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Rio Mesa High

Published on Nov 19, 2015

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PRESENTATION OUTLINE

Caroline Fazio
8th grade

RIO MESA HIGH SCHOOL: HOW STRAWBERRIES MAY BE BAD FOR OUR HEALTH

INTRODUCTION

  • Farmers were banned from using a certain pesticide, but they found a loophole and are now using 1,3-Dichloropropene
  • Growers in the fields in front of the school are using about 770,000 pounds of one the riskiest pesticides around in over the past 10 years
  • Investigators are pretty certain that 1,3-D is causing one cancer case per 100,000 residents
  • It’s nearly impossible to find out who will get cancer because of it, making the victims unknown
  • If someone does get cancer from it, they won’t know if it is from the pesticide or natural causes

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INFORMATION

  • Around 2,100 students and teachers spend their school day surrounded by fields treated with huge amounts of some of the most dangerous pesticides
  • The loophole created by the state’s pesticide regulator, put people at a greater cancer risk
  • The farmers are wearing masks when spraying 1,3-D
  • They also spray DURING school hours

INFORMATION

  • There are strawberry fields with the pesticide that line The high school on all four sides
  • The students and faculty are inhaling the pesticide
  • In the short future the department will be setting rules for telling residents when fumigations are going on

WAYS TO HELP

  • They could spray on the weekends or early in the morning or late at night
  • Stop using the pesticide

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QUESTIONS

  • If the farmers wear masks while spraying then don't they know how dangerous 1,3-D is?
  • Is there an other pesticide less dangerous that farmers can use?