CBCnews
Story Tools: EMAIL | PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK | Bookmark and Share

Sale and use of 200 pesticides to be banned in N.B.

Last Updated: Thursday, June 18, 2009 | 3:24 PM AT

The New Brunswick government is banning the use and sale of 200 over-the-counter lawn-care pesticides starting later this year.

Environment Minister Roland Haché announced the ban in the legislative assembly on Thursday. The government is clamping down on pesticides through a regulatory change.

Haché said there will be some exemptions to the ban for the agriculture and forestry sectors, as well as golf courses.

"This ban will contribute to an improved environment and quality of life for all residents in the province of New Brunswick," Haché said.

"Reducing the reliance on pesticides in the province will contribute to a sustainable environment."

Through this new regulation, the province is banning the use and sale of roughly 70 per cent of the retail products known as cosmetic pesticides available to homeowners.

As well, the ban will include the sale and use of the widely used lawn-care pesticide 2,4-D.

Haché said the ban on lawn-care products will come into force in the fall and that will give retailers enough time to pull the products from their shelves.

The ban is focusing on products that Hache said are most susceptible to being overused or misused, including:

  • Lawn-care products for domestic lawns containing 2,4-D.
  • Combination fertilizer and pesticide products.
  • Granular spreadable weed killers.
  • Hose-end spray products.
  • Lawn-care pesticides that require a homeowner to measure, mix or dilute.

Tories support ban

The Opposition Progressive Conservatives are supporting the government's initiative despite having some questions about how the ban will actually work.

Tory MLA Trevor Holder, the Opposition's environment critic, said he wants to know why the province is making the change through regulation and not legislating the ban.

Holder said the evidence linking pesticides to cancer is not conclusive but he said the move is a step in the right direction.

"You have to err on the side of caution," Holder said.

Companies must be accredited

Haché said it will also become mandatory for companies carrying out lawn-care services using commercial grade pesticides to receive an integrated pest management accreditation by February 2010.

This new accreditation process will require businesses to curtail their "blanket treatment" on problem areas and promote spot treatment.

The accreditation will be required when lawn-care companies seek operating permits.

"Any person that sells or uses a banned product or professionals who fail to comply with the terms of integrated pest management accreditation will be subject to prosecution under the Pesticides Control Act," the environment minister said.

Haché also told the legislative assembly that the Pesticides Control Act will be reviewed and the Environment Department will see if there are other ways of eliminating the unnecessary use of pesticides within the next two years.

  •  
Story Tools: EMAIL | PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK | Bookmark and Share
 

New Brunswick Headlines

Film on Bathurst basketball team planned
A Moncton, N.B., production company hopes to make a TV movie about the Bathurst High School basketball team's 2009 championship win, achieved a year after the school was shaken by a van crash that killed eight people.
RCMP make new plea to missing Moncton woman
The Codiac Regional RCMP are making a new plea to track down a Moncton woman who has been missing for three weeks.
P.E.I. paramedic revives N.B. woman on plane
A New Brunswick woman is praising a P.E.I. paramedic who revived her on a recent flight to the Dominican Republic.
N.B. teen's murder sentence delayed
The sentencing of a Saint John-area teenager for second-degree murder in the stabbing of an elderly man has been adjourned until April so the judge can get more details about the girl's proposed rehabilitation program.
Ex-Liberal MLA's fraud hearing concludes
A preliminary hearing into fraud allegations against former long-time Liberal MLA Frank Branch has wrapped up in Bathurst, N.B., on Friday.

Canada Headlines

New B.C. avalanche kills snowmobiler
A massive avalanche in British Columbia's mountainous backcountry on Friday killed at least one snowmobiler, injured two others and sparked a search for anyone else caught in the second deadly slide in the area in the past week.
Olympic show mini-skirts irk RCMP
The closing ceremonies at the Vancouver Olympics were supposed to show the world that Canadians have a sense of humour but many members of the RCMP weren't laughing at how they were depicted, according to an internal memo obtained by CBC News.
Luck prevented 'worst ever' avalanche accident
A preliminary report into the deadly avalanche near Revelstoke, B.C., last weekend is crediting good luck and a rapid rescue response for limiting the death toll.
King Ralph reigns on new game show
Former Alberta premier Ralph Klein will be handing out his signature "Ralph Bucks" on a new game show that airs this weekend — except this time, people won't actually be able to cash them in.
Top court quashes child porn conviction Video
The Supreme Court of Canada has overturned the conviction of a Saskatchewan man charged with possessing child pornography, saying a justice of the peace had insufficient evidence to issue a search warrant in 2003.

People who read this also read …

Top CBCNews.ca Headlines

Headlines

New B.C. avalanche kills snowmobiler
A massive avalanche in British Columbia's mountainous backcountry on Friday killed at least one snowmobiler, injured two others and sparked a search for anyone else caught in the second deadly slide in the area in the past week.
Montreal shop owner arrested after slayings Video
Montreal police arrested the owner of a clothing boutique where deadly shootings took place as homicide detectives finished combing through the blood-spattered crime scene Friday.
9/11 deal for workers 'not enough': judge
A federal judge has rejected a mutimillion-dollar deal to compensate thousands of emergency workers who had claimed that cleaning up the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the World Trade Center had made them sick.
Obama makes final health-care pitch Video
U.S. President Barack Obama made a final push to rally support before this weekend's vote on health-care legislation, charging that the country cannot afford to miss this historic opportunity.
Woolstencroft wins 4th gold medal
Lauren Woolstencroft of North Vancouver won the women's standing super-giant slalom ski race Friday for her fourth gold medal of the Paralympics.