Peel Council MUST review water fluoridation issue

Peel Council MUST review water fluoridation issue without further delay

 

Posted March 13, 2019

Today it has been 6 months since Peel Regional Council approved RECOMMENDATION CWFC – 6 – 2018:

…That staff report back to Regional Council in six months, pending receipt of a response from the Premier of Ontario, and the Minister of Health and Long Term Care in regard to Recommendation CWFC – 5 – 2018.

Recommendation CWFC – 5 – 2018:

…And whereas, Municipal Councillors …are struggling with a range of conflicting reports and public concern on the matter of fluoridation; Therefore be it resolved, that Region of Peel Council request the Premier of Ontario, and the Minister of Health and Long Term Care… undertake appropriate and comprehensive toxicity testing …

Recommendation CWFC – 12 – 2018:

Whereas, Health Canada in its letter addressed to the  Regional Chair dated April 4, 2012 recommends that  toxicology reviews of the fluoridation  product (Hydrofluorosilicic Acid (HFSA)) be done to ensure its safety at its maximum use level; And whereas, Health Canada is on record that no toxicology studies have been done on HFSA …Therefore be it resolved, that the Community Water Fluoridation Committee (CWFC) refers this motion to the new CWFC  for  the  2018 – 2022 term of Regional Council, to request that the CWFC consider that a moratorium  be  placed on water  fluoridation in Peel  Region until  the toxicology reviews recommended by Health Canada have been completed

https://www.fluoridefreepeel.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/Peel-WF-moratorium-recommendation-approved-by-Council-letter-Jan-9-2019.pdf

Meanwhile, the Region continues to fluoridate, insisting that HFSA is a “water treatment” chemical, but also claiming therapeutic benefit from adding this industrial waste acid that Health Canada refuses to regulate as a drug or natural health product, plays no role in water treatment, increases the risk of water borne disease from its fluoride, arsenic and lead content, has no chronic toxicity tests and was never proven effective in water for reducing cavities, and killed a truck driver on highway 401 just days after resident Thomas W. Boch read a Material Safety Data Sheet to Council (amid laughter and sneers from certain members of Council) .

Eight of the totes of acid that ejected from the trailer were punctured and spilled approximately 8,000 litres of acid into the ditch and onto the truck cab, dousing the driver, which eventually resulted in his death later in hospital.

The acid discharge caused further adverse effects. First responders and members of the public had to be decontaminated, the 401 highway was closed in both directions, and the OPP officer who initially attempted to extract the truck driver from the cab on scene experienced significant health effects. In addition, adverse impacts to the roadside soil ecosystem occurred. https://news.ontario.ca/ene/en/2019/01/trucking-company-fined-250000-for-ontario-water-resources-act-violation.html

Control Chem, the Region’s current HFSA supplier, was initially charged in the incident, hence this HFSA was definitely heading for a community’s drinking water, quite possibly Peel’s, since Control Chem only deals in “water treatment” chemicals.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa/titanium-trucking-bolton-fined-highway-401-acid-spill-1.4981572

So when will Staff report back?

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Council has been informed repeatedly of the recent IQ, ADHD and other studies.

 

Bashash ADHD

Higher levels of urinary fluoride associated with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) in children

 

Till study

York University:
Study: Fluoride levels in pregnant women in Canada show drinking water is primary source of exposure to fluoride

“We found that fluoride in drinking water was the major source of exposure for pregnant women living in Canada. Women living in fluoridated communities have two times the amount of fluoride in their urine as women living in non-fluoridated communities,” said Christine Till, an associate professor of Psychology in York’s Faculty of Health and lead author on the study.

.. The levels of fluoride among pregnant women living in fluoridated communities in Canada were similar with levels reported in a prior study of pregnant women living in Mexico City where fluoride is added to table salt.

“This finding is concerning because prenatal exposure to fluoride in the Mexican sample has been associated with lower IQ in children. New evidence published today in Environment International also reported an association between higher levels of fluoride in pregnancy and inattentive behaviours among children in the same Mexican sample,” said Till.

http://news.yorku.ca/2018/10/10/study-fluoride-levels-in-pregnant-women-in-canada-show-drinking-water-is-primary-source-of-exposure-to-fluoride/