House Farm
Bill proposal could wipe out communities’ power to prohibit pesticides
As lawmakers convene on
Capitol Hill to finalize the latest federal Farm Bill, environmental advocates
warn that a House proposal could put public health at risk by rolling back
restrictions on pesticides in 155 communities nationwide.
The Environmental Working
Group (EWG) today released its analysis of data from the nonprofit group Beyond
Pesticides, including an interactive map of local policies that it says could be scuttled if the
House measure passes.
Those regulations vary widely—some communities restrict neonicotinoid use to protect pollinators, while others map out pesticide-free buffer zones or require that public notice be posted when pesticides are applied on public or private property.
Those regulations vary widely—some communities restrict neonicotinoid use to protect pollinators, while others map out pesticide-free buffer zones or require that public notice be posted when pesticides are applied on public or private property.
According to EWG's analysis, 58 of those communities have adopted more comprehensive policies that prohibit the use of glyphosate, the widely used weed killer under increasing scrutiny for its human health impacts.
Last month a California jury ordered chemical maker Monsanto to pay $289 million in damages to a school groundskeeper who blamed the company's glyphosate-based Roundup and Ranger Pro herbicides for his terminal cancer. Monsanto, which Bayer recently acquired, now faces some 8,000 glyphosate-related lawsuits in the U.S.
The analysis arrives as
work begins for the conference committee charged with sorting out differences
between House and Senate versions of the new Farm Bill—the informal name for a
vast legislative package renewed about every five years—before September 30,
when the current bill expires.
"We're just trying
to bring as much attention to this issue as we can while Congress is deciding
what's going to be in the final Farm Bill package," Melanie Benesh,
legislative attorney for EWG, told EHN. "It was included in the House bill, and I think we have to treat everything in
either the House or the Senate bill as something that could be part of the
final package."
The Farm Bill includes a
broad array of programs covering nutrition assistance, crop insurance, habitat
conservation and other priorities. But blocking cities from regulating
pesticides is beyond the scope of even such a sweeping bill, Benesh contends.
"I don't think the Farm Bill is supposed to dictate what local governments
can and cannot do," she said.
EHN requested comment on
the measure from the office of Rep. Mike Conaway (R-Texas), chairman of the
House Committee on Agriculture, and from a spokesperson for the committee, but
did not receive a response.
The National League of
Cities and the National Association of Regional Councils sent a joint letter to lawmakers last month urging them to reject the measure.
Likewise, 107 House members sent a letter to agriculture committee leaders that included it in a list of "anti-environment
provisions" that had them "deeply concerned." Other groups,
including the Pesticide Action Network and the Natural Resources Defense
Council, also have stated their opposition.
The measure would amend
the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide and Rodenticide Act to say specifically that
"a political subdivision of a State" may not regulate the sale or use
of pesticides.
"The U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency Office of Pesticide Programs regulates and
registers all pesticides after years of diligent and thorough testing,"
Chris Novak, CropLife America President and CEO, told EHN in a statement. "These decisions are based on extensive scientific data to establish that these products are safe to human health and the environment when used properly. Localities lack the staff resources and scientific expertise to conduct these reviews."
Chris Novak, CropLife America President and CEO, told EHN in a statement. "These decisions are based on extensive scientific data to establish that these products are safe to human health and the environment when used properly. Localities lack the staff resources and scientific expertise to conduct these reviews."
The U.S. Supreme Court
ruled in 1991, however, that local governments have the authority to regulate
pesticides under the federal law. That ruling did not take away states' rights
to preempt those local regulations, however, and 43 states have since passed
laws that do so.
Those laws have generally
been interpreted to mean that local governments can't control pesticide use on
private land, but can do so on parks, playgrounds and other public property,
Jay Feldman, executive director of Beyond Pesticides, told EHN.
But the new Farm Bill
provision could be used not only to block private-land regulations in the seven
states that give local governments authority over pesticides, but also to roll
back all local regulations, including on public property, and prevent the other
43 states from giving cities or counties greater authority in the future,
Feldman said.
"It's uncertain as
to how broadly this could be interpreted in terms of restricting the ability of
local governments to adopt ordinances pertaining to pesticide
restrictions," he said.
"We're in a tough spot here because whenever you amend a law like this without any specificity or knowledge about what the implications are, which would typically be gained through a hearing process, you really leave it open to broad interpretation."
"We're in a tough spot here because whenever you amend a law like this without any specificity or knowledge about what the implications are, which would typically be gained through a hearing process, you really leave it open to broad interpretation."
Among those keeping an
eye on the House measure is Ethan Strimling, mayor of Portland, Maine,
which early this year adopted one of the country's strictest pesticide policies.
"It's really kind of an unregulated world out there and people are able to
use pesticides at their will," Strimling told EHN. "We were very
concerned about the environmental impacts."
The proposal to preempt
local regulations is a "terrible idea," Strimling said. "I hope
they allow communities to come up with the policies that work best for the
communities."
And if they don't?
"We would look at whatever options we have to push back on that," he
said.