In an article in the Leicester Mercury titled ‘Campaigners celebrate as pesticide use ended’ published on February 27th 2026, the Leicester Mercury quoted a spokesperson for Leicester City Council who apparently had said that, ‘We use glyphosate-based products that are non-toxic to humans and animals and controlled droplet applicators for targeted spraying’.
We were concerned about this statement because this was never
mentioned in our meeting with Leicester City Council; there are no glyphosate-based
products that are non-toxic. Any products that contain glyphosate are obviously
toxic as glyphosate is known to cause cancer. We mentioned further on in the
press release, which we had sent to the Leicester Mercury, ‘The journal
article that had previously been used to claim that glyphosate was safe was
retracted by the publisher last year, because they discovered the company that
makes glyphosate had been involved in the research’.
We contacted Leicester City Council to ask who had made the comment, but they did not know. We then
contacted the Leicester Mercury to ask where they had got the statement which had
been made by ‘a spokesperson for the City Council’. Eventually it was established by the Mercury
that they hadn’t actually spoken to anyone at the Council but had taken
an out-of-date statement from Leicester City Council's website and used that in
the article.
We asked the Leicester Mercury to print a ‘Clarification’, which they did on Friday May 29th 2026, but unfortunately, they still
did not make it clear where the statement came from. Their clarification read:
‘As set out in the article, a new study discovered that glyphosate
is indeed a toxic substance, and the council subsequently agreed to cease its
use in children’s play areas as a result.’
So it still wasn’t actually transparent that they took
information from a Council website and didn’t actually speak to anyone from the
Council.
We would also like to mention that Leicester City Council
are still spraying the rest of the parks with glyphosate, which is a toxic poison
to humans, animals including dogs, insects as well as to the ‘weeds’ which the
Council are trying to kill.
To encourage Leicester City Council to stop using glyphosate
in our parks and green spaces, we want to show them that Leicester’s gardeners
can mange without pesticides. We have created a pledge which we would
love you to sign: Pledge to go
pesticide-free.
It’s not too late to make a spring resolution for your
garden for 2026. And please do sign even if you’ve been gardening organically
for a long time. We are planning to use the postcodes (without linking them to
people’s names) to create a map of pesticide-free gardens across the city.
Please help!
Melanie Wakley
