This is very interesting to me ...
Sierra Club Canada apparently has made the bee issue into a national
campaign with a paid staffer.
Sierra Club in the U.S. has done neither. Rather, the HUGE implication of
losing a major pollinator is a back burner issue.
Laurel Hopwood, volunteer chair, sierra club genetic engineering action
team and volunteer coordinator, sierra club pollination protection
campaign
MEDIA RELEASE
For Immediate Release
November 15,
2013
OTTAWA -- Just as Health Canada's Pest Management Regulatory Agency
(PMRA) is considering a ban on bee-killing neonicotinoid pesticides, the ag
industry trade association CropLife named long time Conservative MP Ted
Menzies as its new President and CEO.
"Is the pesticide industry attempting
to influence a pending decision on the future of bee-killing pesticides or is
it a coincidence?" asked John Bennett of Sierra Club Canada.
Bee
pollination is essential to the functioning of our ecosystem and the
production of most fruits and vegetables. When bee populations start to
mysteriously and rapidly die-off, it's a very big deal.
In September, PMRA
confirmed
neonicotinoid pesticides (including Clothianidin, manufactured by Bayer) are
killing bees and asked for public comment (deadline December 12, 2013).
Thousands of Canadians and beekeepers have already strongly urged the PMRA to
ban the bee-killing neonicotinoid pesticides.
CropLife has been actively
waging a PR campaign to confuse the public about these pesticides - ironically
originally marketed at 'safer' than other pesticides. CropLife suggests there
haven't been big bee losses while at the same time
blaming
viruses, parasites and beekeepers for their obvious declining
populations.

Over the last decade, use of
neonicotinoid pesticides has grown at an unprecedented rate. Almost every corn
and soybean seed now arrives at the farm gate already coated with the
neurotoxin.
In Europe, where neonicotinoids were first introduced, massive
mortality of bee and pollinating insect populations led to the European Union
banning them. In 2012, beekeepers in Ontario, Quebec and Manitoba suffered
huge die-offs - and early reports from 2013 are grim as well. In early August,
David Schuit of Elmwood Ontario
lost
several million bees alone.
"The PMRA says the decision will be based
on science and there is now a
significant
body of evidence that neonicotinoid pesticides are the culprit," said Mr.
Bennett. "We are happy to see a decision truly based on science -- CropLife
clearly isn't."
Because of dangerously weak federal ethics and lobbying
rules, Mr. Menzies is allowed to become President and CEO of a federally
regulated company that lobbies the federal government regularly.
Mr.
Menzies should be very aware that there are two ethics rules that apply to him
in his new job. Under section 33 of the Conflict of Interest Act, he is
prohibited from acting in any way that takes "improper advantage" of his time
as a Cabinet minister, and subsection 34(2) prohibits him from giving "advice
to his or her client, business associate or employer using information that
was obtained in his or her capacity as a public office holder and is not
available to the public."
Whether or not Mr. Menzies 'technically' does any lobbying,
his position as President and CEO of CropLife clearly opens government doors
and provides valuable insight on the internal workings of the Harper
government.
"Are we supposed to believe Mr. Menzies will lock himself in
his new office and not take calls or check his email," said Mr. Bennett.