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Fwd: Residents turn unruly at prospect of moth spraying - By TOM RA   Message List  
Reply | Forward Message #67 of 2535 |
Please check out additional link to more information about the chemicals used after the end of the article.


Barri Boone <unmaid@...>
wrote:
To: unmaid <unmaid@...>
Subject: Residents turn unruly at prospect of moth spraying - By TOM RAGAN - SENTINEL STAFF WRITER - October 4, 2007
From: Barri Boone <unmaid@...>
Date: Thu, 4 Oct 2007 23:37:44 -0700

Residents turn unruly at prospect of moth spraying - By TOM RAGAN - SENTINEL STAFF WRITER - October 4, 2007

October 4, 2007

Residents turn unruly at prospect of moth spraying



LIVE OAK — Nearly a half-dozen sheriff's deputies and California Highway Patrol officers had to be summoned to the Simpkins Family Swim Center on Wednesday when a handful of people opposed to aerial spraying to eradicate the light brown apple moth started screaming and becoming unruly.

"All I'm asking for you is to trust us," said a frustrated state Department of Food and Agriculture Secretary A.G. Kawamura, imploring the crowd while he rose to his feet at the end of the meeting.
Initially intended for just for elected officials, the meeting was packed with nearly 100 members of the public after it was erroneously reported as public in the Sentinel. Deputies stood guard as anger in the crowd built; many in attendance did not believe that an eradication program involving an obscure pesticide could be carried out in early November without their consent.
"We should not be forced to breathe anything but air," said Katherine Herndon, a Santa Cruz resident and former school nurse for 20 years.
While a lawsuit has been filed by an environmental group in Monterey County to stop a second aerial spraying on the Monterey Peninsula set to start Tuesday, there's already talk about some Santa Cruz County parents pulling their children out of schools. The parents want to send a message to the state that "fewer students means fewer dollars," said Suzanne Dowling, a Soquel resident.
As much as Kawamura tried to quell residents' fears by saying the product, CheckMate LBAM-F, has been used in Australia for 10 years without reports of harmful consequences, the crowd countered with concern that the pesticide has never been sprayed in an urban setting.
More unsettling, they said, is that the manufacturer, the Bend, Ore.-based Suterra Inc., refuses to release the ingredients of its product on the basis that it's a trade secret.
CheckMate LBAM-F, a pesticide, was registered by the EPA in 1997 as a toxic III substance. The agency says it's generally safe when diluted and applied as prescribed by the company. In greater concentrations testing on lab animals found it caused irritation to the skin and eyes and is harmful when swallowed.
The product is not designed to kill the light brown apple moth, but to act as a pheromone and confuse the male moths to the point where they cannot find a female to reproduce with, officials said. They've added that pesticides, overall, have come a long way over time and that this one in particular is about as a naturally occurring as it gets.
"We feel, and are absolutely convinced, that the application does not pose a risk," said Lawrence E. Hawkins, a spokesman with the state Department of Food and Agriculture. "But if somebody wants to increase their margin of safety by leaving and going to another area .."
That comment brought boos from the crowd, who said they had jobs to tend to.
They then asked if any of the state officials lived in the area of treatment.
None of them do.
But the ag department said it believes aerial spraying, which is scheduled between 8 p.m. and 5 a.m. Nov. 4-9, is "an emergency" The moth, they say, could cause millions of dollars in crop damage — as is the case in Australia, its native country.
Known to feed on some 250 plants, the moth was first sighted by a UC Berkeley entomologist in the winter of 2006. He verified his find in February 2007 after sending it to a lab in Australia, according to California Department of Agriculture spokesman Steve Lyle.
Since then, the moths have reproduced at a rapid clip, causing concern among state and federal officials, who've compared the infestation to a forest fire that needs to be put out, particularly in Santa Cruz County, where more than 6,000 moths have been trapped, the majority in the Live Oak and Soquel area.
Ag department officials fear local nurseries, already feeling the effects of state and federal quarantines, aren't the only ones who will be suffering if the moth population is unattended. Crops, such as apples, grapes, even strawberries could be next in line, officials said.
"Are you saying that crops are more important than our people?" asked a visibly shaken Peggy Fleming, diagnosed with breast cancer in 2001, who fears the pesticide could affect her recovery efforts.
To date, however, crop damage has been limited to nursery growers saddled with restrictions of shipments and inspections ushered in by state and federal quarantines.
There are some who believe the moth may have been around for years undetected, a theory the state has rejected outright, saying it conducted a pest survey in 2005 and found none.
Not all residents were opposed to the spraying.
June Coha, who was initially concerned, said she had a long talk with company representatives over the telephone and she now thinks they've come up with a safe product.
"They're trying to get as close to nature as possible," she said.
Dan Harder, however, said he's having a hard time buying the concept of aerial spraying.
A director of the UCSC Arboretum, he said "There's not one study that has ever proved it to work"
Dave Lommen, a Santa Cruz resident, said he'd like to see sterile moths released into the air as a form of disrupting the mating process.
Contact Tom Ragan at tragan@....
Light Brown Apple Moth Spraying
WHERE: Scotts Valley, Santa Cruz, Capitola, Live Oak, Soquel, Aptos, Las Lomas, Aromas, Prunedale and Salinas.
WHEN: 8 p.m.to 5 a.m. Nov. 4-9.
Why: Control breeding of light brown apple moth.
COST: $2.7 million.
SOURCE: California Department of Agriculture
 Print Article

You can find this story online at:
http://www.santacruzsentinel.com/archive/2007/October/04/local/stories/01local.htm

Copyright © Santa Cruz Sentinel. All rights reserved.


Additional information from Isis:


Here's some very limited information and risk disclosure from the manufacturer's label. Over 80% undisclosed ingredients, and insistence that toxics magically become non-toxic by diluting them...

From the CheckMate LBAM-F label (http://www.cdfa.ca.gov/phpps/pdep/lbam/pdfs/LBAM_F_label.pdf):

""

Active Ingredients:
(E)-11-Tetradecen-l-yl Acetate 16.90%
(E,E)-9,11-Tetradecadien-l-yl Acetate 0.71%
Other Ingredients: 82.39%

Caution: Potentially harmful if swallowed, absorbed through skin, or inhaled. Causes moderate eye and skin irritation. Avoid contact with skin, eyes and clothing. Applicators should avoid breathing vapor or spray mist. Wash thoroughly with soap and water after handling and before eating, drinking, chewing gum or using tobacco. Remove contaminated clothing and wash before reuse. These precautions are not necessary for persons exposed to the product after it has been diluted and applied according to the Directions for Use.

""

There is a group in Monterey, which is fighting against the spraying there, and which has more information about this whole issue, chemical, moth, and all: http://www.1hope.org/chkmate.htm




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