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Who regulates lawn services? (ChemLawn)
zxcvbob wrote:
Bill R wrote: Sorry to hear about your garden. Most states regulate the lawn care industry but, in most cases, the "safe use" of herbicides is not done very well. You may also check with your county, some have some regulations that they must follow. One way to deal with companies like that is to sue them in small claims court (sometimes not worth the trouble). If you have a local TV station that has a "consumer affairs" person, it may be worth it to call them and see if they will do a story on them (especially if the lawn company gives you any "lip", which they OFTEN do). This would not be worth suing, because I can't really prove much economic damage, and it's not very spectacular. The plants may or may not grow out of the damage, and it's just a few plants affected -- all my yellow squash and maybe a few of my tomatoes and peppers, but the tomatoes and peppers have just about recovered. Only the squash was actually sprayed, and a little drift or overspray onto some raspberries. They must have used an ester formulation rather than amine, and the tomatoes and peppers just got a whiff of it. I think I'd get more satisfaction treating this as an EPA thing or a criminal tresspass issue; I don't think I could get anyone to take the criminal complaint seriously, but the regulatory issues should fly if I can find the right agency to complaint to. I'm having enough trouble this year with rabbits, squirrels, roaming cats, and cool nights. I don't need this kind of trouble on top of it. At least the beans look good and they are growing faster than the rabbits can eat them. While I like the idea of the TV station's consumer affairs, if they don't put the right spin on the story (which is likely if the ChemLawn people jump at the chance to make things right in front of the camera), it's just free advertising for ChemLawn. On the other hand, if the consumer affairs reporter puts the right spin on it, the station could expand it into a story on how organic gardening is now more in favor than better living through chemicals. One thing that hasn't been mentioned yet is having a talk with the neighbors. Tell them how disappointed you are because of ChemLawn, and show them the damage. They may not be aware that those chemicals aren't magic chemicals that only do good. Get the right dialog going, and you can show them ways they can do without the expense of ChemLawn next year. It won't save this year's veggies, but it may protect future years veggies. Of course call ChemLawn so no one can say you didn't give them a chance to fix things, but then follow through with complaints to your state's agriculture department, environmental protection department, any local county or city departments... well, just about anyone who'll take a complaint. The complaint may not result in action, but even if they sit in a file until enough other complaints come in, they doing some good. -- Warren H. ========== Disclaimer: My views reflect those of myself, and not my employer, my friends, nor (as she often tells me) my wife. Any resemblance to the views of anybody living or dead is coincidental. No animals were hurt in the writing of this response -- unless you count my dog who desperately wants to go outside now. Blatant Plug: Get Black and Decker Landscaping Tools He http://www.holzemville.com/mall/blac...ker/index.html |
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