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"Beekeeping -- Rural Greece Does It Best"

Beekeepers in the remote hills of southern Greece are not seeing colony collapse disorder in their hives. The reason may be that the bees are not exposed to pesticides.

Source: AFP, 04/22/2013

Feds Will Take Their Time Evaluating Pesticide Linked to Bee Deaths

While honey bee die-offs often called "colony collapse disorder" have been increasing for several years, so has scientific evidence that a widely used class of pesticides called neonicotinoids could well be an important contributing cause. In 2011, EPA said it would review its approval on one such pesticide. Now it says it expects to finish in five years.

Source: Mother Jones, 04/15/2013

"Slaking a Region’s Thirst While Cleaning Its Beaches"

"LOS ANGELES -- Surfers here have long lived by a simple rule: When it rains, no matter how good the waves may be, stay out of the water. Those who do head out to the Venice Pier on a rainy day might have their bravery (or naïveté) repaid with pinkeye, a fever or diarrhea."

Source: NY Times, 04/08/2013

"Standards Aim To Strengthen Food Safety"

"Listeria in cantaloupes. Salmonella in peanuts. E. coli in spinach. Hepatitis A in green onions. In the past decade a rash of tainted food has resulted in thousands of hospitalizations and hundreds of deaths. It has also prompted the most sweeping reform of U.S. food safety laws in more than 70 years."

Source: Ft. Myers News-Press, 04/08/2013

"High Levels of Flame Retardants Found on Airliners"

"Spending about 100 hours each month in the air, flight attendants are bombarded with pesticides, radiation, ozone and any illnesses passengers carry on board. Now new research shows that they also fly along with some of the highest levels ever measured for some flame retardants."

Source: EHN, 03/28/2013

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