After a report revealed torrents of raw sewage in the waters where Olympians will compete next summer in Brazil’s first games, you could almost feel the air of smug disapproval emanating from America. But was it justified? Hardly.
Our own waterways are rife with much the same foul blend of feces and urban slobber, the result of sewers overwhelmed by ever more toilets and ever stronger storms. It’s not as bad as Rio, where human waste runs through open-air ditches that feed the Olympic water sites, but it’s bad: 850 billion gallons of untreated sewage mixed with rainwater belch into city waters each year, according to the most recent federal estimates.
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“It’s beaches, rivers, streams, the Great Lakes, it’s everywhere,” said Larry Levine, an attorney who tracks national water issues for the Natural Resources Defense Council. “There’s a crisis in urban water infrastructure.”
And it’s making people sick. Sewage teems with viruses, bacteria and pathogens that can make people ill. That’s why an estimated 3.5 million swimmers a year end up with eye, ear, and stomach ailments, among other health problems, after a dip in contaminated U.S. waters, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.
The real number may be much higher, however, because most people don’t connect their day at the beach with their day at the doctor. New York is believed to lead the nation is sewage runoff, with 27 billion gallons a year pouring into the harbor alone, according to the city’s own figures.
Dan Shapley has been monitoring New York City’s water as the manager of Hudson Riverkeepers. On a dry-weather day, he told msnbc, the water is safe for swimming. But wet-weather discharges can start after as little as a tenth of an inch of rain, turning everyday recreation into a roll of the dice. It’s not just sewage, but all the trash and toxins on city streets.
Almost half of the water samples that Riverkeepers recently took around the city failed federal standards for safe swimming, according to a report released last month. People still jump in, of course, thousands of them, including kayakers and triathlon participants. Most don’t get ill, but many get a “Hudson Mustache,” a nickname for the finger of silt that curls over the lip of swimmers.
Washington, D.C., Detroit, Kansas City, Cleveland, and Cincinnati are also among the worst offenders, according to research by the Natural Resources Defense Council. The culprit is combined sewer and storm water systems, which are found in more than 700 cities nationwide. They are designed to occasionally discharge overflow, but as the population grew and we paved more of the land, these systems started discharge huge amount of sewage — blighting harbors and beaches in the process.
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