Dmathews87
Well-Known Member
give us all the taco food trucks and you can have new orleans. id say thats fair.I can tell you one thing, if New Orleans was a part of Texas, it would be run far better!
give us all the taco food trucks and you can have new orleans. id say thats fair.I can tell you one thing, if New Orleans was a part of Texas, it would be run far better!
Now you’re asking for way too much lolHey wait, while ya'll are at it, if Texas will take New Orleans and Baton Rouge, throw in Jackson MS as a freebie...
They wouldn't have to worry about maintaining the running water...since they don't have it.Now you’re asking for way too much lol
I believe lead oxidized pretty rapidly in the ground or exposed to air and forms a patina or shell which should help mitigate exposure. You might do more damage trying to dig it out than leave it be. Sort of like with asbestos tiles. If they are on the house no big deal, but go remove them and break them up and breathe the dust, not good.
Fyi I’ve read a number of seemingly credible papers that show glyphosate and its degradation product AMPA are more pervasive then we arelead to believe, even in air and rain water.
Niiice I just checked my area and farrr below the national levels across the board. The zip code I entered there’s only 48 households judging by that metric I’d say people are the problem, when it comes to people less is more lolHere's a scary tool for different concerns like this across the country. Use the map to compare your location to the state or country. https://www.epa.gov/ejscreen
I just looked at my hometown on there and used the proximity to hazardous waste layer and it said the 52% of the residents were within the “proximity “ of hazardous material. Damn. I moved away 25 years ago but makes me wonder if even that was too late.Here's a scary tool for different concerns like this across the country. Use the map to compare your location to the state or country. https://www.epa.gov/ejscreen