Was it really “fierce opposition”
from agriculture that killed Hawaii's proposed pesticide disclosure
law, Senate Bill 1037, as Civil Beat claims today?
Or did key legislators appropriately
recognize the bill's fatal flaw — namely, the way it targeted only
agriculture, while ignoring all other users, including the termite
treatment companies that apply far more restricted use pesticides
than farmers, and in residential neighborhoods?
Though Civil Beat's Anita Hofschneider
holds up California as a model — never a popular approach in Hawaii
— she's well into the story before revealing that the Golden State
law goes beyond farms and requires disclosure of “pesticides
applied to parks, golf courses, cemeteries, pastures and along roads.
The main exceptions are home and garden use and most industrial and
institutional purposes.”
And that's been the primary criticism
that I and many others leveled against SB 1037 — it focused only on
ag because it was pushed by anti-GMO activists who want to drive those
crops out of Hawaii. In short, it was yet another bid to kill
biotech, under the disingenuous guise of protecting health.
While Anita claims in her first
paragraph that the bill's demise “essentially [ensures] that the
public won’t be able to find out details about what pesticides are
being sprayed in the state and where,” she later acknowledges that
Kauai seed companies voluntarily disclose their pesticide use.
And it took a reader in comments to
point out that detailed pesticide use information is indeed collected
by the state at time of sale. In short, the data is already available
to conduct a meaningful analysis of possible health risks to rural
residents, but not so easily available that it can be used to harass
farmers.
What I found especially amusing was the
comment from Ashley Lukens of the Center for Food Safety, who said
the withholding of data on pesticide use takes concerns “to the
level of hysteria.”
No, Ashley, it wasn't the withholding of data
but the relentless fear-mongering by CFS and other anti-GMO groups
that took concerns to the level of hysteria. Because folks weren't freaking out until you and the other activists fanned the fire.
And while Kauai pediatrician Jim
Raelson is correct to say “there’s every reason to believe that
[pesticides used in westside seed fields] have a potential of causing
problems,” that doesn't mean they actually are.
We all know that pesticides are
dangerous, but we have yet to see anything indicating they are
migrating off site, much less harming human health. In fact, the Waimea residents suing DuPont-Pioneer were forced to scale back their claims
to nuisance only, because their attorneys couldn't establish there
were harmful levels of pesticides in the dust.
Now that pesticide disclosure and
anti-farming/anti-GMO bills appear dead for the session in the Lege,
perhaps we can spend the next year gathering some meaningful data
through the Joint Fact Finding Group and various studies. That way, we can determine
if legislation is needed and if so, what makes sense, rather than cater to the agenda of anti-GMO activists and their pandering politicians.
Well said...Loved your quote on Ashley, as f she is innocent in the fear mongering.
ReplyDeleteI like to think that more information is always better in a democracy, as long as people have the background knowledge to interpret it. But the problem goes deeper than that. It's becoming almost impossible to have a public debate that involves weighing risks and benefits. Too many people are so sheltered and comfortable that *any* perceived risk is unacceptable to them.
ReplyDeleteI don't know if it'll do any good, but it will be a terrific breath of fresh air to hear the thoughts of the expert groups.
I have trouble with only agriculture being the focus when it has been shown that urban uses are even more toxxxic along with golf courses, termiting of the houses, the 1 time a month all the visitor units get directly sprayed with Restricted Use Chemicals, and all the vacant agriculture lands on the east side og Kauai.Why focus only on the seed companies?
ReplyDeleteWe desperately need genetic engineering to insert some of Joan's wisdom, common sense, and compassion into the new wave of activists out to "save" Hawaii.
ReplyDelete"That's how it's done in California."
ReplyDeleteIf I had dime for every time I heard that. CA is such a hot mess, it's a wonder that anyone looks up to it.
Don't expect the Joint Fact Finding Group to come up with any significant findings. They are doing an extended literature review of pesticides ( which I expect to show that pesticides are harmful if you exposed to too much (either in an acute exposure or low levels over extended periods [risk = dose x time])and that studies done in other locales show that if you live near the fields the increase of certain disease processes increase - all that has been proven elsewhere). They are not doing any epidemiological studies specific to Kauai nor any environmental studies that will show the harm to our soils and ecology. So, the best we can hope for is recommendations suggesting specific studies that should be done around areas of concern. Can I get my 100 grand now?
ReplyDeleteAfter reading the comments posted after the Civil Beat article, I am amazed at the level of scientific illiteracy and critical thinking, and their skewed interpretation of reality, among those who get all of their information from Teh Google.
ReplyDeleteGoogle is a search engine. Where do you get your information ?
ReplyDelete@6:08 AM, I use search engines to find websites that publish scientificially based research, reasoned discourse that looks at the evidence & then reaches conclusions; instead of going to websites funded by industry associations through non-profits in order to disseminate misinformation to demonize industries and technologies that they perceive as threatening their market share.
ReplyDelete