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Keyword: sanitation

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  • Sanitation problems plague mountaineers in Alaska (or Poop Piles Plague Paths)

    06/16/2005 5:56:45 AM PDT · by Gordon Pym · 13 replies · 599+ views
    reuters ^ | Wed Jun 15, 2005 03:54 PM ET | Yereth Rosen
    Sanitation problems plague mountaineers in Alaska Wed Jun 15, 2005 03:54 PM ET By Yereth Rosen ANCHORAGE, Alaska (Reuters) - Mountaineers who ascend North America's loftiest peak are often brought down to earth by "virus-laden poo" left behind by previous climbers, a medical report says. The unsanitary conditions created by piles of human feces on Mount McKinley can cause diarrhea among climbers, which can lead to widespread problems when combined with the physical stress of a mountain expedition, according to the report in the journal Wilderness and Environmental Medicine. Of 132 climbers interviewed on the 20,320-foot (6,200-meter) peak in the...
  • Four Family Members Accused Of Beating Up Trash Collector

    03/03/2005 12:41:04 PM PST · by stainlessbanner · 4 replies · 308+ views
    wftv ^ | March 3, 2005
    PHILADELPHIA -- Four members of a Philadelphia family are facing aggravated assault charges for allegedly beating up a city trash collector. Richard Meyers says it started after he passed a house that didn't have its trash at the curb. Meyers says he and a co-worker were slowly following their city garbage truck, picking up trash bags, when a man yelled for the truck to stop after it passed his house. Meyers says the truck kept moving, although slowly enough for the man to put his trash in the back. Meyers says the man got angry -- then began hitting and...
  • Nigerian City Battling with Mountains of Garbage

    02/04/2005 1:15:17 PM PST · by nickcarraway · 16 replies · 464+ views
    IPS ^ | Jan 23 | Toye Olori
    LAGOS, Jan 23 (IPS) - Tonnes of garbage dot market places, bus stops and bridges, overwhelming efforts to clean up Nigeria’s commercial hub, Lagos. The residents of this sprawling city of over 10 million people dump refuse indiscriminately. Some defecate and urinate in open places. Last year alone, the Lagos state government spent more than 10 million dollars on clearing and disposing of refuse, and demolishing of illegal structures. Despite its efforts, the city still remains one of the dirtiest in the country. Lagos was regarded as the dirtiest capital in the world in the seventies, but the trend changed...
  • Holiday trimmings clogging sewers (flush twice, it's a long way to Venice Beach)

    11/28/2004 12:33:02 AM PST · by BurbankKarl · 25 replies · 908+ views
    LA Daily News ^ | 11/28/04 | Dana Bartholomew
    Carrot peels. Spud skins. And a sludge of turkey drippings. Such holiday leavings each year end up in the kitchen sink from Thanksgiving through Christmas, clogging the nation's largest sewer, Los Angeles sewer officials say. "It's wild," said Kent Carlson, a wastewater collection supervisor for the Bureau of Sanitation. "Beginning with Thanksgiving, everyone gets their cholesterol levels up in the season of family and big eating, with comfort food, gravy and taters. "It's like our arteries -- we start having problems." The Bureau of Sanitation works two shifts daily, seven days a week, to keep 6,500 miles of sewer lines...
  • Just flush with pride

    11/26/2004 11:26:00 AM PST · by Radix · 32 replies · 732+ views
    Boston Globe ^ | November 26, 2004 | Jehangir S. Pocha, Globe Correspondent
    BEIJING -- Authorities here are always eager to show off their accomplishments, so when Beijing hosted the World Toilet Organization conference last week, delegates were given a grand tour of the city's toilets. "But this was not just any restroom. A Viennese waltz floated around the room, ''to relax and help patrons,"
  • PPG working on self-cleaning counters that kill, resist bacteria

    07/24/2004 3:27:40 PM PDT · by Willie Green · 30 replies · 3,239+ views
    The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette ^ | July 24, 2004 | The Associated Press
    PITTSBURGH (AP) -- Arsenals of anti-bacterial sprays and other cleaners crowding cupboards in kitchens across the country could become unnecessary if the company that created windows that partially clean themselves can bring the technology indoors. Researchers at Penn State University and PPG Industries are trying to develop self-cleaning countertops that would keep bacteria from getting a toehold and also kill them on contact. "If you have a food preparation area, and you think you've cleaned it, the truth of the matter is if you go back in and take swabs, the bacteria are still there," David Diehl, a senior scientist...
  • Bedbugs Spread Across US (caused by "international travel" hmmm - is that PC for "immigration"?)

    02/13/2004 9:44:14 AM PST · by churchillbuff · 32 replies · 17,111+ views
    AP via Yahoo News ^ | Feb. 13, 04 | AP via Yahoo
    IOWA CITY, Iowa - Bedbugs have bitten in 35 states, including Iowa, and continue to spread across the country, pest control experts say. Bedbugs are tiny bloodsucking insects that smell like soda pop syrup and are shaped like apple seeds. They live in bedding or furniture, or hide behind baseboards and wallpaper. They don't carry diseases, but they bite while you sleep, turning brownish-red after feeding on your blood. Infestations are on the rise across the country in metropolitan cities with high travel populations, according to Orkin Exterminating Co. Reports show a 300 percent increase in calls about bedbug infestation...
  • Falcon Waterfree Technologies Responds to Increasing Global Demand for Waterfree Urinals

    11/17/2003 7:57:28 AM PST · by Tumbleweed_Connection · 25 replies · 285+ views
    Emediawire ^ | 11/17/03
    Innovative Enviro-Technology saves billions of gallons of water and reduces maintenance costs. Falcon Waterfree Technologies has partnerships in 22 countries with units installed in Heathrow Airport, the Rose Bowl, and the Taj Mahal. Former Vice President of the United States, Al Gore, is on the company's Advisory Board of Directors. LOS ANGELES, CA (PRWEB) November 17, 2003 -– Global demand for waterfree urinals is taking off, and the worldwide leader, Falcon Waterfree Technologies, a U.S.-based environmental technology firm is responding by expanding its international distribution network. From operations in five countries in 2000, the company now has partnerships with local...
  • Effluent water plan could wash out homeowners

    10/23/2003 5:59:31 PM PDT · by BenLurkin · 12 replies · 193+ views
    Valley Press ^ | Thursday, October 23, 2003. | JULIE DRAKE
    Barbara Firsick's family roots touch on two centuries on the east side of Lancaster, but that history is now threatened, with the Los Angeles County Sanitation District 14 considering acquiring Firsick's land for agricultural use. The district wants the land because it needs some place to divert treated effluent water from the Lancaster Water Reclamation Plant, the county's sewer treatment plant. The treated effluent would be used on the agricultural land to water alfalfa. The district's effluent is now going into Piute Ponds, a manmade water fowl refuge, but the excess effluent is overflowing onto Rosamond Dry Lake bed, threatening...
  • Rats could have been cause of Sars outbreak

    08/24/2003 5:02:06 PM PDT · by Prince Charles · 15 replies · 214+ views
    Financial Times ^ | 8-24-2003 | Ien Cheng
    Rats could have been cause of Sars outbreak Latest research into the spread of the virus at a Hong Kong apartment complex overturns previous ideas. Ien Cheng reports Published: August 24 2003 18:24 | Last Updated: August 24 2003 18:24 The World Health Organisation is studying new research that points to rattus rattus - the common black rat - as a key agent in the massive spread of Sars at Amoy Gardens, the Hong Kong apartment complex where 329 people contracted the deadly virus earlier this year. The research by Dr Stephen Ng, published this month in The Lancet, the...
  • "Taboo of poo" blocking progress on global sanitation crisis:

    03/17/2003 7:36:36 AM PST · by cogitator · 23 replies · 363+ views
    Space Daily ^ | March 17, 2003
    "Taboo of poo" blocking progress on global sanitation crisis: Kyoto forum[slightly edited] KYOTO, Japan (AFP) Mar 17, 2003 Embarrassment and inhibitions over discussing human waste is one of the prime obstacles to resolving the global sanitation crisis, experts gathered at the Third World Water Forum said here Monday. Ensuring access to fresh water for 1.4 billion people is dominating discussions at the forum gathering 10,000 participants from 165 countries, but equally important is what to do with the waste generated by six billion people worldwide. Only one billion people use flush toilets that are connected to sewage systems. Another...
  • In days of old, most toilet facilities weren't exactly commodious

    02/12/2003 11:22:25 AM PST · by Willie Green · 22 replies · 489+ views
    The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette ^ | Wednesday, February 12, 2003 | Lillian Thomas
    <p>For most of the world during most of human history, the public toilet has been a convenient bush, riverbank, street or wastewater canal.</p> <p>Though sophisticated water systems that included underground drainage and running water were developed in a number of ancient cultures, they usually served the rich. The poor just tapped into them at strategic spots.</p>
  • D.C. Considers Public Subway Toilet

    01/23/2003 1:52:11 PM PST · by Willie Green · 11 replies · 284+ views
    The Associated Press ^ | JANUARY 23, 2003
    For education and discussion only. Not for commercial use. WASHINGTON (AP) — The first public toilet in the Washington area subway system would get a one-year trial under a recommendation Thursday from transit officials. If the full Metro Board approves Feb. 20, a self-cleaning single stall unit made in New Zealand will be placed inside the fare gates of the Huntington station in Fairfax County, Va. The test run, with a price tag of $66,500, will monitor customer acceptance, feasibility, safety and cleanliness, officials said. ``We're going to gauge it and see what happens,'' Metro chief engineer Pat Porzillo said....