Dallas
Approves Aerial Spraying to Fight West Nile
Dallas
Mayor Mike Rawlings on Wednesday declared the city's recent West Nile
virus outbreak to be a state of emergency and authorized the first
aerial spraying of insecticide in the city in more than 45 years.
15
August, 2012
Dallas
and other North Texas cities have agreed to the rare use of aerial
spraying from planes to combat the nation's worst outbreak of West
Nile virus so far this year. Dallas last had aerial spraying in 1966,
when more than a dozen deaths were blamed on encephalitis.
More
than 200 cases of West Nile and 10 deaths linked to the virus have
been reported across Dallas County, where officials authorized aerial
spraying last week. State health department statistics show 381 cases
and 16 deaths related to West Nile statewide.
"The
number of cases, the number of deaths are remarkable, and we need to
sit up and take notice," Rawlings said during a city council
briefing. "We do have a serious problem right now."
Aerial
spraying for mosquitoes could begin Thursday evening, depending on
weather conditions. The state health department, which will pay for
the $500,000 aerial spraying with emergency funds, has a contract
with national spraying company Clarke. Clarke officials have said two
to five planes will be used in Dallas County.
Dallas
City Council members voiced concerns about aerial spraying's health
effects on humans and animals. Rawlings said the aerial dosage will
be much lower than the dosage used so far during ground spraying. He
also said aerial spraying recently has been safely used in
California, Massachusetts and New York.
The
city charter allows Rawlings to declare a state of emergency and
request aerial spraying, but the City Council would have to approve
additional action beyond seven days.
State
health commissioner Dr. David Lakey, who participated in the briefing
via telephone, reiterated the seriousness of the situation in Dallas,
saying half of all West Nile cases in the United States so far this
year are in Texas.
"There
is a public health emergency related to West Nile right now,"
Lakey said. "The risk of air-based spraying is minimal versus
the ongoing spread of West Nile."
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