Robert's Rants
Robert's Rants
A personal blog on the Canadian pesticide industry and other pet peeves and interests

Let’s take the regional pesticide bans one step further, and bypass Health Canada in the process.

I’m bewildered at how local government can override all the data and research and chemists, ecologists, microbiologists, toxicologists, MD’s and Phd’s who work at Health Canada in the PMRA. That means the PMRA’s highly valued, educated, and respected scientists put in years of work for nothing? It certainly doesn’t guarantee the pesticide can be used.

Banning, or by passing restrictive legislation effectively making it impossible to use, should be a slap in the face to Health Canada. The end effect is something like ”We know what you say, but we don’t believe you.”

I would have thought the PMRA would have led the charge in defending their decisions when local governments start banning uses of federally approved products.

Then look at all the ripple effects with these localized bans.  That’s the major concern, and not just with pesticides, but with where the decision power comes down to uneducated individuals running the show.

Any half brained pesticide company is going to look at the situation in Canada and is going to stop submitting new products for registration.   Why spend all this cash at the Federal level only to have your product banned throughout the country.   And remember Structural Pest Control Industry is the smallest consumer of pesticides, so if they can take the same money and invest it in canola and wheat, or the golf course market, you know where we would stand.

The obvious solution?  Change the dynamics, and give the power to approve products to every level of government!

The City of Kamloops, or Peel Region, or all of Manitoba should have the right to approve pesticide products, if they have the power to ban. It only makes sense.

So no-brainer products like thyme oil will never make it to market in Canada.  This is approved by the EPA under 25b exemptions for products generally regarded as safe (GRAS). 

All the “green” and “safer” pesticides available in the US, like peppermint oil, garlic mists, DE and even natural py can be deemed exempt without any Ottawa intervention. Get your product labelled at your local city hall by paying for their next session’s coffee and cupcakes.

Then we can safely guarantee 75% control while homeowners buy US product from Amazon or drive to Walmart in Buffalo instead of calling you.

Sometimes logic prevails. But not often.

Trudeau coughs up $4bn for affordable housing! 7 new Toronto home starts!

A slight exaggeration but not that far off.

As the new average home price hits $700k, we’re going to make some 5800 families happy. and thats all good, but

Take that same $4 billion and hire 32,000 nurses and/or police and/or teachers at $125,000 each.

Imagine the effect on 20 hour emergency room visits, and if you’re lucky a cot in the hall. Been there done that.

Or hire police so people can get back to going downtown, or out to the island, or take a bus to work without fear of being killed.

yeah I know, a house will last 20 years and that’s only salaries for 1 year, but makes you think.

Who coughed up that $4bn anywho? Look at your pay stub lately?

Read the Label…if you can!

Okay, so my ranting about this label issue and a major gap in communications that needs addressed continues!

The fine print is too damn fine. Simple enough.

The whole pest control manufacturing industry, at least those still dumb enough to be in the pesticide business, are required to put a label and a booklet/pamphlet/Directions For Use (whatever you feel like calling it) on each container.

In both languages!

and this is what you get below.

The background Label is one of those folded up jobbies from a prescription drug. I take it to keep the ticker ticking, the blood flowing so to speak. Like major important. Even though no one reads it, the font doesn’t require double bifocals and a magnifying glass.

The inset fine print is a page from a pesticide booklet stuck on the outside of every container of a pesticide that is used in thousands of homes, kitchens, restaurants, ad nausea by 5000 licensed trained professionals every day. 23 pages…in one language…on a normal 8 1/2 x 11 sheet squished down to a miniature legal document in apparently a legal font.

Does something need fixed here? Or as usual does no one give a flip? (I’ve been told to watch my language)