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Posted: Wed Jun 01, 2005 4:11 pm
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Home Depot and Its Toxic Choices
Dear [Member]:
Home Depot ? the nation's largest hardware chain ? doesn't offer their customers much of a choice when it comes to animal and kid-friendly lawn and garden care. The chain doesn't offer enough natural alternatives to the toxic pesticides it stocks on its shelves. And many of the chemical lawn pesticides Home Depot offers are not only toxic to birds, bees, fish and other wildlife, but also harmful to children, pets and water quality. Let Home Depot know that toxic pesticides aren't the only choice for lawn and garden care. Take action now?
HOW YOU CAN HELP:
As a member of the National Coalition for Pesticide-Free Lawns, Defenders needs you to help us pressure Home Depot to carry a full range of alternatives to toxic pesticides. As the largest supplier of lawn and garden products in the country, Home Depot must do more to support sustainable land practices that won't pollute our environment, threaten our wildlife or harm our families.
We need to urge Home Depot to do three things:
1) Carry a full range of natural, non-toxic lawn and garden products. 2) Train staff to be knowledgeable about non-toxic alternatives. 3) Reconsider the sale of "weed and feed" ? a particularly toxic product.
Please download (or scroll down for) this letter, sign it, and deliver it to the Customer Service desk at your neighborhood Home Depot. We need to deliver as many letters as soon as possible. If you are able to deliver your letter, please email pesticidefree@defenders.org so we know how many letters have been delivered. Let us know the city and state where you delivered your letter.
If you don't know where a Home Depot near you is located, go to http://www.HomeDepot.com and click on the store locator link.
Thanks for supporting natural and safe lawn management products for yards across America!
P.S. For more information about the Home Depot campaign, please click here.
SAMPLE LETTER:
Dear Store Manager:
I am a regular customer at Home Depot and a supporter of the National Coalition for Pesticide-Free Lawns. I was very pleased to learn that Home Depot was asked by Beyond Pesticides and Defenders of Wildlife on behalf of the Coalition to carry a full range of natural, non-toxic lawn and garden products. The group is also asking Home Depot to train staff to be knowledgeable about non-toxic alternatives, to provide natural lawn do-it-yourself materials, and to reconsider the sale of "weed and feed." It is currently impossible to shop at Home Depot and purchase the full array of products needed to maintain a natural lawn or garden. I would like to see not just one or two natural lawn and garden products on your shelves ? but a full range by Spring 2006.
As the fall season approaches, now is the time to be considering making natural lawn and garden products part of your purchase orders for next Spring!
I would like to shop at Home Depot for my lawn and garden products and will be watching to see if more non-toxic products become available and if efforts are undertaken to train your employees and provide materials on natural lawn care. I urge you to work with the National Coalition for Pesticide-Free Lawns to help make this a reality.
Thank you for listening to my concerns and please be sure to convey my support to corporate headquarters.
Sincerely,
BACKGROUND:
In April 2005, the National Coalition for Pesticide-Free Lawns publicly called on Home Depot and Lowe's Home Improvement to start selling a full range of natural, non-toxic lawn and garden products. They also asked the companies to train their staff to be knowledgeable about natural lawn care, to provide do-it-yourself natural lawn materials, to reconsider the sale of "weed and feed," and to work with the Coalition to make it all happen. By June 2005, the Coalition had heard back from the companies. Both essentially said they already carry natural lawn products and that product mix per store depends on demand. Our information tells us that neither company does any market research to determine demand but instead determines demand solely upon sales. Our response?
We understand that the company stocks the shelves depending on demand, but we also understand that the demand level is artificially skewed. The natural product(s) are completely eclipsed by the vast amount of toxic products, and customers are often referred to toxic products because staff do not adequately understand or know how to explain natural lawn and garden care.
Given the inaction of these companies, the Coalition is asking customers to speak up for natural lawn and garden care products and information. Because Home Depot is the largest seller of lawn and garden products and according to our information carries the least amount of natural products, we have initially targeted Home Depot for this action.
To learn more about the National Coalition for Pesticide-Free Lawns, please click here http://www.defenders.org/wildlife/birds/pesticides.html.
To learn how to have a pesticide free lawn, please click here http://www.beyondpesticides.org/pesticidefreelawns/resources/index.htm
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Posted: Mon Jun 06, 2005 10:27 am
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Help Stop the Needless Slaughter of Millions of Sharks
Dear DEN Activist:
Each year 100 million sharks are killed, largely as a result of shark finning. Shark finning is a cruel and remarkably wasteful practice that involves cutting off the dorsal, pectoral and tail fins and dumping the rest of the shark back into the water. Often the mutilated sharks are thrown overboard while still alive, only to die a slow and painful death. This practice has become the method of choice to feed the global demand for shark fin soup, a popular delicacy in Asian cuisine.
Widespread shark finning is decimating the world's shark populations, resulting in declines of 90 percent or more in vast regions of the oceans. Much of this massive shark mortality could be avoided with an international ban on shark finning.
WHAT'S AT STAKE:
Last year, the international community banned shark finning in the Atlantic Ocean, but the practice is still rampant in the Pacific Ocean. Now is the time to ban shark finning in the Pacific as well. This June, governments will vote on a proposal to ban finning in the Pacific at an international fisheries meeting. The U.S. government's position on this issue could help sway the outcome of the meeting and the fate of these remarkable creatures.
WHAT YOU CAN DO:
Your support is urgently needed to stop the needless slaughter of millions of sharks for their fins. Please visit www.savesharks.org and send an e-mail urging the U.S. government to actively promote a ban on shark finning in the Pacific Ocean. With your support, we can secure a brighter future for the lords of the sea.
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Posted: Mon Jun 06, 2005 10:33 am
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Posted: Mon Jun 06, 2005 10:37 am
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Posted: Mon Jun 06, 2005 10:40 am
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Posted: Fri Jun 17, 2005 4:58 pm
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Posted: Mon Jun 20, 2005 9:38 am
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Posted: Sat Jul 09, 2005 10:15 am
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Posted: Sat Jul 30, 2005 11:19 am
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Posted: Mon Oct 17, 2005 7:38 am
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Do you shop at Home Depot? If this "petition" of sorts doesn't work, will you continue to shop there? We don't have a Home Depot around here, so it won't really affect me; though for those shopping there, I would hope that it would be implemented for those people.
Do you use toxic chemicals on your lawn or plants? If you're too young, do your parents? Did you know that they were toxic? Does it bother you that they are? Why or why not? We use chemicals like Scotts products like weed and feed and Sevin to kill the harmful bugs on the plants. Yes, I know they're not safe, but we don't live anywhere where they are going to run off into a stream or anything. Plus, where I work, we don't really offer any organic chemicals, and those that we do, are usually pretty expensive. It doesn't really bother me, for reasons mentioned above.
If the store personnel get trained in natural products and starts carrying environmentally friendly products, do you think more people will start buying them or do you think that they will never sell and pesticides will always be sold over natural products? I'm not really sure; it all goes according to supply and demand. I think some of the older people, who tend to like sticking to routine ways, really won't care one way or another, but perhaps with the proper training, the store employees can teach the new generation a thing or two and have them pass it on to their kids.
Anything else you can think of to comment? Yeah, more people need to comment! >.<
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Posted: Wed Oct 19, 2005 6:24 pm
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Posted: Sat Nov 12, 2005 3:58 pm
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Posted: Sun Nov 13, 2005 6:24 pm
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Posted: Wed Nov 16, 2005 12:35 pm
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Posted: Mon Nov 21, 2005 5:28 am
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