Arcata Pesticide Ordinance
Arcata, a Northern California coastal town of 16,000 and home of Humboldt State
University —— a campus of 7,500 students —— experimented
with a ban on pesticides for fourteen years. Recently, the City of Arcata
created an ordinance that officially eliminated the use of pesticides on
all city properties.
This first-of-its-kind ordinance confirms Arcatas long time commitment to protect our residents from the effects of toxic pesticides, said Jennifer Hanan, Arcata Vice Mayor. Arcata is proving that pest problems can be solved without harming people or the environment. This surely will be a model for other cities that care about their communitys
health and safety.
Two decades ago, city residents became aware of the dangers
posed by pesticides. A regional anti-pesticide organization
based in town, Californians for Alternatives to Toxics (CATs),
acted as a resource center
for supplying local residents with information about —— and action strategies to stop —— the
toxic practices. Community involvement was achieved by organizing
from door-to-door and through the local public radio station,
which offered on-the-spot information
about the location of city spray trucks.
Arcata once sprayed herbicides on city streets, in its buildings and on trees and lawns in its parks, said Patty Clary, Executive Director of CATs, which helped the city draft the new ordinance. When residents realized how dangerous and unnecessary these pesticides are, they demanded change —— and
eventually they got it.
By 1986, the city council was composed of an anti-pesticide
majority and had received so much feedback about the citys pesticide use that it created a citizens task force to search for non-toxic alternatives. CATs director
was elected chairperson and many meetings were held with
city staff to identify the problems that caused pesticide
use. A task force cost analysis compared
the use of pesticide application to manual vegetation removal
and found that increased labor costs were balanced by decreased
costs of purchasing,
applying, reporting and storing of the pesticides. The first
recommendation was that Arcata conduct small-scale tests
of non-toxic methods to determine
the most efficient and cost-effective solutions.
The City Council received the task force recommendations
in May, 1986 and consequently declared a moratorium on the
use of all pesticides on city properties. Staff was instructed
to try out various options. Through
the years, though at times reluctant, city staff adapted
to the moratorium by finding new methods to control pests.
Often they would devise entirely
new ways to do the job because information couldnt be found about
established alternatives.
One of the biggest challenges was the citys baseball lawn. Arcata maintains the ball field used by the highly popular semi-pro team, the Humboldt Crabs, who are known to sustain winning streaks of 40 or 50 games in a row. Fans wondered what the park staff would do to maintain this athletic field which —— like other sports lawns everywhere —— was the area most heavily treated by pesticides in town. Yet, the parks staff created the first non-toxic professional baseball field in the United States, making it a true field of dreams.
Their solutions included designing tarps to cover infield
dirt to retard weed growth between games, purchasing special
tools to remove weeds and
undertaking immediate reseeding to fill gaps were weeds once
grew.
According to Dan Diemer, Arcatas Park Superintendent, From a management perspective its actually easier to not use pesticides. The amount of training and paperwork that is required for pesticide use is intense. He noted that cultural maintenance practices for grass —— such as timely mowing and irrigation in addition to aeration and thatching —— can
be just as effective as pesticides.
Landscapers used plants more adapted to local weather conditions to avoid vulnerability to pest attack. On city streets, weeds sprouting in gutters were controlled by sealing cracks and performing regular street cleaning. For pests in and around buildings, barriers and consistent sanitation practices became the first line of defense. The new methods to manage pests became so routine that workers eventually forgot they were using alternatives to pesticides. Gradually the experiment begun with the moratorium became part of the regular routine.
Years later when CATs asked for a copy of the citys pesticide ordinance, it was discovered that none had been established. The vice mayors request that the city council create an ordinance with the assistance of a working group was met with a resounding yea. The working group —— consisting of city staff, the city attorney, the vice mayor and CATs executive director —— was
charged with drafting an ordinance that established the successful
non-toxic practices as permanent city policy.
On February 16, 2000, the Arcata City Council approved by
unanimous vote the ordinance which eliminates the use of
pesticides on all properties owned or managed by the city.
Arcatas
ordinance is unique among cities because it creates an outright
ban on all pesticide use, rather
than a phased reduction. The ordinance also directs city
staff to create a pest control management plan which will
be tied to the storm water discharge
program to avoid polluting water during pest control activities.
In addition, the pest control plan educates residents about
non-toxic solutions. Pesticides
are described to include fungicides, herbicides, insecticides,
nematicides, rodenticides, dessicants, defoliants and toxic
cleaning agents used to kill
pests.
The pest control plan will be completed in late 2000 and
will establish all permissible pest control materials and methods, including
preventative measures. A methodology will be created to educate the general
public and private property owners about these alternatives in Arcata, and
its format will make it useful for pest managers in other cities.
For more information contact:
The City of Arcata
736 F Street
Arcata, California 95521
707-822-5951
courtesy of
Californians for Alternatives to Toxics
315 P Street, Eureka, CA 95501 USA (707) 445-5100 (fax 445-5151)
http://www.alternatives2toxics.org
cats@alternatives2toxics.org
Californians
for Alternatives to Toxics (CATs) was founded in 1982 by community groups
from throughout northern California to serve as a resource center for information
and action about hazardous chemicals, especially pesticides, and for promotion
of alternatives to their use. In addition to its efforts to end pesticide
use on public properties, CATs also focuses on forestry, roadside and wine
grape pesticide use in the northern California region.