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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE –
September 29, 2006
CONTACT: Fawn Pattison
(919) 833-5333
New
Law to Protect Children from Toxics at School
School Children’s Health
Act (H1502) Goes into Effect Oct 1
RALEIGH – On October 1st,
a new law called the School Children’s Health Act will
go into effect in North Carolina, protecting children from
pesticides, mercury, diesel fumes, arsenic-treated wood,
mold and mildew at public schools in North Carolina.
The School Children’s Health
Act passed the NC General Assembly and was signed into law
by the governor this past July. It directs public school
systems in North Carolina to use common-sense, low-cost,
and even cost-savings measures to reduce student and staff
exposure to hazardous contaminants in school buildings, making
NC public schools safer, healthier places to learn and work.
The NC Department of Public Instruction will issue guidelines
for schools to implement the new law.
“It’s just common
sense,”
stated Representative Grier Martin (D-Wake), one of the bill’s
sponsors. “You don’t want toxic chemicals in
school buildings that can harm kids’ health and make
it harder for them to learn. It just so happens that we can
reduce the risks from these hazards in a way that’s
straightforward and cost-effective, too.”
Pediatrician Debbie Leiner, a
member of the NC Pediatric Society, agrees. “There
is growing scientific evidence that exposure to these common
contaminants can increase children’s risk for many
kinds of disease, including respiratory illness, learning
difficulties and in some cases even cancer. From a medical
perspective, this bill makes good sense –
to prevent serious illness in the first place by making schools
safer for kids,” Dr. Leiner said.
Beginning this fall, schools will
have to reduce students’ exposures to diesel fumes
from idling engines, coat or plan to remove arsenic-treated
wood on playground equipment, make sure there is no elemental
mercury in their science classrooms, and give all parents
and staff the option of being notified 72 hours in advance
of pesticide applications at school.
The new law also requires schools
to start managing pests with a common-sense method known
as “Integrated Pest Management,” or IPM. Schools
will have five years to fully implement the new IPM programs,
but many districts around the state are already using it,
and have even reported cost savings as a result. In fact,
several school districts will be honored by NCSU for their
leadership in School IPM at an awards ceremony in Raleigh
on October 18th. (The award winners are listed at the
end of this press release.)
"By changing simple practices,
you can have a great effect," said Mike Burriss, Assistant
Superintendent for Facilities at Wake County Schools, which
has been recognized for the success of its long-standing
IPM program.
"[IPM] is a very simple process, and it works very well,"
Burriss said. "It actually lowers my costs, because
I don't have to provide pesticides and training on how to
use them."
“The legislature did a great
job of taking a safety-first approach with schools when they
passed this law,” stated Fawn Pattison, Executive Director
of the , a group that advocates for School IPM. “The
old-fashioned way of doing things was to ask,
‘how much of this chemical can we use before we hurt
somebody?’
School systems must now get smarter about asking instead
how they can get hazardous toxics out school in the first
place. I think that’s real progress.”
The bill was strongly endorsed
by the NC Pediatric Society, , Conservation Council of NC,
Action for Children NC, the Covenant with North Carolina’s
Children, and the Chairman of the State Board of Education,
Howard Lee.
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School Integrated Pest
Management (IPM) Recognition Awards
from the NCSU School IPM Program (http://schoolipm.ncsu.edu)
October 18th, 2006, 1:00 pm to 3:00 pm,
Embassy Suites (Raleigh-Durham), 201 Harrison Oaks Blvd,
Raleigh NC 27513
List of Honorees:
I. Recognition for efforts to
implement new IPM programs
Cabarrus County Schools
Davidson County Schools
Gates County Schools
Harnett County Schools
Moore County Schools
Person County Schools
Sampson County Schools
Swain County Schools
II. Award for Implementing IPM
programs
Beaufort County Schools
Cumberland County Schools
Durham Public Schools
Northampton County Schools
III. Award for Leading IPM programs
Orange County Schools
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