Comment submitted by Carla J. Mattingly, National Engineering Regulatory Compliance Coordinator, Centennial Communications

Document ID: EPA-HQ-OPPT-2007-1081-0005
Document Type: Public Submission
Agency: Environmental Protection Agency
Received Date: December 14 2007, at 09:46 AM Eastern Standard Time
Date Posted: December 27 2007, at 12:00 AM Eastern Standard Time
Comment Start Date: December 13 2007, at 12:00 AM Eastern Standard Time
Comment Due Date: February 11 2008, at 11:59 PM Eastern Standard Time
Tracking Number: 80379ee8
View Document:  View as format xml

View Comment

I am one of many who have allergic and after the exposure symptoms to pesticides. I work in an office atmosphere where pesticide treatment is applied once per month with the exclusion of the room that I work in due to past severe reactions. For 2-3 days after applications as workers walk across carpet and stir residual particles of the fresh residue I have headaches become lethargic, experience breathing difficulties and sometimes develop skin irritations including hives. While I react very quickly to exposure, those who notice subtle clues that they don't feel quite right don't realize that over time exposure to pesticides, cleaning agents and general indoor coupled with outdoor pollutants over the course of their lifetime does produce an ongoing exposure that has lasting effects, maybe not immediately as I experience but accumulated over time. The fact that asthma, COPD in children and our elderly in at an alarming high can directly attributed to known allergens, chemical irritants, by product pollution and PESISTIDES. There are many natural versions of pest control, cleaning agents and alternative GREEN means to protect our earth and its inhabitants. Chemically produced pesticides are not among those natural versions. Below are listed known allergens posted on: http://www.musc.edu/oem/pestallr.html Pesticides known to cause allergic reactions. The following list of common names of pesticides have been reported by scientists to be sensitizers in certain susceptible individuals: allidochlor, anilazine, antu, barban, benomyl, captafol, captan, dazomet, dichloropropane, dichloropropene, lindane, maneb, nitrofen, propachlor, pyrethrum/pyrethroids, rotenone, thiram, zineb. Pesticides may be encountered as residues in food, air and water. People may also be exposed to pesticides used in agriculture, applications for pest control at home or at work, applications to roadside right-of-ways to control weeds and applications of pesticides for public health vector control programs. Carla J. Mattingly National Engineering Regulatory Compliance Coordinator NOC Centennial Communications Desk 260-750-3811 Fax 260-459-1632 cmattingly@centwire.com

Related Comments

   
Total: 4
Comment submitted by B. Sachau
Public Submission    Posted: 12/13/2007     ID: EPA-HQ-OPPT-2007-1081-0004

Feb 11,2008 11:59 PM ET
Comment submitted by Carla J. Mattingly, National Engineering Regulatory Compliance Coordinator, Centennial Communications
Public Submission    Posted: 12/27/2007     ID: EPA-HQ-OPPT-2007-1081-0005

Feb 11,2008 11:59 PM ET
Comment submitted by Dee Ann Staats, Environmental Science Policy Leader, CropLife America
Public Submission    Posted: 02/01/2008     ID: EPA-HQ-OPPT-2007-1081-0007

Feb 11,2008 11:59 PM ET
Comment submitted by Michael C. White, Director of Regulatory Affairs, Chemical Producers and Distributors Association (CPDA)
Public Submission    Posted: 01/16/2008     ID: EPA-HQ-OPPT-2007-1081-0006

Feb 11,2008 11:59 PM ET