No, this is not Jade Helm 15
PROVIDENCE - The Town of Westerly, as it has done on a
routine basis each year since 1997, will apply granules of mosquito larvicide
by helicopter to 500 acres of swamp to control mosquito breeding.
The targeted
areas are portions of Chapman Swamp and the swamp area adjacent to Hespar
Drive.
The town is notifying adjacent landowners of its intent, as
well as the general public, to apply the larvicide on Friday, May 8, between 8
a.m. and 2 p.m. The larvicide may also be applied on future dates after
notification by the town. Monday, May 11 has been designated as the rain date.
The Department of Environmental Management approved the town's application to apply the larvicide Bti for mosquito control to the targeted areas.
The Department of Environmental Management approved the town's application to apply the larvicide Bti for mosquito control to the targeted areas.
Bti is a naturally occurring bacterium, which is applied in granular form to swamps and
other mosquito breeding habitats to prevent larval mosquitoes from developing
into adults. It is extremely safe from both an environmental and human health
standpoint.
Larviciding by communities is recommended as part of the state's
action plan for West Nile Virus and Eastern Equine Encephalitis (EEE), and is
the best way for communities to reduce mosquito numbers and risk.
The state is not advocating wide-scale aerial application of larvicide, and it is recommended that most communities apply larvicide by hand into roadside catch basins.
The state is not advocating wide-scale aerial application of larvicide, and it is recommended that most communities apply larvicide by hand into roadside catch basins.
Westerly's Chapman Swamp area is unique because of its large size and
its inaccessibility and because of the presence there in 1996 and again in 2003
of mosquitoes carrying the EEE virus.
Westerly began using the larvicide Bti on
a yearly basis in 1997 after the EEE virus was first found in mosquitoes
breeding in Chapman Swamp.