The Record (Troy, NY)

California bans pesticide linked to brain damage in children

- By John Rogers Associated Press

LOS ANGELES » A widely used agricultur­al pesticide that California environmen­tal officials have said has been linked to brain damage in children will be banned after next year under an agreement reached with the manufactur­er, state officials announced Wednesday.

Under the deal, all California sales of chlorpyrif­os will end on Feb. 6, 2020, and farmers will have until the end of 2020 to exhaust their supplies.

The pesticide is used on numerous crops in the nation’s largest agricultur­eproducing state — including alfalfa, almonds, citrus, cotton, grapes and walnuts.

State regulators have said chlorpyrif­os has been linked to health defects in children, including brain impairment, and to illnesses in others with compromise­d immune systems.

“For years, environmen­tal justice advocates have fought to get the harmful pesticide chlorpyrif­os out of our communitie­s,” Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, said in a statement after the deal was announced.

He added: “Thanks to their tenacity and the work of countless others, this will now occur faster than originally envisioned. This is a big win for children, workers and public health in California.”

The president of the California Citrus Associatio­n, which represents about 5,000 growers, said in an interview that he believes the risks were not as great as the state made them out to be.

“We really thought the exposure assessment­s and risks were just inflated and it wasn’t a true characteri­zation of the protection­s that were already in place,” said Casey Creamer.

Creamer added he appreciate­d that officials have agreed to budget $5.6 million to help pesticide manufactur­ers develop a safer alternativ­e to chlorpyrif­os.

“But just so you’re aware, that’s what agricultur­e does every day, we’re always looking for new products, safer products that are effective,” he said.

When California announced earlier this year it was moving toward banning the pesticide, the state’s environmen­tal secretary, Jared Blumenfeld, said it was doing so because the federal government was allowing it to remain on the market.

“The swift end to the sale of chlorpyrif­os protects vulnerable communitie­s by taking a harmful pesticide off the market,” Blumenfeld said after Wednesday’s announceme­nt.

The Obama administra­tion announced in 2015 that it would ban chlorpyrif­os after scientific studies funded in part by the federal Environmen­tal Protection Agency showed the potential for brain damage in children. After President Donald Trump was elected, the EPA reversed that ban, questionin­g the studies’ validity.

Hawaii and New York are already phasing in chlorpyrif­os bans.

Blumenfeld said the agreement reached with chlorpyrif­os’ manufactur­er, Corteva Agriscienc­e, “avoids a protracted legal process while providing a clear timeline for California farmers as we look toward developing alternativ­e pest management practices.”

Corteva said in a statement that it reached the agreement “in the best interests of the affected growers.”

“Through recent actions, the state of California has improvised and implemente­d several uniquely challengin­g regulatory requiremen­ts for chlorpyrif­os. These new, novel requiremen­ts have made it virtually impossible for growers to use this important tool in their state,” Corteva said.

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