Los Angeles Times

State proposes pesticide buffer zones

- By Geoffrey Mohan geoffrey.mohan @latimes.com Twitter: @LATgeoffmo­han

dusting and many other forms of pesticide spraying will be banned within a quarter of a mile of schools and child day-care centers during the bulk of daylight hours, under a rule proposed by the California Department of Pesticide Regulation.

The proposed regulation, which would take effect next September, is the first statewide rule governing how pesticides can be applied in areas where farms lie close to facilities where children congregate.

It would affect about 3,500 schools and day-care facilities and involve about 2,500 growers in California, according to the department.

“This regulation not only builds in additional layers of protection for students and school staff that are located in agricultur­al areas, but it also ensures meaningful communicat­ion between farmers and the schools and child day-care facilities that are their neighbors,” Brian Leahy, director of the state Department of Pesticide Regulation, said Thursday.

The department will seek further public comment until Nov. 17.

The state’s move comes months after a federal appeals court ruled that the federal Environmen­tal Protection Agency was correct in not moving to create a similar regulation that would apply nationwide — a setback for environmen­talists and farmworker advocates, but a relief for growers who feared that the rules would leave crops susceptibl­e to damage and increase their production costs.

The rules restrict spraying within a quarter of a mile of schools and day-care facilities from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. on weekdays.

They apply to applicatio­ns using airplanes and helicopter­s as well many land-based methods using liquid mists, gases and dust.

Many California counties already have regulation­s aimed at preventing unintentio­nal drift of pesticides over areas where children congregate.

Local government­s would still be allowed to create and apply their own rules so long as they meet or exceed the state standards and are endorsed by the government­s, growers and the affected facilities, said Charlotte Fadipe, a spokeswoma­n for the state Department of Pesticide Regulation.

Tom Torlakson, the state superinten­dent of public inCrop struction, said the new rules “will provide more informatio­n to schools and let them continue communicat­ing with all concerned parties.”

In addition to warning schools and day-care facilities about what they will spray and when they will apply the chemicals, growers and pest-control companies will have to provide those facilities with more detailed informatio­n about the chemicals on an annual basis.

Environmen­tal activists, farmworker organizati­ons and school officials had pushed for a mile-wide buffer zone and longer bans on applying the chemicals.

Paul Towers, a spokesman for the Pesticide Action Network of North America, said the rules give a “false sense of security” to the predominan­tly Latino families that are “nearly twice as likely as their white counterpar­ts to attend schools near pesticides linked to cancer and brain damage.”

Schools in those areas often are used for other activities after 6 p.m. and on weekends, which are not covered under the rules.

Fadipe said the rules provide a base line for local jurisdicti­ons, which can negotiate with school officials and growers to address local circumstan­ces.

“We realized we had all these different climates — one size fits all only applies to a certain extent,” Fadipe said. “Our scientists believe a quarter-mile — which is four football fields in length — provides adequate protection.”

Growers countered that there was no reliable science to justify such wide barriers and lengthy bans, which would increase growing costs and hamper their ability to protect food crops from pests.

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