
The Palisadian-Post has partnered with locally founded environmental organization Resilient Palisades to deliver a “green tip” to our readers in each newspaper. This edition’s tip was written by Lisa Kaas Boyle and SoCal Stop Artificial Turf Task Force.
Revisiting the ashes and rubble of my home of 35 years in our beloved town of Pacific Palisades, I noticed something alarming in the debris: the burned remains of my neighbor’s plastic grass, now heaped on my property.
The sight made me sad because as an environmental attorney, I know a lot about the toxins in that plastic grass and how these toxins, especially melted, impact our environment, soil and nearby ocean.
I’m sure my neighbor installed the plastic grass with good intentions, but we now know that artificial turf has not brought expected benefits such as water savings. Cooling and cleaning plastic grass can require more water than would be used for the maintenance of natural, drought-tolerant grasses.
Most significantly, plastic grass has created many unintended consequences. Plastic grass is manufactured with petrochemicals, and the manufacturing process uses harmful per- and polyfluoroalkyl (PFAS) substances and other hazardous chemicals. PFAS, “forever chemicals,” are associated with cancer and linked to growth, learning and behavioral problems in infants and children; fertility and pregnancy problems; thyroid disease; asthma; and more.
Toxic runoff from plastic grass contaminates drinking water, rivers, lakes and oceans with microplastics as well as PFAS. The EPA has recently reported that there is no safe amount of PFOA or PFOS (types of PFAS) in drinking water, and both have consistently been found in plastic grass.
Plastic grass has been shown to reach temperatures much higher than natural grass, readily reaching 160 to 180 degrees Fahrenheit or more, creating heat-island effects, and causing heat-related injuries and illnesses such as skin burns and heat stress.
Ornamental artificial turf should be replaced with native plant species that are the most cost-effective measure to battle the warming effect while supporting butterflies, local songbirds and other wildlife.
Finally, because it is made of mixed plastic materials, artificial grass will never be economically viable for recycling. At the end of its lifecycle it is sent to a landfill, illegally dumped or sent out of state to be incinerated. My neighbor’s burned plastic grass is simply toxic waste.
Artificial turf is a danger to the health and safety of our community and our environment, and it fails to produce promised water savings. So when we rebuild, let’s rebuild better with health and safety in mind. Rebuild with native plants and not plastic grass. Resilient Palisades is here to provide guidance to the community as we rebuild even better.
For further information visit ncsa.la/artificial_turf and resilientpalisades.org.
This page is available to subscribers. Click here to sign in or get access.