Glendale High football players warm up on artificial turf before a game on Thursday, October 16, 2014. (Roger Wilson / Staff Photographer / March 27, 2015)

During a school board meeting on Tuesday, Glendale Unified Supt. Dick Sheehan recommended to the school board that the district continue to use artificial turf fields made up of crumb rubber, which is composed largely of recycled tire material.

School officials initially switched to using crumb-rubber fields about a decade ago to reduce the cost of watering and re-seeding the grass.

But in late 2014, an NBC News report told the story of a college soccer coachwho created a list of American soccer players nationwide, all of whom had played on crumb-rubber fields and had been diagnosed with cancers such as lymphoma and leukemia.

The news report concerned local parents, who told the Glendale school board that their children bring home bits of rubber in their clothes and that their faces and hands are filthy after playing on the material.

In response, Glendale school officials hired GeoSyntec to analyze the health risk of the crumb-rubber samples from Glendale fields according to standards laid out by both the U.S. and California Environmental Protection Agencies.

What we found was the crumb-rubber material that we currently use actually came out below the standards, said Alan Reising, director of facilities for Glendale Unified.

With the testing of the fields complete, Sheehan said the school district did its due diligence in closely examining the fields.

Its going to be the superintendents recommendation that we remain with the same filler weve been using, he said.

Read the rest here:
Schools likely to stick with crumb rubber turf

Related Posts
March 28, 2015 at 3:22 am by Mr HomeBuilder
Category: Grass Seeding