The Sentinel-Record

Panel approves temporary ban on herbicide

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LITTLE ROCK — Arkansas took the first steps Friday toward temporaril­y banning the sale and use of an herbicide that has prompted hundreds of complaints and a federal lawsuit from farmers who say it has caused widespread damage to crops.

The Arkansas State Plant Board approved the 120-day restrictio­n on dicamba on a 9-5 vote. Dicamba is a relatively inexpensiv­e weed killer but can drift and damage nearby row crops, such as soybeans and cotton in addition to fruit and vegetable farms and ornamental trees. The restrictio­n must also be approved by the governor and a legislativ­e panel.

The plant board has received 247 complaints in 19 counties this year about dicamba’s use, and a group of farmers filed a class-action suit this month against the makers of the herbicide over damage to their crops. The lawsuit seeks unspecifie­d damages for damage to crops, fruits and trees that weren’t dicamba-resistant. The state last year received a little over two dozen complaints over the herbicide.

“We don’t have an emergency. We have a disaster,” plant board member Terry Fuller said after the vote. “It’s damage everywhere you look.”

An identical ban failed before the panel on Tuesday, but the board scheduled a revote after officials said it only needed majority support among the

members present rather than a majority of the 16-member panel. The board on Friday also rescinded an alternate proposal it had approved Tuesday that allowed the spray but with restrictio­ns on how it’s applied.

Opponents of the ban have said more investigat­ion is needed on whether the damage is due to how the herbicide is being applied and whether other restrictio­ns could help address the concerns raised by farmers around the state.

“I just have a difficult time making decisions without informatio­n,” said Jammy Turner, a board member who voted against the restrictio­n. “I just don’t think that’s responsibl­e and I think we owe our farmers and Arkansas agricultur­e more than that.”

BASF, which makes the only dicamba herbicide that’s been approved for use in Arkansas, said it has found in its field visits that a vast majority of growers are successful­ly applying the herbicide to dicamba-tolerant crops.

“A more prudent approach would take all viewpoints, risks, benefits and confirmed facts into full considerat­ion. This same board put in place guidance after carefully reviewing the chemistry and proper applicatio­n,” the company said in a statement.

Gov. Asa Hutchinson said he wanted to review the proposed restrictio­n in more detail.

“I have consistent­ly supported the Plant Board in its protection of Arkansas agricultur­e, and I expect this recommende­d rule will ultimately go to the legislatur­e for additional review and action,” Hutchinson said in a statement.

Arkansas lieutenant governor: No thanks to pay raise plan

LITTLE ROCK — Arkansas’ lieutenant governor says he doesn’t want a 2 percent pay raise a panel is recommendi­ng he receive.

Lt. Gov. Tim Griffin on Friday said he opposes the pay raise proposed by the Independen­t Citizens Commission. The panel this week recommende­d a 2 percent raise for the state’s constituti­onal officers, legislator­s, judges and prosecutor­s. It’s expected to vote on the proposal next week after holding a public hearing on the proposal. Griffin said he’ll submit a letter to the panel on Monday about the proposal, and said he’ll decline the raise if it’s approved.

Griffin’s pay would increase from $42,315 a year to $43,161 under the panel’s proposal.

The commission was created under a constituti­onal amendment voters approved in 2014 that changed how officials’ salaries are set.

Ex-Arkansas deputy sentenced in scheme to plant drugs

LITTLE ROCK — An Arkansas ex-sheriff’s deputy has been sentenced to five years of probation after pleading guilty to charges involving a scheme to plant methamphet­amine on someone to make an arrest.

Drew County Circuit Court records show Robert “Bo” Sanderlin was convicted of using a communicat­ion device in commission of a drug offense and abuse of office and sentenced this week.

The Arkansas Democrat-Gazette reports that a charge of methamphet­amine solicitati­on against the 26-year-old former lawman was dropped as part of a plea agreement.

An affidavit says someone told authoritie­s that Sanderlin had called him and told him of a plot that involved the informant planting drugs on someone so the sheriff’s deputy could make a drug arrest.

Sanderlin was arrested in February.

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