News

According to the EPA, diquat “rapidly adheres to soil particles,” which makes it unlikely to leach into drinking water.
CT officials and advocates say the negative social media posts are misleading and harmful to a project that has taken years ...
Connecticut is among several states that uses the herbicide Diquat to combat hydrilla, an invasive plant species that grows ...
Locals raised concerns over an herbicide used to kill an invasive aquatic plant in Connecticut rivers and lakes.
Applications are expected to be made in Middletown, Chester, Lyme, Portland, Deep River, East Haddam and East Hampton.
Environmental advocates are raising concerns over the state’s plan to use a controversial herbicide to combat the spread of ...
An herbicide used to treat hydrilla, an invasive plant in Connecticut lakes, ponds and rivers, has recently been the target ...
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers will start injecting diquat dibromide, an herbicide banned in the European Union, into ...
Guest columnist Elizabeth Allen of The Active Voice tells us that no, the state did not allow poison to be dumped into any rivers, but you can rest assured that when the noise of social media ...
Connecticut is about to poison its own lakes and rivers with a highly toxic chemical called Diquat. And it seems like no one knows about it. It's actually a coordinated plan that they're about to roll ...