The International Eosinophil Symposium in Banff was a timely gathering of leading experts to discuss the precise role of eosinophils in allergic asthma. The meeting followed hard on the heels of a report suggesting that eosinophils might be redundant in late-phase responses in asthma, inasmuch as treatment of asthmatic patients with humanized anti-IL-5 in clinical trials failed to modify bronchial hyperresponsiveness. Mouse models of allergic asthma were also cited for failing to show a consistent proinflammatory role for the eosinophil in asthma. Presentations at this meeting included a reevaluation of murine models of asthma, which exhibit substantial differences from human disease. The inability of murine eosinophils to degranulate either in vivo or in vitro was shown to present a major obstacle in asthma research; this is in sharp contrast to human eosinophils, which readily degranulate in response to stimuli. Degranulation from eosinophils was proposed to be a crucial event in human airway hyperresponsiveness. Major advances were presented in the understanding of molecular and intracellular pathways regulating eosinophil priming, activation, and mediator secretion. Recruitment and activation of eosinophils might be regulated by other immunoregulatory agents as well as IL-5, including eotaxin. Future clinical trials might benefit from focusing on dual inhibition of IL-5 and eotaxin to ensure the removal of the effects of activated eosinophils from the body.