Saturday 1 July 2017

N.B. herbicide on list of cancer-causing chemicals

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/gylphosate-herbice-new-brunswick-california-1.4182805

California places popular N.B. herbicide on list of cancer-causing chemicals

  
99 Comments
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 David Peters 
David Peters
Doesn't NB have very high cancer rates?


William Roberts
William Roberts
@David Peters You bet it does and it is all for the profits of a select few. The minuscule fines issued for repeatedly violating the clean air act have been a joke and merely the cost of doing business as with water and soil contamination violations. Irving does as Irving wants!!

David Raymond Amos
David Raymond Amos
@David Peters All of this has been well known for years. Nothing is gonna change unless we who don't usually vote do bother to vote and vote out the liberals and the conservatives. Then if perchance that di happen folks must pay attention and hold whomever replaces the old political party professionals accountable to ordinary folks and not the corporate or union/NDP or Green Party interests.


Fess Allaire 
Fess Allaire
I'll bet there won't be any mention of this in New Brunswick newspapers!


David Raymond Amos
David Raymond Amos
@Fess Allaire I won't bet against you

  
Rosco holt
Kim Colpitts
As long as the Irvings want to use glyphosate it won't be banned.


David Raymond Amos
David Raymond Amos
@Kim Colpitts True


Joe Allaire 
Joe Allaire
The Empire, like the monarchy, aka malarkey before, does not care how many peasants die; they are expendable.


William Roberts
William Roberts
@Joe Allaire Population control and saves the government a ton in pension funds while feeding the Pharma industry. You have to see the bigger picture.

David Raymond Amos
David Raymond Amos
@William Roberts Sad but true


Tony Petrocelli 
Tony Petrocelli
Manslaughter charges might be in order here if this stufff kills people.

Clive Gibbons
Clive Gibbons
@Tony Petrocelli

Like cigarettes?

Tony Petrocelli
Tony Petrocelli
@Clive Gibbons, like cigarettes! This is why so many governments have sued cigarette companies over healthcare. Maybe a class action against these polluters is long overdue.

David Raymond Amos
David Raymond Amos
@Tony Petrocelli A class action against Monsanto? My wouldn't that be rich? For lawyers that is.


Stephen Wood 
Stephen Wood
Why do you think the former Chief Medical Officer of health in New Brunswick was let go by the Government? She was investigating this very product that Irving was spraying all over New Brunswick with total disregard to humans and wildlife. Irving swings a big hammer and the Liberals and Conservatives bow to them regardless of Right or Wrong. Political and Corporate Corruption abounds in New Brunswick. Remember this in the up coming 2018 election and get rid of the Old Mindless Corrupt Red and Blue, time for new government Peoples Alliance of NB.


William Roberts
William Roberts
@Stephen Wood There is absolutely no doubt in my mind as to why DR. Cleary was fired and then muzzled. A clear message to all who rock the boat. You don't Pi$$ in the wind and you don't mess with Jim.
Democracy is nothing more then a false promise. Vote for who you want. The results will always be the same. Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely!!!

David Raymond Amos
David Raymond Amos
@William Roberts Ask yourself why Cleary shut up after she no longer worked for us with a fancy high paying job?

If she were sincere why quit exposing the truth about the stuff merely because her big pay cheque stopped?.

  
William Reed
Tom Mosher
Let's get things straight here, first of all there is no need to kill the foliage in the forest in order to plant trees. There is no need to plant trees in the first place. By saving a little two to six inch chest height measured tree you can re-harvest in 25 years. That's right 25 years! I will prove it any day of the week.

Why do they plant trees? It is nothing more than a method to pacify the public. The planted trees will not make good lumber. The trees grow up a cabbage type with lots of knots, the long and the short of it is that it is no good for lumber, ask a sawyer.

Just look at the forest replanting project out side of Moncton, NB The documentation is there and for the whole world to see the proof of when they were planted and the proof of the development.

So why would a company go through all this? It is basically profits, no different than a pig in a grain bin, clear cuts must be outlawed.

We are destined for the same development as the destruction of the cod fisheries.


David Raymond Amos
David Raymond Amos
@Tom Mosher I believe you have a very valid point sir


Douglas James 
Douglas James
Spruce budworm spray doesn't cause Reyes Syndrome...it's just the flu. Oops. Agent orange doesn't cause cancer. Oops. Glyphosate doesn't cause cancer. Premier Gallant prefers to wait and see whileNew Brunswickers die. Oops.


William Roberts
William Roberts
@Douglas James $20K? What is a life worth? They also had a very narrow qualification on who received it. There were far more elements that would disqualify you then get you on that list. A slap in the face all round. Spraying these toxins will have no better out come. Let the little people die!!

David Raymond Amos
David Raymond Amos
@William Roberts Not just people die because of this needles spraying. Just ask what is left of the other animals that must share this wonderful old world with greedy people.


 Douglas James 
Douglas James
Just like the politicians in England who turned a blind eye to the likelihood of apnartment tower fires...Those in New Brunswick simply shrug and say they'll wait for an update from Health Canada....presumably on how many of us have to die before they have to tell the Irvings they need to change their practices.


David Raymond Amos
David Raymond Amos
@Douglas James On the bright side the countryside will be pretty because no doubt the daisies will flourish with all whom folks nobody cared about pushing them up.




California places popular N.B. herbicide on list of cancer-causing chemicals

Glyphosate, the active ingredient in Roundup, is used to kill hardwood growth in forests

By Shane Fowler, CBC News Posted: Jun 29, 2017 7:30 AM AT 

California has put glyphosate, a herbicide sprayed throughout New Brunswick's forests to kill hardwood growth, on a list of chemicals known to cause cancer.
California has put glyphosate, a herbicide sprayed throughout New Brunswick's forests to kill hardwood growth, on a list of chemicals known to cause cancer. (CBC) 

Widely used in New Brunswick forests, the herbicide glyphosate has been classified as a cancer-causing chemical in California.

On July 7, glyphosate will be placed on the California state government's list of carcinogenic chemicals.
This follows a decision by courts in the state to deny an appeal of the glyphosate classification by the company Monsanto, which produces several products that include the chemical, including the popular weed killer Roundup.

All products containing glyphosate must now be sold with warning labels that identify ingredients that are potentially cancer-causing. Companies selling those products will have one year from July 7, 2017, to add those labels to their products.

Welcome decision


Glyphosate is commonly found in household garden herbicides, but is also widely used to control weeds on farmers' fields and to kill undergrowth on tree plantations.

Earlier this year, Health Canada announced the potential risks to human health and the environment from pesticides containing glyphosate are acceptable, if used as directed in updated labels.

California joins several other jurisdictions, including the Netherlands and several South American Countries, that have classified glyphosate as a carcinogen.

The decision was welcomed by New Brunswick groups who want the material banned in the province.

"Hopefully it puts more pressure on provincial and municipal governments to look at pesticides and to consider warning labels," said Tracy Glynn, forestry director with the Conservation Council of New Brunswick. "And then phase it out completely."

Tracy Glynn
Tracy Glynn, forestry director for the Conservation Council of New Brunswick, says the province needs to follow the lead of other jurisdictions and start phasing out the use of glyphosate. (Shane Fowler/CBC)

While California's decision does not affect the use of the chemical compound in this province, the New Brunswick Department of Health is aware of the recent classification.

For now, glyphosate continues to be approved for use en mass for a variety of projects, including NB Power's use of the material on its power transmission lines, and J.D. Irving's use of glyphosate to control forest growth.

Dr. Jennifer Russell
Dr. Jennifer Russell, chief acting medical officer of health in New Brunswick, says glyphosate remains approved for use but the province will watch for any decisions on the product made by Health Canada. (Pat Richard/CBC)

New Brunswick's acting chief medical officer of health said the province will continue to monitor for any decisions on the product made by Health Canada.

"In New Brunswick, it is approved for use," said Dr. Jennifer Russell. "We're just monitoring that situation and we keep abreast of whatever the new information is that is coming out."

Health Canada re-evaluation


Glyphosate was first listed as "probably carcinogenic to humans" by the International Agency for Research on Cancer, a branch of the World Health Organization, in 2015.


Health Canada is now undergoing a re-evaluation of the use of glyphosate in Canada, but it's not yet known when those results will be published.

That's not enough for Glynn, who said the province has the power to make its own call on the use of the herbicide.

"We know that a Supreme Court decision affirmed … that municipalities and provincial governments can limit and ban pesticides," she said, adding that other provinces, such as Quebec, banned the use of glyphosate in forestry "in light of public health concerns."

"And now we're spraying a record amount, the most of any province, at a time when New Brunswickers have never been more opposed to it," said Glynn.

"So we think it's time and New Brunswick needs to enter the 21st century in terms of forestry practices."

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