P.E.I. pesticide rules still apply, reminds province - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 09:54 AM | Calgary | -12.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
PEI

P.E.I. pesticide rules still apply, reminds province

Just days after Stratford passed a bylaw banning cosmetic pesticides, P.E.I.'s Environment Department is reminding Islanders there are still provincial rules around pesticide use.

Stratford's newly-passed bylaw only bans some commercial pesticides, licensed for use by lawn-care companies

The Environment Department considers pesticides that are sold on store shelves to be lower-risk products than certain chemicals lawn-care companies use. (CBC)

Just days after Stratford passed a bylaw banning cosmetic pesticides, P.E.I.'s Environment Department is reminding Islanders there are still provincial rules around pesticide use.

Stratford's bylaw, which takes effect Jan. 1, bans certain commercial pesticides that only lawn-care companies are licensed to use.

Erin Taylor, manager of the province's pesticide regulatory program, says the Pesticide Control Act includes a long list of banned pesticide products that Island stores aren't allowed to sell.

Erin Taylor, the province's pesticide regulatory program manager, says it won't be easy for homeowners to buy pesticides from other provinces or the U.S. (CBC)
"In 2010, we made some pretty big changes to those regulations that meant that people could only buy products in small containers, stuff that was already mixed," she said.

"We consider them to be lower-risk products."

Provincial inspectors check in on stores to ensure they're only selling what is allowed, says Taylor.

Robert Gallant, owner of Atlantic Graduate Lawn Care, says the products sold in stores aren't as effective as those he will soon need to stop using in Stratford. He worries residents will be looking outside the province to find ones that do.

"The homeowner will now have to take it into their own hands, whether they purchase product over the internet or whether they purchase products from other provinces or states," he said.

But Taylor says it won't be that easy for homeowners to do.

"New Brunswick rules are essentially similar as ours. Nova Scotia's have more stringency to them," she said.

"If there are products coming from outside the country, that becomes an issue at the federal level. So they work with agencies like the Canadian Border Service to ensure that products coming across the border comply with their federal regulations."

No other P.E.I. communities have passed a cosmetic pesticide bylaw.