SMALL
TOWN, BIG CLEARCUT
Why
aren't Oregon's schools protected from pesticides?
BY
CAMILLA MORTENSEN
The once forested hillside looks like some sort
of post-apocalyptic wasteland: a cheerful green and white clapboard
schoolhouse, surrounded by stumps of trees and piles of charred,
dead slash.
It may not be a one-room schoolhouse, but the Triangle
Lake School in rural Blachly is as close as it comes. There are
a few more than 100 students, from kindergarten through high school
seniors, all on one small campus.
The school was recently rated "exceptional" by the
state for the second time in a row. But some parents in this tiny
Coast Range town about half an hour west of Eugene want to know
why their school is in the middle of a clearcut and why their exceptional
kids could get exposed to pesticides that might make them sick.
There are no laws in Oregon requiring buffer zones around schools
for clearcuts or toxic sprays. And some people in this small town
feel like it's a case of big business hurting their homes and children.
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| Clearcut
above Triangle Lake School. Photo by Gary Hale. |
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| The
clearcut looms over Triangle Lake School's playground. Photo
by Gary Hale. |
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| Photo
by Gary Hale |
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| Day
Owen and Neila Crocker |
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| Photo
by Gary Hale |
When parents drove up to drop off their kids on
the first day of school last fall, the surrounding 50 acre forest
was gone, clearcut by Weyerhaeuser. Another five acres that belongs
to the school was razed as well, at the request of the School Board.
Nothing was left around the school — no buffer, just mud and
broken branches on the surrounding hillside. Weyerhaeuser did not
respond to EW's requests for an interview before press time.
Day Owen and Neila Crocker, whose three children
attend Triangle Lake School, realized the clearcut was only the
beginning: Clearcutting is almost always followed by pesticide spraying.
The couple has been campaigning for several years against the aerial
spraying of pesticides after logging. Roseburg Forest Products recently
used a helicopter to spray over a clearcut near Owen and Crocker's
organic farm. As the helicopter swooped and sprayed chemicals for
four hours, the family videoed the spraying and went about their
farm chores. "Just because they're spraying, I can't not go out,"
said Crocker. "I have to milk the goats and water."
But after a couple hours of being exposed the spray
the couple say was drifting over them, they began to get sick. "Heart
palpitations, heart pain," said Crocker. "Imagine being the sickest
you've ever been," said Owen, "muscles shaking and spasming." They
rushed to their local doctor. Owen said, and even hours later, "My
life signs were off the chart."
If this could happen to them, they wondered: What
would happen if Weyerhaeuser came to spray pesticides on the clearcut
only feet away from Triangle Lake School's classroom doors? A small
group of parents and concerned citizens set out to fix the problem.
PESTICIDES
AND KIDS
The word "pesticide" is a catch-all for a variety
of "cides": herbicides, rodenticides, insecticides, fungicides and
so on. Under U.S. law, substances used as plant growth regulators,
defoliants or desiccants are all pesticides. The suffix "cide" comes
from the Latin meaning slayer, murderer or cutter.
Weyerhaeuser no longer plans to aerially spray the
area but still proposes to use a variety of pesticides near Triangle
Lake School through other methods. According to the notification
documents filed with the Oregon Department of Forestry (ODF), the
pesticides to be applied include imazapyr (brand names Arsenal AC
and Chopper) and triclopyr (sold as Garlon 4).
Imazapyr can cause irreversible damage to the eyes
and is irritating to the skin, according to a fact sheet published
by the Northwest Coalition for Alternatives to Pesticides (NCAP).
Symptoms in laboratory animals chronically exposed to imazapyr include
fluid accumulation in the lungs, kidney cysts and abnormal blood
formation in the spleen. Studies show "an increase in the number
of brain and thyroid cancers in male rats and an increase in the
number of tumors and cancers of the adrenal gland in female rats."
According to the fact sheet, imazapyr has contaminated surface and
ground water following aerial and ground forestry applications and
can persist in the soil for up to a year.
Triclopyr has been found to contaminate ground water,
streams and wells. In laboratory tests triclopyr caused an increase
in the incidence of breast cancer as well as an increase in a type
of genetic damage called "dominant lethal mutations."
Regulating pesticides around schools would involve
everything from these commonly used forestry herbicides to wasp
sprays and ant poison. Aimee Code of NCAP said, "There's a lot of
research talking about pesticides and children." She points to studies
that show that children are more prone to be exposed to pesticides
"through the way that they play; they are lower to the ground and
engage in hand-to-mouth activities." They also have trouble ridding
their body of the chemicals: "A child's liver, the main route to
purging chemicals," she said, "is not fully formed until 7 years
old."
Code points to a Canadian study that poses the idea
that "children have a longer life expectancy in which to develop
diseases with long latency periods." In other words, if a 5-year-old
child and a 50-year-old adult both receive a one-time exposure to
a pesticide that takes 40 years to cause cancer, the child has a
much higher lifetime risk of getting the disease because the adult
might die of other causes before the pesticide-induced cancer developed.
More than 20 research articles collected by Oregon
Toxics Alliance (OTA) show effects like neurological, motor skill
and memory problems as well as increased incidences of leukemia
and autism in children exposed to pesticides.
PESTICIDES
AND SCHOOLS
There are laws in Oregon creating logging and pesticide
buffer zones around streams for salmon. But the state of Oregon
has no law mandating buffer zones from pesticides near schools or
bus stops.
According to the Environmental Protection Agency,
pesticides can contaminate areas near where they were applied through
"erosion, migration, volatility or contaminated soil particles that
are windblown after application." The chemicals can also move through
"pesticide drift" — when droplets of chemicals are carried
through the air to nearby areas, according to the EPA. The EPA says
the agency gets "thousands" of complaints of spray drift a year.
Oregon grape growers are aware of the dangers of
pesticide drift to their crops. Studies by OSU researchers show
that "drift from growth-regulator herbicides can injure grapes half
mile or more from the application site."
Data collected by OTA show 68 instances in which
someone reported problems with a pesticide on a school campus in
Oregon since 1998. One case in April 2007 involved the possible
exposure of children and pregnant women at a Multnomah County daycare.
In another, a school bus driver in Junction City reported children
getting on the bus coughing after a plane sprayed pesticides near
their bus stop.
Last year Oregon Senate Bill 20 and House Bill 2978
proposed to prohibit aerial spraying of pesticides within one mile
of school property during the school year and within one mile of
a road that services a school property during morning and afternoon
commute times. It would also have required that the sprayer draw
up a written plan before spraying within five miles of school. The
bill didn't make it out of committee during the 2007 legislative
session, and it won't come up again until 2009. The Senate commissioned
a workgroup made up of staunch pesticide opponents, industry groups
like Oregonians for Food and Shelter (OFS), government representatives
and ordinary concerned citizens to discuss the pesticide issue.
Some members of the group, such as Lisa Arkin of
OTA, want to see pesticides kept away from areas where children
could be exposed to them. Others, such as Terry Witt of OFS who
lobbied against Senate Bill 20, don't want to see buffer zones "without
regard to the impact on land owners," and stressed the need to "define
if there is a problem." According to OFS' website, its primary
goal is in "protecting those who responsibly use pest management
products, soil nutrients and biotechnology from government over-regulation."
Without legislative protection, schools like Triangle
Lake that abut private lands where farmers and foresters choose
to use pesticides are caught in the crossfire. Some school districts,
such as Eugene's 4J, use Integrated Pest Management (IPM) to control
weeds and pests and protect schoolchildren, but the rest of Lane
County's kids and most kids in Oregon are not protected from pesticides
at their schools.
According to the EPA, IPM involves using strategies
like managing indoor and outdoor spaces to keep pests from becoming
a threat and using "less risky pest control options" first,
with broadcast spraying as a last resort. According to Arkin, Oregon's
17-year-old definition of IPM is out of date, doesn't mention schools
other than universities and needs to be revised to be in accordance
with the EPA's definition.
NO
SPRAY FOR TRIANGLE LAKE?
A small group of determined Blachly residents decided
to fight Weyerhaeuser's plan to spray the clearcut with pesticides.
The School Board had decided about six years ago
to log the school's trees whenever Weyerhaeuser cut theirs. They
were told the school's trees might blow down onto the building without
the protection of the Weyerhaeuser trees, said Triangle Lake School's
Superintendent/Principal Steve Dickenson. The possibility of falling
trees was "a bigger problem than the lack of beauty that we have
here now," he said. He also cited the fire danger of the trees so
near the building.
It has largely gone unmentioned that studies show
clearcuts often leave hillsides prone to mudslides. The hill behind
the school ranges from a 35 to 65 percent slope. Slopes greater
than 65 percent are considered "high" landslide risk, according
to the ODF. Oregon's Coast Range has been cited as an area particularly
prone to landslides.
Weyerhaeuser has offered to provide trees for replanting
the school's clearcut acres, and to create a buffer of native trees
to re-create a nature trail that was used by Triangle Lake's athletes
for conditioning. The trail meandered from the school to the Blachly
Lakeview Cemetery, which also borders the clearcut (see sidebar).
Dickenson said Weyerhaeuser offered to spray pesticides
on their own clearcut through ground application rather than aerially
spray the chemicals near the school. Parents asked the School Board
to write a letter to the company requesting it not spray any pesticides
at all. The board declined to write the letter. "It's not up to
the public to tell private owners how to manage their property,"
Dickenson said. The School Board is currently considering a request
for parental notification before pesticides are used on school property.
Dickenson, whose first day on the job coincided
with the logging, said while Weyerhaeuser intends to chemically
treat its land, he is working with the concerned parents and community
members like Owen and Crocker who want to avoid using chemicals
on the school's own acres.
The parents and nearby residents have offered to
control the weeds like Scotch broom and blackberries that often
invade clearcuts in Oregon through what is called "manual release."
Rather than killing invasive shrubs with imazapyr and triclopyr,
the shrubs would be uprooted or cut down by hand. The residents
have also offered to do the replanting of the school's acres with
native trees and shrubs that don't pose a danger to the school.
They are considering rhododendrons and huckleberries.
Paul Clements, whose office at the ODF has jurisdiction
over forestry in the Blachly area, said "reforestation is required
within 12 months" after clearcuts, with trees suited to the site.
Reforestation is done in part to prevent landslides. Most timber
companies replant mainly with Douglas fir, creating a tree plantation
to cut again in the future. "There is no rule that you have to apply
pesticides," Clements said.
One study done by the Forest Service's Pacific Northwest
Research Station showed that Douglas fir trees grew back in a greater
volume after manual release compared to herbicide spraying.
Superintendent/Principal Dickenson described the
concerned residents and parents who have come to every school board
meeting since the clearcutting as "polite and persistent" and said
they have "provided tons of data that support their position" to
School Board members. "They're passionate, and we appreciated that,"
he said.
Freelance writer and school neighbor Rob Lafferty
is chair of the replanting committee. While he appreciated the efforts
Weyerhaeuser has made, he said, "I don't like their practices."
Weyerhaeuser burnt all the slash piles on the property at once during
Christmas break, and Lafferty said that "the air quality was bad
for a day and half." Community reaction to the clearcut has been
mixed though "universally against the aerial spray," he said. The
Triangle Lake area has been a timber community for decades. But
Lafferty said that recently "The logging is all BLM and timber companies,"
not local businesses.
The parents and residents have until May to submit
a plan to the school board and get enough volunteers to remove the
weeds and replant. "My attitude is give them a chance," said Dickenson.
If the parents don't succeed, the school could still resort to chemicals.
But parents like Owen and Crocker still worry about
the effects of the pesticides the timber companies will use on the
lands surrounding the school and their farm. "Manual spray can still
lead to chemical run-off," said NCAP's Aimee Code.
Between 1995 and 2006, timber companies have aerially
sprayed pesticides 15 times within a two-mile radius of the school,
according to mapping by Jan Wroncy of Forestland Dwellers. OTA and
other anti-pesticide advocates hope that Oregon will legislate against
aerial spraying of pesticides near schools so other small towns
won't face the threat that looms over Triangle Lake School.
"Go look at our school. Go look at our cemetery.
That's what they're doing for our rural community," said Owen.
To
find out more about the effort to replant near Triangle Lake School
without using pesticides contact Rob Lafferty at rob@lakecreekvalley.info
or call 925-3999. Jan Wroncy and Forestland Dwellers (www.forestlanddwellers.org)
compile a list of scheduled pesticide sprays in Lane County,
published each week in EW. The list includes sprays adjacent to
schools. Go to NCAP at www.pesticide.organd
OTA at www.oregontoxics.org
to find out more about pesticides and kids.
Cemetery
Clearcut
On the other side of the Triangle Lake clearcut,
just a short hike from the school, lies the Blachly Lakeview Cemetery.
Francine "Frannie" Hamilton-Moon lies buried there. "She was born
and raised in the area," said her mother, Candy Moon. Frannie went
to Triangle Lake School, and her gravestone bears the images of
a basketball with her jersey's number and a horse. Ten years after
Frannie died at 18, her mother said, "I was just coming home from
town, and I drove up there like I do sometimes. I was just flabbergasted."
The cemetery, like the school where Frannie once went to class,
was in the middle of a clearcut.
Not everyone sees the clearcut as a problem. The
clearcut "doesn't bother me," Maxine Renken said. "I was raised
with logging. This wasn't the first time it's been logged, and it
won't be the last."
Renken's family goes back for five or six generations
in Blachly. Her parents and grandparents are buried in the cemetery.
She visits the graveyard regularly and is the secretary and treasurer
of the cemetery association. She chokes up when she says her elderly
mother, who has come to visit the graves with her, mentioned wanting
to be cremated rather than buried.
Renken's son is a millwright, and her husband was
a feller and bucker. "When I went to school here, everyone that
lived here worked at the mill," she said.
"Give it two or three years, and it will be green
again," she said, and pointed to a green space that Weyerhaeuser
had cleared, leaving room for more graves. "I think it looks better
than it did. I know there's people that would disagree."
Moon wants to see a law, a county ordinance or something
from the state that gives places like cemeteries a buffer zone.
"They're all saying it's going to grow back, but not in my lifetime,"
she said. Moon wants Weyerhaeuser to plant some rhododendrons, "a
few really nice bushes."
"The best I got out of them was that they would
put a stone bench up there," she said.
"If it was a small outfit, family owned, that really
needed the timber, I could see it. Weyerhaeuser has billions of
acres. What's 10 acres to them? They didn't have to do this."
Of her daughter's grave, she said, "I don't want
her in the middle of a clearcut."
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