City should support a ban on Avitrol
Lena Yee Hayashi
I strongly encourage the city of Huntington Beach to ban the use of
Avitrol for pest control. New York City and Boulder, Colo. have
already done so.
Louann Murray and Vic Leipzig, in their column “Natural
Perspectives,” March 11, wrote an excellent article, “Silent Spring
at Blackbird Pond,” describing how a legal and seemingly effective
method of pest control can and does have unrealized affects. Their
column addressed the problem of red-winged blackbirds leaving the
Shipley Nature Center pond shortly after arriving and dead and dying
birds that were brought from Central Park to the Wetlands and
Wildlife Care Center at Pacific Coast Highway and Newland Street.
There, Vicki Andersen determined that the blackbirds, and other birds
brought in from the equestrian center, had died of poisoning from a
pesticide called Avitrol.
Education is the key to all of this. The majority of people are
concerned about the health of their environment and the well-being of
wildlife and domestic animals. Unless we are educated to see the
whole picture, however, incidents as the one described in the column
often become a battle of right versus left and tree huggers versus
cement layers when in actuality, each have valid reasons for their
beliefs and actions and all share a common love for nature.
Thank goodness for the Independent’s weekly column “Natural
Perspectives,” and thank goodness for our City Council, both of which
are concerned about the welfare of our wonderful city. I received
Vicki Anderson’s facts and timeline from her work with the injured
and dead birds at the Wetlands and Wildlife Care Center on March 1.
At 6 p.m., I mailed board members of the Friends of Shipley Nature
Center and two City Council members. I received many e-mails saying
the information was passed on to other council members and Louann
Murray and Vic Leipzig were very interested in researching the issue.
Councilwoman Connie Boardman assured me that the city would look
into the matter the very next day. In less than two days, Avitrol was
removed from the stable grounds, and the above article was printed
the following week. Efficient and effective work by all. As a result,
all of us are more informed, and there are no “bad guys” in this
story except the poison Avitrol.
I hope others in the Huntington Beach community will join me in
supporting a city ban on the use of Avitrol.
* LENA YEE HAYASHI is a Huntington Beach resident. To contribute
to “Sounding Off” e-mail us at [email protected] or fax us at (714)
965-7174.
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