Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
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October 1970 | Volume 21, Issue 6
Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
Subject:
October 1970 | Volume 21, Issue 6
“Its vapors reach into every nook and crack, every hiding place, to seek out and kill small flying insects,” boasts the Shell Chemical Company of its popular NoPest insecticide strip. Constantly vaporizing a potent nerve gas, 2,2-dichlorovinyl dimethyl phosphate, nicknamed DDVP or vapona, one cardboard-caged Shell strip poisons flying insects in an average room for up to three months. It attacks innocent insects as well as mischievous ones, and it operates constantly and continuously, whether there are any insects in the room or not. According to Shell, which markets the product enthusiastically and successfully, what’s bad for the bugs is fine for the family. “Housewives particularly like the product,” claimed Shell in a 1968 report, “because they can hang it in the kitchen, bedroom, living room or other rooms to rid the house of annoying bugs all summer long. … a housewife need only hang it up and she’ll have an attractive accessory for any room in thé home.” Should the happy housewife, while doing this bit of expensive (at about $2.00 per strip) interior decorating, worry about what else this ubiquitous poison might be doing when it isn’t annihilating insects, she may take comfort from the product’s Good Housekeeping Seal and the reasonable faith that an alerted government is militantly protecting the consumer against suspect pesticides. Tobe sure, since 1947 the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act has required that all pesticides shipped in interstate commerce pass muster with the U.S. Department of Agriculture as both safe and effective when used as directed. In addition, since 1964, the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare has had power of review over applications to the U.S.D.A. for pesticide registration. And for good measure, the Food and Drug Administration sets tolerances for pesticide residues on food, under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act. Thus blanketed by three layers of official protection, the housewife might well believe her family certified safe in the presence of No-Pest strips. She might just as well believe in the Tooth Fairy. To know better, though, she might have to wade through a non-best-selling publication of the U.S. Government Printing Office, a report by the House Committee on Government Operations of a study by its Intergovernmental Relations Subcommittee, the Honorable L. H. Fountain of North Carolina, Chairman (gist Congress, ist Session, House Report No. 91-637). In the language peculiar to its genre, the report chronicles a complex and elegant pas de deux between the Shell Chemical Company and the U.S. government. Among the highlights: