Oh, Shit

Compost_D responded to my last post with a couple questions about the legality of “humanure,” that is, composting your own feces, within the city limits of Austin, and what follows is pretty much everything I know on the subject.
In Section 15-5-8 of its City Code, the City of Austin basically passes the buck on the subject when it states that it follows the “applicable state law penalty provisions related to on-site sewage facilities” as provided by the Texas Health and Safety Code. Article 5 of Section 341.011 of the state code forbids “sewage, human excreta, wastewater, garbage, or other organic wastes deposited, stored, discharged, or exposed in such a way as to be a potential instrument or medium in disease transmission to a person or between persons.” A little further down the page in Section 341.014, it says that “human excreta in a populous area shall be disposed of through properly managed sewers, treatment tanks, chemical toilets, or privies constructed and maintained in conformity with the department’s specifications, or by other methods approved by the department.”
That all seems a little vague to me, but I do know that, according to Austin’s Building Code, if you’re building a house that’s within 100 feet of a sewer line you must by law connect to it. But as far as I can tell there’s nothing that says you actually have to use it. What’s to stop an intrepid humanure enthusiast from composting his own “excreta” as long as he does so in a way that doesn’t endanger the health of his neighbors?
I’m just a simple farmer so all this legal mumbo jumbo is a little over my head. However, I do know that the same rules that are designed to protect the public health are also hurting the environment we live in, which in turn will be negatively impacting the public health in the every near future. It’s high time that we as a society get over our Victorian priggishness about shit. According to Joseph Jenkins, author of The Humanure Handbook, “nearly a third of all household drinking water in the U.S. is used to flush toilets.” Which in a time of drought such as we’re experiencing right now seems absolutely absurd and will only grow more absurd the closer we get to experiencing a global crisis a hundred times worse than Peak Oil, and that is Peak Water. Add to this the fact that we as a society are also rapidly depleting the fertility of our soil, and the fact that we flush away so much rich organic material, i.e. shit, becomes almost laughably ridiculous, except I’m not laughing. Are you?
Tags: humanure
August 30th, 2008 at 9:52 am
Oh excellent!
Thanks so much for posting and citing your research.
I enjoy your ‘chutzpah’. I’m adding your blog’s RSS feed to my reader to keep updated on your posts. I don’t know what it will take to change legislation of Humanure, some sort of ‘Tipping Point’ will occur when back yard Humanure composters start to grow in numbers and organize. Either way, I’m gathering information on the subject so I can exercise my will in something I believe in, being respectful of the law at the same time.
November 17th, 2008 at 1:07 am
Yes. I was musing on this just the other day as our fair city, a few years ago, in an attempt to upgrade its failing sewer system implemented a series of “shit pumps” as we call them, to electrically pump raw sewage across the river rather than repair the existing lines that were in place. One of these happens to be across the street, a few doors down. When the power goes out, we are blessed with a lovely diesel generator sound and smell to ensure uninterrupted shit tube movement up & over the water. Brilliant, no? If it didn’t involve raw sewage I swear I would have monkey wrenched that thing as soon as it went in. BUT, in light of this, what are the safety issues of composting as Jenkins describes when one lives less than 100 feet from a riparian waterway? I wonder. Anything’s better than the tube, but I’d hate to do something stupid that would compromise water quality.
But yes, people, get over it, already. I’m not laughing, either.