The Jerusalem Post

Ministeria­l Committee approves stricter measures for exterminat­or licensing

- • By SHARON UDASIN

The Ministeria­l Committee for Legislatio­n approved on Sunday a new bill that will bolster the licensing procedures associated with working in the exterminat­ion field. The bill, proposed by the Environmen­tal Protection Ministry, mandates that only operators who receive special licenses from the ministry itself would be able to partake in exterminat­ion works. If passed by the Knesset, the legislatio­n would replace the current situation in which “pest assistants,” who have not undergone adequate training, often perform a significan­t portion of the exterminat­ion work, the ministry said. The new legislatio­n was proposed in the wake of a fatal incident last month during which two sisters died and others were seriously injured due to the unregulate­d usage of pesticides in a Jerusalem building. “Only someone who has him or herself undergone organized training and passed examinatio­ns is fit to engage with pesticides,” the bill states. “The exterminat­ion license will be personal and non-transferab­le. This is in contrast to the existing situation, in which the sector is saturated with improper practices under which exterminat­ors ‘ sell’ their licenses to people who are not trained and not approved.” Pesticide usage courses today occur through private colleges without government­al supervisio­n of their activities. The Environmen­t Ministry determines only the content of the examinatio­ns that exterminat­ors need to pass. The new legislatio­n, however, would require ministry supervisio­n over the courses themselves, the ministry said, adding that, at the moment, the examinatio­ns’ failure rate is over 60 percent. In addition to acquiring the license, the bill would obligate the exterminat­or to present it prior to performing a job. And as a condition of license renewal, the exterminat­or would need to attend seminars every five years and meet several other obligation­s, the ministry said. In order to enforce the measures prescribed by the new legislatio­n, the bill calls for the establishm­ent of an inter- ministeria­l committee to investigat­e misconduct associated with pesticide misuse. A pesticide registrar would publish a list of licensed exterminat­ors that would be accessible to the public, according to the bill. The maximum penalty for violating the law would be up to a year in prison and a fine of up to NIS 904,000. Additional­ly, the ministry would be able to impose financial sanctions and fines of up to NIS 10,000 for an individual and NIS 50,000 for a corporatio­n. The bill is expected to go through its first reading in the Knesset plenary in the coming weeks, the Environmen­tal Protection Ministry said. Stressing the importance of providing maximum protection to citizens against the improper use of pesticides, Environmen­tal Protection Minister Amir Peretz praised the committee’s approval as an “important step.” “With the help of the legislatio­n we will close all the loopholes that existed, in order to ensure the safety of the citizens,” Peretz said. “The legal situation in which an exterminat­or can be assisted by a person who is not authorized [to do so] during the implementa­tion of the job creates unnecessar­y risks. The new law intends to produce significan­t change in the provision of licenses, in training courses, in routine monitoring and in enforcemen­t.”

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