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For Immediate Release:
4/27/2005
For More Information:
Contact Bill LaBorde
206-568-2850

Department of Health and Human Services Unaware Cruise Ships are Discharging Treated Sewage in Puget Sound

As the new home of WashPIRG's environmental work, Environment Washington can be contacted regarding this news release.
SEATTLE—In a letter sent to the Washington State Department of Health (Health) on April 15, the Federal Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), which administers the National Shellfish Sanitation Program (NSSP) made it clear that it was unaware cruise ships have been discharging treated sewage in Puget Sound for several years. The letter stated that if discharges like the ones already happening were to occur, shellfish beds would need to be re-examined and possibly closed.

"This is potentially a disastrous situation," said Chris Wells, Oceans Associate for the Washington Public Interest Research Group (WashPIRG). "If the National Shellfish Sanitation Program is unaware that cruise ships are discharging treated sewage in Puget Sound, how can they certify that the shellfish beds located there are safe from dangerous pollution like bacteria and viruses?"

The issue surfaced earlier this week as House Bill 1415, a bill setting standards for the treatment and sampling of cruise ship wastes, approached the final stages of the legislative process. In a letter, Joseph R. Baca, Director of Compliance for the Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition at HHS in Washington, D.C., expressed concerns about the bill. The letter stated that H.B. 1415 "proposes that discharges from cruise ships be permitted within Puget Sound…" and suggested that if such discharges were permitted, Puget Sound shellfish growing waters would "need to be reclassified from approved to prohibited." However, cruise ships have been discharging treated waste in Puget Sound with as much or less treatment than is required by the bill for several years; HB 1415 would not have allowed new discharges, but would have made a strict treatment regimen legally binding. But HSS and the NSSP apparently didn't know discharges were happening.

HB 1415 was never brought to the Senator floor for a vote, and therefore did not pass.

It is not clear whether Health knew about the ongoing discharges. Since the Department of Ecology (Ecology) signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with the Northwest Cruise Line Association in April 2004 that allowed cruise ship discharges of highly-treated sewage and other wastewater in Puget Sound, Health should have received that information from Ecology. But regardless of whether or not Health knew about them, the discharges should have been included in the FDA's annual audit of the Washington Shellfish Sanitation Program, which Health manages.

Either way, it is likely that the NSSP will have to reassess and possibly close shellfish beds in Puget Sound. And most concerning of all, people may have eaten shellfish that were not adequately assessed as to whether or not they were safe to eat.

"NSSP must reassess the safety of Puget Sound shellfish beds immediately to ensure that they are not a threat to public health," said Wells. "In addition, we need to find out why the Departments of Ecology and Health did not provide NSSP the information it needed to accurately assess whether or not Puget Sound shellfish were safe to eat."