Leona’s History, Bachmann’s Bulbs, & Minnesota’s Bizzare Foods
<iJJ> Leona Lewis makes history, tops billboard hot 100
Thank goodness Oprah stepped in to let America know how awesome she is. Go Leona!
<iJJ> Bachmann bill would reverse phase-in of energy-efficient bulbs
Crazy Congresswoman Bachmann is up to loony-tuney right-wing crap again. Tries, and fails to argue that incandescent bulbs are better than fluorescent. Nope, sorry.
<iJJ> Andrew Zimmern does Bizarre Minnesota Food
This Travel Channel show, which I usually avoid, did an episode dedicated to Minnesota foods. I’ll have to try and catch it sometime…
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Ok, tonight was the reverse of last night. Not weird, no friend bumping, and stuff got accomplished. All in all a fine day. Later.





The down-side of florescent bulbs: (You really want these in your house?)
On March 13, Brandy Bridges was installing some of the two dozen CFL (compact fluorescent lamp) bulbs she had purchased in an attempt to save money on her energy bill.
One month later, though, Bridges is paying much more than she had ever expected to.
On that Tuesday, Bridges was installing one of the spiral-shaped light bulbs in her 7-year-old daughter’s bedroom. Suddenly, the bulb plummeted to the floor, breaking on the shag carpet.
Bridges, who was wary of the dangers of cleaning up a fluorescent bulb, called The Home Depot where she purchased them. She was told that the bulbs had mercury in them and that she should not vacuum the area where the bulb had broken. Bridges was directed to call the Poison Control hotline.
Poison Control directed her to the Maine Center for Disease Control and Prevention and the Department of Environmental Protection.
Upon reaching the DEP the next day, the agency offered to send a specialist out to Bridges’ house to test the air levels. The specialist arrived soon after the phone conversation and began testing the downstairs, where he found safe levels of mercury — below the state’s limit of 300 ng/m3 (nanograms per cubic meter).
In the daughter’s bedroom, the levels remained well below the 300 mark, except for near the carpet where the bulb broke. There the mercury levels spiked to 1,939 ng/m3. On a bag of toys that bulb fragments had landed on, the levels of mercury were 556 ng/m3.
Bridges was told by the specialist not to clean up the bulb and mercury powder by herself. He recommended the Clean Harbors Environmental Services branch in Hampden.
Clean Harbors gave Bridges a low-ball estimate of $2,000, based on what she described, to clean up the room properly. The work entailed removing anything with levels greater than 300 ng/m3, including the carpeting.
One month later, Bridges’ daughter’s bedroom remains sealed off with plastic “to avoid any dust blowing around” and to keep the family’s pets from going in and out of the room.
As a matter of fact I have all fluorescent bulbs in my apartment. No matter what a person does there is some risk involved. I like to put it as, “The leading cause of death is life.”
Plus this story sounds like worst cause scenario. Personally I would just cut out the square of carpet myself (while wearing a mask, and having the room sealed), then dispose of it in a sealed bag at my municipalities hazard waste facility. This story sounds like more of a scare tactic than typical case scenario to me…
Oh, forgot to mention there are fluorescent bulbs in acrylic shells. So I imagine that would avert a problem like mentioned in the story above.