CLARK COUNTY QUESTION NO. 1
Water Fluoridation Question
Should the water authority and each public water system in this county
that serves a population of 100,000 persons or more cease the fluoridation of the water?
Yes 
No
EXPLANATION
The 1999 Nevada Legislature passed Assembly Bill 284 directing the
Southern Nevada Water Authority and the City of Henderson to begin fluoridating water on
March 1, 2000. The fluoridation takes place at the treatment facilities owned by these
entities, which provide over 90% of the water used in the Las Vegas Valley. In accordance
with regulations established by the Nevada State Health Division, the Southern Nevada
Water Authority and the City of Henderson maintain the fluoride level at not less than 0.7
milligrams per liter and not more than 1.2 milligrams per liter.
To provide Clark County citizens the choice of whether to continue
fluoridation of water, Assembly Bill 284 also required that this ballot question be placed
before the voters at the November 2000 General Election.
If a majority of the voters vote "yes" on this question, the
act directing fluoridation of water will expire on January 1, 2001, and the Southern
Nevada Water Authority and the City of Henderson will then stop fluoridating the water
delivered for public consumption in Clark County.
If a majority of the voters vote "no" on this question, the
act directing fluoridation of water will remain in place and the Southern Nevada Water
Authority and the City of Henderson will continue to fluoridate the water delivered for
public consumption in Clark County.
ARGUMENT ADVOCATING PASSAGE
Fluoride is currently added to our drinking water at most valley
sources. You must vote "yes" on Clark County Question 1 to stop water
fluoridation. The reasons why you should consider voting "yes" to cease
fluoridation of our drinking water include the following:
The citizens right to choose is taken away when fluoride is added
to drinking water.
Every citizen should have the right to drink water without concern for
drugs or chemicals that are not required for water purification.
Water fluoridation is mass medication.
There are fluoride alternatives for those who want to use them despite
the serious government warnings on the labels. See the back of your toothpaste tube. They
include for example, fluoridated toothpaste, dental sealants, and mouthwash preparations.
The International Journal of Fluoride has published an increasing
number of scientific research studies on fluoride that indicate fluoride, even at low
levels, can cause health problems. See, www.fluoride-journal.com.
The intent of water fluoridation is to help with the dental health of
children. In the process, those with liver, kidney, stomach, throat and other health
problems were not considered. Fluoride is a highly toxic substance.
The long term health effects of drinking water fluoridation that are
known indicate that our citizens are participating in a medical experiment without their
informed consent. That is an ethical and legal issue that should not be forced on anyone.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has not found fluoride to
be safe and effective. See www.noflouride.com.
Remember! You must vote "yes" on Clark County Question 1,
"yes" if you want to cease or stop water fluoridation.
The above argument was submitted by the Ballot Question
Committee as provided for in NRS 295.121
ARGUMENT OPPOSING QUESTION
To keep fluoride in our water, vote "no" on Clark County
Question 1.
Our water supply has been fluoridated since March 1. A "no"
vote on this measure will continue to protect us against dental decay.
There are sound health reasons why fluoridated water is used in more
than 10,000 communities nationwide, including all major cities, and protects more than 150
million Americans against tooth decay.
Former Surgeon General C. Everett Koop said, "Fluoridation is the
single most important commitment that a community can make to the oral health of its
citizens." Fluoridation of water is the most cost-effective method for the prevention
of tooth decay. Fluoride for our water supply costs less than 25 cents annually per
resident.
Contrast that to the high cost of treating tooth decay. The annual
average cost for dental services for Americans in need of dental care is $300 per person.
Dental problems are among the top seven reasons children are treated at
the publicly-supported University Medical Center. Physicians say those problems can be
severe and permanently disabling.
Along with pasteurization, water purification, and immunization,
fluoridation is considered one of the most important public health measures of the 20th
century.
Community water fluoridation is the single most effective and efficient
means of preventing cavities in children and adults, regardless of education or income
level, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.
Studies indicate that fluoridated water reduces cavities by 60 percent
in baby teeth and by up to 35 percent in adult teeth.
Drinking fluoridated water is not harmful. It has been added to public
water supplies since 1945 without ill effect. Fluoridation has been proven to be medically
safe in numerous studies over the past half century.
Fluoridation is endorsed by all major medical associations in the
United States, including the American Medical Association, American Dental Association,
American Cancer Society, American Veterinary Medical Association, the Centers for Disease
Control and the U.S. Public Health Service.
The Consumers Union, publishers of Consumer Reports, has observed:
"The simple truth is that theres no scientific controversy over the safety of
fluoridation. The practice is safe, economical, and beneficial. The survival of this fake
controversy represents one of the major triumphs of quackery over science in our
generation."
Fluoridation should not be a political issue. It is a matter of public
health.
Vote "no" on Clark County Question 1 to keep our water
fluoridated.
The above argument was submitted by the Ballot Question Committee as
provided for in NRS 295.121
REBUTTAL TO ARGUMENT ADVOCATING QUESTION
Adding fluoride to water is like adding vitamins, minerals and
other nutrients to food to improve everyones health.
We add chlorine to water to prevent dysentery, vitamin C to fruit
juices to prevent scurvy, vitamin D to milk to prevent rickets, and iodine to salt to
prevent goiter.
People who wish to avoid fluoridated water can use a simple reverse
osmosis process to remove it or drink bottled water.
Because fluoride is not a drug, it is not regulated by the U.S. Food
and Drug Administration. However, the FDA calls it safe and effective in fighting
cavities.
"Regular daily dental hygiene, including brushing with a fluoride
toothpaste and flossing, and an adequate intake of fluoride, preferably from fluoridated
water, will help you prevent tooth decay," the FDA states in its Dietary Guidelines
for Americans.
According to Consumer Reports, "Of all the numerous ills that have
been attributed to fluoridation none has even been shown to be valid." For more on
the benefits of fluoridation see www.ada.org or www.cdc.gov.
Good dental health is vital to overall health. Fluoridation gives a big
bang for the public health buck.
Vote "no" on Clark County Question 1 to keep fluoride in our
water.
The above rebuttal was submitted by the Ballot Question Committee as
provided for in NRS 295.121
REBUTTAL TO ARGUMENT OPPOSING QUESTION
Every citizen should have the right to a water supply free from any
drug or chemical not required for purification. Freedom of choice concerning health
matters, as long as it doesnt infringe upon the rights of others, is essential and
fluoride violates the freedom of choice by mass medicating the public water supply.
Numerous scientific studies have tied fluoride to hip fractures,
skeletal fluorosis, osteoporosis and cancer. Six studies alone in the Journal of the
American Medical Association found dramatic links to hip fractures.
There is no proof that fluoride will prevent tooth decay. In fact, a
study of 39,000 schoolchildren conducted by dentists trained by the National Institute of
Dental Research found tooth decay virtually the same in fluoridated and non-fluoridated
areas.
Fluoridating our entire water supply is not cost effective. We are
fluoridating more golf courses, trees and swimming pools than people.
The union representing the scientists, researchers and attorneys of the
EPA, opposes fluoridation based on "the scientific literature documenting the
increasingly out-of-control exposures to fluoride, the lack of benefit to dental health
from ingestion of fluoride and the hazards to human health from such ingestion."
More than thirty-five cities have rejected fluoride in their water
supplies, three as recently as March of 2000.
The above rebuttal was submitted by the Ballot Question Committee as
provided for in NRS 295.121