HomeMy WebLinkAbout00 - Non-Agenda Item - HandoutNon Toxic
IRVINE
Received After Agenda Printed
April 12, 2016
Non -Agenda Item
Stop the Spraying of Toxic Pesticides Over
Orange County
Please help stop the aerial spraying of harmful, pesticides
300 feet over our homes, parks and schools!
On April 21, the OC Vector Control District (OCVCD) board of directors will vote
whether to give the OCVCD Manager unilateral decision-making power to
authorize aerial spraying of toxic pesticides over OC's homes, parks, schools,
playgrounds, sidewalks and farms without even providing notice to residents.
The pesticides that OCVCD plans to use are ineffective and harmful,
particularly to pregnant women and their unborn children, people with
compromised immune systems, chemically sensitive people, young children,
and children with respiratory problems, such as asthma. They are also toxic to
bees, butterflies, hummingbirds and fish, to name a few.
3 W_aTsYou Can Help:
What Is OCVCD Planning To
Spray 300 Feet Above OC?
Duet, a synthetic pyrethroid pesticide
containing Sumithrin, Prallethrin and
Piperonyl Butoxide (PBO).
Sumithrin and Prallethrin are adulticides
patterned after pyrethrum, yet have
been chemically engineered to have
greater toxicity and longer breakdown
times.'
Sumithrin and Prallethrin are combined
with a synergist chemical, PBO, which
increases potency and compromises the
human body's ability to detoxify the
pesticide.
Studies by Columbia and Duke
Universities have shown piperonyl
butoxide (PBO) impairs brain
development in children exposed in
utero.
1. Attend the Irvine City Council meeting April 12 and ask OCVCD representative Lynn Schott to vote no
and advocate for safe mosquito control alternatives. Tuesday, April 12 at 4pm, 1 Civic Center Plaza, Irvine
2. Attend the OCVCD board meeting, April 21 at 3 p.m., 13001 Garden Grove BI, Garden Grove
3. Sign and share the online petition: Sign and share the petition —go to change.org and search for
"Orange County Vector Control"
We want OCVCD to use effective tools to fight disease -carrying mosquitos - public education on the
importance of emptying standing water and non-toxic mosquito traps which the CDC has reported
reduce mosquito -populations -4y 80'x.
Non oxic
IRVINE: ._
Pesticide Spray Programs Harm People and the Environment:
• The U.S. EPA warns that "no pesticide is 100 percent safe.""
• In 2011, researchers at Columbia University found that infants whose mothers had been exposed
to low levels of PBO in air during pregnancy had impaired cognitive and motor development by the
age of three.
• Researchers at the Duke University School of Medicine have shown that PBO disrupts a biological
signaling system that is "critical in neurological development." The researchers reported in 2012 that
the disruption of this critical pathway "may be the molecular basis for profound developmental
defects in children exposed in utero to P13_0."
• According to a 2006 EPA review, studies with lab animals have linked pyrethroid exposure to damage
of the thyroid, liver and nervous system, as well as impairment of behavioral development, changes
in the immune system and disruption of reproductive hormones. According to the EPA, these animal
studies are relevant to human health because pyrethroids act on functions of the nervous system
common to all animals.
• A study conducted by the National Research Council found that pregnant women, infants, and
children have a greater risk of getting sick from pesticides."'
• Adulticides present considerable risk to all living things, and kill beneficial insects and natural
mosquitoes predators, iv such as dragonflies, damselflies, and beetles, potentially increasing the
number of mosquitoes.
• Mosquitoes that survive the spraying may become resistant, longer -lived, more aggressive, and have
an increased prevalence of viruses within their bodies.
Pesticide Spray Programs Are Ineffective:
• The Centers of Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) state that spraying adulticides, pesticides intended to kill adult
mosquitoes, is usually the least efficient mosquito control technique."'
• A study from the Harvard School of Public Health found that aerosol plumes fail to contact the target mosquitoes.
According to David Pimentel, Ph.D., an entomologist at Cornell University, close to 99.9 % of sprayed chemicals go off
into the environment where they can have detrimental effects on public health and ecosystems, leaving 0.10% to
actually hit the target pest."'
• Adulticides do not restrict or control mosquitoes from continuing to breed.
• Mosquitoes develop resistance to chemical pesticides over time, which renders the chemicals ineffective and creates
an increased prevalence of viruses such as West Nile within their bodies.
• A 2003 study finds that mosquitoes carrying West Nile virus and malaria are resistant to organophosphate and
carbamate insecticides. The study shows that the resistance is a result of a single genetic mutation.
Gooselin, R. 1984. Clinical Toxicology of Commercial Products. Williams and Wilkins. Baltimore, MD.
" U.S. EPA. 2000. Questions and Answers: Pesticides and Mosquito Control. Department of Prevention, Pesticides and Toxic Substances.
National Research Council. 1993. Pesticides in the Diets of Infants and Children. National Academy Press. Washington, DC.
" Howard, J. et al. 1997. "Impact of Naled (Dibrom 14) on the Mosquito Vectors of Eastern Equine Encephalitis V iris." Journal of the .4merican ,Wosquiot
Control Association 13(4): 315-325.
Sugg, W., et al. 2001. Overkill: Why Pesticide Spraying May Cause More Harm then Good. Toxics Action Center. West Hartford, CT.
" Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 2001. Epidemic/Epizootic West Nile Virus in the United States: Revised Guidelines for Surveillance, Prevention,
and Control. Atlanta, GA. http://www.ede.gov/ncidod/dvbid/westnile/resources/wnv-guidelines-apr-2001.pdf.
- Pimentel, D. 1995. "Amounts of Pesticides Reaching Target Pests: Environmental Impacts and Ethics." Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics
8(1):17-29.
Sugg, W. et al. 2001. Overkill: Why Pesticide Spraving May Cause More Hann Than Good Toxics Action Center. West Hartford, CT.
" Weill, M., et al. 2003. "Insecticide Resistance in Mosquito Vectors." Nature 423(6936): 136-137.
Are there comsequnces to mass aerial spraying
of a petroleum-based, endocrine -disrupting,
toxic pesticide called DUET?
FACT: There is NO EPIDEMIC. Less than 100 people in a
population of 3,000,000 got a West Nile infection (with 8 possibly
related deaths) in 2015. Why are we killing the dog to kill the flea?
2015 Reported West Nile Virus Infections in Orange County (Infections by Type)
(as of 111112016)
OC Population: 3 million
Gender
Age Group
invertebrates."
2. How will ALL residents with animals
Disease Type Total
Cases
Male Female
<18 18-49 50-64 ' 65
West Nile Neuroinvasive Disease 71
47 24
12 35 24
West Nile Fever 21
13 8
1 1 10 9
Asymptomatic 5
3 2
2 2 1
Classification Pending ---
--- --
— --- --- --
Total infections 97
63 34
1 15 47 34
Total Deaths 8
1Source:
10CHealthlnfo.com 3/31/16
1. How will ALL residents with fish
"This pesticide is HIGHLY TOXIC to aquatic
ponds be notified?
organisms including fish and aquatic
invertebrates."
2. How will ALL residents with animals
"Do NOT contaminate pastureland, rangeland,
living outside (ex. chickens, turtles,
cropland, poultry ranges or potable water
horses, rabbits, etc) be notified?
supplies with spray drift."
3. How will ALL residents with organic
"Do NOT contaminate food, feed or drinking
gardens be notified?
water. "
4. Why are we purposely killing bees?
"This product is HIGHLY TOXIC TO BEES... "
S. How will ALL residents including the
"Harmful if swallowed. Wash thoroughly with
HOMELESS be told to stay inside during
soap and water after handling and before
the aerial assault?
eating, drinking, chewing gum, or using
tobacco. Remove and wash contaminated
clothing before reuse."
Source: DUET product sheet from KellySolutions.com