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TIME: Almanac 1993
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TIME Almanac 1993.iso
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010791
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0107106.000
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1992-08-28
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NATION, Page 59American NotesCOLORADOPure as Driven Sewage
When nature fails to cover the slopes with a blanket of
powder, the ski resort at Vail, Colo., compensates by making
snow with water from nearby Gore Creek. Trouble is, the water is
drawn from a point 100 yds. downstream from a sewage-treatment
plant and contains minute amounts of fecal coliform, a
contaminant of human feces.
Until recently no one had made a stink about the practice.
But then the Denver Post reported that up to two-thirds of
Vail's artificial snow consists of treated sewage. The report
set off a minor blizzard of controversy in which a salient fact
was forgotten: though Gore Creek's water is not classified as
safe to drink, the man-made snow contains such a low level of
bacteria that skiers cannot be harmed by falling into it.
Conservation groups endorse the use of recycled water as
environmentally sound.
Still most skiers seem sure to follow the prudent example of
Jay Skinner, an official of the Colorado wildlife division.
Asked if he would eat the snow, Skinner replied, "Knowing what I
know? Probably not. But then, I wouldn't drink what's coming out
the effluent pipe, either."