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Publication Type:
| Popular |
Author(s): | Perks, Gord |
Author Affiliation: | Toronto Environmental Alliance |
Title: | Your lawn, our health: In upholding Hudson's by-law, the Supreme Court of Canada has advanced environmental rights into the previously inaccessible territory of private property |
Section: | Stir it up Other records with the "Stir it up" Section
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Source: | Alternatives Journal. Vol. 28, No. 4, Fall 2002, p. 13. |
Publishing Information: | Waterloo, Ontario, Canada: Faculty of Environmental Studies, University of Waterloo |
# of Pages: | 1 |
Keywords: | TIC Keywords: Local legislation; Litigation; Pesticide usage legislation; Health; Safety; Costs; Political climate; Political advocacy
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Geographic Terms: | Canada |
Abstract/Contents: | Describes the legal battle between lawn care companies and environmental activists on spraying pesticides on public and private properties in Canada. Defines the precautionary principle - "chemicals should be treated as dangerous [until] proven innocent" - and lists it as one reason the no-spray bylaw was upheld by the Supreme Court. Raises questions about the values of private property and the environmental powers of local governments. |
Language: | English |
References: | 0 |
| ASA/CSSA/SSSA Citation (Crop Science-Like - may be incomplete): Perks, G. 2002. Your lawn, our health: In upholding Hudson's by-law, the Supreme Court of Canada has advanced environmental rights into the previously inaccessible territory of private property. Alternatives J. 28(4):p. 13. |
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