OPINION Page 4 Thursday, December 4, 1986 The Michigan Doily Edien mgdant M Edited and managed by students at The University of Michigan The poisoning pestacides Vol. XCVII, No. 64 420 Maynard St. Ann Arbor. MI 48109 Unsigned editorials represent a majority of the Daily's Editorial Board All other cartoons, signed articles, and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. Seeping problem T OXIC WASTE HAS become a severe hazard to the people and environment of Michigan. Solu - tions require enforcement of federal and state laws regulating toxic waste disposal and storage. Yet, neither have been intense nor effective enough to produce ac - ceptable results. Michigan is home to some of the worst toxic waste problems in the nation; only New York and New Jersey claim to have more. The Michigan Department of Natural Resources listed at least 1,200 toxic waste sites in the state which pose actual or potential threats to local populations. The state has 1,000 known or sus - pected cases of groundwater con - tamination by toxic substances. This is particularly disturbing since nearly one-half of Michigan's drinking water is groundwater. Contamination by toxic chemicals results from a number of activities, most of them related to industry. Discharges from industrial and municipal complexes pollute the local environment and, carried by wind currents, also contaminate areas many miles away. In ad - dition, disposal of toxic waste in landfills and storage facilities results in leakage over time. Two laws, one federal and one state, are the primary means of rectifying toxic waste problems in Michigan. Both the federal Super - fund Act and the Michigan Environmental Response Act are funded by tax revenues. Govern - ment officials admit that it will cost billions of dollars to clean up toxic waste sites in Michigan alone. Tax revenues just barely cover testing and evaluating costs, leaving little, if any, money for actual clean-up. Michigan has 59 sites on the federal Superfund list-only one has been cleaned- up. Legal actions and penalties are levied by state and federal officials against violators of hazardous waste laws. Negligent companies accept the weak penalties, most often in the form of fines, and are not encouraged to cease their illegal activities. To a mutli-million dollar industrial corporation, as many of the violators are, fines are not very damaging. Individuals within companies should be charged with criminal offenses regarding toxic waste violations, rather than the company as a whole being prosecuted. Companies are more susceptible to change when their employees and infrastructures are affected than when they are confronted as a unit. The fines and financial penalties levied against violators should be stiffened andt increased. The money collected would serve to alleviate the burden of clean-up costs from the taxpayers and put on those who are the source of the problem. By David Austin The United Nations World Health Organization conservatively estimates that 500,000 farm workers are poisoned every year through direct contact with pesticides. That is, at least once a minute someone is poisoned. Yet the use of dangerous pesticides continues to increase, both here and abroad. Farm workers in the United States are protected by laws that regulate what pesticides can be used and in what circumstances. In spite of this, the United Farm Workers' union (UFW) estimates that 300,000 workers are poisoned annually and a Federal task force recently reported that half of the nation's five million agricultural workers risk becoming seriously ill, perhaps fatally, in the normal course of their work. Clearly, there is a great danger posed by the indiscriminate use of pesticides. Yet, when the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) decides whether or not a chemical is too toxic to be used, it does not take into account the close contact field hands have with pesticides. Instead, it assumes that farm workers only absorb the small amounts of pesticides found in foods. Furthermore, the laws that do protect farm workers are not always enforced. The UFW has documented numerous cases in which workers were sprayed with pesticides while in the fields or were forced (through threats of losing their jobs) to work in fields that had just been sprayed. For example, on August 5, 1985 a migrant worker named Juan Chabolla was ordered to work in a tomato field near San Diego, CA that had just been sprayed with the pesticide Monitor. After complaining about the fumes, he collapsed and later died without receiving medical treatment. In another incident, a farm worker named Zacarius Ruiz sprayed the pesticide Dinoseb on a cotton field in Texas. Because the sprayer leaked and he wore no protective clothing, Ruiz absorbed the chemical through his skin Austin is a LSA freshman and became ill. At a local hospital he was given asprin, which compounded the illness. He died a few hours later. Those are just two of many documented incidents in which existing regulations were either inadequate to protect workers or not followed by growers and enforced by the EPA. The situation of workers in the Third World is, if anything, worse than that of their counterparts in the U.S. This is because pesticides that are banned here and in Europe due to health risks are still manufactured and exported to Third World countries. Most of these countries have few, if any, regulations on the use of pesticides. For example, DDT, which was banned in the U.S. in 1972, is still used in many countries to fight malaria and on crops like cotton. In Mexico, food growers insist that there are no regulations on pesticide use and that they can use whatever they want however they want to. In Columbia, government officials admit that they have neither the information nor the resources necessary to adequately regulate pesticide use. In conditions like this, workers around the world run a very high risk of being poisoned, in many cases for crops that they do not benefit from-crops like cotton, coffee, peanuts, and beef that are exported to the U.S. and Europe. We should be concerned not only with the dumping of dangerous pesticides in the Third World, but also with the crops that are grown there and exported to us. According to the General Accounting Office (GAO), one-third of the produce imported from Mexico contains illegal pesticide residues. Yet, while the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) tests every food shipment for cosmetic appearance, it checks only one in fourteen shipments for pesticide residue. In another report, the GOA revealed tlat FDA testing methods could not detect 178 pesticides for which toxicity levels have been set, nor could it assure consumers that imported food was free of 130 pesticides for which levels have not yet been set. Under such circumstances, it is almost impossible to know how much of our food is contaminated and to what extent. Consumers should not assume that food grown in the U.S. is safe eithert Permissable toxicity levels in food are set by the EPA after testing on lab animals. However, such experiments are short term, acute tests. The effects of long term, chronic exposure to pesticides are not known, so what risk do we face by ingesting small amounts of pesticides every year, for years on end? Nor are EPA toxicity levels established totally objectively. By law the EPA is required to balance social and economic effect4 with health and environmental risks when establishing such levels. Thus, the profits of agribusinesses and chemical companies are balanced against the health of farm workers and consumers. How great a risk are we willing to take? How many cases of cancer are acceptable? How many deaths? There is no doubt that pesticide use can be beneficial-for quick, intensiv farming and for increasing immediat profits. But the risk to farm workers, consumers and the environment is too great to be ignored. And there are natural alternatives to pesticides that have successfully controlled pests without reducing yield and at equal or less cost then that of pesticides. Because of this we should decrease our use of chemicals and turn to safer methods of pest control. We can support such methods b4 educating ourselves and others about the dangers of pesticide use. We can pressure Congress for a ban on the manufacture and export of chemicals that have been proven to be dangerous, like DDT, and for stricter regulations concerning pesticidecuse and worker safety. And we can support organic farmers by directing our purchasing power to organizations like Wildflour Bakery and the People's Food Co-op. If consumers refuse tc support dangerous agricultural practices by buying organic foods, pesticide practices will be changed. However, if we continue to support them, they will not be changed. We can and must act now, before we do more damage to our bodies and the environment. 4t I r --- Promises or progress? S INCE THE EARLY '70s a professed goal of the University has been increased minority enrollment. Figures released in mid-November indicate that the University has made progress toward this goal. Unfortunately, the progress has been uneven, with { some minority groups increasing enrollment far more than others. Much of this problem stems from the University not doing enough to retain minority students. The minorty enrollment figures have been heralded as a triumph by University administrators because they show an increase in overall minority student enrollment from 12.0 to 12.7 percent. This results primarily from a 0.5 percent increase in Asian student enrollment. The University deserves praises for its success in attracting and retaining Asian students. This success masks an overall failure however. Black enrollment at the University is only 5.3 percent, well below the University's goal of 10 percent and an increase of only 0.1 percent from last year. Enrollment of Hispanic student students increased only 0.2 percent and Native Americans decreased 0.1 percent this year. In order to increase minority en - rollment across the board, not just among Asian students, the U niversity nn~f e toimnrnvP defined as the percentage of students obtaining degrees in six years. One reason that Asian student enrollment has increased is the fact that their retention rate is high. Associate vice-president for academic affairs Niara Sudarkasa aknowledges the need to provide strong support services to retain minority students. Low retention rates indicate that she is not succeeding. It is important that Sudarkasa, or her replacement after she leaves at the end of the year, finds a way to implement these services more effectively. If retention were increased, overall enrollment would be positively affected. Despite decreasing black enrollment nationwide, this year's freshman class has the highest number of black students since 1983. If the University can become more accepting and supportive of minorities, perhaps there will a high percentage of black and minority students graduating in 1990. In 1983, the University publically committed itself to increasing minority enrollment. One way the Unversity can show the sincerity of this commitment would to make an effort to find a replacement for Sudarkasa who has definite plans for increasing both retention and recruitment. By doing this the University will both broaden opportunities for minorities and broaden the i!j ::.. .y « rr .. / a "'ANCUT[ R PLANE CDON ! OQY, I'M STAYIN' ON THE GROUN -S. WI) WHfERE lf';5,#j !" LETTERS: Male stereotypes victimize men too To the Daily: We have a problem in our society. It deals with the perpetuation of a rape culture ideology unto our social mores and values. . Rape culture, as I understand it to be, deals with the concept of male dominance, and how best to express it. The degrees of expression varying from simply acting only be alleviated if we all can critically examine our own attitudes about society. We examine our issues through the use of classes, workshops and especially through the media. The Daily does an effective job of providing the University with social comment on the current lack of values in our society. are used. Its sad that her conclusion is true of society, but it is not indicative of it. All men are not out on the ego trip of Rambo-ism or afflicted with the mental deviation that causes rape in our society. A lot of us may talk a mean game, but look a little deeper past the window dressing and you will find more decent people from a variety of backgrounds and I can't think of any one who fits what you describe. I'm not saying thtat they don't exist or that they are a small minority, but what I am saying is that I and many others are continually blamed for the sins of a few and I'm tired of it. The nrohlem exists Ad i