|
The following is a paid advertisement for FieldTurf. Views expressed in this advertorial do not necessarily represent the views of NRPA.
FieldTurf Tarkett
Environmental Intelligence.
We
see our sports surfaces as part of the world's ecological system - and make
every effort to ensure that our activities respect the environment. All of
our surfaces are developed, produced and installed with a concentration on
sustainability and a commitment to protecting the environment. We call it
Environmental Intelligence and we live by this principle in every way.
As
part of the Tarkett group we have more than 100 years of flooring experience
and have always taken the initiative when it comes to the environment. We
continue our efforts to minimize our products' environmental effects over
their entire lifespan.
We're even
'greener' than we look.
FieldTurf
starts out as recycled plastic pellets, transformed into lush, grasslike
fibers. Mountains of worn out tires are recycled into clean, safe, cryogenic
rubber crumbs, which are brushed in between these fibers, providing a unique
and durable infill system. Each FieldTurf field saves over one million
gallons of fresh water every year. It needs no herbicides, fungicides or
pesticides - eliminating some of the eight billion pounds of these harmful
chemicals used each year in natural grass fields.
Maintaining
a FieldTurf field produces no pollutants from lawn mowers or other equipment
normally used to look after playing fields. FieldTurf can survive over ten
years of daily abuse from football, soccer, baseball, lacrosse, rugby, field
hockey, gym class, band practice and every other kind of event that takes
place on it. It's made to take a beating, performing its duty safely and
consistently, in any weather - day after day, year after year.
Safety First.
FieldTurf
Tarkett has, at its core, a commitment to the health and safety of athletes
and the environment. FieldTurf artificial turf is a product created solely to
provide athletes of all ages a safe playing surface, regardless of heavy use
or bad weather.
Since our first installation 15 years ago, there has never been a single
incident reported of any sickness or injury, of any kind, anywhere in the
world, as a result of contact with, ingestion of, or inhalation of any
materials used in our turf.
The truth about
lead in synthetic turf.
Recent
reports surrounding high levels of lead in artificial turf may, on the
surface, be alarming. However, simply put, FieldTurf is safe and the science
is there to prove it. Let's review some of the extensive toxicology reports,
testing, studies and supporting research.
1 - Background
Synthetic
turf is, and has always been safe. In over 40 years of EPA oversight and
OSHA-regulated manufacturing, there is no scientific or medical evidence that
synthetic turf poses a human health or environmental risk from lead (or from
any other material used in our products). While there were over 40,000 cases
of elevated lead blood levels reported in children in 2006, there was not one
case caused by synthetic turf and there has not been one single case reported
since synthetic turf was introduced in the US marketplace over 40 years ago.
Lead chromate
is a stable compound that was widely used by yarn manufacturers until around
2002 in the form of Chrome Yellow to create colorfast yarns that would not
leach or "bleed."
Dr.
Davis Lee, Ph.D, Synthetic Organic Chemistry, Executive in Residence at the
Georgia, Institute of Technology School of Polymer, Textile, and Fiber
Engineering, said, "If a green synthetic turf field containing lead
chromate is still green, then the lead chromate is still in the yarn. If the
Yellow Chromate had leached out, the field would likely be blue."
Yarns
containing lead chromate were used (and are still found in) household and
commercial carpet as well as in synthetic turf. The chemistry of lead
chromate is completely different than lead carbonate that was previously used
in household paint.
"Lead
chromate is stable when encapsulated in the fiber into which it is extruded.
Being encapsulated in the fiber, the lead in the lead chromate is not readily
bio-available - meaning that even if the yarn breaks down, the lead in the
complex compound which is lead chromate is not readily absorbed by the
body," states clinical and forensic toxicologist, Dr. David Black,
Ph.D., of Aegis Sciences Corporation.
Lead
chromate was chosen for use in the carpet industry because chemists and
toxicologists consider it a safe compound when encapsulated in extruded yarn.
Yarn
manufacturers began moving to alternative pigments in the late 1990's due to
new European waste management regulations regarding disposing of heavy
metals. According to Dr. Lee, "If synthetic yarns containing lead
chromate are burned, the lead in the lead chromate can be released into the
atmosphere."
Even
though there are no similar regulations regarding the disposal of carpet containing
lead chromate in the US,
nearly all synthetic turf became virtually lead-free by around 2003.
Importantly, there were never any health concerns over lead chromate in
synthetic turf either in the US or
in Europe.
Until
very recently, lead chromate has been used in bright yellows and reds in some
FieldTurf logo applications and in some cases, in the pigment used in yellow
yarn that makes up the lines on some FieldTurf soccer fields. Even though the
use of lead chromate in these applications is completely safe, we have moved
away from the use of any lead chromate to eliminate any confusion with our
consumers over product safety.
2 - Key Findings
Lead
chromate has been used in a number of synthetic turf fields to extend the
life of its colorfastness. Testing three fields in New Jersey with elevated
lead levels, the NJDHSS focused on the bioaccessibility of synthetic turf,
which it defines as "the fraction of a substance in a material that is
soluble and made available for absorption" by the body. Findings
validated the Synthetic Turf Council's position, based on science and expert
opinion, that lead chromate's extremely low bioavailability prevents it from
being readily absorbed by the human body.
From
its tests, the NJDHSS reported that the amount of lead chromate
contained in fibers from the three fields available for absorption
in the intestine, which is where food altered by stomach acid is absorbed
by the blood and lymphatic systems, ranged from 2.5% to 11%. We used the most
extreme scenario, 11%, to calculate the amount of turf that would have to be
ingested to equal the federal standard of 600 parts per million. In
practical terms, it is virtually impossible for a child to be at risk from
synthetic turf:
According
to calculations made by forensic toxicologist Dr. David Black, a 50 lb. child
would have to ingest over 100 lbs. of synthetic turf to be at risk of
absorbing enough lead to equal the minimum threshold of elevated blood lead.
The
Consumer Product Safety Commission's guidance states that young children
"should not chronically ingest more than 15 micrograms of lead per
day from consumer products." Putting these test results in
perspective, polymer and fiber engineering specialist Dr. Davis Lee
calculated that a child playing on the three New Jersey fields would have to wipe his
fingers on the turf and put them in his mouth 750 times in a day to receive
enough lead to equal the CPSC threshold level.
Dr.
David Black performed the same tests as the NJDHSS, using the same protocol
during late May, which showed an average bioaccessibility of 4%. The results
of the two tests are similar and validate the safety of synthetic turf,
including the synthetic turf NJDHSS reported to contain concentrations of
lead chromate of between 3,400 and 4,700 part per million.
3 - The Facts
•
Lead does not leach from synthetic turf.
• Bioavailability of lead from pigment is extremely low.
• Lead from dust at Ironbound (NJ) was tested and is not an inhalation
hazard.
• Ironbound (NJ) children with regular exposure to the artificial turf
field test normal
• Worker exposed to turf and particles for 30 years tests normal.
• Even assuming 50% bioavailability, the amount of ingested turf
required to pose a risk is absurdly unrealistic.
The
potential for hazard is determined by several factors, including
bioavailability, the proportion of a chemical that is actually absorbed.
The
City of Newark
made blood lead testing available to children who played on the field.
According to State of New Jersey Deputy Commissioner
and State Epidemiologist Dr. Eddy Bresnitz, results concluded that the
children had blood lead levels equal to or less than those tested in other
areas of New Jersey
who had not been exposed to other synthetic turf fields. Therefore, the
Ironbound field did not result in elevated lead levels in the children from
the Ironbound neighborhood.
The
synthetic turf fields at the Old Tappan and Demarest High Schools,
which initially had been closed, were sampled on June 6, 2008. The testing
found lead in the green turf fiber at concentrations of 4000 mg/kg (Old
Tappan field) and 6300 mg/kg (Demarest field).
However,
when Dust Wipe sampling was conducted on the aforementioned Northern Valley
(Old Tappan and Demarest) fields in New
Jersey the results of the wipe test produced
results between 10-35 µg/wipe which falls below the EPA guideline for dust on
floors (40µg) and Interior Window Sills (250µg).
Both
fields were subsequently re-opened.
4 - Wipe Testing,
Explained
The
hysteria can be attributed to improper testing methods. The test that has
been conducted which is producing "high lead levels" is one that is
done to determine the chemical composition of the fiber. Simply put, it does
not assess bioavailability of potential health effects.
In
this method, which is the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) standard for
hospitals ans schools, a known surface area (1 square foot) of the field is
wiped in both directions (up and down, back and forth) with a lead-free wipe.
The wipe is then analyzed for total lead by the laboratory. This will give
dust lead results in microgram of lead per square foot (µg/ft2). This result
can be compared to the EPA and HUD floor dust clearance standard of 40
µg/ft2. It should be emphasized that even this comparison is conservative,
i.e. likely to over-estimate risk. The reason is that the dust clearance
standard is based on daily year-round exposures of young children in their
homes, whereas exposures at the field would be mainly to older children and
of less frequency.
5 - What The
Experts Say
US Consumer Product Safety Commission
"There
is no indication that exposure to the turf could pose any harm. We are not
recommending at all communities shut down their playing fields."
The Center for Disease Control (CDC)
"Testing
on FieldTurf fields have consistently shown 10-20 ppms or less than 5% of the
lead level regarded as problematic."
"No
cases of elevated blood lead levels in children have been linked to
artificial turf on athletic fields in New
Jersey and elsewhere."
The New York Department of Health and Mental Hygience
"Based
on existing HUD Guidelines and EPA standards, lead hazard risk assessments at
these four DPR synthetic turf fields did not identify lead hazards.
Toxicologist Barbara D. Beck
"In
interpreting the health risk from these results, it is important to recognize
that people do not ingest the actual turf fibers. The NJ and EPA soil
standards of 400 mg/kg are based on an assumption that small children may
ingest approximately 100 mg of soil per day through hand to mouth activity.
Thus, comparing the concentration of lead in the turf fiber to an acceptable
soil lead concentration is not an accurate way to evaluate the human health risk
from exposure to lead in turf fibers and is likely to overestimate risk,
because the turf fiber is unlikely to be ingested (if at all) to the same
extent as lead in soil.
The
best way to evaluate exposure to lead on synthetic turf fields is to evaluate
the dust present on the surface of the field. When people play on the field,
they may get dust onto their hands or other exposed skin, and transfer the
dust into their mouth through normal hand to mouth activity. Thus, the
primary route of exposure we are concerned with is ingestion of dust. Lead
has no appreciable absorption through the skin, and the inhalation of dust
from the field is expected to be minimal, as any dust is likely to adhere to
the turf fiber or rubber crumb padding rather than becoming airborne."
(Dr. Beck is a lecturer in Toxicology at Harvard; Former Chief of
Air Toxics Staff in Region I EPA; Fellow, Interdisciplinary Programs in
Health at the Harvard School of Public Health)
New Jersey
Department of Health
The
following is an excerpt from an article which describes the events
surrounding the closing of Montville's
artificial turf field after the first test found 852 ppm of lead -- more than
double the state-issued safe standard of 400 mg/kg. However, once the problem
wipe testing was done the field was re-opened...
Montville
OKs use of field after latest lead test - Daily Record (May 8, 2008)
Patrick
Guilmette, a representative for PMK, explained at Wednesday's meeting that
the lead levels that were discovered are isolated to the core samples of the
turf, and did not appear in the samples of dust, wipes and blades of
artificial grass taken from the field.
"In other words, the lead is encapsulated in the fibers inside
the turf and not leaching out to the surface to be ingested," Guilmette
said.
Township Health Officer, John Wozniak also received an e-mail
Wednesday from James Brownlee, State Director of Consumer and Environmental
Health Services. Brownlee confirmed the negative results from the fiber, dust
and wipe samples, as discussed with Wozniak, in the e-mail.
But Brownlee recommended that the township discontinue watering the
fields to limit dust, in light of the negative results. He also noted that if
the matrix which binds the turf is not breaking down, watering the fields is
not necessary.
"My recommendation would be to just have field managers monitor
each field and look at potential degradation results that may result in
matrix material becoming accessible," Brownlee wrote.
Based on the state's recommendation, the committee voted in favor of
re-opening the fields without restrictions.
6 - The City of New York Department of
Health and Mental Hygiene
Lead
hazard risk assessments were conducted at four DPR synthetic turf fields from
3/11/08 to 3/12/08 by the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (DOHMH).
The risk assessments were conducted in accordance with The United States
Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) "Guidelines for
Evaluation and Control of Lead-Based Paint Hazards in Housing" (HUD
Guidelines) by a DOHMH Associate Public Health Sanitarian and EPA certified
Lead Risk Assessor. The risk assessments included a visual inspection of each
site and collection of environmental samples for lead in dust, bare soil and
deteriorated paint.
Applicable
Regulations and Guidelines
The
following stringent test method was used to determine the bioavailability of
the encapsulated lead in the fields:
•
EPA 40 CFR-745.65(b) defines a dust-lead hazard as surface dust in a
residential dwelling or child occupied facility that contains a mass-per-area
concentration of lead equal to or exceeding 40 µg/ft2 on floors or 250 µg/ft2
on interior window sills based on wipe samples. All dust wipe samples were
compared with the EPA limit of 40 µg/ft2 on floors.
Based
on existing HUD Guidelines and EPA standards, lead hazard risk assessments at
these four DPR synthetic turf fields did not identify lead hazards. Some
sample results indicated the presence of lead in the synthetic turf carpet
fibers in the fields at West 27th Street and 10th Avenue, West 103rd Street
and Riverside Drive, and East 120th Street and Park Avenue.
NOTE
- Even though the total lead concentrations in the turf fiber exceeded soil
criteria, New York City
concluded that, because of the low lead in dust concentrations, none of the
four fields tested represented a lead hazard.
7 - Field Testing
at Northern Valley
The
synthetic turf fields at the Old Tappan and Demarest High Schools
were sampled on June 6, 2008. The testing found lead in the green turf fiber
at concentrations of 4000 mg/kg (Old Tappan field) and 6300 mg/kg (Demarest
field).
However,
when Dust Wipe sampling was conducted on the aforementioned Northern Valley
(Old Tappan and Demarest) fields in New
Jersey, the results of the wipe test produced
results between 10-35 µg/wipe which falls below the EPA guideline for Dust on
Floors (40µg) and Interior Window Sills (250µg).
|