5:06 pm By la Macha · Immigration|Violence · Comments Off
24 Dec 2009If you aren’t sure what a pesticide drift is, you should really read this article at Orion. It not only covers what pesticide drifts are, but who they are affecting and exactly how they are affecting those people.
LUIS MEDELLIN LIVES IN LINDSAY, another poor community comprised almost entirely of immigrants, about an hour east of Huron in neighboring Tulare County. In the summer of 2006, he and eleven others from Lindsay volunteered to collect their urine every day for two weeks so that PANNA could test for the presence of chlorpyrifos in their bodies. Medellin, twenty-two, works as a dishwasher in a restaurant. He lives in a trailer park surrounded by orange trees, but figured he was young and strong and unlikely to have a toxic chemical in his bloodstream.
Yet Medellin had 7 micrograms of chlorpyrifos per liter of urine, or 4.5 times the amount of the average American adult. He fell within range, just barely, of the EPA’s acceptable level for healthy adults (7.9 micrograms/liter). One woman, a former farmworker who no longer works in the fields, had levels twice that. Only two of the study participants worked in the fields during sampling, but eleven of the twelve people tested had levels above the level that EPA data and PANNA analysis indicate would be an acceptable daily exposure for pregnant and nursing women (1.5 micrograms/liter).
11:05 am By Maegan La Mala · Health|Latin America|mexico · Comments Off
13 Jun 2008
As a former resident of the world’s biggest city, Mexico D.F., I can attest to the horrid pollution, often augmented by occasional spurts from nearby El Popo (though I insist it’s no worse than L.A.‘s smog). Capital residents are so used to it you really don’t notice it, but what they appear to be noticing now is a serious physical manifestation of the problem: the loss of their sense of smell. The BBC reports that a study
“…compared the sense of smell of people from Mexico City to that of people from Tlaxcala, a nearby community with the same environmental characteristics and altitude. The results were revealing…the residents of the capital had a less ability to distinguish between smells like orange, coffee or milk due to the high levels of pollution.”
That’s bad news but in truth there are so many smells in Mexico City that one would prefer not to smell that this might have a positive side for some. The city of 20,000,000 people, as amazing as it is, almost always smells like a mixture of bleach, garbage and tacos al pastor. Try smelling that when stumbling out of a bar at 5:00 a.m…That’s when a weak nose comes in handy.
Via / BBC Mundo
Image via el ranchero on Flickr
11:53 am By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Activism|Celebrities|Chile|Environment · Comments Off
14 May 2007Last Friday, ex-vice president-cum-documentarian Al Gore
brought his “inconvenient truth” — that we are rapidly destroying the earth — to Santiago de Chile, where he spoke before a crowd of 1700 which included Chilean president Michelle Bachelet. It seems that the message could not have come at a better time, as Santiago mobilizes in the face of the highest smog levels since 1999:
On Saturday, the Particle Quality Index (ICAP) hit 409, well above the 300 that is required for the government to declare a pre-emergency. While levels had returned to normal by late Sunday, environmentalists are concerned that the capital’s new public transport system is not living up to its promises of safer, cleaner air for its residents.
Although Latinos represent less than 4 percent of the population of the state of Michigan, Latinos are three times more likely to live in areas that have high levels of air pollution.
In general minorities and impoverished families are more likely to breathe unhealthy air. It’s unfortunate that those on the bottom rung of the economic ladder always seem to face the most obstacles in trying to “make it.”
Via / Hoy Internet
VivirLatino is a daily publication published by Mamita Mala Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse Latin@ diaspora.
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