I've seen very little coverage of this  infested-firewood story in Iowa, 
either in newspapers or on TV, which  puzzles me.  The news release from the Iowa 
Department of  Agriculture was certainly ominous.  
 
I emailed a reporter and three editorial  writers at the REGISTER, asking 
about coverage of this story, and none  of them responded.  If any media people 
assume that spraying can  take care of any problems if borers emerge, a la spot 
 infestations of gypsy moths, they're in for a surprise.  Based on  
experience in other states, nothing stops emerged borers, and unlike  gypsy moths, 
which only defoliate trees, borers kill them.
 
I read in the Ames DAILY TRIBUNE that live  emerald ash borer larvae have 
been found in the Taylor firewood in  Wisconsin and Minnesota, so I assume some 
of the Taylor's Wood firewood  sold in Iowa may be infested as well.  If it 
isn't burned, any  borers in it could emerge any day now.  Good luck to Iowa's 
seventy  million ash trees.
 
ch
 
***
 
From the MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINAL, May 6,  2007 
 
Editorial:  A lack of vigilance
 
Bought any Taylor's Wood firewood lately at a Menards home  improvement 
store? Burn it. Now. Then send Menards a letter asking why two of  its southern 
Wisconsin stores were still selling the firewood more than a week  after state 
authorities had told the company to remove Taylor's Wood products  from shelves.
 
Maybe that will send a message to Menards honchos, some of whose employees  
seem to have trouble remembering what they're supposed to sell and what they're 
 not supposed to sell.  
The firewood recall order came April 13. Menards was given 24 hours to remove 
 all firewood that violated a federal quarantine designed to keep the emerald 
ash  borer from stealing into the state on the back of a log cut outside 
Wisconsin.  More than a week later, according to state officials, banned wood was 
still for  sale at two stores. 
Nor is this the first time Menards has run afoul of government regulators  
trying to contain a pest that has already destroyed more than 20 million ash  
trees in the Midwest. 
The home improvement chain was investigated by Michigan officials in 2004 for 
 selling live ash trees where the sale of such trees was prohibited. The 
company  got a warning. Last summer, a Menards store in Traverse City, Mich., was 
caught  doing the same thing. The Michigan Agriculture Department is seeking 
$7,000 in  fines. 
Wisconsin officials might want to consider what they can do to send a strong  
message to Menards. The emerald ash borer is a serious threat to Midwestern  
trees. If left unchecked, the tree-killing bug could cause up to $300 billion 
in  damage, according to the U.S. Forest Service. Checking it requires 
constant  vigilance on the part of officials, businesses and consumers. 
Menards says it has pulled 23,014 bundles and acquired a new firewood vendor. 
 And a Minnesota official said the company has been "very cooperative" in the 
 recall effort in that state. 
But Menards is a Wisconsin company. It should have been doubly vigilant in  
its own backyard.  
For more on invasive species and firewood rules, go to 
_www.dnr.state.wi.us/invasives/firewood_ (http://www.dnr.state.wi.us/invasives/firewood) 
***

Cindy  Hildebrand
[log in to unmask]
Ames, IA  50010

"The firm,  undulatory flight of the hairy woodpecker is a frequent sight, 
and his resolute,  penetrating pimp...is often heard along the streets." (Selden 
Lincoln  Whitcomb, describing Grinnell, Iowa in 1885)



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