| Literature DB >> 21867501 |
Donald C Cole1, Loren Vanderlinden, Jessica Leah, Rich Whate, Carol Mee, Monica Bienefeld, Susitha Wanigaratne, Monica Campbell.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pesticide use on urban lawns and gardens contributes to environmental contamination and human exposure. Municipal policies to restrict use and educate households on viable alternatives deserve study. We describe the development and implementation of a cosmetic/non-essential pesticide bylaw by a municipal health department in Toronto, Ontario, Canada and assess changes in resident practices associated with bylaw implementation.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21867501 PMCID: PMC3224547 DOI: 10.1186/1476-069X-10-74
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Health ISSN: 1476-069X Impact factor: 5.984
Figure 1Toronto Pesticide Bylaw Implementation Phases.
Public Education and Outreach Campaign.
| Means by which particular audiences were reached with appropriate information: | |
|---|---|
| in spring and fall - when people are thinking most about their lawns and gardens - served to remind residents of the bylaw, to balance marketing of traditional pesticides, and to support community acceptance of natural lawn care. In collaboration with Toronto Water and Parks, Forestry and Recreation, 300-500 advertisements were created and placed in major newspapers, community and ethno-cultural newspapers, City guides and newsletters, family and lifestyle magazines, transit shelters and on recycling bins [ | |
| had the text of the bylaw, answered frequently-asked questions, included guidance for professional users, provided complaint forms, and made links to relevant information from other City divisions and community organizations. Given the ethnic diversity of Toronto, some material appeared in the City's most commonly spoken non-English languages (French, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, Russian, Tamil, Chinese and Farsi). | |
| staff responded to public telephone inquiries, processed complaints, sent educational material and provided basic advice on natural lawn care. | |
| were designed to appeal to residents at all stages of awareness and activity. They contained general information, lawn care and gardening tips, information on how to prevent and deal with specific pest problems; bylaw information; questions to ask a lawn-care company, and information about the lower risk pest control products with no restrictions on use. | |
| as both restricted and exempted pesticides remained available for purchase and residents mistakenly assumed that products for sale were "approved" by the City. In consultation with retailers, a "Go Natural" in-store education program was launched in 2005. Go Natural brochures, tear-off sheets, staff aprons, posters and banners were voluntarily posted on store shelves or at cash registers and directed consumers to lower-risk products for certain lawn or garden problems. | |
| with professional stakeholders, including landscapers, lawn care companies, arborists and other horticultural professionals to support compliance and their transition to sustainable pesticide reductions. | |
| included 16 environmental and cultural organizations funded to deliver innovative outreach such as workshops, garden tours and radio shows in eight languages. Toronto Public Health also collaborated with academic and community partners to identify communication barriers and explore opportunities to improve multicultural outreach [ | |
| by City staff included expert advice through health promotion consultants, Public Health Inspectors, Parks, Forestry and Recreation staff and the Toronto Environmental Volunteers. | |
| included both small community gatherings and large events such as Toronto's Community Environment Days, the Canadian National Exhibition, Canada Blooms, and the Toronto Renovation Forum. | |
Figure 2Logic model for Toronto Pesticide Bylaw.
Relevant indicators of Toronto pesticide policy roll-out and program implementation.
| Domain | Indicator | Gardening Season | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2004 | 2005 | 2006 | 2007 | 2008 | ||
| Enforcement/legal | Bylaw complaint investigations | 1672 | 1118 | 294 | 74 | 127* |
| Warning letters issued | NA | 6 | 28 | 6 | 0 | |
| Convictions | NA | 3 | 0 | 1 | 3 | |
| Education & Outreach | Advertisements placed | 353 | 503 | 335 | 850** | 850 |
| Website - Pages of content | 50 | 197 | 230 | No info | No info | |
| Traffic/month | 4,754 | 7,999 | 12,000 | |||
| General information materials (postcard, brochure, pamphlet) | 40,000 | 20,356 | 92, 949 | 89,250 | > 75,000 | |
| Technical manual | 435 | 892 | 482 | 45 | 25 | |
| Plastic "pesticide" free lawn signs | 3000 | 1646 | 300 | Discontinued | NA | |
| Telephone Inquiries | 709 | 588 | 434 | 174 | 318 | |
| Presentations at events | 53 | 74 | 74 | 32 | 20 | |
| Go Natural retail participation | NA | 122 stores | 122 stores | 113 stores | 145 | |
| Fact sheets on natural gardening | NA | NA | > 2500 | > 2500 | > 2500 | |
*Several lawn care companies introduced a new lower-risk pesticide in 2008, which triggered an increase in complaints, though the pesticide was compliant with the bylaw.
** In 2007 and 2008, TPH initiated an extensive month-long radio ad campaign, which significantly increased the number of ads.
NA = Not applicable
Respondent* and household^ characteristics, by gardening season (n, %) (Rapid Risk Factor Surveillance Survey, Toronto).
| Characteristics | Gardening Season | Totals | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2003 | 2004 | 2005‡ | 2006‡ | 2007 | 2008 | ||
| (n = 608) | (n = 607) | (n = 1453) | (n = 795) | (n = 614) | (n = 825) | ||
| Women | 316 (52.0%) | 353 (58.2%) | 795 (54.7%) | 459 (57.7%) | 344 (56.0%) | 457 (55.3%) | 2723 (55.6%) |
| Men | 292 (48.0%) | 253 (41.8%) | 658 (45.3%) | 336 (42.3%) | 270 (44.0%) | 368 (44.7%) | 2178 (44.4%) |
| (n = 608) | (n = 607) | (n = 1453) | (n = 795) | (n = 614) | (n = 825) | ||
| < High school | 62 (10.2%) | 82 (13.5%) | 130 (9.0%) | 77 (9.7%) | 45 (7.3%) | 63 (7.7%) | 459 (9.4%) |
| High school | 118 (19.5%) | 111 (18.2%) | 269 (18.5%) | 138 (17.4%) | 130 (21.2%) | 182 (22.1%) | 947 (19.3%) |
| Some post-2ndy | 58 (9.6%) | 60 (9.9%) | 124 (8.6%) | 76 (9.6%) | 40 (6.5%) | 75 (9.1%) | 434 (8.9%) |
| Completed post-2ndy | 361 (59.4%) | 347 (57.2%) | 904 (62.2%) | 496 (62.3%) | 394 (64.1%) | 494 (59.8%) | 2995 (61.1%) |
| Missing, don't know, refused | 9 (1.4%) | 7 (1.2%) | 26 (1.7%) | 8 (1.0%) | 5 (0.9%) | 11 (1.3%) | 66 (1.3%) |
| < low income cutoff | 122 (20.1%) | 127 (20.9%) | 201 (14.0%) | 121 (15.6%) | 91 (14.7%) | 137 (16.2%) | 799 (16.3%) |
| ≥ > low income cutoff | 357 (58.7%) | 344 (56.5%) | 842 (58.5%) | 433 (55.7%) | 336 (54.2%) | 460 (54.3%) | 2772 (56.6%) |
| Missing, don't know, refused | 129 (21.2%) | 138 (22.7%) | 397 (27.8%) | 223 (28.7%) | 193 (31.1%) | 250 (29.5%) | 1330 (27.1%) |
| East York | 36 (5.9%) | 33 (5.4%) | 98 (6.8%) | 60 (7.7%) | 40 (6.5%) | 64 (7.6%) | 331 (6.8%) |
| Etobicoke | 98 (16.1%) | 76 (12.5%) | 190 (13.2%) | 98 (12.6%) | 86 (13.9%) | 142 (16.8%) | 690 (14.1%) |
| North York | 157 (25.8%) | 155 (25.5%) | 340 (23.6%) | 172 (22.1%) | 151 (24.4%) | 189 (22.3%) | 1164 (23.8%) |
| Old City of Toronto | 168 (27.6%) | 183 (30.0%) | 388 (26.9%) | 215 (27.7%) | 174 (28.1%) | 241 (28.5%) | 1369 (27.9%) |
| Scarborough | 116 (19.1%) | 118 (19.4%) | 333 (23.1%) | 175 (22.5%) | 133 (21.5%) | 168 (19.8%) | 1043 (21.3%) |
| York | 29 (4.8%) | 32 (5.3%) | 70 (4.9%) | 48 (6.2%) | 27 (4.4%) | 34 (4.0%) | 240 (4.9%) |
| Other | 1 (0.2%) | 1 (0.2%) | 2 (0.1%) | 1 (0.1%) | 3 (0.5%) | 0 (0.0%) | 8 (0.2%) |
| Missing, don't know, refused | 3 (0.5%) | 11 (1.8%) | 19 (1.3%) | 8 (1.0%) | 6 (1.0%) | 9 (1.1%) | 56 (1.1%) |
| Yes | 333 (54.8%) | 289 (47.5%) | 896 (62.2%) | 479 (61.7%) | 308 (49.7%) | 421 (49.7%) | 2726 (55.6%) |
| No | 265 (43.6%) | 312 (51.2%) | 529 (36.7%) | 294 (37.8%) | 308 (49.7%) | 421 (49.7%) | 2129 (43.4%) |
| Missing, don't know, refused | 10 (1.6%) | 8 (1.3%) | 15 (1.0%) | 4 (0.5%) | 4 (0.6%) | 4 (0.6%) | 46 (0.9%) |
| Yes | 81 (24.3%) | 77 (26.6%) | 193 (21.5%) | 97 (20.3%) | 72 (23.4%) | 98 (23.3%) | 618 (22.7%) |
| No | 248 (74.5%) | 202 (69.9%) | 693 (77.3%) | 376 (78.5%) | 232 (75.3%) | 316 (75.1%) | 2067 (75.8%) |
| Missing, don't know, refused | 4 (1.2%) | 10 (3.5%) | 10 (1.1%) | 6 (1.3%) | 4 (1.3%) | 7 (1.7%) | 41 (1.5%) |
‡ Explicit oversamples of those with lawns occurred for the 2005 (n = 355) and 2006 (n = 179) gardening seasons
†The cut-offs are based on income before taxes for a 2 person household in a community size of 500,00 and over. Since the cut-off for a 2 person household in a community size of 500,000 and
over is 27,601, a value within an income category ($20,000 to $29,999), all respondents within this category were designated below the LICO. All respondents within income categories > 30,000 were designated above the LICO.
Respondent* & household^ lawn care awareness and practices, City of Toronto, 2003-2009 All households (n, %).
| Lawn Care Awareness & Practices | Gardening Season | Totals | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2003 | 2004 | 2005 | 2006 | 2007 | 2008 | ||
| Aware of pesticide bylaw*†(wgtd counts, wgtd %) | NA | NA | (n = 1452) | (n = 794) | (n = 614) | (n = 825) | (n = 3684) |
| Yes | 734 (50.6%) | 520 (65.4%) | 415 (67.8%) | 570 (69.2%) | 2239 (60.8%) | ||
| No | 133 (9.2%) | 80 (10.1%) | 48 (7.8%) | 75 (9.1%) | 335 (9.1%) | ||
| Missing, Don't Know, Refused | 585 (40.3%) | 195 (24.5%) | 151 (24.6%) | 179 (21.8%) | 1110 (30.1%) | ||
† Question pestby_1 from Pesticide Awareness Module in RRFSS. Some communities have bylaws that limit the outdoor use of pesticides, some are thinking about it and others do not. Do you think that "Name of Health Unit inserted here" currently has a bylaw that limits the outdoor use of pesticides?
Respondent* & household^ lawn care awareness and practices, City of Toronto, 2003-2009 Only households with lawns (n, %, 95% CI for key practices).
| Lawn Care Awareness & Practices | Gardening Season | Totals | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2003 | 2004 | 2005 | 2006 | 2007 | 2008 | ||
| Lawn care company applied pesticides^ † | |||||||
| Yes | 49 (14.7%, 10.9 - 18.5) | 40 (13.8%) | 69 (7.7%) | 18 (3.8%) | 9 (2.9%) | 19 (4.5%, 2.5 - 6.5) | 204 (7.5%) |
| No | 18 (5.4%) | 27 (9.3%) | 86 (9.6%) | 69 (14.4%) | 52 (16.9%) | 66 (15.7%) | 318 (11.7%) |
| Missing & Not Applicable | 266 (79.9%) | 222 (76.8%) | 741 (82.7%) | 392 (81.8%) | 247 (80.2%) | 336 (79.8%) | 2204 (80.9%) |
| Household member applied pesticides^‡ | |||||||
| Yes | 82 (24.6%, 20.0 - 29.3) | 58 (20.1%) | 145 (16.2%) | 83 (17.3%) | 43 (14.0%) | 47 (11.2%, 8.1 - 14.2) | 458 (16.8%) |
| No | 229 (68.8%) | 205 (70.9%) | 708 (79.0%) | 375 (78.3%) | 248 (80.5%) | 350 (83.1%) | 2115 (77.6%) |
| Missing & Not Applicable | 22 (6.6%) | 26 (9.0%) | 43 (4.8%) | 21 (4.4%) | 17 (5.5%) | 24 (5.7%) | 153 (5.6%) |
| Aware of Natural Lawn Care Campaign*§(wgtd counts, wgtd%) | NA | NA | (n = 977) | (n = 531) | (n = 344) | (n = 456) | (n = 2308) |
| Yes | 359 (36.8%) | 210 (39.4%) | 133 (38.8%) | 172 (37.8%) | 875 (37.9%) | ||
| No | 473 (48.4%) | 300 (56.5%) | 197 (57.3%) | 269 (59.1%) | 1239 (53.7%) | ||
| Missing, Don't Know, Refused | 145 (14.9%) | 22 (4.1%) | 14 (3.9%) | 14 (3.1%) | 195 (8.4%) | ||
| Lawn care company used natural lawn care methods^° | |||||||
| Yes | 16 (4.8%, 2.5 - 7.1) | 29 (10.0%) | 67 (7.5%) | 49 (10.2%) | 32 (10.4%) | 50 (11.9%, 8.8 - 15.0) | 243 (8.9%) |
| No | 23 (6.9%) | 21 (7.3%) | 46 (5.1%) | 19 (4.0%) | 13 (4.2%) | 17 (4.0%) | 139 (5.1%) |
| Missing & Not Applicable | 294 (88.3%) | 239 (82.7%) | 783 (87.4%) | 411 (85.8%) | 263 (85.4%) | 354 (84.1%) | 2344 (86.0%) |
| Household member used natural lawn care methods^¶ | NA | ||||||
| Yes | 131 (45.3%, 39.6 - 51.1) | 518 (57.8%) | 290 (60.5%) | 196 (63.6%) | 279 (66.3%, 61.7 - 70.8) | 1414 (51.9%) | |
| No | 130 (45.0%) | 333 (37.2%) | 163 (34.0%) | 97 (31.5%) | 109 (25.9%) | 832 (30.5%) | |
| Missing & Not Applicable | 28 (9.7%) | 45 (5.0%) | 26 (5.4%) | 15 (4.9%) | 33 (7.8%) | 480 (17.6%) | |
† Question pbl_3 from Pesticides and Lawns Module in RRFSS. Did the lawn care company use any pesticides on your lawn to kill weeds or insects?
‡ Question pbl_8 from Pesticides and Lawns Module in RRFSS. There are also many commercial pesticides available off the shelf, such as Roundup, Killex and Weed and Feed, for HOME AND GARDEN use. Now some questions about these types of pesticides.
If pbl_2 = 1 (if hired/paid a lawn care company)Besides the services provided by the lawn care company, so far this year*, have you or someone else in YOUR HOUSEHOLD used pesticides on your LAWN to get rid of weeds or insects?
If pbl_2 = 5 (if not hired/paid a lawn care company]So far this year*, have YOU or someone else in YOUR HOUSEHOLD used pesticides on your LAWN to get rid of weeds or insects?
§ Question ng_1 from Pesticide Campaigns Module in RRFSS. Have you seen or heard ANYTHING about the Naturally Green Campaign in your community? The campaign includes lawn signs, brochures, and ads on the radio which encourage people to avoid pesticides and try pesticide free methods.
° Question pbl_7 from Pesticides and Lawns Module in RRFSS. [PBL_6 = No]Did they (the lawn care company) use any natural lawn care/pesticide-free methods?/[PBL_6 = Yes] And did they use it?
¶ Question pbl_10 from Pesticides and Lawns Module in RRFSS.
If pbl_2 = 1 (if hired/paid a lawn care company) Besides the services provided by the lawn care company, have YOU or someone else in YOUR household used pesticide-free methods such as hand weeding or used products such as corn gluten on your lawn?
If pbl_2 = 5 (If not hired/paid a lawn care company), So far this year*, have YOU or someone else in YOUR household used pesticide-free methods such as hand weeding or used products such as corn gluten on your lawn?
Logistic regression models of variables associated with respondent awareness or household practice outcomes, weighted with individual level variable weight (Odds Ratio, [Standard Error], significant coefficients bolded).
| Independent variables | Dependent variable | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Respondent aware of pesticide bylaw | Lawn care company applied pesticides | Household member applied pesticides | Respondent | Lawn care company used natural lawn care methods (n = 196) | Household member used natural lawn care methods (n = 1283) | |
| Man | 0.77 [0.37] | |||||
| < high school | 0.75 [0.53] | 1.02 [0.24] | 0.34 [1.06] | |||
| highHigh school | 0.98 [0.35] | 1.16 [0.48] | 0.89 [0.16] | |||
| > high school | 1.01 [0.23] | 1.04 [0.22] | 0.94 [0.20] | 0.38 [0.73] | 0.97 [0.24] | |
| 1.03 [0.29] | ||||||
| < low income cutoff | 1.12 [0.24] | 0.80 [0.20] | ||||
| Etobicoke | 0.65 [0.36] | 1.30 [0.60] | 1.07 [0.79] | 1.15 [0.28] | ||
| North York | 0.94 [0.22] | 1.67 [0.76] | ||||
| Old City of Toronto | 0.79 [0.62] | 0.94 [0.29] | 1.14 [0.21] | 1.12 [0.26] | ||
| Scarborough | 0.78 [0.34] | 1.92 [0.28] | 0.94 [0.22] | 0.90 [0.26] | ||
| York | 1.15[0.36] | 1.17 [1.32] | 1.15 [0.38] | 1.12 [1.25] | 1.20 [0.36] | |
| Other | NU | 3.51e-05 [393.7] | 1.02 [1.35] | NU | NU | |
| (2005) | (2003) | (2003) | (2005) | (2005) | (2005) | |
| 2004 | NA | 0.97 [0.23] | NA | NA | NA | |
| 2005 | NA | NA | NA | NA | ||
| 2005 Oversample | 1.13 [0.29] | 0.81 [0.22] | ||||
| 2006 | 1.08 [0.24] | 1.04 [0.16] | ||||
| 2006 Oversample | 0.02 [1.09] | 0.71 [0.29] | 1.44 [0.70] | |||
| 2007 | ||||||
| 2008 | ||||||
| Pesticide bylaw awareness | NU | NU | NU | NU | NU | |
| Natural Lawn Care Campaign lawn care campaign awareness | NU | NU | NU | |||
NA indicates not available in gardening season
NU indicates variable not used for the model because not appropriate as variable to be dependent variable, not included as wanted to include all seasons, or co-variation required selection between two awareness variable.
Figure 3Adjusted* odds ratios (95% confidence intervals (CI)) for reported . *Adjusted for respondent gender & education, household income & location. ^ Hence OR are slightly different from those in table 4