PUSHING PESTICIDES

Thank you for noting the opt-in provision of the state neighbor-notification
law (Metro Ink, March 16), which would require application companies to notify
neighbors 48 hours before applying commercial pesticides to next-door property.

            The
“turf wars” are often portrayed as arguments between equals. Although
City correctly states that both sides
claim to have science on their side, it should be noted that those requesting
notification can point to scientific evidence that was first made public in
Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring (1962).
That evidence has since been corroborated and expanded in hundreds of credible
peer-reviewed studies connecting pesticides to the health of humans, pets, and
the environment. The University of Rochester is just one of many research
facilities that have been finding strong cause-and-effect pesticide
relationships to Parkinson’s disease and other illnesses.

            A
multi-million-dollar industry with no scientific credibility supports the other
side. Companies such as Dow, Syngenta, and Scotts make their corporate
interests heard through a trade association known as Project Evergreen. Feeling
threatened by an increasingly aware public eager to protect itself from
pesticide exposure, a Project Evergreen member group inaccurately named
Responsible Industry for a Sound Environment (RISE) has recently launched a
national public-relations campaign to extol the benefits of chemically-treated
lawns.

            The
“green industry” (as they call themselves) encourages local
pesticide-dispensing businesses to describe themselves with environmental
euphemisms. At two recent County Legislature public forums, local
lawn-pesticide spokespersons boldly declared themselves to be “the true
environmentalists.”

            Companies
using pesticides routinely also misuse the term “integrated pest management.”
IPM was originally intended to help farmers phase out pesticides gradually
while adopting sustainable farming practices that eliminate the need for
chemicals. But IPM is not a legitimate excuse for cosmetic pesticide use in
urban and suburban yards.

            Local
campaigns to fight legal measures such as neighbor notification get their
inspiration from RISE. The public needs to keep in mind that the strategy to
defeat this legislation originates at the top.

            Audrey Newcomb, Landing Road South,
Brighton
(Newcomb is a member of RAMP, Rochesterians Against the Misuse of
Pesticides.)

DISTRICT FAILS

Recently an educator revealed to me that only 10 percent of
Black and Latino kids in the City School District were receiving an education.

            The
president of the School Board and the superintendent have stated that the state
approved the district’s budget and that demonstrated that they were more or
less fiscally responsible. We disagree with the district and the state when too
many educators are being paid over $100,000 and they aren’t able to educate
more than 10 percent of the kids.

            Rochester
isn’t the only city that has failed Black and Latino kids. All of the major
cities above the Mason-Dixon Line have failed these kids. New York City,
Syracuse, Buffalo, Yonkers, Boston, Jersey City, Newark, etc., are all in the
same boat.

            The School
Board president and the superintendent sent an offensive letters to those who
protested at the School Board meeting a few weeks ago. The public has a
constitutional right to protest. In light of the poor education the district
offers the minority kids, there ought to be a protest every week. In fact, the
entire school system should be shut down and reorganized by people who really
care about those neglected kids.

            Raymond L. Graves, Henrietta (Graves is
president of the North East Non-Partisan Political and Social Action
Committee.)

GENDER-NEUTRAL OPTIONS GROWING

As a transgender activist and a former Rochesterian, I
greatly appreciated your article on the struggle that trans people often face
simply to “pee in peace” (“New Battleground for Human
Rights,” March 23). But the writer should not have measured the extent to
which colleges are providing support to trans students solely by the progress
made at Rochester-area schools.

            A growing
number of colleges are creating gender-neutral restrooms and locker rooms, as
well as developing gender-neutral housing options, creating trans-inclusive
forms, enabling trans students to change their names and genders on records,
and providing trans-supportive health care.

            More information
on college policies and practices can be found on the website of the
Transgender Law and Policy Institute: www.transgenderlaw.org.

            Brett Beemyn, Columbus, Ohio (Beemyn is
coordinator of GLBT Student Services at Ohio State University and is a board
member of the Transgender Law and Policy Institute.)

FIGHT BUSH’S BUDGET

How can our government continue to cut programs for the poor
and middle class while giving the wealthiest Americans permanent tax breaks? In
all the years that we have gone without an increase in the minimum wage, the
cost of everything has continued to rise.

            I can’t
claim to understand how Bush was re-elected, given all the questionable things
he did in his first term, but I do know that having him in office, especially
now that he doesn’t have to worry about getting re-elected, is dangerous.

            Republicans
are trying to push the budget, before we realize what’s going on. On top of
giving tax breaks to the wealthy, the proposed budget will dramatically cut
funding for health care, especially Medicaid, which principally serves senior
citizens and the working poor. Pell Grants will be drastically cut, making it
even harder for those of us with low-paying jobs to get a college diploma.

            This
further impacts women, especially single mothers, who make up a majority of the
working poor due to our society’s unequal pay practices. Women need a college
education to earn what the average male high-school graduate would earn. And if
you’re a minority…. This budget is an affront to every hard-working American,
to those of us who keep the economy going despite the increasing prices and our
stagnant incomes.

            Don’t let
the Republicans pass this budget. Get information, get involved, get the real story,
and fight for our right to do more than survive in this country.

            Marie Starr, County Road, Farmington

WRITING TO CITY

We welcome and encourage readers’ letters for publication.
Send them to: themail@rochester-citynews.com or The Mail, City Newspaper, 250
North Goodman Street, Rochester 14607.

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sent to other media — and we don’t
publish form letters generated by activist groups.
While we don’t restrict
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do edit letters for clarity and brevity. And in general we don’t publish
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once every two months.