Here is a list of the members of the Lowndes County Board of Health:
Continue readingTag Archives: Health Care
Who implements trash, health, and safety?
As we’ve seen, solid waste is a matter of public health, safety, well-being, and the environment, according to Georgia state law. Whose responsibility is it to protect the environment and the public health, safety, and well-being from solid waste?
Many health and safety issues are handled through the health department,
including the Georgia Department of Public Health,
and the
South Health District
(Ben Hill, Berrien, Brooks, Cook, Echols, Irwin, Lanier, Lowndes, Tift and Turner Counties).
Particularly, water quality (septic tanks, well water), food safety,
cleanliness of hotels, motels, restaurants, swimming pools and so on
are the responsibility of the local health department,
such as the
Lowndes County Health Department.
However, disposal of solid waste (trash/garbage) is handled by the local municipality or governmental body (county).
- Valdosta Residential Sanitation Services
- Hahira Water, Sewer, Sanitation and Utility Provider Information
- Lowndes County
The EPA has a variety of documents available about solid waste.
So does the state EPD, as enabled through Georgia Legislation: Existing Rules and Corresponding Laws.
So, where does this leave us? See next post.
-gretchen
Trash, health, and safety
Solid waste is a health and safety issue, according to Georgia law.
According to the Georgia Department of Natural Resources copy of the GEORGIA COMPREHENSIVE SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT ACT OF 1990 AS AMENDED THROUGH 2004,
O.C.G.A. ยง 12-8-21. Declaration of policy; legislative intent
a) It is declared to be the policy of the State of Georgia, in furtherance of its responsibility to protect the public health, safety, and well-being of its citizens and to protect and enhance the quality of its environment, to institute and maintain a comprehensive state-wide program for solid waste management and to prevent and abate litter, so as to assure that solid waste does not adversely affect the health, safety, and well-being of the public and that solid waste facilities, whether publicly or privately owned, do not degrade the quality of the environment by reason of their location, design, method of operation, or other means and which, to the extent feasible and practical, makes maximum utilization of the resources contained in solid waste.
Emphasis added on the parts about
health, safety, well-being, and the environment.
Those are the goals of this legislation, stated twice in the first paragraph.
Georgia being a home rule state, the implementation of these goals
is now left to the local governing bodies.
More on that next.
-gretchen
Grant funding opportunities: deadlines very soon
Received today from Bryan Zulko of USDA. -jsq
Continue reading
Community Food Projects Competitive Grants Program – Application deadline: Nov 28, 2012
Grants to plan or implement food projects designed to meet the needs of low-income individuals and increase community self-reliance concerning food and nutrition.Great American Main Street Awards (GAMSA) – Application deadline: Dec 3, 2012
Grants to recognize exemplary and innovative revitalization achievements in revitalization of historic and older neighborhood commercial districts using a community-driven, historic-preservation based approach.
Wiregrass Alley for local agricultural knowledge-based jobs
What jobs and businesses can we build out of local agriculture and VSU and Wiregrass Tech and GMC and SGMC and Moody? Build like the way Silicon Valley grew out of Stanford and HP and Intel, but different, drawing on our local strengths? Various things, no doubt, but the companies the VDT listed in its agricultural heartland article suggest maybe Wiregrass Alley:
When you factor in businesses such as South Georgia Pecan, PCA, the Langdale Company,
Shiloh Farms, Dupont, Arizona Chemical, ERCO Worldwide, Coggins Farms, Carter and Sons, and the additional farmers represented by Farmer Browns, the impact of agriculture in Lowndes County alone is one of the largest private, non-governmental industries. Across the region, ag and forestry sustain the economies of a number of counties.
Many of those are obviously agricultural, but Dupont, Arizona Chemical, and ERCO? OK, I’ll buy Arizona Chemical which turns pine products into adhesives and smells. But DuPont? Sure, they make chemical fertilizer, but that’s like listing Chevron as a home heating company.
And what’s this ERCO Worldwide, which provides chemicals like caustic soda for PCA? ERCO Worldwide’s other name hereabouts is Sterling Pulp Chemicals. That’s right, the VDT listed Sterling Chemicals as an agricultural company! Well, that’s hard to deny, because, according to FundingUniverse, Sterling Chemicals “was founded in 1986 to acquire and operate Monsanto Co.’s petrochemical plant in Texas City, Texas.” Nobody can say Monsanto isn’t agricultural, when 90+% of corn, soybeans, cotton, and peanuts grown hereabouts are grown from Monsanto seeds. Which is why we have so many chemical fertilizers and poisonous pesticides being used around here. Is that really the direction we want to go?
What if we turn the VDT’s list around,
and start with the “additional farmers”
represented by Farmer Brown and Carters?
You know, the ones who sell at Valdosta Farm Days?
Farmers markets have
increased 6% on average for the past decade.
Why is that?
Partly because of
the conversations and community
at a farmers market.
Anybody who has gone to Valdosta Farm Days or Hahira Farm Days can attest to that.
And it’s not just anecdotal:
there is
research to demonstrate that in farmers markets compared to supermarkets:
On average, the sociologists found, people were having ten times as many conversations per visit.
Another reason farmers markets are spreading so fast is people are paying attention to the increasing number of scientific reports that “conventional” agriculture is poisoning us, such as the recent one that demonstrates that even the inert ingredients in Roundup are poisonous or the one that links the active ingredient, glyphosate, to Parkinson’s disease. Maybe they’ve heard about Monsanto being sued for “devastating birth defects” and chemical poisoning. And most farmers market customers seem to like fresh local foods that taste good and that support local farmers.
So what if we started with those “additional farmers”
that sell at Farmer Brown and Carters and Valdosta Farm Days?
They are the ones already starting in a different direction.
A direction that is actually
more profitable,
in addition to healthier (and less flooding and more wildlife).
Crop rotation takes more thought and more labor (more jobs!)
than just spraying,
but it also takes a lot less expense on patented seeds and chemicals,
for a net financial profit.
Which could help explain why the USDA says:
Consumer demand for organically produced goods has shown double-digit growth for well over a decade, providing market incentives for U.S. farmers across a broad range of products.
The USDA is talking certified organic, which has so many hoops
to jump through that most local producers are not certified, yet many
also aren’t using a lot of chemical inputs and are using
crop rotation and other organic techniques.
Techniques which many old-timers around here will recognize,
because they used to use them a half century ago,
but with new wrinkles such as computerized records and
recent research that may make them even more effective.
That’s right:
modern organic and local agriculture is a knowledge-based industry.
What has all this got to do with the colleges and SGMC and Moody?
Moody could be a big customer for local agricultural produce,
as could the local K-12 schools; VSU already is.
Wiregrass Tech can (and already is) help teach people how to grow
organic or with fewer manufactured inputs.
VSU and GMC can study how that’s working out,
in conjunction with SGMC, which eventually will have fewer
cases of some kinds of diseases to deal with.
How many cases, of what kinds of diseases?
There’s a field of research we could lead,
along with the agricultural industry to cause such improvements in health:
healthy jobs from planting to PhDs!
And if we do want other kinds of knowledge-based businesses and workers (which is where Silicon Valley usually gets mentioned), I think we’ll find they like a place that produces local healthy foods.
-jsq
Agriculture considered beneficial —VDT
The VDT’s first recent agriculture story started to connect the dots to building on local strengths to growing local knowledge-based jobs in Wiregrass Alley.
“Staff Writer” wrote for the VDT 14 November 2012, Valdosta-Lowndes: An agricultural heartland,
When the Valdosta Daily Times and its sister newspapers in Tifton,
Thomasville, Cordele, Americus and Moultrie decided to launch an agriculture magazine in January 2011 to be distributed across South Georgia, it was unknown how it would be received.
Well, the first couple of issues were quarterly, and then due to overwhelming response and requests, it is now a bi-monthly publication going into its third year.
While Valdosta may not consider itself an agriculture community, we sometimes forget just how much acreage and economic benefit derives from the ag and forestry industries locally. With a farmgate value of $70 million and more than two thirds of our entire county taxable digest in agriculture and forestry use, Lowndes County remains dependent on this economic sector almost as much as the surrounding counties, which we consider far more rural than ours.
That’s great, and I congratulate the VDT. Their conclusion is also good as far as it goes, but it could go further:
Continue readingThumbs up for agriculture —VDT
The VDT continues to congratulate agriculture as a mainstay of the local economy. It’s amazing what a little investigative reporting can turn up! Now if the VDT would connect a few dots of local strengths and suggest how we could take a few tips from Silicon Valley on how to become the Wiregrass Alley of agricultural knowledge-based industry.
The VDT opined Friday, Thumbs up,
THUMBS UP: To the region’s farmers and people involved in the agricultural industry. While some may think agriculture is a thing of South Georgia’s past, a Times story revealed this week that Lowndes County’s farmgate has a $70 million value, making it one of the strongest private-sector industries after South Georgia Medical Center. Given the continued financial clout on the economy, we offer a green thumbs up.
The “some people” would presumably include the Chamber, which made it pretty clear it considers agriculture mostly good for paving over for a shopping mall.
The VDT story mentioned in the Thumbs Up was apparently not Kay Harris’ agriculture alive and well, rather another one of the same day. See next post.
-jsq
Valdosta Farm Days grant
Received 12 October 2012 from Tim Carroll from Mara Register from Larry Hanson.
The Lowndes County Partnership for Health has received a $96,858 grant from the USDA to continue to develop Farm Days Farmers Market, establish agricultural center that will serve the agri-science educational needs of area students and provide low cost fresh produce to primarily low income populations in our area. In addition this project will aggregate commodities from surrounding farms for distribution which will support economic development among area farmers.
The grant will pay for a full time farm manager over two years, a portable vegetable stand to be used on a distribution route, travel cost associated with distribution route, and promotional and educational materials for Farm days and the agricultural center. City of Valdosta staff assisted in the effort in the preparation of the grant application. This project has grown out of the partnership between the City, the South Health District and the Partnership for Health with the Farm Days Farmers Market. The last market day for the year will be held on Saturday, October 20th.
Here’s the USDA’s paragraph on that award:
$96,858 to Lowndes County Partnership for Health, Inc., Valdosta, GA, for a communityโsupported agricultural center that will serve as a food hub and educational center to increase access toaffordable, nutritious, local food in lowโincome food deserts in South Georgia by purchasing a mobile farmers market van, offering a series of workshops to train vendors, and establishing community gardens for resident use.
That’s good news! But please, can we not use this grant to move the location of Valdosta Farm Days? It’s got a great site right where it is, around the historic Lowndes County Courthouse.
-jsq
Help the military stop climate change through sustainable renewable energy
In memory of Armistice Day, the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month, when World War I ended, let’s help the military get us off of oil and to deal with climate change so fewer people will die in wars.
John M. Broder wrote for NYTimes 9 November 2012, Climate Change Report Outlines Perils for U.S. Military,
Climate change is accelerating, and it will place unparalleled strains on
American military and intelligence agencies in coming years by causing ever more disruptive events around the globe, the nationโs top scientific research group said in a report issued Friday.
The group, the National Research Council, says in a study commissioned by the C.I.A. and other intelligence agencies that clusters of apparently unrelated events exacerbated by a warming climate will create more frequent but unpredictable crises in water supplies, food markets, energy supply chains and public health systems.
Hurricane Sandy provided a foretaste of what can be expected more often in the near future, the report’s lead author, John D. Steinbruner, said in an interview.
โThis is the sort of thing we were talking about,โ said Mr. Steinbruner, a longtime authority on national security. โYou can debate the specific contribution of global warming to that storm. But weโre saying climate extremes are going to be more frequent, and this was an example of what they could mean. Weโre also saying it could get a whole lot worse than that.โ
…
Climate-driven crises could lead to internal instability or international conflict and might force the United States to provide humanitarian assistance or, in some cases, military force to protect vital energy, economic or other interests, the study said.
This is in addition to the even more obvious
connection between war and U.S. dependence on foreign oil
which the veterans in Operation Free want to fix
by helping us shift to clean renewable energy.
โIn Iraq… the lines would stretch up to ten miles long under the hot sun, under constant risk of attack by extremists. I realized then just how vulnerable it makes any country to be dependent on oil, especially the United States, which uses nearly a quarter of the world’s supply.โ
We also heard last year from Col. Dan Nolan (U.S. Army ret.) that the Marines in Afghanistan realized Continue reading
First Annual Lowndes County Animal Health Fair 2012-11-03
Animal Health Fair flyer seen on the door of the Lowndes County Commission Chambers yesterday evening at their 5:30 PM Regular Session.
Lowndes County Animal Health Fair flyer
Pictures by John S. Quarterman for Lowndes Area Knowledge Exchange (LAKE),
Valdosta, Lowndes County, Georgia, 23 October 2012.
This is the event discussed by County Clerk Paige Dukes the previous morning:
On November 3rd the animal shelter along with the Humane Society will have the first animal health fair here in Lowndes County. It’s hoped that this is going to be an annual event, held the first Saturday of November. And the purpose is to mirror the benefits you see for people health fairs.
-jsq