Forum-- Methyl Iodide and Our Community--Learn the Facts
September 2011
What: Central Coast Community Forum on Methyl Iodide. Come learn about the State's most hotly debated strawberry pesticide- Methyl Iodide, and the potential health risks for the Central Coast. Open to the public. Free of charge.
When: September 29th, 6:30-8:00pm
Where: Hartnell College Steinbeck Hall (near cafeteria---main campus) corner of Central Avenue and Homestead Avenue in Salinas
Keynote speaker: Assemblymember Bill Monning, Chair of California State Assembly Health Committee
Plus:
Assemblymember Luis Alejo
Jim Cochran, Strawberry Farmer and CEO of Swanton Berry Farms
Dr. Bob Gould, Pathologist, Board of Physicians for Social Responsibility
Professor Kathy Collins, Professor of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology at University of CA at Berkeley
Co-sponsors: Office of Assemblymember Luis Alejo, Monterey Bay Central Labor Council, Planned Parenthood Mar Monte, Safe Strawberry Monterey County Working Group, Pesticide Watch Education Fund, & the United Farm Workers Union.
English/Spanish translation available. Light refreshments.
This is part of a campaign organized by local community leaders to educate the public regarding the impacts of methyl iodide on the community, public health and environment. The event is an education forum which is meant to address the concerns of residents, members of the Board of Supervisors, farmers and growers, farmworkers, and physicians, etc about methyl iodide.
Background:
Local grassroots efforts are underway in Monterey and Santa Cruz Counties to "Say NO to Methyl Iodide." The local effort, along with Pesticide Watch and Pesticide Action Network's national campaign, is especially important, since strawberries in California are a $2.1 billion industry and growers in the Watsonville and Salinas areas produced 41 percent of California's crop in 2010. In addition, many other local crops could be targeted for methyl iodide use. A primary goal of the campaign is to get both County Boards of Supervisors to sign a resolution against the use of this toxic, cancer causing chemical.
In December, 2010 the California Department of Pesticide Regulation (DPR) approved the registration of methyl iodide, allowing pesticide applicators to seek permits to fumigate with the highly toxic substance. Methyl iodide is the proposed replacement chemical for the banned ozone-depleting chemical methyl bromide. Methyl iodide is a known carcinogen, neurotoxin, and thyroid toxin, which can also disrupt fetal development, cause miscarriages and contaminate groundwater. It was nevertheless approved under lobbying pressure from chemical manufacturer Arysta LifeScience.
Scientist John Froines, professor of environmental health at UCLA and Yale Ph.D chemist led the DPR scientific review of methyl iodide and he said that "Science was subverted" in the approval process and "there is no safe level of release" when it comes to the fumigant.
The recent discovery of corporate interference in the scientific process strengthens the concerns voiced by leading scientists, including six Nobel Laureates. The court ordered release of DPR documents showed that the approval process was tainted because state officials cherry picked calculations and misused data to obtain an "acceptable level" of exposure to methyl iodide. Their concern for Arysta's economic viability outweighed the concern for increased cancer risk in exposed rural communities.
Contact Gary Karnes locally for more information: 831-402-9106
Or Dana Perls with Pesticide Watch Education Fund 925-705-1074
Sign the petition at: http://www.change.org/petitions/fumigation-season-is-here-we-need-action-on-methyl-iodide-3
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