THE ACCIDENTAL CRUSADER
From: Stephen Tvedten <steve@getipm.com>,
Get Set Inc. (www.getipm.com), Thur, 17 Oct 2002
To: Paul Helliker <phelliker@cdpr.ca.gov>,
Director, State of California, Department of Pesticide Regulation
cc: Christine Whitman whitman.christine@epa.gov
Brad Evenson is a health reporter for the National Post in Canada...This
article appeared in Saturday Night magazine... Dr. Bruinsma recently lost her
fight with cancer and passed away last February...She recently won the 2002
Canadian Environment Award for her work on pesticides...The fight to ban
pesticides continues across Canada because of her and many other innocent
victims of these unnecessary poisons...
THE ACCIDENTAL CRUSADER
Some scientists believe pesticides can cause cancer. Dr. Nicole Bruinsma
isn't convinced that's what led to hers. Still, she's leading the battle to
have them banned By Brad Evenson Across Canada right now, millions of tiny
flags are being unfurled on lawns, warning children to stay away. Men and
women in work pants, rubber boots, and gloves are spraying the turf, mostly
with a synthetic growth hormone called 2,4-D. The chemical causes the cells of
leafy plants to divide uncontrollably, like a cancer, so that weeds such as
dandelion and crabgrass literally grow themselves to death.
This is no small enterprise. Almost seven in ten Canadian homeowners spray
their grass, or dust their roses and shrubs with chemicals.
Last year, sales of non-agricultural pesticides exceeded $100 million in
Canada, not counting the fees charged by lawn-care companies. Many people
spray the pesticides themselves -- and they really pour it on.
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency says lawn owners apply ten times
more pesticide per square foot than farmers do on their crops.
The result is a homeowner's dream: lush emerald grass free of weeds, the
kinds of lawns John Deere commercials are made of. And something else:
residues of these pesticides run into groundwater, are carried aloft by
evaporation, are ingested by birds, or worms, or smeared on the palms of
cartwheeling children.
Opponents of spraying believe the rising rates of asthma, environmental
sensitivity, and certain cancers are caused by herbicides and insecticides.
The tiny paper flags are, to them, the banner of a hated, occupying army.
There is mounting evidence that the chemical residues may be toxic and that
the indiscriminate use of pesticides could be an environmental disaster in the
making.
Now, more and more cities are banning the chemicals, or discouraging their
use through public information campaigns. This is not about agriculture --
without pesticides, billions might starve. And some insecticides, notably ddt,
save lives in Africa and Asia by killing mosquitos that spread malaria. This
is about grass. The fight, involving town councils and lawn-care companies
that use pesticides, has reached the Supreme Court of Canada. Last May, a
House of Commons committee recommended a gradual phasing out of "cosmetic"
pesticides -- synthetic chemicals used for ornamental, not food-producing,
purposes. It's a huge battle. It's going to get bigger.
Behind much of it is forty-one-year-old Nicole Bruinsma, a family doctor
from Chelsea, Quebec. Four years ago, she lost her right breast to cancer. In
1997, during her months of chemotherapy, she happened to see the film
Exposure: Environmental Links to Breast Cancer. Sitting in a dimly lit room,
watching the film, it struck her that pesticides may have a link to cancer.
"You hear about the penny dropping?" she laughs. "Well, the penny really
dropped."
Bruinsma, a general practitioner with a degree in biology, was no stranger
to ecology. Her husband, Scott Findlay, is an environmental biologist. One of
his Ph.D. students, Jeff Houlahan, had been researching declines in global
amphibian populations; one explanation is that pesticides are involved. Still,
the film opened her eyes.
"These things are designed to kill life, and therefore they must have an
effect on living tissue, of which we are made, right?" she says.
"I fervently believe that it makes sense."
Over the next year, as she began reading more scientific literature and
talking to medical colleagues, the environmental-toxins explanation came up
again and again, though there was nothing conclusive. She searched her
memories of an idyllic country childhood, but could not recall ever having any
abnormal exposure to pesticides. "I wasn't raised in a toxic waste site or
under high-tension wires," she says. "My mother wasn't exposed to anything
dramatic during her pregnancy." But even if she couldn't be sure her own
cancer was caused by these toxins, she was struck by what she read, and by the
notion that the risk -- toxic exposure -- wasn't worth the reward -- a
beautiful lawn. So when a neighbour urged her to join the campaign to ban
their use in Chelsea, she jumped in.
Since 1998, she has spearheaded efforts to ban cosmetic pesticides both in
Chelsea and across Canada. She is not blind to the impact her own story had.
"The fact that I had breast cancer gave it the really personal element that
made people stop and think," she says. When the House of Commons environment
and sustainable-development committee released its 200-page report on
pesticides, "Making The Right Choice," it criticized cosmetic pesticide use
and quoted her extensively.
It should have been a time for jubilation. But Bruinsma found no time to
celebrate. The cancer was back, and this time, her entire body was riddled
with it. Weeks earlier, she had disappeared to a clinic in the Bahamas in
search of an alternative cure. She was beginning another intense personal
battle, this time for her life.
North America's obsession with mowed lawns can be traced back to the late
eighteenth century, when the landscape architect Andr? LeN?tre grew small
lawns in the gardens at the Palace of Versailles. Until then, grass was not
cultivated for ornamental reasons; it fed cows.
The lawn aesthetic was quickly adopted in England, and by the
mid-nineteenth century it had caught on in North America, though it was mostly
wealthy estates that had lawns.
Then, a simple game changed everything: golf. According to Virginia Scott
Jenkins, author of The Lawn, A History of an American Obsession, the game had
a huge influence in popularizing lawns. Once content to play on cow pastures,
U.S. golfers had begun, by the early
1890s, to demand the luxury of smoother surfaces. Through an ad placed in a
farm journal in 1905, the O. M. Scott & Sons seed company sold 5,000 pounds of
Kentucky bluegrass seed, typically used for livestock pastures, to a New York
real-estate company then building one of the first golf courses in the U.S. It
caught on. The company got membership lists from golf clubs and sent
advertising material to the men, who they thought would appreciate a yard that
looked like a golf green.
It didn't take long for the notion to germinate with average homeowners.
Sam Snead and other golf professionals advertised grass seed and other
lawn-care products in the 1930s and 1940s. The golf industry even paid for
federal research into hardy grasses. Across postwar North America, suburbs
were rising from agricultural land on the outskirts of cities, covered row on
row with uniform carpets of flat, mowed grass.
Environmentalists claim that the widespread use of lawn chemicals can be
traced to 1956, when the Masters Tournament at Augusta National golf course in
Georgia was televised for the first time. Suddenly, everyone wanted
Masters-quality grass. And pesticide companies had something that could help:
2,4-D, pioneered in the 1940s to make crops grow faster. The U.S. Army used
2,4-D, along with another herbicide, to create Agent Orange to kill crops and
jungle trees in Vietnam and increase visibility for warplanes. Back home,
folks used 2,4-D, a close cousin of Agent Orange, for dandelions. And once the
weeds were dead, people wanted to be rid of annoying flies and mosquitoes,
too. Tanker trucks would trundle down suburban lanes spraying the toxic
insecticide ddt to kill mosquitoes. Children often frolicked in the clouds. It
smelled sweet, like fruit.
In 1962, the biologist Rachel Carson decried this practice in her book
Silent Spring, warning of the ecological and health dangers of ddt. Silent
Spring triggered the first stirrings of a consumer-oriented movement to
protect the environment. Although scientists refuted the claim that ddt had
led to the extinction of several bird species, the U.S. government banned its
use in 1972.
Canada soon followed. By the time Nicole Bruinsma met Scott Findlay, her
future huband, on a research project, when they were both banding snow geese
near Churchill, Manitoba, in 1980, the green movement had hit the mainstream.
Until she developed cancer, Bruinsma enjoyed a relatively carefree life.
The daughter of Dutch immigrants, she grew up in the countryside west of
Montreal.
Bruinsma and Findlay married in the mid-eighties. She worked as a general
practitioner, and he was a tenure-track biology professor at the University of
Ottawa. In 1989, they bought a sprawling brick house in the village of
Chelsea, north of Ottawa. It overlooked a farmer's field to the south.
Hardwood hills loomed to the west. That year, they had a daughter; two more
would follow.
Like many residents of Chelsea, they loved outdoor sports. Patients
invariably got advice from Bruinsma to exercise and eat well, and she led by
example. A tall, strikingly beautiful woman with dirty-blonde hair, she was a
graceful swimmer and cross-country skier. It was a running joke among her
fellow doctors that Bruinsma was "a granola exercise freak," a woman who spent
a lot of time outdoors.
Her cancer came as a shock. Bruinsma noticed the lump in 1996. She admits
that, like many women, she ignored it for a few months, figuring it was
nothing and would probably go away. Two years earlier, she had had a false
alarm, a lump that turned out to be a cyst. Then, one winter night in 1997,
she woke up suddenly. "I thought, 'Whoa, what am I doing?' " she says. " 'I've
gotta deal with this.' " Two weeks later, when the lump was found to be
cancer, a surgeon removed the breast.
"I remember my colleagues saying, 'Of all of us ... it's impossible that
it's you,' because everybody used to tease me about my carrot sticks for
lunch. I'd always be the one exercising."
If Bruinsma could get cancer, people said, anyone could. She had
investigated her family history and learned after genetic testing that she had
no predisposition to breast cancer. She had no unhealthy habits, but just in
case, she switched to eating only organic foods.
To be certain she was rid of her cancer, Bruinsma underwent radiation and
chemotherapy. She also saw a psychiatrist to focus her mental energies on
getting well. "And the other measure that I took, which was sort of over and
above most, was that I actually had a prophylactic mastectomy [breast removal]
on the left side," she says, a precaution that reduces the chance of a
recurrence.
Throughout this time, she struggled to find an explanation for the cancer.
Little she read seemed to fit. In the summer of 1997, she attended the first
World Conference on Breast Cancer at Queen's University in Kingston, where the
film Exposure was screened. The film's thesis is that environmental factors
such as radiation, plastics, and chemical pesticides can trigger an increase
in estrogen production, which has been linked to breast cancer.
Bruinsma has a scientific mind. She knows some other environmental factor
could have caused her cancer. But she couldn't make the world stop using
plastics overnight. Pesticides, on the other hand, seemed to be a definite
risk factor, and one that was entirely avoidable.
The only reason that the vast majority of people would be exposed to them
was for the sake of a pretty lawn. As veteran activist Merryl Hammond puts it,
"Why would anyone spray chemical poisons in a suburb, where the only crop
people are trying to grow is children?"
In early 1998, with her neighbour's encouragement, Bruinsma screened the
film and delivered a lecture on environmental links to cancer before a crowd
of 200 people, including a ctv News crew, packed into a Chelsea ski chalet.
The topic struck a chord in the community, where most people live on one-acre,
wooded lots. At the meeting, someone asked, "Why not ban pesticides in
Chelsea?"
In fact, someone had already tried, though the effort had run out of steam.
But Bruinsma was a powerful spokesperson -- not only was she a physician, but
a physician with cancer, talking about cancer. When she approached the Chelsea
council about a ban, she encountered no opposition. Like many rural
communities, Chelsea does not have a municipal water system; residents get
their water from artesian wells. "When you live on wells, you don't want a lot
of chemicals getting into the groundwater," says Mayor Judy Grant. "I couldn't
imagine anybody being happy to drink the water from a well knowing their
neighbour was using pesticides." Grant asked the proponents of a ban to write
a bylaw; she would see that it passed.
Chelsea was not the first community in Canada to consider a ban.
Twenty-two other Quebec municipalities had passed some kind of pesticide
bylaw. Indeed, the province is at the forefront of this movement. In 1991, the
council in Hudson, a town just west of Montreal, passed Bylaw #270, called
"Concerning Pesticides." The first of its kind in Canada, it banned the
cosmetic use of pesticides. The following summer, two lawn-care companies,
Chemlawn and Spray-Tech, broke the bylaw and were charged. In court, they
argued that Hudson did not have jurisdiction over the issue, since they had
Quebec permits to spray pesticides and used products registered by Agriculture
Canada. But in 1993, the Quebec Superior Court ruled Hudson Council had acted
in the public interest. The bylaw would stand.
A few months later, the first draft of the Chelsea bylaw was completed.
This early version excluded golf courses from the pesticide ban, for the sake
of expediency. In economic terms, golf courses are a middle ground between
farms and lawns, since their income, and, therefore, local jobs, hinge at
least partly on the idealized beauty of their turf and greens. None of the
bylaws to date had affected golf courses.
But many Chelsea residents argued that golf courses are among the heaviest
users of pesticides, something experts readily admit. Golf greens, in
particular, tend to attract all kinds of pests, such as mould, because they
are mowed daily as short as one centimetre, making them a kind of perpetually
open wound. The bylaw was amended to give golf courses five years to quit
using pesticides and passed in December, 1998.
Meanwhile, the battle was moving from a little town to the national stage.
The following summer, the House of Commons Standing Committee on the
Environment and Sustainable Development began hearings into pesticide use. The
Canadian Public Health Association invited Bruinsma to testify on its behalf.
Bruinsma told the committee that no one on earth, not even infants, has
escaped the reach of pesticides. Experts say humans now carry at least 500
chemicals in their bodies that were not in anyone's body before 1920. Fat is
the perfect storage place for such chemicals.
Since women have a greater percentage of body fat than men, especially in
their breasts, they are more likely to accumulate persistent organic
pollutants, known as pops. The older generation of pesticides, such as ddt,
tend to rise with evaporation, are carried by winds for days or weeks, over
thousands of kilometres. In Canada, they condense under the effect of cold
Arctic air and fall to the ground or into waterways. This long-range
transportation is known as the Grasshopper Effect. Since these pops are not
easily dissolved in water, animals cannot excrete them. They tend to build up
over a lifetime, magnifying at each ascending link of the food chain, ending
in humans. "Breast milk is the most contaminated food that humans can eat,
because it presents a food that is at the very top of the food chain,"
Bruinsma testified at the Ottawa hearings. "It's more concentrated than
anything we're exposed to. And that's the first food we're putting into the
mouths of our infants."
One of Bruinsma's key points at the hearings was that molecules found in
some pesticides, including ddt, can disrupt the hormones of living creatures,
from salmon and alligators to birds. Hormone disrupters have been linked to
all kinds of illnesses, including cancer.
An Israeli study offers a hint of the effect of environmental toxins.
Prior to 1976, the levels of ddt, as well as other pesticides such as
lindane, were five to 800 times greater in cow's milk, human milk, and human
tissue in Israel than in the U.S. Its breast-cancer rates were among the
world's highest. But in 1978, the government began an aggressive campaign to
phase out these pesticides for health reasons.
By 1986, breast-cancer mortality in Israel had fallen 8 percent from a
decade earlier. Israeli scientists believe the end of ddt use caused the
decline.
The trouble is, even when chemicals such as DDT are no longer in use, they
can persist in the environment for decades. "There are certainly doses in the
environment now that still make it into the Arctic and still make it into the
fish in Lake Ontario, for instance," says the University of Toronto's Scott
Mabury. Humans ingest pesticides primarily by eating, but also by drinking,
touching, or inhaling them. Children are at particular risk. They eat more,
drink more, and breathe more air per kilogram of body weight than adults,
while their bodies do not break down harmful chemicals as readily.
Pesticide companies say their products are now much safer, and offer dozens
of studies as evidence. ddt has been banned, and common lawn pesticides such
as 2,4-D and microprop tend to break down quickly in the environment. No study
has definitively linked them to cancer.
(One study has suggested that 2,4-D can disrupt the reproductive cycles of
female rats, but further research is needed to prove it is a hormone
disrupter.) "Modern pesticides are not like the old-time pesticides," Mabury
acknowledges. "There has been a very large and important evolution in
pesticides towards lower application rates, meaning less goes out there.
[Products are] more selectively toxic toward the target organism and less
toxic to non-target organisms."
Speaking at the Commons hearings, Lorne Hepworth, president of the Crop
Protection Institute, an industry association, told MPs that companies spend
tens of millions of dollars ensuring new products are safe. "Our companies
have no interest in putting products out on the market that would somehow
present an unacceptable risk," says Hepworth. "And that's the word you have to
use. I can't say that there's zero risk in life, whether it's pesticides or
anything else.
The key here is registered products, [tested] properly and safely used." He
points out that the Pest Management Regulatory Agency (PMRA), an arm of Health
Canada, established in 1995, demands stringent testing and must approve
products before they are sold. It takes an average of ten years for a
pesticide to be approved by the federal government.
But the PMRA has not inspired public confidence. Two of its primary goals
are to protect human health and the environment, and to support the
competitiveness of the agriculture, forestry, and manufacturing sectors. To
many people, this is a stark conflict of interest.
A 1999 audit of the pmra conducted by the federal Commissioner of the
Environment and Sustainable Development and presented at the Commons hearings
found major shortcomings in its safety standards. Of the 500 active
ingredients in pesticides, it said, over 300 were registered before 1981 and
over 150 before 1960. Many pesticides, including 2,4-D, were approved
according to far less stringent standards than are in use today.
In fact, products believed to be harmful by some are still on the market.
Rotenone, a naturally occurring pesticide used across Canada, has been found
in at least one study to cause symptoms of Parkinson's disease in rats --
although some critics have pointed out that the researchers injected high
concentrations of the chemical directly into the bloodstream, which would not
normally occur. Another study presented last year at the American Academy of
Neurology's annual meeting found Parkinson's patients were twice as likely to
have been exposed to home pesticides.
While the debate over the safety of pesticides continues, it is clear we
are ingesting them. As one witness at the hearings noted, "There is a U.S.
pesticides and groundwater database, and it reviews data from over 68,000
wells in forty-five states. Pesticides were found in more than 16,000 of these
wells." In Canada, the only groundwater survey officials knew of, the Ontario
Well Water Survey of 1998, found concentrations of the pesticide atrazine at
210 parts per billion in one sample -- forty times the Canadian guideline.
Recently, the federal Liberals have supported a ban on the cosmetic use of
pesticides, though they haven't actually created any laws to enforce it.
During the last legislative session, a Montreal-area MP, Marlene Jennings,
tabled a bill calling for a moratorium on the use of pesticides on lawns,
gardens, golf courses, and parks. Indeed, riding associations across Canada
gave it such strong support it was adopted as official Liberal party policy.
However, Jennings's bill died on the Order Paper when Jean Chr?tien called the
election last fall. Likewise, the House of Commons report, after days of
hearings, seemed to disappear off the political radar screen.
At the commons committee hearings, Bruinsma did not give the impression
that she'd recently had cancer. She looked healthy. That summer, she had run a
ten-kilometre race and a triathlon. She figured her cancer was gone. She did
not shrink from MPs' questions. "Her personality was that of a crusader," says
Mayor Judy Grant, who also testified. "She was not a screamer. She was very
logical and made a lot of sense and was very passionate."
But in February, 2000, she developed a dry, persistent cough. In the
spring, Bruinsma's fears were confirmed. Her cancer was back.
Unbelievably, in spite of the radiation, chemotherapy, and the double
mastectomy, her cancer had metastasized and sent tiny clones of her tumour
throughout her body. She was stunned. "You know, I really thought I had this
thing beat," she says. "I really did. I felt that I had taken absolutely every
measure that I could think of that would stack the deck in my favour in terms
of a non-recurrence."
Unlike primary breast cancer, metastatic cancer is usually fatal.
Bruinsma's doctor suggested hormonal treatment. Within ten days, Bruinsma
had her ovaries removed in an attempt to slow down the disease. She was to
wait six weeks to decide on the next step.
Coincidentally, Findlay's aunt, Penny Williams, had recently published a
book called Alternatives in Cancer Therapy: The Case for Choice. It questions
the use of radiation, surgery, and chemotherapy to treat cancer. It also
criticizes the firms that sell cancer treatments. Historically, many of the
world's top pharmaceutical companies, such as Ciba-Geigy, ici, and Bayer have
also been the top pesticide sellers. Taxotere, a drug used by breast-cancer
patients who have previously been failed by chemotherapy, is sold by Aventis,
a conglomerate that also makes herbicides, fungicides, and insecticides. Some
patients, including Bruinsma, find this troubling.
Williams's book mentioned a clinic in the Bahamas that offered a vaccine
treatment to boost the immune system, amplifying its ability to kill tumour
cells.
"I thought, 'Maybe I should just abandon everything I'd learned in the past
seventeen years in medicine and just go completely in the other direction,' "
says Bruinsma. " 'What have I got to lose?' So, I bought a ticket to the
Bahamas, I spent six weeks there, and just got worse and worse." When she
returned to Ottawa and underwent a CT scan, her oncologist told her the cancer
was "totally out of control." His words were shattering. It was the first and
only time Bruinsma saw her husband, normally stoic, lose his composure during
the ordeal. "It was just despair, complete hopelessness and just crying for
twenty-four hours straight, just, what the hell are we going to do now?" she
said.
The oncologist said she needed chemotherapy. This time, Bruinsma hesitated.
Statistically speaking, if she had done nothing to treat the disease when it
was first diagnosed -- no chemo, no radiation, no surgery -- she would have
gotten metastatic disease about two and a half years later. "It was almost as
if I had done nothing," she says.
"So you can imagine that my thoughts around chemotherapy were pretty
negative."
There was something more. A standard regimen of the drug Taxotere, used
when primary chemotherapy fails, will only prevent metastatic breast cancer
from progressing for about ten months. "I thought, okay, I could be sick as a
dog and have all my hair fall out and live for ten months, or I could go and
try something else," she says.
Hoping that a more advanced medical treatment could be found at a German
clinic that uses cytokines, proteins that can stimulate an immune response,
she and Findlay flew to Germany. But after only two treatments, the sac
surrounding Bruinsma's heart filled with fluid, a potentially fatal condition.
She was taken to a hospital where she was injected with Taxotere. The
attending physician told Findlay to prepare the family. Unless things improved
soon, Nicole was going to die.
Instead, she got stronger. The Taxotere, a drug produced by a company that
also makes pesticides, had pulled her from the brink.
On Valentine's Day, Marlene Jennings, the Montreal-area MP, tabled her bill
again, though it has not yet been debated in the House of Commons. "I think
that the health risks outweigh the benefits of having a beautiful lawn," she
says.
In the meantime, other municipalities have begun to impose their own bans.
Last summer, after a rancorous four-month debate, Halifax's regional council
passed a bylaw completely phasing out spraying on residential lawns and
gardens by April 1, 2003.
In December, Chemlawn and Spray-Tech, the two companies involved in the
Hudson case, appealed to the Supreme Court of Canada. Lawyers for the
companies argued that a municipal government does not have the jurisdiction to
ban products approved by the Canadian government. But court observers say the
appeal doesn't look promising for the companies. After all, city governments
already ban the use of tobacco -- a product also regulated by Ottawa -- in
some public places. The judges did not seem friendly to the appellants.
"Should a municipality be prevented from protecting the health of its
citizens?" asked Justice Charles Gonthier. A ruling is expected this month.
Meanwhile, Bruinsma continues to struggle against the tide of her disease.
She writes articles and talks to fellow campaigners. She was recently made
honorary president of the Canadian Association of Physicians for the
Environment. She exercises when she can, walking and even cross-country skiing
in the nearby Gatineau Hills. But recently, fluid has begun building up in her
chest again, a possible toxic effect of her chemotherapy drugs in combination
with the cancer. Doctors took her off the drugs several weeks ago to find out,
monitoring her progress in hospital.
"I try to avoid saying I believe pesticides caused my breast cancer,
because I can't say that at all," she says. "But that doesn't mean that I
don't believe pesticides can play a role in the development of breast cancer.
Just in my personal case I don't have any proof of it." Findlay, a diligent
researcher, continues to hunt for a better therapy to treat his wife's
illness. He has sent samples of her tumours to several colleagues, hopeful
something can be found to destroy her particular cancer, or at least manage it
as a chronic disease.
Before long,
they will endure yet another dark irony. The farm near their house is now
being sold, although the buyer has promised it will remain "green." He's
building a golf course
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