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- NATION, Page 59American NotesCOLORADOPure as Driven Sewage
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- 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.
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- 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.
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- 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."
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