Here's poop on public pools: Don't!

Published: Tuesday, May 20, 2008 12:03 a.m. MDT
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I was reading a newspaper story recently about the effort to create new rules for our public swimming pools when this paragraph caught my eye:

"The new rules establish protocols for pool operators to handle fecal matter."

FECAL MATTER?

You don't suppose they mean, you know, as in, um, a toilet?

Are we talking about a swimming pool or a cesspool?

Maybe it was a typo. Maybe they meant DECAL — as in, pool operators need new protocols for handling decals in the pool.

This could be wishful thinking on my part.

OK, things I plan NOT to do this summer:

1. Get a sunburn.

2. Watch "American Idols" in concert.

3. Get sand in my swimsuit and then sit in the car for a long time.

4. Stick one toe in a public swimming pool.

Maybe you heard last summer that Utah's public swimming pools have been become giant vats of viral stew. This is thanks to something called cryptosporidiosis, a nasty, long-named, gastrointestinal disease brought to you by parasites, which are brought to you by FECAL MATTER, the end result being (pardon the pun) a supreme case of diarrhea.

Sounds fun.

About 2,000 people got sick from swimming in public swimming pools.

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What, you might ask, is fecal matter doing in the swimming pool? After all, if we want to swim in fecal matter, we can go to Lake Powell.

Or the Pacific Ocean in Southern California.

Well, by a process of elimination (all right, enough double-entendres) the Department of Health has determined that the sources of cryptosporewhatever are diapers and people who have had diarrhea within the past two weeks.

That's all I needed to hear. The rest is just details.

Last week, the Department of Health accepted public comment on the proposed rule changes. Consider these my public comments:

• People who have had diarrhea within the past two weeks from an unknown source may not enter a public pool.

Actually, they can't leave the house, and jumping into a public swimming pool doesn't even come up for consideration.

• Children under 3 or who are not toilet trained or can't "control themselves" must wear a swim diaper and "water resistant swimwear."

Fine — as long as the "water resistant swimwear" is the same thing astronauts wear on the space shuttle or what Jacques Cousteau wore on his deep sea dives. I'm no expert, but a swim diaper and "water resistant swimwear" don't sound reassuring.

Putting a "swim diaper" on a toddler in a public pool is like giving smokers a smoking section in the middle of an airport. Public health officials say that diapers might not be effective in keeping fecal matter "in." I hope they were going for understatement.

Recent comments

The main thing that was left out of this article was that this is…

Scuba Steve | May 21, 2008 at 10:48 a.m.

The motto used to be: "I don't swim in your toilet, please don't…

Log Jam | May 20, 2008 at 11:21 p.m.

I enjoyed your column thoroughly and laughed all the way to the end…

J&J | May 20, 2008 at 11:07 a.m.