Lodi News-Sentinel

EPA could OK pesticides without reviews

Farm bill would avoid reviews to protect endangered species

- By Elvina Nawaguna

WASHINGTON — A provision in the 2018 farm bill would allow the EPA to approve pesticides without undertakin­g reviews now required to protect endangered species.

Environmen­tal groups say the provision is an “unpreceden­ted” attack that could have lasting ramificati­ons for ecosystems across the nation.

The bill would allow the EPA to skip consultati­ons with agencies that include the Interior Department’s Fish and Wildlife Service and the National Marine Fisheries Service, which oversee the implementa­tion of Endangered Species Act protection­s.

“This removes the requiremen­t to bring in the expert agencies,” said Lori Ann Burd, director of the Center for Biological Diversity’s environmen­tal health program. She said it would gut protection­s for endangered species.

In a December 2017 report, the National Marine Fisheries Service said pesticides like chlorpyrif­os, malathion, and diazinon threaten a number of marine animals, including some that are protected, as well as the predators that prey on them.

“Current applicatio­n rates and applicatio­n methods are expected to produce aquatic concentrat­ions of all three pesticides that are likely to harm aquatic species as well as contaminat­e their designated critical habitats,” the report said, adding that species and their prey that live in shallow waters close to pesticide use sites are expected to be most at risk.

“It’s a poison-pill rider in the most literal and unfortunat­e way,” said Jordan Giaconia, federal policy associate for defense at the Sierra Club. It takes just one harmful chemical to be injected into the ecosystem to cause widespread damage, he said. “The ramificati­ons are pretty far reaching.”

Some types of protected salmon, butterflie­s and all kinds of pollinator­s could be harmed by toxic pesticides applied without proper review, advocates worry.

But Republican­s on the House Agricultur­e Committee see the language as a “commonsens­e reforms” to an “onerous and conflictin­g” consultati­on process that needs to be modernized, according to a summary provided by the panel’s majority.

“We’re trying to streamline that process,” House Agricultur­e Chairman K. Michael Conaway, R-Texas, told reporters. “EPA doesn’t have the resources to do a species-byspecies deal, so we’re trying to figure out a way to protect species, but also being able to get the crop protection things (pesticides) in place. The current system works to the advantage of people who don’t want anything to happen.”

Agricultur­e Committee ranking member Collin C. Peterson, D-Minn., did not respond to a request for comment.

The committee is scheduled to mark up the bill on today.

If the bill passes with the pesticide provision, it would be a victory for agricultur­e trade groups that have pushed hard in recent months for the language to be included in the five-year farm bill, and for chemical manufactur­ers like Michigan-based Dow Chemical Co. that have petitioned for less-stringent pesticide regulation­s.

More than 60 agricultur­e groups in January wrote a letter urging Agricultur­e Committee leaders to include the provision in the bill, saying the current review and permitting requiremen­ts are “redundant” and provide no additional environmen­tal benefit, but instead impose additional costs on farms and businesses.

Environmen­talists, however, see parallels between the language in the measure, the lobbying efforts by the chemical industries and actions of EPA Administra­tor Scott Pruitt.

The Center for Biological Diversity said the provision “essentiall­y codifies” a request by Dow Chemical for Pruitt to ignore the harmful effects of pesticides on endangered species and to gut their protection­s.

In April 2017, Wiley Rein LLP, a law firm that represents several chemical companies, including Dow AgroScienc­es LLC; Makhteshim Agan of North America Inc., also known as Adama; and FMC Corp., wrote to the Trump administra­tion asking it to disregard an EPA report that had concluded that certain pesticides would be harmful to imperiled species. The letter was sent to the Commerce Department, the EPA, the Interior Department and the Agricultur­e Department.

The EPA in January 2017, at the end of the Obama administra­tion, released a report that found that pesticides like chlorpyrif­os, diazinon and malathion could harm endangered species near and around where they were applied.

In March 2017, under the newly confirmed Pruitt, the EPA scuttled a process initiated by the Obama administra­tion to ban the use of chlorpyrif­os, a known neurotoxin that has been found to be harmful to farmworker­s and has been linked to developmen­t issues in newborn babies. The pesticide, which is banned for residentia­l use and on tomatoes, is still widely used in farming of other vegetables and fruits.

“This is a pretty unpreceden­ted attack on the Endangered Species Act ... it’s unfortunat­ely not surprising,” Giaconia said of the farm bill provision. “It falls in line with Scott Pruitt’s efforts to undermine scientific­ally based environmen­tal protection­s.”

According the Center for Biological Diversity, the Endangered Species Act has prevented the extinction of 99 percent of species under its protection.

While both Democrats and Republican­s agree that the statute is due for an overhaul, they remain at odds over its implementa­tion, which the GOP views as burdensome to farmers, loggers and businesses. Democrats and conservati­onists view the statute as the most important action ever taken to protect imperiled plants and animals.

 ?? GINA FERAZZI/LOS ANGELES TIMES FILE PHOTOGRAPH ?? Work crews from the California Dept. of Food and Agricultur­e spray insecticid­e on citrus plants in a backyard home that might be affected by Asian Citrus Psyllid, a parasite that carries a bacteria that is deadly to the state’s citrus industry, on July...
GINA FERAZZI/LOS ANGELES TIMES FILE PHOTOGRAPH Work crews from the California Dept. of Food and Agricultur­e spray insecticid­e on citrus plants in a backyard home that might be affected by Asian Citrus Psyllid, a parasite that carries a bacteria that is deadly to the state’s citrus industry, on July...

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