We should make public the names of government officials who approve the use of such poisonous chemicals.
Despite the demands made by residents of
Hawaii to end the use of Roundup in the islands, the state continues to
spray in parks and public areas with this cousin of Agent Orange.
When the Honolulu Parks Department was
queried as to why it continues using a known carcinogen that’s been
banned in many cities in the United States and several countries around
the world and is involved in more than a dozen lawsuits, including a
class-action suit, the reply was that its use was state-approved.
The Environmental Protection Agency’s
3,000-acre Superfund cleanup site in Kunia on Oahu exists because a
“state-approved pesticide” was used for pineapple.
After reading a recent opinion piece titled Why Is Roundup Still Used In Hawaii? I wanted to correct some of the misinformation contained in the article.
Glyphosate is the active ingredient in
many Roundup-branded weed control products, as well as many other weed
control products marketed under different names by different companies.
It is used by homeowners, gardeners, farmers, businesses and government
agencies to control a lot of different weeds.
Weed control is important. Weeds can
cause farmers to lose yields, harbor insect pests, be invasive, create
hazard along roadways and be a pest in landscaping.
To be clear, glyphosate is not a “cousin” to Agent Orange, as the article stated. They are not chemically similar. Glyphosate has nothing to do with an Environmental Protection Agency Superfund site in Kunia, as the piece seems to suggest.
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