Ask your local authority questions about their pesticide use – a template
This is a template that you can use (simply copy and paste the text below, and fill in a few details) to ask your local authority about their use of the pesticide glyphosate (more information about glyphosate – click here). When you get a reply we would love to see it – please forward to admin@wild justice.org.uk and we’ll assess it and add it to the list of local authorities that have been contacted. Thank you.
By email to information team of local authority
Dear [Local Authority name]
Re: Herbicide Use – Requests for information under the Environmental Information Regulations 2004 and/or the Freedom of Information Act 2000
I am a resident of [village/town/city] in [Local Authority’s name]. I write regarding [Local Authority’s name]’s use of glyphosate-based herbicides, about which I would like to know more.
In this letter I set out a request for environmental information, which I make in accordance with the Environmental Information Regulations 2004 (the “EIR 2004”) and/or the Freedom of Information Act 2000 (the “FOIA 2000”). Where the Information Sought is available online, I am happy to receive that information by way of link to the respective online source.
Information Sought
I request the following information:
- Which glyphosate-based herbicides[1] are currently used by or on behalf of the Council and/or on land owned by, managed by, or under the control of, the Council?
- For the most recent 12-month period for which information is available, please could you tell me the amount and brand of each glyphosate-based herbicide in question, as well as the size of the area over which they were used.
- Please could you explain the basis for (i) the Council’s choice of particular product(s), and (ii) the Council’s decision to use glyphosate-based herbicides rather than alternative methods. Please could you provide me with copies of any policy or other document which informs that decision-making.
- I understand that, if the Council uses, or instructs other to use, plant protection products (including glyphosate-based herbicides) then the Council is required by law[2] to ensure that[3]:
- all reasonable precautions are taken to protect human health and the environment;
- the application of the plant protection product is confined to the crop, land, produce, buildings, contents of buildings, materials or other areas intended to be treated;
- and when the product is used in places of heightened concern (which includes, among others, areas used by the public or vulnerable groups[4], areas in the close vicinity of healthcare facilities, and on or along roads, railway lines, very permeable surfaces, or other infrastructure close to surface water or groundwater) that the amount used and the frequency of use are as low as reasonably practicable.
5. Please explain how the Council ensures that it complies with the requirements set out above in paragraph 4, particularly in terms of operational decision-making by the Council?
6. Please provide me with copies of any policy or other document which informs the Council’s decision-making in relation to compliance with the legal requirements set out in paragraph 4 above. Please also provide copies of evidence of the Council’s decision-making over the past 12 months relating to the records of decisions taken to ensure the amount of plant protection products used and the frequency of use are as low as reasonably practicable.
Time for a response
I should be grateful for a response as soon as possible and no later than 20 working days in accordance with section 5(2) of the EIR 2004, or, if the information is not environmental information, promptly and no later than 20 working days in accordance with section 10 of the FOIA 2000.
Yours faithfully
[Signature]
[Name]
[1] Defined to include products containing glyphosate
[2] Plant Protection Products (Sustainable Use) Regulations 2012, Regulation 10
[3] Regulation 10(1)
[4] Defined to include “persons needing specific consideration when assessing the acute and chronic health effects of plant protection products. These include pregnant and nursing women, the unborn, infants and children, the elderly and workers and residents subject to high pesticide exposure over the long term”.