Loop

Loop is the professionally "branded" sewage sludge product made by the the King County Wastewater Treatment Division (KCWTD) from the human excrement and industrial waste of the Seattle, Washington metropolitan area -- known by the industry euphemism "biosolids." Its slick, professionally designed logo and trucks sporting colorful new decals (which transport 310 wet tons a day of sewage sludge from the wastewater treatment plant to be spread on farm- and forestland) bely the chemical cocktail of contaminants that municipal sewage sludge may contain. Hundreds of communities across the U.S. sell toxic sludge products that are typically renamed biosolids and sold or given away as "fertilizer" or "compost" (and often even labeled or marketed as "natural" or "organic").

Loop trucks are "decked out with scenes of flowers in bloom, Washington forests, or wheat fields," according to BioCycle Magazine, the official publication of the sewage sludge industry front group the U.S. Composting Council. * But inside is Class B Biosolids, which is allowed to have detectable pathogens and which has been known to sicken cattle fed forage crops grown in soil "fertilized" with this "Class B" sludge. 80 percent of the Loop product is spread on agricultural cropland owned by Boulder Park, Inc. and Natural Selections Farms; 15 percent is spread on commercial forestland managed by Hancock Natural Resource Group and the Washington State Department of Natural Resources; and the remaining five percent is mixed with sawdust and sold as the Class A Biosolids product GroCo.

Branding & Controversy
Kate Kurtz, Biosolids Project Manager at KCWTD, told BioCycle Magazine, "Creating a brand helps us to get in front of the message by communicating the truth about our product in a consistent way." But as defined by public affairs specialist Danielle Blumenthal in Brand Channel, branding is "to tell a very partial, even propagandistic, truth. Really, branding is pure selling, aimed at owning a single idea in the audience’s mind. No matter how they are written up in The Wall Street Journal or Fortune, the brands of Nike, Disney, Starbucks, and Coca-Cola have little to do with the real world inside their organizations, and much to do with the image they represent to the public."

The Loop branding process "included a new name, messages, website, brochures and an internal training campaign to educate employees on how to communicate the new brand in a consistent way. . . . The total process took about a year from inception of the idea to the first unveiling of the Loop brand at the Northwest Flower and Garden Show in February 2012. During this time, the county worked with consultants from Kite Brand Studio (Kite) and Somelab Design, who guided King Conty [sic] with some outside perspectives. Kite provided the research and brand strategy services; Somelab Design developed the logo and visual identity of the brand."

As part of this brand unveiling, KCWTD issued a press release featuring a quote from the founder of Seattle-based urban farming collective Alleycat Acres: "'As an urban farming collective, it only makes sense that we use an urban-derived compost. We know that using Loop not only helps us grow great crops, it's also the right thing to do,' said Sean Conroe, founder of Seattle-based urban farming collective Alleycat Acres, which uses GroCo compost made with Loop to fertilize and amend their city farm sites." Several things were not noted in the press release: 1) KCWTD's Kurtz herself was a co-founder of Alleycat Acres; 2) just the day before the press release was issued, Seattle cancer patient and naturopath, Dr. Molly Linton, and University of Washington Researcher John Kissel raised concerns about pharmaceutical residues such as the drugs in her chemo therapy making their way into sewer systems on Seattle's local King 5 News; and 3) a few days before that, a new study out of Colorado State University was released that found steroid hormones in the runoff coming from agricultural test plots smeared with sewage sludge.

Involved in the branding work done by the brand consulting and design firms was the creation of "marketing materials, including brochures, the website, and swag like hats, pens[,] and sticky notes." And as for the name, Loop? "It certainly isn’t lost on anyone that Loop rhymes with poop,” Kurtz told BioCycle.

Related SourceWatch Articles

 * GroCo
 * Kate Kurtz
 * Sally Brown
 * Alleycat Acres
 * Toxic Sludge Products
 * Sewage sludge
 * Biosolids
 * Sludge contaminants
 * BioCycle
 * U.S. Composting Council
 * Class A Biosolids
 * Class B Biosolids

Related PRWatch Articles

 * Erica Pelzek, [http://www.prwatch.org/news/2011/04/10584/release-%E2%80%A8%E2%80%A8sally-brown-and-biocycle-magazine-supporters-growing-food-sewage-sludge RELEASE:   Sally Brown and BioCycle Magazine, Supporters of Growing Food in Sewage Sludge, Call Organic Food Advocates "Ecoterrorists"  ], PRWatch.org, April 12, 2011.