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Stories Leading Anti-Pesticide
Activist's Lawn Doused With Toxic Chemicals
By the time she got outside, the TruGreen workman had already completed a pesticide application to the back yard, and was starting on the side yard. After confronting the applicator and telling him that she had no contract with TruGreen and that she did not want any treatments on her lawn, Ms. Karwoski proceeded to caution the applicator about possible risks associated with common pesticide chemicals. "I told the young man, ‘Even more important to me is that you don't have a mask on. These are chemicals that will affect your unborn children,’” Karwoski said, explaining that such pesticides can affect sperm counts and alter the structure of reproductive organs, particularly in male fetuses. By the time she was done, she said the young man's eyes were watering. “I don't know if it was the irritant properties of the pesticides or what I was telling him.” Ms. Karwoski was
upset, but she saw it as an opportunity for education as well. "I'm
incensed that this happened, but see it as a teachable moment," she
said. "Lawn applications that contain these dangerous chemicals are
routinely applied to lawns when they don't need to be. It's easy to have
a beautiful yard and lawn without the application of chemicals that are
a threat to children, pets and unborn fetuses." TAKE ACTION: Make sure your lawn is toxic-free. Visit www.pesticidefreelawns.org to sign the National Declaration on the Use of Toxic Lawn Pesticides and to find tips on how to have a safe, healthy lawn. Additionally, the number of organic landscape companies nationwide is rapidly growing. To find a landscaping company using least-toxic and non-toxic methods in your state, visit www.safetysource.org. Beyond Pesticides launched Photo Stories on March 1, 2002. The photos are updated on a biweekly basis. Read the instructions on how to get your photo story featured. To see what other visitors to this site thought about this photo story, visit the reader's comments page. |
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