Showing posts with label pesticides. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pesticides. Show all posts

EPA Protecting You Into An Early Grave

Diposkan oleh Zainal Arifain

By Alan Caruba

The Environmental Protection Agency is always going on about the ways it “protects” everyone, but its greatest achievement has been to protect them out of countless jobs eliminated by their regulations and restrictions. Their latest diktat is directed at products that consumers can purchase to rid their homes, apartments, and other facilities of mice and rats.

If they keep it up, soon the only thing you will be able to purchase is a mouse trap.

I stopped believing anything the EPA had to say on most things because it is usually based on distorted statistics and totally dubious “science” such as their continuing claim that carbon dioxide (CO2) is a “pollutant” that must be regulated. CO2 is vital to all life on Earth as the “food” that supports all vegetation. It has zero affect on the atmosphere, being a mere 0.0380% of it.

Recently, the EPA gave $1.29 million of our money to China “to promote environmental research” there. The objective was to reduce “carbon emissions” in a nation that, unlike America, is building reliable, traditional coal-fired utilities to generate electricity, i.e. power to grow their economy.

I happen to know a lot about pest control because, for twenty-five years I have been the public relations counselor to a state pest management association. Before that I served in a similar capacity for a pesticide manufacturer who was forced by the EPA to withdraw an extraordinary defense against all manner of insect pests from the marketplace. It had passed all the requirements to initially be registered for use, but the EPA then insisted it repeat the multi-million dollar process. The company and the product that was applied with nothing more than water waved bye-bye to the U.S.A.

For the record, I have not represented any pesticide manufacturers in more than four decades. I say this because most of the smear “profiles” of me on the Web continue to suggest that I do. That is, when they are not insisting that I work for Exxon, too.

Pest management firms use rodenticides that are inside enclosed bait stations that children or pets cannot access. That said, mice and rats cannot be exclusively controlled by such devices. Professionals must access wall voids, attics and other areas rodents use for nests. They use a variety of products to do this including small bags of rodenticide and even powders.

The EPA claims that poison control centers receive between 12,000 and 15,000 reports of children under the age of six being exposed to pesticides in the form of pellets or baits placed where they can find them. Reports, however, are not poisonings. Any call a poison center gets is “a report”, so what we really have here is the EPA playing fast and loose with the truth. When you consider that there are millions of rodenticide applications every year by pest management professionals, that constitutes an astonishing record of safe use.

Anyone who would go to the local garden supply outlet or similar vender, purchase rat and mice bait, and then put it where children can get at it is the definition of stupidity, but it happens. Trained, licensed and certified pest management professionals do not do this.

The goal of the proposed ban is to “better protect children, pets, and wildlife.” Well, okay, but rats and mice are wildlife.


Moreover, rats and mice are responsible for an enormous amount of property damage to all kinds of structures from homes to warehouses. They are Nature’s prime vectors of disease, spreading Salmonella, whenever they get access to foods of all description. This is why all food-related outlets are subject to constant inspection by health departments in cities and towns.

The difficulty people encounter with a mouse invasion has to do with how swiftly they breed. A female can have anywhere from five to ten litters of five or six young. They are born between 19 and 21 days after they mate and their young reach reproductive maturity in six to ten weeks. The result is that a single pair of mice can rapidly multiply wherever they can find a steady source of food and water.

Rats reproduce in a similar fashion. Thus, by the time you realize you have a problem, it is probably already in need of professional pest control. Rats bite more than 45,000 people each year, a figure far in excess of the EPA claim of poison “reports” (many of which include other substances.)

All the enclosed bait stations you can purchase are not likely to respond to a do-it-yourself effort to reduce a rodent infestation. The availability of other rodenticide products at least gives people—particularly those with low incomes—a chance to deal with the problem.

Since the EPA intends to ban the sale and distribution of products containing brodifacoum, bromadiolone, defethialone, and difenaccoum to residential consumers, that means most consumers will no longer have access to any rodenticides to protect themselves against a rat or mouse infestation.

Meanwhile, the EPA is under pressure from Rep. Edward Markey (D-MA) to ban Triclosan, a key ingredient that has been safely used to stop the spread of viruses and keep kids healthy via anti-bacterial soap. Hospitals use such products to maintain a sterile environment, but Markey is determined to end that with the help of the EPA.

This is what passes for “protection” from the Environmental Protection Agency.

In sum, Americans are not being protected. They are being put at risk for all manner of diseases from an insane, Nanny-State agency that has pushed so far beyond its original mandates that the safest thing Americans could do at this point is to insist that it be shut down.

© Alan Caruba, 2011
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A Needless, Nationwide Bed Bug Epidemic

Diposkan oleh Zainal Arifain

By Alan Caruba

There really is no mystery to solving the nationwide bed bug epidemic. In 1946 the solution was DDT. Today the solution could still be DDT if it hadn’t been banned by the Environmental Protection Agency in the 1970s and, since then, any number of other beneficial pesticides.

I know something about this because, as a public relations counselor I have worked with pesticide manufacturers in the past and elements of the pest control industry today.

The problem isn’t so much the bed bugs as the brainwashing of Americans to believe that pesticides are worse than the pests. One of the reasons Americans live in an essentially pest-free environment in their homes, offices, restaurants, hotels, and elsewhere is the widespread use of pesticides, despite decades of effort by environmental organizations to spread and maintain an irrational fear of pesticides.

In the years following World War Two, the pest control industry had eliminated bed bugs to a point where today’s generation of pest control professionals literally had no experience dealing with them when they began to reappear in American homes, hotels, and other structures.

What is the Environmental Protection Agency’s answer? It is to hold bed bug “summits” in which industry and other experts testify to the obvious necessity to authorize the use of existing pesticides and expedite the registration of new formulations to rid the nation of this pest.

Today there is only one pesticide, Propoxur, known to effectively knock down a bed bug infestation, but when Ohio pest control professionals asked the Environmental Protection Agency for permission to use it, it was denied.

In December, Forbes magazine had an article, “America’s Most Bed Bug-Infested Cities.” Is it any surprise that three of Ohio’s cities, Cincinnati, Columbus, and Dayton, were identified as the most infested?

Among the other cities cited as suffering major bed bug infestations were New York City, Chicago, Los Angeles, and Washington, D.C.

A January 11th article in The Wall Street Journal, “City’s Problems with Bedbugs Getting Itchier” reported a seven percent increase in complaints about bed bugs. “Nationally,” the article noted, “one out of five Americans has had a bedbug infestation in their home or knows someone who has encountered the pests at home or in a hotel, according to the National Pest Management Association.”

The bed bug epidemic owes more to governmental regulation than to the experience and expertise of pest control professionals, all of whom must be licensed and certified by their respective States. Given the pesticides to address the epidemic, the industry could eliminate it.

It is shameful that America has to endure this epidemic, not just in terms of the physical harm that people encounter from it, but because it is entirely preventable. We are fortunate that bed bugs do not spread disease, despite the discomfort of their bites.

The last EPA bed bug summit heard 34 suggestions that would expand the bureaucracy at every level of government and expand training and licensure requirements. The answer is not more bureaucracy, but less. Not more paperwork, but the application of existing and new pesticides to rid America of the bed bugs.

The answer is more realism, less fear-mongering about pesticides, and the removal of regulatory barriers so that the pest control industry nationwide can do what it does best, eliminate bed bugs and other insect pests that spread disease and destroy property.

© Alan Caruba, 2011
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