More than 90 Mass. municipalities have enacted bansState Rep. Jim Hawkins, D-Attleboro, said there's significant support from the public to get rid of SGARs. For several years, he's been working on legislation to get a statewide restriction in the use of all anticoagulant poisons."SGARS are the most common but there is a first generation and a third generation," Hawkins told Wicked Local in an email."We filed companion bills in both the House and Senate and both have been released favorably with slight technical changes.Current legislation has received "an unheard-of 120 co-sponsors," including respected organizations like the MSPCA, Mass. Audubon, New England Wildlife Center and more, he said.More than 90 Massachusetts municipalities have enacted bans on city property or filed a home rule petition to outright ban the use of SGARs in their communities.