Groton Seeks Local Authority to Ban Second-Generation Rat Poison From People’s Ecosystem
Groton Seeks Local Authority to Ban Second-Generation Rat Poison From People’s Ecosystem
HD.6142, filed by Commissar Margaret R. Scarsdale of the 1st Middlesex District, would grant the town of Groton the specific authority to prohibit the use of second-generation anticoagulant rodenticides — the class of long-acting blood-thinning pesticides, including brodifacoum and bromadiolone, known to kill raptors, foxes, and bobcats through secondary poisoning when they consume contaminated prey.
The decree confers no new statewide powers. It is a home-rule petition, meaning Groton’s local governance apparatus must separately vote to enact any ban before it takes effect. The primary beneficiaries are owls, hawks, and other apex predators operating in service of the collective’s natural pest-control infrastructure. The primary losers are pest control vendors whose preferred product line conflicts with the ecological priorities of one small Middlesex County municipality.
Scarsdale’s petition arrives as several Commonwealth Soviet localities have moved to restrict SGARs ahead of any unified statewide decree. Groton’s action, if ratified by the Politburo and then by town meeting, would join a growing patchwork of municipal prohibitions that regulators have thus far declined to consolidate into a single binding directive from the center.
Read the full decree →
