Sonoma Passes Resolution Against Aerial Spraying

Sonoma City Council members voted 4-1 Wednesday to pass a resolution opposing aerial spraying to eradicate the light brown apple moth.

Read the Press Democrat Story Here.

I will make the actual resolution available here when I can find a copy of it.

In the meantime, deepest thanks to Councilman Ken Brown for introducing the resolution and to the members who voted for it.

I am concerned that the Press Democrat report indicates that the council is asking the state to use least-toxic methods. Unfortunately, CDFA’s idea of least-toxic is blanket aerial spraying of carcinogenic pesticides and deadly PM10 over 7 million people! I need to see the resolution for myself to get a clear idea of what was resolved. I’ll update this post soon.

Update:
Here is a Sonoma Index Tribute article regarding the city council meeting. From the article:

Sonoma architect Bill Willers told the council its most important responsibility is “the health and welfare” of the community. “It’s absurd,” he said, “to put ourselves under this aerial assault.”

Mayor Joanne Sanders emotionally recalled her childhood experience in the South Bay when her neighborhood was sprayed with malathion, a pesticide used to combat the Mediterranean fruit fly. “My parents told me the malathion was coming and it marked my whole life…It wouldn’t matter to me if this room was full of people from the government saying this was safe. I guess I don’t trust the government.”

Update:
Extract from letter to the editor from Sonoma Mayor Pro-tem, Ken Brown:

As a Sonoma County resident and parent, I am concerned that the state may conduct aerial spraying for the light brown apple moth, which has been found in Sonoma Valley.

In Santa Cruz and Monterey counties last year, there were more than 600 health-related complaints attributed to the spraying when it happened there.

In almost all circumstances there would be a complete environmental impact report to determine the effects of this spraying. All we are asking is that the full process of an EIR study be included before any spraying occurs.

5 Responses to “Sonoma Passes Resolution Against Aerial Spraying”

  1. on 09 May 2008 at 9:31 am donna kuhn

    least toxic would probably mean twist ties and they are going up all over the by area much faster than i realized. we are finding out how toxic they are plus 33% of the ingredients are undisclosed. other ingredients are the same as those in checkmate. suggesting the least toxic methods instead of aerial spraying is playing into their hands in this fake emergency.

  2. on 12 May 2008 at 8:01 pm Peggy Karp

    I think we should shine the spotlight on how little a threat this moth actually poses to crops. Europe does not classify it as a quarantine pest and that New Zealand uses nontoxic IPM (integrated pest management) to contain it and doesn’t feel the necessity to eradicate it, which is an unattainable and dangerous goal.

  3. on 12 May 2008 at 8:29 pm admin

    Dear Donna -
    Yes, I am afraid you are right and that CDFA will doubtless wish to festoon every shrub, fence and tree with their toxic twist ties.

    I saw CBS footage of them putting these up…I’m assuming in San Jose? The ties were so low in hedges that very small children could simply reach them walking past on their way to school.

    It’s outrageous.

    Peggy -
    You are absolutely right, and thankfully, Dr. Daniel Harder’s New Zealand report has been widely used in the defense of Californians. Please, share this information with everyone you know, and thank you so much for taking the time to comment here. Come back soon!
    Mim

  4. on 04 Jun 2008 at 12:59 pm Will Shonbrun

    Enclosed: Copy of Sonoma LBAM Resolution:

    A RESOLUTION OF THE SONOMA CITY COUNCIL OPPOSING THE CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF FOOD AND AGRICULTURE AERIAL SPRAY PROGRAM TO ERADICATE THE LIGHT BROWN APPLE MOTH

    WHEREAS, the Light Brown Apple Moth (LBAM) is a pest subject to Federal and State quarantine and eradication orders, and there is a confirmed presence of Light Brown Apple Moths in Sonoma County; and
    WHEREAS, on April 21, 2008, a second LBAM was confirmed in Sonoma County in the Sonoma Valley in close proximity to the initial find; and
    WHEREAS, the California Department of Food and Agriculture (CDFA) had planned to begin an LBAM aerial spraying program in adjacent Marin County and surrounding areas in August of 2008; and
    WHEREAS, a Santa Cruz County Superior Court Judge ruled on April 24, 2008 that aerial spraying to control the LBAM could not continue in Santa Cruz County because the State had not provided sufficient evidence of an emergency, and must complete an Environmental Impact Review before spraying resumes; and
    WHEREAS, on April 24, 2008, Governor Schwarzenegger announced a temporary postponement of the light brown apple moth spraying throughout the state; and
    WHEREAS, until the issue is settled, it is critical for the City of Sonoma to record its opposition to any LBAM aerial spraying plans for Sonoma County, given the recent confirmed presence of LBAMs in the Sonoma Valley; and
    WHEREAS, the City of Sonoma utilizes modern Integrated Pest Management (IPM) relies on the least-toxic, environmentally sensitive control methods, and the City’s IPM policy includes a review the of the list of pesticides before application to assess ecological impacts and human health concerns, and the City has ceased pesticide use in the Plaza Park with the exception of the use of Merit to control elm leaf beetle and Dutch elm disease in City elm trees, and aims for a gradual reduction of pesticide use at other parks and City properties; and
    WHEREAS, modern Integrated Pest Management (IPM) relies on the least-toxic, environmentally sensitive control methods; and
    WHEREAS, least-toxic control options are available for LBAM, including physical and cultural practices such as clean-up of plant debris where moth larvae over-winter; use of natural predators, parasites, and insect diseases; introduction of sterile male moths; and use of pheromone sticky traps are available to control the Light Brown Apple Moth (LBAM); and
    WHEREAS, aerial and other blanket pesticide applications have repeatedly been shown in the past to upset natural ecosystem balance in unpredictable and often catastrophic ways, and aerial and other blanket pesticide applications have repeatedly been shown in the past to cause unintended, unpredictable, and often serious human health effects; and
    WHEREAS, the proposed materials to be used in the LBAM spraying program have not been tested for toxic health effects when used in areas of concentrated human population; and
    WHEREAS, the State has claimed an emergency exemption under the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) in order to begin the LBAM aerial spraying program without conducting environmental review; and
    WHEREAS, the State began the spraying program in Monterey and Santa Cruz Counties in 2007 without completing an Environmental Impact Report (EIR), and has confirmed that it will not complete an EIR before the aerial spraying program continues in 2008; and
    WHEREAS, blanket spraying of chemicals is expensive and inefficient, and biologists have testified that aerial pesticide spraying is extremely unlikely to eradicate LBAM [see testimony of James Carey, testimony of Daniel Harder]; and
    WHEREAS, biologists have testified that the range over which LBAM has been detected in California indicates that LBAM has been established in the state for decades; and
    WHEREAS, CDFA has stated that no physical crop damage has been attributed to LBAM; and
    WHEREAS, scientific study indicates that LBAM does no significant biological or environmental damage to crops or wild land plants in New Zealand where LBAM has been an introduced exotic pest for more than 100 years; and
    WHEREAS, scientific study indicate that LBAM is 80-90% controlled by natural predators in New Zealand and the same “generalist” natural predators are present in California; and
    WHEREAS, the risk of economic damage alone does not justify the health and environmental risks of aerial pesticide applications; and
    WHEREAS, the State has relied almost entirely on its own scientists to address public concerns about the LBAM spray program and has not employed independent outside experts to evaluate and support the program or address issues in a direct and impartial manner; and
    WHEREAS, the CDFA LBAM spraying program has used pesticides that both State and independent toxicologist’s review have stated have not been tested for long-term human exposure risk and toxicity; and
    WHEREAS, the CDFA LBAM spraying program is relying on pesticides that contain ingredients that are highly toxic to aquatic life; and
    WHEREAS, the CDFA LBAM spraying program is relying on pesticides that contain ingredients that are documented to be tumorogenic/carcinogenic, mutagenic, reproductive effectors linked to birth defects, liver toxins, dermal irritants, and unsafe to inhale; and
    WHEREAS, the CDFA LBAM program sprays pesticides in microscopic plastic capsules the pose unknown inhalation risks; and
    WHEREAS, the CDFA LBAM program sprays pesticides in microscopic plastic capsules that scientific study has shown will be 10 microns or smaller in size, which is small enough to be inhaled to the deep lung and not expelled [see Knepp/Haferman Report]; and
    WHEREAS, the California Department of Pesticide Regulation and Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment Consensus Document on Health Risks of the LBAM Spray indicates that the State is relying on conclusions drawn from research that assumes that the pesticides to be used for LBAM will be sprayed over agricultural rather than populated urban areas; and
    WHEREAS, aerial spraying disproportionately affects vulnerable populations such as those who work and play outdoors, those with the recognized disability multiple chemical sensitivity, and those in the homeless population who have no option for protection from the spray or receipt of written notification of spray dates; and
    WHEREAS, the California Department of Pesticide Regulation and Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment Consensus Document on Health Risks of the LBAM Spray acknowledges that the State cannot account for health effects of the pesticides on vulnerable populations such as children, the elderly, and those with chronic diseases; and
    WHEREAS, State Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment (OEHHA) Toxicologist Dr. David Ting stated at the February 14, 2007 hearing of the Assembly Environmental Safety and Toxic Materials Committee in Marin that the pesticide had not been tested for long-term human exposure risk, and the Material Safety Data Sheet for the pesticide (CheckMateLBAM-F) says that it has not undergone long-term exposure testing; and
    WHEREAS, LBAM aerial spraying in Santa Cruz and Monterey areas resulted in the spraying of numerous residents and pets, and hundreds of reports [643] of health effects were reported following the LBAM aerial spraying in Santa Cruz and Monterey counties [see Lawrence Rose, M.D. report]; and
    WHEREAS, other environmental impacts were reported following the LBAM aerial spraying in the Monterey and Santa Cruz areas; and
    WHEREAS, 21 Bay Area cities have passed resolutions against LBAM spraying, 21 communities and 2 County Boards representing 1,815, 434 Californians have united to stop the spraying; and
    WHEREAS, under state law, California Department of Food & Agriculture (CDFA) has the responsibility and authority to control and eradicate invasive pests in California (Food and Agricultural Code Section 5321-5323): and
    WHEREAS, given the agricultural activity in and around Sonoma and Sonoma Valley, there is a high likelihood that should spraying commence the City of Sonoma and Sonoma Valley will be added to the list of areas to be sprayed, thereby exposing residents to potentially harmful exposure to pesticides.

    NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED AND ORDERED that the Sonoma City Council:

    1) Opposes the CDFA aerial spray program to eradicate LBAM and supports a moratorium on all proposed aerial spray programs until complete, independent study of the potential health effects of all substances, both active and inert, have been completed;
    2) Requests the CDFA protect the health and welfare of the residents and natural environment of Sonoma County by immediately shifting its LBAM control methods to least-toxic Integrated Pest Management methods such as those listed above, and that include monitoring to determine the true risk posed by LBAM;
    3) Requests that CDFA shift its focus to educating the USDA regarding the lack of crop damage done by LBAM, the need to use the least-toxic control methods that do not expose populated areas to aerial spraying, and the need to appropriately downgrade the pest classification of LBAM to reflect the lack of risk it poses;
    4) Requests that the State conduct a long-term study of the health and environmental effects resulting from the aerial spraying project that has been conducted to date in Monterey and Santa Cruz counties, taking into account reports collected by citizens in the absence of an easily accessible method of reporting to the State; and
    5) Supports the introduction and passage of state legislation requiring explicit consent of affected residents before and aerial spraying program can be implemented; and
    6) directs the City Manager to notify the Governor and other relevant State and Federal officials of the Sonoma City Council’s opposition to the CDFA aerial spray program to eradicate LBAM, and

    References
    Carey, James, PhD. 2007. Testimony Submitted in Edna Williams, et al., v. California Department of Food and Agriculture, A.G. Kawamura, et al., Case No. 01-05587, U.S. District Ct. for the Northern District of California. November 14.
    Harder, Daniel, PhD. 2007. Testimony Submitted in County of Santa Cruz v. CDFA, Superior Court of California, Santa Cruz County. October 31.
    Harder, Daniel, PhD. and Jeff Rosendale. 2008. Integrated Pest Management Practices for the Light Brown Apple Moth in New Zealand: Implications for California.
    http://democrats.assembly.ca.gov/members/a27/pdf/HarderNZReportFINAL.pdf
    Philp, Richard B. PhD. 2007. Analysis of toxicology Studies with LBAM and Related Lepidopteran Pheromones. October.
    Philp, Richard B PhD. 2007. Testimony Submitted in County of Santa Cruz v. CDFA, Superior Court of California, Santa Cruz County. October 32.
    Knepp, Dennis L., PhD. and Haferman, Jeff, PhD. All the Math: http://www.lbamspray.com/Reports/KneppAndHafeermanLetterwithAttachments.pdf
    Rose, Lawrence, M.D., M.P.H., former Senior Public Medical Officer for Cal-OSHA Marin Pesticide Spraying Health Hazard Alert
    PM10 from Aerial Spraying Increases Hospitalization and Death. New England Journal of Medicine: https://content.nejm.org/cgi/content/abstract/3343/24/1742
    National Institute of Occupational Safety and Health Registry of Toxic Effects of Chemical Substances. 2008. 1,2-Benzisothiazol-2 (2H)-one; p-Cresol, 2,6-di-tert-butyl-(butylated hydroxytoluene); Ammonium, methyltrioctyl-, chloride (Tricaprylymrthylammonium chloride) and the manufacturer’s Material Safety Data Sheets for the same chemicals.

  5. on 04 Jun 2008 at 6:04 pm admin

    Dear Will,
    I sincerely thank you for posting this here. I had been eagerly awaiting reading the text of this. Thank you for taking the time to share it with us and our reader!
    Mim

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