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Residents claim city contaminated drinking water | Behind the Investigation
Manage episode 429215159 series 3471991
When Coleen Brooks sees something out of the ordinary, she jots it down on paper. It started as a hobby that turned into a full-time career. In her 30 years as a columnist for small newspapers in Calhoun, Georgia, she estimates writing at least 10,000 articles about everything from the weather and local sports to movies.
There’s one column, though, that has always stuck with her, one she wrote decades ago entitled, ‘Spreading It Around,” about city trucks she saw spraying something on fields across from her home and around Gordon County.
In the 2004 article, Brooks wrote a city worker told her at the time it was municipal sewer sludge turned into fertilizer. She said the worker told her the sludge was safe because it was treated with chemicals. “And when it rains, are these chemicals safe if they run off into our rivers and lakes or soak into the earth?” asked Brooks in her column.
Twenty years later, Brooks’ article may have foreshadowed a potential environmental disaster, impacting her and thousands of her neighbors.
Read the full story here: https://www.atlantanewsfirst.com/2024/06/25/dont-poop-where-you-drink-i-residents-claim-city-contaminated-drinking-water/
105 episodes
Manage episode 429215159 series 3471991
When Coleen Brooks sees something out of the ordinary, she jots it down on paper. It started as a hobby that turned into a full-time career. In her 30 years as a columnist for small newspapers in Calhoun, Georgia, she estimates writing at least 10,000 articles about everything from the weather and local sports to movies.
There’s one column, though, that has always stuck with her, one she wrote decades ago entitled, ‘Spreading It Around,” about city trucks she saw spraying something on fields across from her home and around Gordon County.
In the 2004 article, Brooks wrote a city worker told her at the time it was municipal sewer sludge turned into fertilizer. She said the worker told her the sludge was safe because it was treated with chemicals. “And when it rains, are these chemicals safe if they run off into our rivers and lakes or soak into the earth?” asked Brooks in her column.
Twenty years later, Brooks’ article may have foreshadowed a potential environmental disaster, impacting her and thousands of her neighbors.
Read the full story here: https://www.atlantanewsfirst.com/2024/06/25/dont-poop-where-you-drink-i-residents-claim-city-contaminated-drinking-water/
105 episodes
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