Letter: Williamstown Should Adopt Ban on Sewage Sludge Land Application

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To the editor:

This year, Williamstown Town Meeting will be considering whether to adopt a new bylaw that would prohibit the land application of sewage sludge or sewage sludge-derived products (biosolids). The ban would apply to land application of sludge and biosolids to farmland as a soil amendment or to home gardens where store bought compost may contain biosolids. The intent of this bylaw is to protect farmland, water sources, food crops and ultimately animals and people from PFAS contaminants.

PFAS are per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, a group of "forever chemicals," and are linked to health issues like cancer, liver damage and immune system dysfunction. They enter wastewater systems through residential, commercial and industrial sources. Conventional treatment processes are largely ineffective at removing them. As a result, PFAS pass through treatment systems into surface waters or accumulate in sewage sludge/biosolids.

Most states and the federal law have been slow to regulate this activity. The EPA's January 2025 Draft Sewage Sludge Risk Assessment identified human health risks associated with land-applied biosolids containing as little as 1 part per billion of PFAS and yet federal law does not yet impose limits on PFAS in biosolids.


A growing number of states are adopting a range of regulatory and monitoring strategies. Maine is the only state so far to impose an outright ban on land application of biosolids from wastewater treatment plants, while Connecticut has banned the sale of biosolids containing PFAS for land application. In New York State, at least two communities, Thurston and Cameron, have banned the land application of biosolids.

At this time, we don't know of any farms in Williamstown that currently use biosolids. But we also don't know the future of the farms in our community. Biosolids can also be found in some commercially bagged compost. While this bylaw would not ban the sale of these products, we hope it will raise awareness and encourage our residents and local vendors to find biosolid-free products for use.

Let's keep our lands safe for our children and future generations. Williamstown's Select Board, Agricultural Commission, and the Board of Health recommend adoption of this article. We hope you will support this article on May 19, 7 p.m. at the town meeting at Williamstown Elementary School.

Stephanie Boyd
Sharon Wyrrick

Williamstown, Mass. 

 

 

 

 


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Letter: Vote for Williamstown School Budget and Amendment

Letter to the Editor

To the Editor:

We encourage all voters in Williamstown who care about education to come to the town meeting on May 19 and vote to pass the school budget and the amendment to the budget.

The amendment seeks to add a math interventionist position at Williamstown Elementary School. The proposal came from the WES School Council, the body Massachusetts law designates to identify school priorities and bring them to the community, and was presented to the School Committee in February as part of the district budget process. Before presenting, the Council, consisting of the WES principal, two elected teachers and two elected parents, reviewed historical MCAS data, current school year data, conducted a teacher survey and refined this proposal. The Council named a math interventionist the top academic need.

The School Committee was divided in their vote on adding a math teacher. It recognized that improvement in math education was a critical need but thought including the position might risk rejection of the overall budget, forcing major spending cuts and drastic compromises to educational quality.

This does not mean that we, as citizens, cannot review that decision and, based on the alarming math scores, decide to meet the need identified by the WES School Council, the teacher survey, and concerned parents. The amendment goal is straightforward: to give the town the opportunity to weigh in directly.

Forty percent of WES students are currently testing below grade level in math. Our MCAS math scores have consistently declined since 2019.

Math facts:

  • This amendment is estimated to cost approximately 9 cents per day for Williamstown tax payers, based on a median home value.
  • This would be a recurring expense. With inflation, next year it may cost 9.34 cents per day.
  • WES spends $1,800 below the Massachusetts per-pupil average. The added math teacher still leaves us well below state average.

The math interventionist position, included in WES budget priorities since FY21, is not the cure-all to declining math scores. It would certainly help though in meeting the fundamental educational needs of this generation of children who cannot afford to fall further behind.

Town meeting is the right place for this conversation. Come with an open mind and decide for yourself.

Thomas Bartels and Elizabeth Heekin Bartels

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