Manitoba weeds out cosmetic pesticides in new legislation
The forthcoming pesticide restriction extends to grass around hospitals, schools and daycares
The Manitoba government has introduced legislation on Tuesday restricting the use of certain chemicals for weed control on lawns.
Pesticides would also not be allowed on grass around hospitals, sidewalks, schools and daycares under the new legislation.
Conservation and Water Stewardship Minister Gord Mackintosh said Tuesday morning the legislation will help keep children safe.
"Synthetic chemical pesticides pose a risk to human health, especially in the early stages of life," said Mackintosh.
The legislation doesn't ban pesticides outright, but it would require use of pesticides thought to be less potentially harmful.
Pesticide use in the agriculture and forestry industries would not be impacted by the province's new restrictions. The legislation won't extend to gardening; golf courses will not be affected; and the legislation doesn't apply to use of pesticides in the removal of invasive or poisonous weeds either.
The legislation is good news for some, but others argue it will complicate lawn-care for Manitobans.
"It seems like ban or no ban... it just doesn't seem like the smart way to approach this," said Ken