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Seattle's King County Removes Pesticide Guide
SEATTLE - At the insistence of agricultural industry-sponsored groups, a wallet-sized consumer guide to which fruits and vegetables contain the most and least pesticides has been pulled from a King County Web site, where it had been a popular draw.
The informational card first appeared about a year ago in printed form and soon after on the Web site of the Local Hazardous Waste Management Program, a coalition of health and hazardous-materials agencies from King County, Seattle and 38 neighboring communities.
But on July 8, the program stopped handing out the consumer card and removed it from the Internet.
"The design of the card is flawed," said Jay Watson, who was named program administrator three months ago. "The information was oversimplified. It doesn't address the scientific uncertainly (of pesticides)."
Local and national health advocates strongly disagree.
"It is outrageous the pesticide industry is trying to prevent people from getting information that will help them make healthier choices about their food. We urge King County to make the information available to the public," said Ivy Sager-Rosenthal, environmental health advocate for the Washington Toxics Coalition.
Watson's comments on the card's design are similar to those expressed by Washington Friends of Farms and Forest, which repeatedly lobbied the county program to remove the information.
Heather Hanson, executive director of the 25-year-old organization, said the consumer guide was "misleading" and "harmed local farmers by saying you shouldn't buy apples and pears and peaches and the cherries -- all leading crops in Washington.
"It says, 'Don't eat locally grown stuff. Eat mangos and bananas.' "
When asked to point out where that was printed on the guide, she added: "OK, so it doesn't actually say that, but it could sure lead people to that conclusion. The average person looks at (the guide) and says, 'Hmm, I shouldn't buy this stuff. I should buy that stuff, so they're going to go to the grocery store and buy mangos."
On one side of the card are suggestions for "how to shop for the safest household products." The flip side is divided into two columns, one labeled "High pesticide risks" and listing 13 produce items, beginning with apples, carrots and celery.
The other column, labeled "Low pesticide risks" lists a dozen items, starting with asparagus, avocados and bananas.
Not only does the guide not say to avoid buying local produce, it offers a link to another Web site sponsored by King County (pugetsoundfresh.org) that contains maps and directions to farms and farmers markets in 12 surrounding counties.
The rankings on the card came from data collected by the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Food and Drug Administration in 51,000 analyses for pesticides in 44 fruits and vegetables.
But Hanson said the card is misleading.
"The role of USDA and FDA is to tell people to have a healthy diet and that's not what this card does," she said. "The government has the responsibility to regulate everything in such a way that food is safe, and I don't think that card contributes to food safety in any way, shape or form."
Hanson said her group represents farmers and growers from all different commodity groups -- from cranberries to wheat. When asked if the group received industry money, she replied, "It depends what you consider to be industry."
While the organization's board of directors does include someone representing wheat growers and the timber industry, some directors are employed by national and international pesticide and fertilizer producers.
USDA databases on pesticide studies are extremely complex, with detailed listings of each of the specific areas evaluated. Nevertheless, the data is widely distributed by consumer groups, food-safety activists and many state and local government agencies throughout the country.
Many of these organizations use a more easily understood presentation of the USDA findings by the nonprofit Environmental Working Group, based in Washington, D.C., which distributes about 100,000 copies of the guide each year.
The county guide also printed the address of the EWG Web site, which offers a user-friendly summary of the USDA data.
"The guides give consumers the information they need to make choices to reduce pesticides in their diets. They present information on the overall load of pesticides found on commonly eaten fruits and vegetables," said Sandra Schubert, government affairs director for the Environmental Working Group.
"I'm appalled that anyone, even an industry group, would try to prevent the public from getting information on how to reduce their consumption of pesticides," Schubert said.
Many farmers and growers are angered at the interpretation often made of the government-collected data and, in the past, Washington growers of apples, pears, peaches and other crops have argued, with some proof, that many have greatly reduced the amount and types of pesticides they use.
When the USDA was asked about its data in the past, the agency stood behind its accuracy and said it is an indication of what was found during extensive testing and analysis, but cautioned it should not be taken as an indicator of what exists on all crops, everywhere.
Watson said a large number of the cards have been distributed "and we're not going to make any attempt at retrieving them. But we're not going to print them in fire-engine red and green, or distribute any more until we've studied the issue and gotten input, including comment from the ag community."
He said a similar card will be made available at some point, "but I can't tell you when."
© 1998-2008 Seattle Post-Intelligencer
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13 Comments so far
Show AllPesticides are poisons.
Poisons sicken, weaken and kill.
Poisons do not care what species you are, whether cat or cockroach, housefly or human.
Poisons accumulate until a fatal dose.
Poisons do not know when to stop killing.
Corporations that produce pesticides MUST, by law, do what ever it takes to ensure profits for their shareholders, even if it endangers the public, and ultimately, the shareholders.
Corporations control money paid to politicians. Politicians like the money. Corporations use lobbyists to influence politicians. Politicians like being in power, and cater to corporations to get the campaign donations to win elections to stay in power. Politicians relax or re-write laws that were enacted to protect the public from harmful products or practices, thus benefitting their corporate paymasters, but endangering the public of which both the politicians and corporate employees are members of.
Isn't watching slow motion suicide fun?
We're damn if we do and damned if we don't. How can anyone ever trust our government again?
If you expect to get your food dispensed from a vending machine why would you expect it to be free from contaminants? You have, after all, producers feeding machines, not people. The producer has a hard time imagining that he is feeding people instead of feeding a machine. Maybe you can try instead getting your food directly from the producer. This way he sees you eye to eye, and he is reminded that you are a vulnerable organism, not a vending machine. Then maybe he will use fewer pesticides, ehh? Maybe the same is true of everything you buy - if you get everything from the local small independent farmer, craftsman and merchant, eye to eye, they might consider that they are trading with real human beings with vulnerabilities, and treat you with some respect, ehh?
You can't give them natives too much information, it might confuse them.
www.StudentsForTheEarth.org
very interesting stuff...
all things have loop holes.. and we the consumer should start learning how to use it against them.... since they've been doing it to us for so long...
wonder if this would be enticing to OSHA... unless osha has been subverted by this current admin and then i guess we the ppl are screwed...
and i totally agree about buying directly from the suppliers... time to eliminate the middle man "the grocery giants"
if they cant be trusted to do all that they can to protect their consumers... then stop shopping there... its really very simple...
you have the money... you control where you spend your money... and until "they" say otherwise... this is still in effect...
i have very little sympathy for ppl that act as if they are so helpless when they have all the power over their own lives!!!
if they wont provide you with information so that you can make an educated decision on what you purchase... then dont purchase from that store/supplier.... there is no mandate that you MUST buy and where they tell you to buy...
start growing your own food... or start community gardens.. where the locals decided...what where when why and how...
and i love the idea of buying direct from the producer of goods.... it bolsters the local economy and you're right... when they have to see the kids that are about to eat the poisoned fruit... maybe it will remind them of one of their own and they'll begin growing with a conscience!
but at the end of the day.... you have only yourself to hold accountable for what you do... we have got to STOP pointing our fingers at the big bad govt... and stop and take a good long hard look in the mirror... if you allow it to happen to you... its done with your consent... informed or otherwise!
Guess we should stop eating apples, carrots and celery and stick to candy bars, soft drinks and potato chips. Whoops! Maybe not potato chips...better check that card first. Those potatos could be hazardous to our health. Make that cheeze curls instead.
The whole pesticide concern is skewed. The argument goes round and round because it is so difficult to document a direct cause-effect with illness. No one mentions the agricultural runoff factor, and the nutritional content factor, both of which may be worse that the direct contamination of food.
I don't see an outright ban any time soon. The point must be driven home that no one has a right to impose a cost on someone else. There should be a tax on pesticides at point of sale to cover "runoff mitigation" (water treatment plants, dead zones in the Gulf, etc). And go back to Carter's plan to help farmers transition off chemicals. (He proposed something like front end loading ag subsidies to get farmers through the first 3 years, then start tapering to 0 after 10 years total)
Why not post the card online on this site?
Pesticides, preservatives and additives all work to weaken the immune system. Rima Laibow, M.D. suggests that we only eat organic foods in order to boost the immune system as much as possible. She also recommends taking colloidal silver to help prevent what she claims will be the biggest disaster in world history coming soon to a neighborhood near you. Apparently, newly manufactured flu vaccines have been weaponized by the US government, and the moment you see or hear the word "pandemic" in the news, forced vaccinations will begin. These vaccines carry the necessary DNA to give one the "avian flu virus" not the protection against it. Here's more info on the subject:
http://www.healthfreedomusa.org/index.php?p=742
Here is the correct link. The one above is incorrect.
http://www.healthfreedomusa.org/index.php?p=742
Oops. Sorry, both links are correct now. Editing snafu I'm afraid.
got another bed dug today. Time to start winter crops. Yummie beets and greens for lunch. This time of year we can easily commute the 25 yards to the garden and eating is whatever is fresh and available. Soon we'll have to get the greenhouse ready for winter food so that the crops from summer and winter overlap and we can JUST STAY HOME AND EAT.
Where's my pickled pigs feet, an' my god-givin' right to my pickled hard boiled eggs?
Where's my gun? Dang it! I knows I left it layin' around here somewheres'.