Councillor Steve Orser came into the Civic Works Committee on
Monday afternoon pumped and loaded for bear. Armed with a petition signed by
1442 London residents requesting the immediate cessation of water fluoridation,
he headed straight for the media table to show his ammunition. They opted to
wait until he had presented it to the committee.
As soon as chair Harold Usher had completed the
preliminaries to open the meeting, Orser broke in with a motion. He wanted to
move the staff recommendation, remove the fluoride, and hold a plebiscite on
the issue.
The chair was nonplussed. The motion didn’t make sense, as
far as he was concerned, since the staff recommendation was to continue
fluoridation of the water. How did immediate cessation fit with that? Usher
ruled his motion out of order as it was contrary to the staff recommendation
which he had put on the floor.
Orser was upset. He was being blocked and he didn’t
understand why. “You’re throwing grenades all over here,” he complained to
Usher. He just wanted to get things going so that he could “give the
information to all the committee.”
It took a while for him to grasp the problem with what he
had set forth. He had been pretty revved up, he acknowledged, but now “I’ve got
clarity of mind.”
Since no one challenged this statement, he continued that he
wanted to set aside the staff recommendation and to recommend discontinuing
fluoridation, thereby saving money, realizing environmental benefits and
demonstrating confidence in tap water.
In the pause that followed, Usher recognized Councillor Joni
Baechler. She wanted something more.
They needed a strategy involving the
Middlesex London Health Unit (MLHU) to provide an alternative to fluoridation.
Orser was happy to accept this as a “friendly amendment”, but Baechler suggested
that what she was talking about was “much more than a friendly amendment.”
For Baechler, arriving at the position she was about to take
had been a “circuitous journey”. She considers herself to be health conscious,
she likes to understand what she puts into her body. The loss of family members
had made her more aware of the fragility of life and to contemplate her own
mortality.
She had spent a lot of time over the past few weeks trying
to get some answers on the issue of fluoridation and its health impacts and the
certification process. She takes her position on the joint water boards
seriously.
She had tried to contact a lot of the organizations that
staff had identified in its reports as experts whose opinion could be relied
upon. It had not been an easy process. She had been bandied about, referred
from agency to agency and not getting any straight answers along the way. She
had been in touch with the National Sanitation Foundation (NSF), the Ministry
of the Environment (MOE), Health Canada. None could point to any toxicology
studies that had been done. All were pointing their fingers at the
municipality. The safety of the water, the testing, it was the municipality’s
responsibility.
“We are responsible for it” she concluded. “We’ve been
relying on the NSF certification, but NSF does only one testing per year. Are
we evaluating that product when we receive it?”
She had noted that, when she had made her call, NSF had
assumed she was asking about a pharmaceutical grade of fluoride. But the stuff
London puts in its drinking water is a by-product of the fertilizer industry,
and is shipped in concentrated form from Florida by tanker truck.
Water Quality Manager Dan Huggins was called on to respond.
He explained that the MOE regulates fluoridation and NSF looks after all the
products that end up in the water. None of the elements—lead, copper, arsenic,
etc.—are allowed to reach more than 10% of their maximum allowable to ensure
purity of the product. Those standards are based on Health Canada studies and
the US Environmental Protection Act (USEPA). Truckload operators have to check
the certification but they don’t have to do additional testing.
Baechler
wasn’t satisfied. She had requested that the NSF Standard 60 send her the
studies but was still waiting for someone to get back to her. She had received a 2011 report containing fact
sheets and procedures but no toxicology studies. It did include two pages of
disclaimers and a request that the report not be shared. What she wanted to
know was, is the product used by the city a toxic substance?
Acting city engineer, John Braam responded that any chemical
in concentrated form is toxic. Huggins pointed out that when the product is
diluted 450K to 1, the atoms hydrolyze, separate and become free floating;
hydrofluorosilicic acid (HSFA) ceases to exist. NSF looks at all the elements
to standards of maximum acceptable concentration set by Health Canada.
But Health Canada doesn’t do independent studies, Baechler
noted, just literature reviews of studies done by others, many of which are by
the industries which produce the fluoride. And standards have been changed over
time; there is more awareness of chemical interactions and there have been reductions
in the maximum allowable daily dose. “NSF
doesn’t absolve me of due diligence,” she argued. “We should be testing to see
we get what we think we’re getting.”
She wanted to include the need for a strategy for removing
fluoride involving MLHU in the motion. She suggested provision of topical
applications of fluoride through the Healthy Smiles program.
Orser had unwittingly lost the floor. He used the addition
to the motion to reclaim it. The savings from fluoride could be directed oral
health, just like what Windsor was proposing, he suggested.
Councillor Sandy White was on the fence. She was being
lobbied by poverty groups wanting to keep fluoride in. She didn’t want to make
a decision and would rather go to a plebiscite. She was concerned about legal
aspects, about liability.
Although he is not on the committee, Councillor Dale
Henderson wanted his say. He had made up his mind and he wanted to give his
reasons. It was difficult to make out what they were, as he listed a series of
issues he had received via emails. He identified chlorine and fluoride, toxic
waste, environmental wanting to shut this thing down, can’t control how much
people drink, topical application, fluorosis in 1 out of 8 children, kids still
suffer from tooth decay, a student’s paper findings were suppressed. “We’re
poisoning our water system!” he proclaimed.
Apart from this last statement, it was all pretty
incoherent, but he spoke passionately and the anti-fluoride lobby in attendance
appreciated it. They gave him a loud round of applause.
Councillor Denise Brown concurred. She had been reading a lot
of journals. She had done a lot of work. She wanted fluoride out.
Then it was Councillor Paul Hubert’s turn. “This issue has
dogged me for last four or five years,” he acknowledged, but he hadn’t been won
over by the lobbyists. What other municipalities had done didn’t matter. What
he objected to was the tenor of conversation, talk of conspiracies and poisoning
Londoners. The research was difficult but he had actually read the stuff. He
gave kudos to Baechler for the hard work she had done, but Henderson and Brown
and their reading, where was it coming from?
“Sort the fiction from the fact,”
he urged. None of the members of council had technical expertise to assess the
studies; he appreciated Health Canada’s meta-analysis. He wouldn’t support the
discontinuation of fluoridation at council where he would have a vote. His
decision would be evidence-based.
Seeing no other speakers, Usher took his turn. He had read
all the emails and the comprehensive staff report, he assured the committee. He
was supportive of the staff recommendation. He was convinced that “If you don’t
have fluoride in the water, you’re going to have problems with cavities.”
Medical Officer of Health Dr Graham Pollett was asked to
respond to the alternatives to fluoridation being proposed. A proponent of
fluoridation, he pointed out that existing dental health programs are not
universal and have strict income thresholds. He stressed that cost savings
shouldn’t be the turning point for this discussion.
It was time to vote. The motion to discontinue fluoridation
lost on a vote of 2-3, with Usher, White and Paul VanMeerbergen in opposition.
VanMeerbergen, who had remained silent to this point, moved
the staff recommendation. He pointed out what was already contained therein,
that 90 national and international agencies had loaned their support. Who were councillors
to question their assessments?
White wanted to add the provision of a plebiscite, but
VanMeerbergen pointed out that the public is in no better position to question
the experts who “are saying unanimously to continue.”
This statement resulted in an uproar in the audience. Most
of them could point to dissenting viewpoints from legitimate authorities.
Orser wanted everyone to know that he had talked to a lot of
people about this, not just “wingnuts”.
He appealed to the committee, and if
truth be told, to the audience he was courting, on behalf of his daughter, his
little girl. He wants to be able to tell her that the city is no longer trying
to poison her. He gave her name. More applause.
The motion to approve the staff report and its
recommendation to continue fluoridation passed with White and Usher supporting VanMeerbergen’s
motion. White’s suggestion for a plebiscite failed as only she and
Orser supported it.
So it seems that the push to eliminate fluoride from the
water supply will not be realized although it is still another week before
council makes its final decision.
In the meantime, I was interested to read the following statement from Sheldon Thomas, retired Manager of Water Distribution for the
City of Hamilton at a recent Board of Health meeting.
You may find it interesting too.
6 comments:
Hi Gina,
As always, thanks for the notes-not-formal-minutes reporting on this.
This is a topic I've never delved into ... but I've just read the first section of Sheldon Thomas' submission to Hamilton Council... and I'm shooken (as my Mum used to say).
This morning I have an appointment at the Western (Schulich) Dental Clinic. After the session I'm going to ask my student some questions about the information they receive in school. It'll be my research contribution.
Best regards,
Why's Woman
and to confuse the situation even more...Americans and Canadians use a different system of calculating parts per measure.
A cup=8oz.
Maybe we've been supersized.
50 Reasons to Oppose Water Fluoridation: http://www.altlondon.org/article.php?story=20120424161615594
probably the best article on the issue from both sides is:
http://www2.macleans.ca/2009/09/29/fluoride-is-one-of-our-great-public-health-victories-fluoride-is-toxic-waste-that-does-more-harm-than-good/2/
If council approves Joni's suggestion of vending machines such that the gallery can obtain refreshment during long meetings, it would be most appropriate, I suspect, if they start with a popcorn machine.
I much appreciate your blog and recommend it to any who wish to have a sense of what goes on at city hall. I have tried, but apparently without success, to register so that I can respond when the spirit moves me, but I appear to lack the requisite e-skill.
On the subject of fluoridation, allow me this. I started teaching in London elementary schools about the same time fluoridation was introduced and probably some years before a good number of its current critics can recall. At the time the public health department was providing a much more extensive dental health service for children. Within a very few years the consistent comment from health care workers in the schools noted a dramatic improvement in dental health among young children. I have had much occasion to summer in a rural east-coast community the past number of years and continue to be struck by the terrible dentition so very much in evidence. I cannot help but wonder how fluoridation might have helped there - anecdotal cause to pause.
In addition, I have heard no plausible response to three concerns.
In the years since the introduction of fluoride in London water, the cost of dental care has grown so dramatically that a return to the kind of public dental health program then in place would today be judged prohibitive.
This same cost factor would be prohibitive for a great many London families and there is no doubt that the children of the poorest, and of families without the security of a full and dependable benefit package would suffer disproportionately.
We have no proven realistic and cost-effective alternative to put in place. Fluoridation may not be perfect, but I dare say that until we have a proven improvement, changing the status quo would be to put the horse before the cart.
It is somewhat reassuring to note that current criticism by and large avoids the most absurd hyperbole and claims of communist plots to poison us all. However, I cannot help but feel that it lacks historical perspective and is propelled to a significant degree by the first generation to view dental health as somewhat of a given. It wasn't always so. A good many of my parents' generation were reconciled, often to their great relief, to dentures by middle age. It seems reckless to shake what is a most likely pillar of the very significant progress in such a relatively few years.
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