Guest guest Posted August 30, 1999 Report Share Posted August 30, 1999 http://www.sptimes.com/Commentary/60898/A_toxic_reaction.html A toxic reaction Times staff writer © St. sburg Times, published June 8, 1998 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- ---- he decision by the Environmental Protection Agency to allow aerial spraying of pesticide over Bradenton to fight the Mediterranean fruit fly represents a welcome change in tactics, but not in strategy. Government rightfully thought twice before sending planes over an urban area but, ultimately, a chemical campaign that poses underexplored risks to public health and the environment still prevailed over a more thoughtful and long-term strategy to protect Florida agriculture. Spraying begins this week. It follows three weeks of chemical treatment from the ground and the release of sterile medflies, which keeps the crop-eating pests from reproducing. State Agriculture Commissioner Bob Crawford fulfilled his promise, made after last year's prolonged spraying in Hillsborough, to exhaust all alternatives to an aerial campaign. That is part of the problem. Few alternatives exist. Indeed, that this year's response marked a responsible departure from the past says more about the mishandling of previous infestations than it does reflect any new thinking on the part of government or industry. State plant director Gaskalla put it best Thursday to opponents in Bradenton who urged that malathion not be used. " That's not an option, " Gaskalla said. Not an option? Agriculture officials need a reality check. Growth and increasing public concern with continued spraying are running out the clock on Florida's dated approach to killing the medfly. With four outbreaks during the past year alone -- two in heavily urban areas -- people's tolerance for malathion spraying may be reaching a breaking point, even though agriculture is a vital part of Florida's economy. Residents are not as sympathetic to growers' concerns as Floridians once were. Crawford, who is elected, will have trouble building support for spraying as long as the state lacks a host of preventive measures, from a sufficient number of traps and inspectors to an adequate rainy day fund to handle crop emergencies. Crawford learned from the Hillsborough outbreak, which for his department was a public relations disaster. So did the EPA, which hardly said boo throughout the disorganized spraying campaign. Hopefully this new sensitivity, on display in Bradenton, will provide the impetus for Florida to lessen its dependence on chemical farming. The issue really is quite simple. Advanced societies do not spray their own people. Crawford has a choice: He can find a reliable alternative to malathion, or risk one day hearing the news that aerial spraying -- in the government's own words -- is " not an option. " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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