be inhaled by another person; however, TB is less contagious than the common cold.

One in three people on Earth carries the bacterial infection, and about 10 percent progress to disease. Nearly 2 million people die from TB every year, making it one of the world’s biggest killers.

There are drugs and a vaccine for TB, but none is ideal. Drug treatment of the bacterial infection is cumbersome, time-consuming and expensive. The vaccine is not very effective at preventing the infection.

Public health experts are more concerned than ever about the potential for increased drug-resistant strains of TB worldwide.

A free informational World TB Day forum will be held at 7 p.m. Monday at Town Hall in Seattle.

Do You Really Know What’s In Your Food? Try Sewer Sludge.

That’s right, sewer sludge from New York is being sprayed for free on fields Nationwide.  Human feces which has been found to carry such diseases as E-Coli and Salmonella is being shipped and sprayed for free on the very fields that ultimately put food on American’s tables.

The reprocussions are there as well, contaminated fields no longer capable of being farmed, dead herds, contaminated milk and sick animals all have been reported.   For the company responsible, they claim they will just keep on spraying and you, the average citizen, will probably never know which fields and foods are at risk.

SOURCE: http://www.enewscourier.com/statenews/cnhinsall_story_071093112.html

 Sewage Sludge Banned From Crops (by Karen Middleton)

Processed human waste will no longer be brought into Limestone County, Ala., for distribution as fertilizer on fields.

Monday, County Commission Chairman David Seibert said the county had “reached a settlement” with a company, Synagro Technologies, which early last fall drew complaints from northwest county residents who complained of a strong odor after the company spread the free bio-solids on fields there.

Synagro Technologies has a contract to dispose of human wastes from New York. The company, which operates with approval from the Environmental Protection Agency, treats sludge from wastewater plants in New York and ships it to Alabama by rail car. The sludge is treated at a plant in Leighton, and then offered at no charge to farmers in Limestone County to fertilize their fields. About 40 farmers signed up to receive the sludge.

In Georgia, a farmer’s cattle died and the milk from another farmer’s cattle was contaminated from contact with sludge-treated fields. Last week, a federal judge ordered the Agriculture Department to compensate a farmer whose land was poisoned by sludge from the waste treatment plant near Augusta. His cows had died by the hundreds.

In October, the county had reached an agreement with the company after seeking an injunction against Synagro. Alabama Agriculture Commissioner Ron Sparks said Synagro officials had assured him they would no longer distribute the fertilizer on pastureland. Where it is spread, it would have to be worked into the dirt instead of being placed on top of the soil.

The company said it would continue to take sludge to the most remote locations for applications and would make deliveries just before application to reduce odor concerns. Company officials also said they would alter transportation routes to avoid populated areas and schools and explore additional odor reduction measurers to include additional processing and the use of more lime to neutralize the odor.

However, Seibert said that “about three weeks ago” the county reached a further agreement with Synagro to stop hauling sludge into Limestone County entirely.

“It’s just been taken care of,” said Seibert. “A settlement has been reached and I cannot talk about it further.”

March 15, 2008

All Three Genesee County Hospitals Turned Away Patients

Filed under: Uncategorized, Health Threats, State & Local, Michigan, United States News — Administrator @ 5:29 pm

March 13, 2008

Genesee County, MI — All three Genesee County hospitals were so full they were forced to turn away all patients who arrived by ambulance on Thursday.  It is not uncommon for one hospital to be filled to capacity and send patients to another one that can handle their care, but it is very unusual to see all three Hospitals at once close their doors to new patients.

Syphilis Outbreak Puzzles Specialists

March 14, 2008

Washington Times

LYNCHBURG, Va. (AP) — A syphilis outbreak that is afflicting men and women of all ages has attracted the attention of state epidemiologists.

“What we’re seeing is kind of strange,” said Tangye Harris, regional supervisor of the Virginia Epidemiological Response Team of the Department of Health.
“Actually, there’s no one group that stands out. The cases don’t follow a pattern of young, old, prostitutes, black or white,” said Miss Harris.

Syphilis can be treated at all stages with a single or series of injections of either penicillin or a similar antibiotic.
The number of cases in the Central Virginia Health District has grown steadily since 2005, when two new cases were reported. In 2006, there were seven new cases and, in 2007, 26.

Those new cases are among 58 existing cases in the district, which includes Lynchburg and the counties of Amherst, Appomattox, Bedford and Campbell, said Yvonne Walker, district lab manager.
The cases are reported in patients ranging from 19 or younger, to 79. Most cases are occurring in women aged 20-29.

Along gender lines, 32 women and 26 men have tested positive for syphilis.

The state response team is attempting to target the core transmitters — possibly people who exchange sex for money or drugs.

“We try to make it known how important it is to share with us who their partners are in order to stop the spread of the infection,” Miss Harris said.
Everything is confidential, and someone named as a partner will not know the source, she said.

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