6/18/2010 New York Times: Dispute Over Pesticide for California
Strawberries Has Implications Beyond State
..."I'm not in blanket opposition to the use of pesticides, but methyl iodide alarms me," said Theodore A. Slotkin, a professor of pharmacology and cancer biology at Duke University Medical Center and a member of the scientific review committee. "When we come across a compound that is known to be neurotoxic, as well as developmentally toxic and an endocrine disruptor, it would seem prudent to err on the side of caution, demanding that the appropriate scientific testing be done on animals instead of going ahead and putting it into use, in which case the test animals will be the children of the state of California."... More
6/20/2010: NPR Weekend Edition: Controversial Pesticid Worries Scientists
Odds are most supermarket strawberries come from California -- that's where 90 percent of the berries are produced. And if the strawberries are not organic, they were likely grown in fumigated soil, which is creating a stir between scientists and regulators in California. The two groups recently faced off over the expected approval of a potentially dangerous pesticide
Currently, farmers use a fumigant called methyl bromide. But it is being phased out internationally because it damages the ozone layer. And the leading alternative,methyl iodide, has its own set of problems....More.
6/18/2010 CBS News: Calif. Lawmakers Question Strawberry Pesticide
State legislators grilled officials from California's Department of Pesticide Regulation Thursday over a proposal to move ahead with the use of a possibly toxic pesticide for strawberry fields. At a hearing, DPR officials defended the decision.... Legislators pointed out to DPR's Warmerdam [DPR head], restrictions aren't always followed out in the fields. Warmerdam's responded, "It is difficult for us to regulate to either stupidity ignorance or violations of law."... More
6/17/2010 Ventura County Star: Scientists tell state regulators methyl iodide is too toxic to be used on crops
Independent scientists who served on a panel selected by state regulators to analyze the health risks of a proposed new agricultural fumigant told lawmakers Thursday they are dumbfounded that the Department of Pesticide Regulation now seeks to authorize its use in California."It's simply not the case that one should move ahead on a chemical that's so toxic that there's evidence of its causing death and disease," said John Froines, a professor of environmental health sciences at UCLA who chaired an external scientific review panel that studied the risks of methyl iodide. "This is, without question, one of the most toxic chemicals on earth."...More
June 18-20 The California Report: The Fight Over Methyl Iodide - Part II (AUDIO)
Last week we reported on a controversial pesticide the Schwarzenegger administration plans to approve called methyl iodide. The chemical is used to sterilize soil before planting. Strawberry growers say it's key to sustaining their industry. But scientists who advised the state worry that it's too toxic to be used safely. Experts gathered at a hearing this week warned that the chemical will endanger farmworkers and people living near strawberry fields....More
6/18/2010 Pesticide Action Network Update Services: Scientists & Californians stir up Sacramento on methyl iodide
...Karin Cushaway, who lives in Sisquoc, CA, at the edge of fields where methyl iodide would likely be used, said: "It's easy for our Governor and other state officials to agree to allow methyl iodide to be used because they don't have it being applied in their back yards."...More