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Happy contrails
>> Local
fringe party politician Ken Fernandez fears wrath from above
by NAOMI BLOCH
For several
weeks now Ken Fernandez has been pleading with Montrealers to look up, way
up, and smell the fumes from above. Fernandez says that he and several
other witnesses have seen airplanes overhead leaving behind "lingering
chemtrails."
"I've seen them in a number of places, including on
Friday afternoon in downtown Montreal," says Fernandez, the president of
the Canadian Action Party's Quebec wing. "I've seen the same above
St-Eustache where I live, as well as in Ville St-Laurent and around
Dorval."
Fernandez fears the planes are spraying malathion, an
insecticide approved in Canada since 1953 as a method for controlling
mosquitos, which can be applied as a low-volume aerial spray. In past
years malathion has been used around Winnipeg for this purpose, though
critics complain of the health risks to people with conditions like asthma
or chemical sensitivities.
Recently the Quebec Health Department
confirmed that malathion might be applied as a last resort if an outbreak
of the West Nile Virus is identified, and if all other efforts to control
the spread of the virus fail. So far Quebec and federal government
officials have stated that no spraying against the mosquito-borne virus
has taken place. Indeed, WNV has yet to be identified in Canada, though
active monitoring is taking place.
Say it, don't spray it
Two summers ago New York City faced the first known outbreak of
WNV in the Western hemisphere. Though people infected with the virus
generally exhibit mild symptoms or none at all, in New York seven deaths
were attributed to West Nile viral encephalitis. Transmitted by mosquitos
infected by blood from infected birds, NYC's attempt to control the
disease using a generous supply of pesticides led to public outcry and a
lawsuit.
This year Quebec is following more conservative
guidelines established by a Health Canada steering committee. The
committee brought together government agencies such as the Pest Management
Regulatory Agency (PMRA), environmental and health ministries and some
American advisors to come up with a containment strategy in case WNV
strikes north of the border.
What raises alarm bells for Fernandez
is that the Deparment of National Defence (DND) as well as U.S.
representatives and "other interested parties" are all listed as
participants in this multidisciplinary group. "I checked with a number of
environmental and health groups," says Fernandez. "None of them were among
these so-called other interested parties. I can only surmise that the
other interested parties consist of representatives from the chemical
industry."
Not so, says Richard Aucoin, director of the Efficacy
and Sustainability Assessment division for the PMRA. "The national
steering committee has no industry folks on it." The American
representatives, explains Aucoin, attended a few meetings to share their
experiences in dealing with WNV in New York, and included someone from the
Centre for Disease Control.
Germ warfare
However,
Fernandez's fears go beyond corporate interests. He believes that the
involvement of the DND may indicate some kind of germ warfare experiment,
the kind of operations often referred to on conspiracy-theory Web sites
where stories of airplane chemtrails run amok. He says his efforts to
acquire clarification from the government have led nowhere.
According to Aucoin, the explanation is simple. "If there was
going to be any kind of mosquito control around airforce bases or where
military personnel are housed, the DND would have to contract out and have
control over doing that. That's why they were on the committee."
But if it's not malathion, just what are those planes spraying?
Most of Fernandez's sightings occured over farmlands. "This time of year
there's quite a lot of pesticide use, including aerial use," says Aucoin.
However, aerial spraying over residential areas such as downtown Montreal
is extremely unlikely. Hélène Ross, of the Quebec Environment Ministry's
Montreal regional office, found no record of any spraying over Montreal.
"There was no request by the City of Montreal," says Ross. "The assistant
director of municipal affairs was very suprised by this claim, and I was
too. It's practically impossible."
Another answer is that the
so-called chemtrails are actually just normal condensation trails. Though
certain anti-military types believe that long-lasting trails caused by
airplanes are not normal and are the result of chemical dispersal, most
pilots and experts disagree.
"Contrails have been a normal effect
of jet aviation since its earliest days," an Environmental Protection
Agency document reported last year. "Depending on the temperature and the
amount of moisture in the air at the aircraft altitude, contrails
evaporate quickly (if the humidity is low) or persist and grow (if the
humidity is high)... Persistent contrails are mainly composed of water
naturally present along the aircraft flight path." Of course, if you're
the type who lends no credence to government reports, this document won't
offer you any reassurance. Nor will the explanations of Canadian
government operatives.
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