Posted on 05/15/2008 3:09:23 PM PDT by XR7
They cannot remove all perscription residue.
I thought only the French used that stuff.
Yes...responsible conservation. But don't bring up such things on FR!
Yes, all except for Viagra contaminants. Cheers.
This goes along with his “We clean your toilets speech.”
“Do you remove prescription drug contaminants?”
We do not. Nor do we need to. Our system is supplied by very deep wells. Our system is very small, 300 homes, and a couple of businesses. I just received my yearly report from the Cleveland water system. They do not remove pharms either. Their system gets water from “cribs” well off-shore in lake Erie. There have as yet been no testing schedules set, nor any MCLs determined re pharms, but the levels are in the parts per trillion, which are so inconceivably small that most people can’t comprehend them. Until the EPA decides what to do, and if there is any harm in these miniscule levels, no one knows what to do. I think the pharm industry will have to be involved in any solution, if indeed one is required. They need to make medicines that are better absorbed by the body, with much less “pass through” waste.
Unfortunately, the snow pack, yellow or not, is pretty meager this time of year in Los Angeles County.
“John and Ken are going to have sooo much fun with this today.”
I thought they were in San Fransicko getting married today.
And this is after it’s already been processed in San Francisco.
There isn’t enough money in the WORLD for me to drink that water unless I’m dying...literally DYING.
They inject it into a “buffer” aquifer to keep salt water from intruding upon the drinking water aquifer. Although, surely, some of that water leaches into the drinking aquifer, drinking water is not pumped from it.
A few years ago, LA County was considering injecting treated waste water into the aquifer in the San Gabriel Valley which is east of Los Angeles. Well, Miller Brewing Co. has a brewery in Irwindale on the north end of that valley. Miller told the county it would close the brewery if the county started using treated waste water. That stopped that one.
What about phalates, triclosan, birth control hormones, hormones mimics, and all of that?
Some of those are definitely not being cleared from water supplies at the moment, and some of them are inorganic. Will california environmentalist groups be able to stop these sewer to spigot programs with lawsuits?
I think they should save their money and just drink their urine.
Remember never to take a space flight for an extended mission.
Sorry, John and Ken are radio talk show hosts at KFI640.
That was a good guess, though, LOLOLO!!
I should have read the comments first. Thanks for some answers to my questions.
Bravely posting before reading threads since 1999,
JH
Toilet to tap is a faalse description. Orange County already uses this technique, and they pour the water into the aquifer. By the time it reaches the customer’s tap, it has been sitting in the ground for quite some time.
Plus there’s the fact that this stuff is filtered so highly that there’s nothing in it. No viruses, no microscopic shreds of toilet paper, nothing. It’s taste is described as being more like bottled water than tap water.
Yep, lots of nasty past date prescriptions go down the toilet.
You’re correct.
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