Posted July 30, 2008
WASHINGTON, D.C. – The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) staff today released its evaluation of various synthetic athletic fields. The evaluation concludes that young children are not at risk MORE >
Posted June 21, 2008
WINCHESTER — The undertaking at Shenandoah University isn’t your average landscaping renovation. Considering that workers are in the midst of a projected 54-day assignment to excavate the old grass at MORE >
Posted June 21, 2008
WINCHESTER “” The undertaking at Shenandoah University isn’t your average landscaping renovation. Considering that workers are in the midst of a projected 54-day assignment to excavate the old grass at MORE >
Posted June 15, 2008
HERSHEY, Pa. — The 51st Big 33 Football Classic might as well have been the 2008 WPIAL Football Classic. WPIAL athletes played some of the most prominent roles in Pennsylvania’s MORE >
Posted June 9, 2008
Lancaster Mennonite won the PIAA Double-A girls’ spring soccer championship with a 3-2 victory over Fleetwood at Hersheypark Stadium, an A-Turf field. The Blazers’ Kelsey Gorman, a senior midfielder, scored MORE >
Posted June 5, 2008
Atlanta, Ga. (June 5, 2008) – Synthetic turf test results released by the New Jersey Department of Health and Senior Services (NJDHSS) on June 3rd confirmed lead chromate levels are MORE >
Posted May 25, 2008
Salisbury University men’s lacrosse team has never lost on its A-Turf field and they took their winning streak with them to the NCAA Division III national championship. The top-ranked Salisbury MORE >
Posted May 7, 2008
The NCAA Division III Sea Gulls play football, field hockey and men’s and women’s lacrosse on its A-Turf field – installed Fall 2007. Since then, there have been no home MORE >
Posted May 5, 2008
Franklin & Marshall’s women’s lacrosse team (16-1 in regular season) is set to defend its NCAA Division III National Championship; and will host a regional round of the tournament.
Posted April 22, 2008
Artificial turf manufacturers and officials at Lancaster County colleges and schools say there’s no reason for concern that students practicing and playing on synthetic fields here are at risk of MORE >