| Action Update: US Soccer and ChemLawn
Several months ago, CCFC sent a public letter to US Youth Soccer
(USYS) asking them to end their sponsorship agreement with
ChemLawn. Under this agreement, ChemLawn used USYS address lists
to send mailings that were clearly designed to get soccer
players to nag their parents for ChemLawn’s potentially toxic
products.
Then we asked for your help and you responded. Hundreds of you
wrote letters to US Youth Soccer and demanded that they sever
their ties to ChemLawn.
We are happy to report that all of our efforts paid off.
ChemLawn is no longer a sponsor of US Youth Soccer. It is great
that ChemLawn will no longer be able to exploit children's love
of soccer to market toxic pesticides to families. And it is
gratifying to see that we can make a real difference.
Thanks to the individuals and organizations who participated in
this campaign!
c/o Judge Baker Children's
Center
53 Parker Hill Avenue,
Boston, MA 02120-3225
617-278-4282 ~ 617-232-7343
(fax)
www.commercialexploitation.org
David Messersmith, President
Chris Branscome, Director of Marketing
US Youth Soccer
1717 Firman Drive, Suite 900
Richardson, TX 75081
Dear Mr. Messersmith and Mr. Branscome,
We are writing to
express our concern over the corporate sponsorship agreement between TruGreen/ChemLawn
and US Youth Soccer (USYS). We feel strongly that the harm to children and
families from this agreement outweighs any financial benefit for USYS.
As part of this
promotion, TruGreen/ChemLawn sent a mailer addressed to the “family of” children
who are members of US Youth Soccer - presumably after getting each child’s home
address from USYS. The mailing, which features pictures of a young boy playing
soccer and a soccer ball, features the US Youth Soccer logo and mentions five
times that TruGreen/ChemLawn will donate a percentage of each purchase to USYS.
Children are more
likely to read a mailing that has their name listed in the addressee line. In
addition, pictures of soccer and US Youth Soccer logo are likely to pique the
interest of young soccer players. Clearly, TruGreen/ChemLawn wants to enlist
children as allies to ask or nag their parents for lawn services so that any
parent who chooses not hire ChemLawn will be viewed by their children as not
caring about youth soccer. To put it simply, TruGreen/Chem/Lawn marketers want
to make it as hard as possible for parents to say no.
And why would
parents want to say no to TruGreen/ChemLawn’s services? Because like so much
that is marketed to or through children, ChemLawn’s pesticides can be harmful to
them. Studies have linked lawn pesticides to birth defects, liver and kidney
damage, and neurological disorders.[i]
Young children and adolescents are particularly susceptible to the toxic effects
of lawn chemicals[ii];
the use of pesticides has been linked to an increased risk of childhood
illnesses including non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma, brain cancer, and leukemia.[iii]
Of the three active ingredients in ChemLawn’s popular Tri-Power system, two (MCPA
and Mecoprop-P) are possibly carcinogenic; the third (Dicamba) is classified by
the Pesticide Action Network as a developmental and reproductive toxin.[iv]
Children’s love
of soccer should not be exploited to market toxic products. With this in mind,
we recommend the US Youth Soccer do the following:
1) Protect
children’s health by not renewing their sponsorship agreement with ChemLawn when
the current agreement expires in December, 2004.
2)Protect
children’s privacy by refusing to share their contact information with
TruGreen/ChemLawn and
other corporate sponsors.
3)Refrain from
working with corporate partners whose products and/or practices may cause harm
to children.
Sincerely,
Stop Commercial Exploitation of
Children (www.commercialexploitation.org)
Action Coalition for Media Education (www.acmecoaltion.org)
Concerned Educators Allied for a Safe
Environment (www.peaceeducators.org)
Dads and Daughters (www.dadsanddaughters.org)
Family and Home Network (www.FamilyAndHome.org)
Kids Can Make a Difference (www.kidscanmakeadifference.org)
The Media Center at Judge Baker
Children’s Center (www.jbcc.harvard.edu)
The Motherhood Project (www.americanvalues.org)
School Mediation Associates (www.schoolmediation.com)
Teacher’s Resisting Unhealthy
Entertainment (www.truceteachers.org)
Beyond Pesticides (www.beyondpesticides.org)
California Safe Schools (www.calisafe.org)
Children's Health Environmental Coalition (www.checnet.org)
Clean Water Action (www.cleanwateraction.org)
Coalition for Environmentally Safe
Schools
Commercial Alert (www.commercialalert.org)
Environment and Human Health, Inc (www.ehhi.org)
Generation Green (www.generationgreen.org)
The Green Decade Coalition/Newton (www.greendecade.org)
HealthLink (www.healthlink.org)
Healthy Schools Network, Inc. (www.healthyschools.org)
Healthy Kids: The Key to Basics (www.healthy-kids.info)
Jesse’s Project (www.headlice.org/jesseproject)
Massachusetts Parent Teacher
Association (www.masspta.org)
Massachusetts Breast Cancer Coalition
(www.mbcc.org)
Maryland Pesticide Network (www.mdpestnet.org)
Natural Landscapes Project (www.naturallandscapes.org)
New Jersey Environmental Federation(http://www.cleanwateraction.org/njef)
Organic Consumers Assocaiton (www.organicconsumers.org)
Toxics Action Center (www.toxicsaction.org)
Vermont Public Interest Research Group
(www.vpirg.org)
[i] K. Machera. Commmon Birth Defects
Increase After Pesticide Exposure. Bulletin of Environmental
Contamination Toxicology, 54:363-369, 1995; Beyond Pesticides, Health Effects
of 36 Commonly Used Lawn Pesticides, updated 2002.
[ii] US EPA, Office of the
Administrator, Environmental Health Threats to Children, EPA 175-F-96-001,
September 1996
[iii] Zahm, S.H.,
Ward, M.H., Pesticides and Childhood Cancer, Environmental Health
Perspective. 106 Suppl 3: 893-908 1998
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