Termite trouble threatens day care
Michael Miller
Insects have arrived at Miss Sherri’s Preschool -- and they’re
starting to mark their territory. Their droppings are visible on a
child’s toy stove that sits on the back patio under the edge of the
roof.
Sherri Turner, a resident of the Newport Terrace condominiums who
operates a day care service out of her living room, wants the
invaders out as soon as possible. But she’s also up against
neighborhood authorities. The Newport Condominium Assn. board of
directors, seeking to quell the area’s infestation problem, has begun
ordering the fumigation of homes with Vikane, a common anti-termite
pesticide.
The board claims fumigation is a safe and effective way of
fighting termites. Turner, however, opposes the use of anti-termite
gas in her home -- and fears the impact it might have on the 11
children who populate it five days a week.
“The main issue is health for the children,” Turner said. “When
you’re in your home all the time, the risks are higher. Some of my
kids are on breathing machines, defibrillators, putting things in
their mouths.”
Parents at her school support Turner’s position and have
petitioned the board to use another method of pest control.
“Part of the reason I picked Miss Sherri’s school for my son to go
to is that she favors an organic environment,” said Kari Stade, who
drops her son off at Turner’s home for six hours a day. “She keeps
everything clean. If they sprayed the house with chemicals, I might
have to take my son somewhere else.”
Some parents at Miss Sherri’s have already withdrawn their
children, citing concerns about the gas. But the board isn’t
budging. In a pair of recent letters, Newport Condominium Assn.
attorney David Cane asked Turner to vacate her home when the time
comes for fumigation, and threatened to obtain a court order for her
compliance if she did not.
In the most recent letter, mailed July 12, Cane said the start
date for fumigation would likely occur in late August, and that
Turner’s fears about contamination were unfounded.
“After considering the advice, information, and recommendations of
the pest control consultants and the Dow Chemical representatives,
the board has determined that fumigation is both a necessary and
appropriate means of addressing termite infestation within Newport
Terrace,” reads the letter, which Turner showed the Daily Pilot.
Cane, along with several members of the board of directors,
declined comment for this story.
Whether gases such as Vikane pose long-term health hazards is a
matter of contention. To fumigate a home, exterminators generally
tent it off for three to four days and allow residents to reenter
when the level of gas has dropped sufficiently.
“There’s very clear directions on the label regarding clearing the
structure after fumigation, to ensure that there’s no residue left
inside,” said Rick Le Feuvre, the agricultural commissioner for
Orange County. “The key is that they follow the label.”
Harvey Logan, executive vice president of the trade association
Pest Control Operators of California, and Marion Moses, president of
the nonprofit Pesticide Education Center, also said that Vikane would
not have lasting effects on a home once exterminators had cleared it.
However, a number of nonprofit groups, including Californians for
Pesticide Reform and the Northwest Coalition for Alternatives to
Pesticides, have long decried the use of toxins in combating
termites. Turner cites them as proof of her argument.
In addition to concerns for the children’s health, Turner is
worried about the effect the fumigation would have on her livelihood.
The Newport Terrace resident, who has run her day care service for
about seven years, relies on the children’s $38-a-day tuition for her
income. If she were forced to have her home gassed, Turner said, she
would close her school down for two weeks and lose the tuition that
comes along with it.
“What I would do is just completely move out,” Turner said. “I
would close my school down, put all the stuff in storage, and then
redo the entire house. I’d repaint walls, rip out the carpet, before
I opened for business again.”
Parents, who consider Turner’s preschool both nurturing and
environmentally sound, hope never to have to reach that stage.
Kellina Martin said that if fumigation occurred, she would remove her
3-year-old grandson, who is asthmatic and wears a nebulizer.
“He’s very sensitive to certain chemicals,” Martin explained. “I
don’t even have him in the kitchen if I’m using Windex or those kinds
of things.”
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