Federal rules prohibit New York City from dumping its treated sewage into the ocean. So since 2017 the city has been shipping it by train to Alabama, where the land is cheap and the landfill regulations are easy. But when one Alabama town's officials sued to stop a shipment of NYC excrement from entering its borders earlier this year, the poop train stopped in nearby Parrish, pop. 982. Fast forward eight weeks and it's still there today, stinking up nearby Little League baseball fields. “It smells like rotting corpses, or carcasses. It smells like death,"
here comes the sun
here comes the sun
here comes the sun
Federal rules prohibit New York City from dumping its treated sewage into the ocean. So since 2017 the city has been shipping it by train to Alabama, where the land is cheap and the landfill regulations are easy. But when one Alabama town's officials sued to stop a shipment of NYC excrement from entering its borders earlier this year, the poop train stopped in nearby Parrish, pop. 982. Fast forward eight weeks and it's still there today, stinking up nearby Little League baseball fields. “It smells like rotting corpses, or carcasses. It smells like death,"