Monday 21 September 2020

ALL WEATHER PITCH HEALTH RISKS

 ALL WEATHER PITCH HEALTH RISKS

PM plans to build 2,000 artificial pitches 

Campaigners say they pose risks to players 

Parents and teachers have spoken out about the health and environmental risks
of artificial sports pitches after Boris Johnson announced plans to build thousands of them for England’s bid to host football’s 2030 World Cup. 

Artificial turf allows games to go ahead that would otherwise be postponed. But so-called 3G pitches are often made from used car tyres and contain chemicals such as lead, mercury and benzene. In the Netherlands more than 100 clubs have banned their use for youth games after analysis of 60 showed carcinogen levels to be up to six times higher than would be allowed for consumer products. 

There are currently 4,853 3G fields across the UK, with the government planning to build 2,000 more. But the English Football League (EFL) has outlawed artificial pitches. 

Pitch contact 

In 2013, Lewis Maguire, 13, from Darlington was half way through a 12-week trial as a goalkeeper for Leeds United when he was forced to quit after he became unwell. He was found to have developed Hodgkin’s Lymphoma, a form of blood cancer. His father, Nigel, quit as chief executive of NHS Cumbria to look after Lewis, who died in 2018. 

In 2016, Nigel Maguire wrote to sports minister Tracey Crouch highlighting the developments in the Netherlands as well as research by former US international goalkeeper Amy Griffin. Of 150 footballers who had played regularly on 3G fields and had cancer, Griffin discovered that more than 100 were goalkeepers – a position that means the player will be in contact with the pitch surface more than other players. 

Acting sports minister David Evennett replied that football authorities “adhere to the latest independent evidence, which indicates that 3G pitches ... are safe”. 

Maguire remains unconvinced. He wants to see a moratorium on the construction of any 3G pitches, the replacement of rubber with inert materials such as cork and coconut fibres and to ensure that young goalkeepers no longer practice on such fields. 

He called on the Football Association to ensure coaches make players shower after playing or training on 3G pitches, to remove rubber crumb from their bodies and equipment. 

Others point out that 3G pitches only last around 10 years. Viv Mitchell, whose local council built a 3G pitch close to her home in Northampton, pointed out that companies in the Netherlands had refitted pitches in Africa rather than disposing of them responsibly at the end of their life. She calculated that the pitch close to her contained 20,000 tyres. 

“This is going to be a lot of plastic waste and rubber crumb going to landfill every 10 years,” she said. “It is industrial dumping as these pitches won’t last any length of time before they aren’t fit to play any sports on.” 

In reply to Big Issue North’s detailed list of questions, a spokesperson for Defra, the government department responsible for sports fields, said waste tyres are classified as “absolute non-hazardous” by the EU. 

Call for urgent review 

The spokesperson also pointed to a 2017 European Chemicals Agency evaluation that concluded there is a very low level of concern from exposure to substances found in recycled rubber granules used in sports pitches, and that there is “no reason to advise people against playing sports on synthetic turf containing recycled rubber granules as infill material”. 

The spokesperson added: “We are committed to protecting the environment and wildlife including through the regime which regulates chemicals and restricts the use of harmful substances in products. 

“The European Chemicals Agency concluded there is a very low level of concern from exposure to substances found in recycled rubber granules used in sports pitches. A further restriction is being considered that would further lower the concentration limits.” 

According to an FA spokesperson: “Hygiene guidance is being promoted on social media and shared with the county FAs.” 

Tony Gavin, former head of Laurence Jackson School, a specialist sports school in Guisborough, North Yorkshire, said: “There should be an urgent FA review as part of a full government enquiry with legal powers to investigate the whole process, from procurement to construction, including materials used. 

“The priority must be the health, safety and wellbeing of young people. Any ingredients which pose a risk must be identified, highlighted, discontinued and removed immediately.” 

MARK METCALF 







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2 comments:

  1. Hi We retired to Tenterden UK after buying a wonderful enchanting oasis and haven for all local wildlife. It is a large natural pond but we call it a small lake because it is fed by underground streams at one end and discharges into a brook the other end. When we saw it the first time we were spell bound; all previous owners had spent perhaps a total of 75K over the past 42 years to keep it pristine and we started spending thousands on it to upgrading the perimeter footpaths. We had every animal, insect and reptile here imaginable and my grandkids had begged us to buy the place thinking we might change our minds. Then it all happened so quickly and everything was wiped out in months. They built a new 3G rubber dust pitch next to and uphill from our lake, which overflowed in a storm into our lake. At first we did not realize the lake was poisoned until we began to wonder why the water lilies died and then all the oxygenating weed and then laods of bank reeds died and then fish started dying but big carp survived for some reason. All micro-pondlife died including fish fry, newt embryo and dragon fly larvae. We had 30 ducks bit they all left. We had bats dancing but now they are all gone. We had snakes, lizards water voles and so many other wonderful species. Now they are all gone. I had a bust up with the owners of the 3G pitch and was advised by their events manager to go away and prove it if I was so concerned. I then reported the matter to all who should be concerned, including my MP, my local town council and my main county council. I also reported the matter to The ministry of Sports and Culture who I was told by my MP was responsible for all 3G pitches but they simply brushed me aside as a nutcase. The EA closed my complaint saying it was a Localized issue and a Planning Issue and they did not have resorces? The matter is in the hands of my main County Council who are looking for ways to pass me back to the Complaints Procedure. This would mean that I have been run around in circles for 3 long nightmare years of worry, loss of sleep and acute stress. The lake banks are now caving in and I am putting 1000 tons of rocks and rubble and pebbles to prop them up. All this excruciating work has to be done by one pair of hands a wheelbarrow and a shovel to get it all around the steep lake banks. I am now trying to get a Lab to test the lake water but the Labs say that I must tell them what chemicals I want them to test for and how may chemical to test for? Please can anyone advise me? I am age 77 but strong and fit though with a heart which needed my leg vein sewn into it in two places hence I could drop dead before I get any justice due to deliberate hold ups by ALL who should be doing something yet do nothing. I did get a copy of The Rivers and Ditches Act thrown at me which says I am entirely responsible for repairs to my lake perhaps even though the devastation has been inflicted. Please note: my email address has changed. My lake is next to Homewood school in Tenterden you can contact me through the town Clerk at Tenterden Town Council. I would give my new email address, home address and phone number but it may not be allowed and I could be cut off from this site after typing all this to you all. We really must get crumb rubber removed from the UK before it is totally out of control. If it harmed my our lake as I THINK it did ad hope to prove it did, hem what is it doing to our children's lungs? This is so important because the same could be happening unnoticed to so many ecosystems all over the UK and could become irreversible or cost trillions to clean up and take years of recovery.

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  2. Hi it is the poisoned lake guy. Can I give my address and phone number so people can phone me about how to test for crumb rubber chemicals in my small now poisoned lake. What chemicals kill weed and pondlife. Anyone know a laboratory I can employ. I also need lawyers who will be reasonable and honest.

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