Tell EPA to Protect Us from
the Toxic Pesticide Endosulfan
New Public Comment Period.

Last year more than ten thousand UFW supporters signed our petition asking the EPA to ban endosulfan--an antiquated and dangerous pesticide. We’ve got their attention, but so far nothing has happened.

However, the new Obama EPA has just re-opened the public comment period regarding this deadly pesticide. The UFW is again working with a coalition of our environmental friends to turn in a joint petition on June 24 to show the EPA how concerned the American public is.

Please TAKE ACTION today and demand change by signing this petition and demanding that the EPA ensures that no residues of endosulfan are found in food sold in the U.S. Tell the new EPA chief Lisa Jackson that this risk is unacceptable and something needs to be done now.

The EPA’s own analysis concluded that endosulfan poses unacceptable risks to the health and safety of farmers and fieldworkers who use it and that it poisons the environment downstream from where it’s sprayed.

Endosulfan is one of the most commonly detected residues in our national food supply. It persists for years in the environment, traveling great distances and accumulating in the food chain as it moves about the planet, impacting communities and ecosystems far from where it’s used.  It is acutely toxic and easily absorbed by the human body. Low levels of exposure in the womb have been linked to autism, male reproductive harm and other birth defects. The lethal chemical has been linked to dozens of accidental deaths. Endosulfan has already been banned in 60 countries. It’s time for the U.S. to do the same and protect farm workers, our communities and the environment from this toxic pollutant.

It is vital that we get as many signatures as possible. Please sign the petition today and then immediately forward this petition to as many friends as possible.

Thank you!

Full Petition Text:

Dear Administrator Jackson,

We, the undersigned individuals, write to urge EPA to take swift action to cancel all remaining uses of endosulfan and revoke all food residue tolerances for this toxic chemical.

In 2007, EPA found that use of endosulfan in agriculture poses unacceptable risks to the health and safety of pesticide applicators who handle this pesticide, and to farmworkers who work in endosulfan-treated fields. Agency calculations also show that its use on tomatoes in Florida (one the few remaining food crops in the U.S. with significant endosulfan use) presents a grave threat to aquatic organisms.

Since then, scientists from National Parks Services, the USGS, and other federal agencies have documented that endosulfan contaminates sensitive ecosystems from Florida Everglades to the Sierra Mountains to the Alaskan Arctic The accumulation of endosulfan in the Arctic is a serious concern, which is why the European Union has proposed that this chemical be added the Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants. Listing endosulfan in the Convention would trigger a global phaseout of its production and use. The effect of endosulfan on amphibians has only begun to be explored, but is already apparent that it is extremely toxic to many species.

EPA data also indicate that use of endosulfan is declining, alternatives exist, and its continued use provides only minimal benefits to growers. It?s time for EPA to step up to the plate and begin reversing some of the damage done by the previous administration?s anti-regulatory stance . By banning endosulfan, the US will take a significant step towards regaining its position as a leader in environmental protection, and will join the 60 other countries around the world that have already phased out use of this dangerous pesticide.

Please take action now to protect the health of people and the environment at home as well as globally by banning endosulfan.

Sincerely:

[Your name]
[Your address]

Sign the Petition Today!

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** We are using a petition format, as the EPA has a very complicated web form docket system that is difficult to use and makes our one-touch email system impossible. The UFW and our partners want to make expressing your voice as easy as possible and will turn our petition signatures into the required docket to save you the time and effort.

 

  Maintainer: United Farm Workers (ufwofamer@aol.com) Powered by image