Saturday, December 28, 2013

FAN'S Report: "Fluoridation: Dirty Politics in New Zealand"

Summary report from New Zealand for 2013
December 28, 2013

by Mary Byrne, FAN-NZ

Before I get started I would just like to say thank you for all the support we have received through Fluoride Action Network (FAN). Our request for financial help with this year’s referenda battles resulted in donations totaling $3,137 from 25 people overseas. We really appreciated those donations, as we know you are all fighting your own battles so it was very generous of you to help us here as well. 

We are also really grateful to Professor Paul Connett for visiting us and giving talks. His talks have probably been the single most effective thing we have done to generate interest and activity throughout NZ. FAN also helped to pay the airfare of Dr. Andrew Harms, former President of the South Australian Dental Association, to fly to NZ to testify on behalf of fluoridation opponents at the successful Hamilton tribunal – successful that is until the pro-fluoridation PR machine went into action (see below).

Luckily, for us Paul and Ellen will be back here in early February to help us keep up the momentum that has been building here despite the fact that we lost three referenda this year. In fact, the huge effort by the fluoridation promoters to turn around the Hamilton council’s decision to end fluoridation may well backfire for them in the long run.

The Hamilton city councillors decision to end fluoridation propelled fluoridation into the national arena and, regardless of comments from the fluoridationists, it has legitimized the issue and the Ministry of Health is now feeling very threatened. They know that when we get an opportunity to have the whole issue aired on a level playing field people go against fluoridation.

Efforts to get mandatory fluoridation in NZ


Fluoridation promoters are trying to get the decision for fluoridation made by the central government rather than local government. A recent Health Select Committee report has heeded those calls and proposed the decision be moved to the District Health Boards (DHBs). This would effectively mean mandatory fluoridation as the DHBs are contracted to promote Ministry of Health policy and are not required to consult with the community. Disturbingly, the Health Select Committee included the Health spokesperson for the Green party and the Health spokesperson for the Labour party as well as some of the current government (National party) MPs. While these individuals have strong pro-fluoridation beliefs, there are many MPs in all parties that oppose fluoridation. The NZ Greens are ostensibly neutral, as they cannot reach consensus on fluoridation, even though Greens in UK and Canada are strongly opposed.

The political scene

Labour and Greens are the opposition parties, which may well make up a coalition government at next year's election. The ruling National party is at this point steadfast in maintaining the decision should be made by local councils. The only parties to be openly opposed to fluoridation are the Conservative party and Democrats for Social Credit.

While we have lost a few battles this year in NZ, we are winning the war because the antics of the proponents of fluoridation have made this into a national issue. Because of this, more and more people here are learning the truth and it is only a matter of time before that truth forces an end to this outdated practice. New Zealand has been known in the past to have the courage to buck the tide on both national and international affairs. We are looking forward to another busy year with:
1) Paul Connett’s visit in early February;
2) The High Court ruling sometime early in the New Year, and
3) A review of fluoridation from at least one council.

So watch this space. Meanwhile, here are some more details on some of this year’s events

The great victory in Hamilton

Fluoridation opponents in New Zealand achieved a great victory June 5 when councillors of Hamilton City Council after a 4-day tribunal where they heard testimony from both proponents and opponents of fluoridation (Fluoridation Tribunal) voted 7 to 1 to stop fluoridation. Fluoridation was actually stopped there on 21 June.

But after the vote the pro-fluoridation lobby went into full gear. They whipped up the kind of frenzy in the media that we have seen in other places around the world (Pinellas County, Florida; Brooksville, Florida; Portland, Oregon and Lismore, Australia). This was all aimed at intimidating the councillors in Hamilton, as well as sending a clear message to other councils around the country. Don’t do the right thing (i.e. end fluoridaiton) or you will get lambasted in the media – both local and national.

Councillors ridiculed locally and nationally

The Hamilton council members were not only chastised and ridiculed for being anti-science in a series of very personal attacks by the rabidly pro-fluoridation Waikato Times but they also received attacks at the national level. Both they and FAN-NZ received unfounded and scathing remarks from two Government Ministers, Judith Collins and Tony Ryall. They accused the councillors of being "gutless" and FAN-NZ and other opponents of misrepresenting the science on fluoridation.

Both FAN NZ and the council were very angry about the Ministers’ comments and used the official Information Act in an attempt to force them to justify their claims. But Minister Collins sidestepped the Information Act request by claiming her comment was made as an MP, not as Minister of Justice. MPs’ comments are not subject to the Act, Ministers are. This was the height of hypocrisy.

Minister Ryall also ducked justifying his comments by forwarding the request for information to Ministry of Health, even though his accusations were personal. The fact that Minister Ryall referred to the Ministry of Health suggests that he may have been misled by his own civil servants into making these false accusations.

FAN-NZ’s media release

FAN-NZ issued a media release stating that it was “totally unacceptable in a free democracy that Ministers should try to silence people and intimidate local government by bullying those who say something they or their Ministry disagrees with."

We further argued that Ministers Collins and Ryall should be promoting open transparent scientific discussion at a national level instead of stooping to name-calling and the kind of ridicule that is intended to quash dissent.”

But all to no avail. The Ministers comments were splashed all over the media and even made it onto National TV. So…
The victory in Hamilton was short-lived

Just a week after the council’s decision, fluoridation proponent Councillor Ewan Wilson, who is also a member of the Waikato District Health Board (WDHB), pushed for a referendum saying Hamilton's ratepayers should make the final decision on whether to keep fluoride in their water. Councillor Wilson’s initiative resulted in 2,500 signatures being collected (1,000 more than required). This forced the full council to vote on whether to hold a referendum on the issue.

A violation in the process

On July 4, the full council voted 7 to 6 in favour of holding a referendum. However, this decision controversially included the votes of Cllr Wilson and two other DHB members – Cllrs Martin Gallagher and Pippa Mahood, who previously had excluded themselves on this issue in accordance with conflict of interest rules in the Crown Entities Act 2004. Cllrs Wilson, Gallagher and Mahood exploited a loophole and were allowed to vote on whether to hold a referendum as this vote was considered by Hamilton Council’s lawyer’s to be about process rather than about fluoridation per se.

If the Council’s Fluoridation Tribunal had voted to continue fluoridation, would Cllr Wilson have called for a referendum? We doubt it.

We lose the referendum

The referendum was conducted by post between 20 September and 12 October in conjunction with local elections. With the great help of the Waikato Times the proponents won the referendum by 68 to 34%.

So while the Council had given the issue a full and balanced hearing over four days and voted 7 to 1 to end fluoridation, the situation was reversed by a public vote, which was heavily influenced by a combination of one-sided media coverage and ill-founded and unfair comments from two Government ministers.

But the fluoridation tap has not been turned back on yet!


Following the referendum result, a full meeting of Hamilton Council on 28 November considered the issue and voted 7 to 6 to defer a decision on whether to restart fluoridation until after the outcome of a judicial review of South Taranaki District Council's (STDC’s) December 2012 decision to add fluoride to Patea and Waverley's water supplies.

Another violation?

Cllr Wilson voted on this decision even though he was advised not to by Hamilton Council’s lawyers. Wilson claimed he was eligible because he was “open-minded” on the issue. Members of the public at this meeting couldn't help but start laughing. The term ‘open-minded’ does not appear in the 2004 Act.

Judicial review in New Plymouth

The STDC Judicial Review took place from 25 to 26 November in New Plymouth and on the final day Justice Hansen reserved his decision. This is expected early in the New Year. The case was brought to court by New Health New Zealand (NHNZ), a natural health advocacy group. NHNZ’s lawyers claimed local councils are breaking the law and breaching human rights by fluoridating water supplies.

More violations trigger judicial review in Kapiti Coast

Kapiti Coast District Council is also facing a judicial review over its 2010 decision to retain water fluoridation (Kapiti is near the capital Wellington). Kapiti Coast resident, Mike Woods, lodged a Judicial Review with the High Court in Wellington on 29 October. The legal challenge is to Kapiti Council’s decision to allow a councillor with a conflict of interest to vote. The 2010 vote was split 5 to 5. If one vote is declared invalid, the vote will retrospectively be reduced to 4 councillors in favor of retaining fluoridation and 5 opposed and will immediately end the practice in Kapiti Coast. The excitement mounts!

The outcome of this Kapiti judicial review, expected towards the end of February, may have implications for Hamilton Council in relation to its joint council/WDHB members latterly refusing to exclude themselves from council decisions on fluoridation due to conflicts of interest.

Fluoridation is, of course, NZ’s Ministry of Health official policy but it is now being challenged in many jurisdictions.

Fluoridation promoters have historically opposed referenda and in New Zealand this was reflected in a 2000 ESR Report1 recommendation that councils consider tribunals, which can involve taking submissions from professionals and lay people from near and far.

Councils can choose a referendum instead of a tribunal and this has happened.

A mixed record in NZ

Overall in recent years we have been winning. There are only 67 councils in NZ and currently only 22 have any fluoridation.

Since 2009, opponents have put fluoridation on the agendas of nine councils.

Councils took the decision to stop fluoridation in Central Hawke's Bay, Taumarunui, New Plymouth and Hamilton.

Hastings, Whakatane and Far North chose referenda. The citizens in Far North voted to stop, butHastings (binding) and Whakatane (non-binding) voted to continue fluoridation. It is likely that Hastings will continue with fluoridation but it is less certain in Whakatane where a sizeable 40% of people voted to stop.

New Plymouth, like Hamilton, held a Tribunal Hearing where the council chose to stop.

Central Hawke’s Bay and Taumarunui invited public consultation through their draft annual plan and councillors subsequently voted to stop. Lower Hutt commissioned a council report on fluoridation but a voted 8 to 5 not to hold a referendum.

Meanwhile, Kapiti Coast and Hastings District Councils lowered their fluoride levels to 0.7 ppm in 2010 despite the Ministry of Health advising them not to.

Dunedin City Council reduced its fluoride level to 0.75 ppm following the draft annual plan process this year during which Paul Connett put the case against fluoridation while the Dunedin Dental School and the local DHB produced their usual propaganda.

Fluoridation opponents gearing up for more battles in 2014

This year’s referenda results will make things a bit more challenging. In Kapiti, despite the legal challenge (or perhaps because of it), fluoridation is already on the Kapiti Council’s agenda. Meanwhile, the campaign against fluoridation will continue across the country until Fluoridation is stopped completely.

Thanks again to all those outside NZ who have wished us well. When any one of us wins we all win. Just as we were inspired by the decision to end mandatory fluoridation in Israel we hope to continue inspiring communities everywhere with our victories. Go FAN Go!


Reference:

1) Council decision-making in relation to fluoridation of public drinking water supplies, Ann Winstanley, Institute of Environmental Science and Research Limited ("ESR") for the NZ Ministry of Health, September 2002.



















Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Video Lecture on Economy for High School/College Students

"How Entrepreneurs Make an Economy Grow" | Peter G. Klein

December 24, 2013
 
"...this lecture by Peter Klein was presented at “How Does an Economy Grow? A Seminar for High School and College Students”."
 
 

Monday, December 9, 2013

Politics and Economics News Report for Today

Missouri State Senator Wants To Require Parents To Notify School District How Many Guns They Own

December 8, 2013

State senator looks to stiffen gun-possession laws

http://www.callnewspapers.com/Articles-Our-Town-i-2013-12-04-270214.112112-State-senator-looks-to-stiffen-gunpossession-laws.html

An Effective Eye Drug Is Available For $50. But Many Doctors Choose A $2,000 Alternative.

December 9, 2013
http://libertycrier.com/effective-eye-drug-available-50-many-doctors-choose-2000-alternative/?utm_source=The+Liberty+Crier&utm_campaign=b6e7d0b383-The_Liberty_Crier_Daily_News_12_9_2013&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_600843dec4-b6e7d0b383-284777229

I Lived a Day According to Ben Franklin’s Schedule and It Changed My Life

http://goodmenproject.com/featured-content/dtv-benjamin-franklin/#!pov4a


The Federal Reserve: 100 Years Of Boom And Bust (New Documentary)

December 9, 2013

Murray Sabrin | Murray Sabrin, Ph.D. is professor of finance at Ramapo College of New Jersey and co-founder and president of Conger LH, the world's first Lubrihibitor. Virtually all of Dr. Sabrin's profits from this venture will go toward funding economic education, nonprofit health centers and supporting the Second Amendment. He is the author of Tax Free 2000:The Rebirth of American Liberty and is working on a documentary on the 100th anniversary of the Federal Reserve. Dr. Sabrin blogs at www.MurraySabrin.com.

http://libertycrier.com/federal-reserve-100-years-boom-bust-new-documentary/?utm_source=The+Liberty+Crier&utm_campaign=b6e7d0b383-The_Liberty_Crier_Daily_News_12_9_2013&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_600843dec4-b6e7d0b383-284777229


 

 

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Sulfuryl Fluoride Update on the US Congressional Farm Bill


                                             


Sulfuryl Fluoride Legislation In D.C.

Sulfuryl fluoride is a highly toxic food fumigant used on post-harvest foods in warehouses and mills - but not on organic foods. Dow AgroSciences, one of the nation’s largest pesticide manufacturers, along with various food companies including the peanut industry, have spent much of 2013 lobbying U.S. Congressional respresentatives in the House and Senate in an effort to reverse the EPA's proposed phase-out of the highly toxic food fumigant sulfuryl fluoride.

If successful, their efforts would have removed key health protections from the Food Quality Protection Act, a law passed in 1996 to give more protection for a child’s exposure to pesticides. Not only would reversal of the phase-out expose children to incredibly high levels of fluoride residues on their food, but this would also make it harder for anyone living in the U.S. to avoid fluoride, as foods fumigated with Sulfuryl fluoride have no labeling requirement.

Background

FAN became involved with Sulfuryl Fluoride in 2001 when Dow AgroSciences first petitioned US EPA for an Experimental Use Permit for its use on raisins and walnuts. FAN submitted comments and formal Objections and then in 2004 and 2005 EPA approved its use and high fluoride residues on all processed food, beans, grains, flour -and much more, including a fluoride residue of 900 ppm on dried eggs! FAN collaborated with two great groups, the Environmental Working Group and Beyond Pesticides, and a masterful pro-bono lawyer (Perry E. Wallace, Esq.), to reverse EPA’s approval, through a series of substantive submissions to the US EPA.

Incredibly, after many years of hard work, in January 2011, EPA concluded that it agreed with “all” of our objections and published their proposal to phase-out sulfuryl fluoride in the Federal Register. According to protocol, EPA simultaneously solicited public comments on the phase-out. Since then Dow AgroSciences, the proprietary maker of sulfuryl fluoride, has done everything a powerful corporation can do to dissuade EPA from enacting the phase-out. EPA has yet to issue its final decision.

2013 Lobbying

This past year, Dow worked harder than ever to reverse the phase-out using their Congressional lapdogs and lobbyists in Washington, D.C. to introduce not one, but four different pieces of legislation to accomplish their goal. Fortunately, FAN was prepared to work just as hard to protect the phase-out and our nation’s children.

The first attempt in 2013 was a House bill titled the Pest Free Food Supply Act (H.R.1496), and was sponsored by Representative Tom Graves (R-Georgia) along with 14 co-sponsors from various farming states. The bill would have required the EPA to withdraw their proposed phase-out of Sulfuryl Fluoride. It was introduced in the House Energy and Commerce Committee in April, but FAN acted quickly to generate hundreds of emails, letters, and phone calls to committee members prior to a public hearing on the bill. Our intense opposition and that of our colleagues, Jay Feldman of Beyond Pesticides and also EWG, kept the bill from even making it out of the committee.

The pesticide-lobby’s second attempt was in the Senate, where Indiana Senator Joe Donnelly (R) proposed amendment #1122 ("Exclusion of fluoride from aggregate exposure) for the Senate version of the Farm Bill in June. Again, FAN and Beyond Pesticides responded quickly by targeting Agriculture committee members, generating hundreds of letters and phone calls from constituents to Senators, and working with our sulfuryl fluoride coalition to get information to Senate leadership. As a result, the amendment was tabled by the Senate leadership and not included on their version of the Farm bill.

Not to be deterred, Dow had Representative Tom Graves amend the House Appropriations bill with phase-out reversal language. In response, FAN sent staff down to D.C. to meet with House and Senate members on the Appropriations committees. In the process we made a number of legislative allies, had House members speak out publicly in opposition to the amendment, and were able to get commitments from Senators that they would oppose the amendment if it made it out of the House. So far, the Appropriations bill carrying Rep. Graves’ amendment has stalled in committee, and will not be voted on in 2013.

The fourth attempt to end the phase-out may be the most devious. In the House’s version of the Farm Bill there is a section that calls for an economic impact study of the phase-out of Sulfuryl fluoride. While this may seem innocuous, we suspect it’s really an attempt to keep the possibility of a phase-out reversal on the table in negotiations on the final Farm Bill text between the House and Senate. Not only hasthe EPA already conducted an economic impact study that showed that alternatives to SF would actually save the food industry money in the long run, but because SF is simply mentioned in the House version being negotiated by a joint conference committee, it’s possible that the language could be amended as part of those negotiations. So far, SF has not been discussed by Farm Bill conferees, and changes have not been made to the language, but FAN has continued to contact Senators urging them to oppose any SF language in the final version of the Farm bill.

If successful, a reversal of FAN’s hard fought victory would make the United States one of only two western nations to allow sulfuryl fluoride on food. Should this happen, it will increase the number of American children ingesting unsafe levels of fluoride, and create a food poisoning risk for consumers who purchase food that contains permissible levels of the fumigant. We cannot allow this to happen!

While the House appropriations and House Farm Bill amendment are still viable, our lobbying has created a number of allies for us in the both legislative bodies, and we are confident that these amendments will not pass in 2013. Of course, while we have been successful in 2013, we can rest assure that Dow will not give up their fight in 2014. This is why we need your continued support. We both need each other for this campaign to succeed, and so far we have proved to be a good match! Please help us protect our nation’s children and the safety of our food supply by making a tax-deductible contribution today.


Sincerely, 
Stuart Cooper
Campaign Director
Fluoride Action Network

Strange News Items: WebMD taking $4.8 million from Feds to promote ObamaCare, New Zealand newspaper caught red-handed in reversing poll survey results on fluoride, and Fluoride questions to EU Parliamentary for Ireland's fluoride additive...

WebMD Pockets Millions to Stimulate $1 Trillion in Drug Sales
December 4, 2013
Story at-a-glance
  • WebMD has received a $4.8 million government contract to educate doctors about the Affordable Care Act. Lack of transparency has raised questions about potential conflicts of interest
  • WebMD has positioned itself as a primary source of independent and science-backed health information yet is financially dependent on pharmaceutical companies, and now the US government
  • In 2010, WebMD was found to have created a depression screening test in which 100 percent of quiz-takers ended up having a “high likelihood of major depression,” and were asked to discuss available drug treatment
  • Global expenditure for prescription drugs is estimated to hit $1 trillion next year, and as high as $1.2 trillion in 2017
  • The main driver of increased drug sales is increased access to medical care across the world. In the US, the Affordable Care Act will likely lead to major spending increases


 

New Zealand Newspaper Caught Reversing Fluoridation Poll Results

Wednesday, December 4, 2013
 
‘The Waikato Times has been caught out reversing its online survey results about the Hamilton City Council’s decision on Thursday to defer its fluoridation decision. The poll asked people if they supported the council’s decision to wait until the after the legal challenge currently before the High Court is decided. 68% of people said “yes” and only 32% said “no” but the Waikato Times misrepresented this as 68% saying “no” and 32% saying “yes”.
The Waikato Times “turning reality upside down” was discovered because various members of the public had taken screen shots while the poll was running, reports the NGO Fluoride Action Network New Zealand (FANNZ) in a press release, adding that people were shocked to see the newspaper print the poll with the results reversed.’

Read more: New Zealand Newspaper Caught Reversing Fluoridation Poll Results
 
 
Parliamentary questions
29 November 2013 - Last Updated December 4, 2013
P-013561-13
Question for written answer
to the Commission
Rule 117
Martina Anderson (GUE/NGL)
http://www.europarl.europa.eu/sides/getDoc.do?type=WQ&reference=P-2013-013561&format=XML&language=EN

 Subject:  Use of hexafluorosilicic acid for water fluoridation in Ireland
The substance used to fluoridate the water in the Irish state is hexafluorosilicic acid which is classed as a biocide. The EU wrote to the manufacturer of the substance asking them to provide clinical and epidemiological studies showing that this substance is safe to use as a biocidal product within the EU.

Given that the manufacturer refused to give this information to the EU and the fact that the EU subsequently banned the product for use as a biocidal chemical in the EU, can the Commission clarify the legal status of hexafluorosilicic acid and any restrictions that may exist on its usage, particularly in the process of water fluoridation?

Is the Irish Government in breach of EC law by continuing to allow hexafluorosilicic acid to be used in the fluoridation of the water supply in Ireland?

Does the Irish Government have any obligation under EC law to stop or review its use of hexafluorosilicic acid in the fluoridation of water?