Nathan Donley Profile picture
Aug 4, 2020 24 tweets 5 min read Read on X
Today the first meaningful pesticide reform legislation in a quarter century was introduced in the House and Senate #PACTPA

What exactly would this bill do? Section-by-section Rundown below

biologicaldiversity.org/w/news/press-r… Image
First, the obvious. This bill faces an enormous uphill battle in this congress.

But whether it’s next congress or 20 congresses from now, pesticide reform will pass in my lifetime

This bill will be the blueprint for that reform. So it IS important and WORTH taking a look at
Section 3: This implements a hard 15-year deadline for registration review of “dangerous” pesticides

A dangerous pesticide is one that is carcinogenic, acutely toxic, an endocrine disruptor, causes harm to a pregnant woman or a fetus, or causes neurological or developmental harm
Importantly, a “dangerous” determination – and registration review of “dangerous” pesticides - must take into account I) epidemiological studies (II) peer-reviewed literature, and (III) Federal or State agency research
Studies can't be ignored if they don't comply with industry guidelines (GLP), which are NOT a measure of scientific quality and have been abused by EPA to only take into account industry research

Though it sounds wonky, this is perhaps the most important requirement in this bill
If registration review for dangerous pesticides is not completed in 15 years, then the pesticide is automatically cancelled.

The public can challenge EPA’s “dangerous” determinations and registration review decisions
Section 4: There will be a temporary suspension of pesticides that have been banned in the EU or Canada

This will be followed by a review of the peer-reviewed literature to determine whether the EU or Canada’s decision was erroneous or not.
In analyzing pesticides that have been banned elsewhere, the EPA will not be able to take into account the purported economic costs or benefits of the pesticide’s use

It's strictly an evaluation of the harms

Pesticides found to be unsafe will be cancelled within 2 years
We are falling behind at banning the worst pesticides. Over 300m lbs of pesticides are used in the US each year that are banned in the EU, China or Brazil

India has announced plans to ban 27 pesticides, including atrazine and 2,4-D. We need to catch up

blogs.biomedcentral.com/on-biology/201…
Section 5: All conditional pesticide registrations will have 2 years by which the conditions of their registration must be met or there will be an automatic cancellation.
Section 6: Existing stocks of pesticides that are cancelled cannot be used. Period.

An incredibly consequential loophole that was on full display with this year with the weedkiller dicamba
Section 7: Emergency exemptions for the use of a pesticide cannot be granted for more than 2 years in any 10-year period or for pesticides that are not already registered

This will end the egregious abuse of fake “emergencies”
Section 8: The name and percentage of all ingredients in each pesticide product must be written on the pesticide label.

No more undisclosed “inert” or “other” ingredients
Section 9: All organophosphates, like chlorpyrifos, will be immediately cancelled and all tolerances will be revoked. No existing stocks can be used
Section 10: All neonicotinoids will be immediately cancelled and all tolerances will be revoked. This includes neonics that the pesticide industry tries really hard not to call neonics: sulfoxaflor and flupyradifurone. No existing stocks can be used
Section 11: The weedkiller paraquat, linked to Parkinson’s Disease and commonly used as a suicide agent, will be immediately cancelled and all tolerances will be revoked. No existing stocks can be used
Section 12: Any political subdivision of a state (town, city, county) will be allowed to enact stronger pesticide restrictions than the federal government allows.

You shouldn’t have to be exposed to something you don’t want in your community
Section 13: All pesticide labels will be printed in English and Spanish. For any product that is known to be used by more than 500 individuals who speak a common language other than English or Spanish, the pesticide label must be translated in that language as well.
Section 36: When a farmworker incident occurs, the employer shall report detailed information on the incident to EPA within 7 days. A failure to report is subject to a $1,000 fine/day thereafter

More egregious behavior by an employer will carry prison time and 6-figure fines
This will be kept in check by the existence of an anonymous reward system to report employers who are flouting the rules

Federal agencies won't be able to take any action regarding the immigration status of a farmworker based solely on information from a farmworker incident
Every pesticide incident will be followed by a determination of whether a pesticide cancellation or restriction is warranted. If a pesticide product kills someone, it will be immediately suspended followed by a review of the incident

The public can challenge any decision by EPA
There you go. That’s the bill.

Our definition of normal has been so skewed for the last 50 years that using chemical warfare agents like organophosphates on our food seems like something we should just accept.

It’s not
Ten years ago, the thought of major pesticide legislation even being introduced in both chambers of Congress was a pipe dream.

Now it’s a reality.

People are starting to pay attention and they don’t like what they see
Thank you to the courageous @SenatorTomUdall and Congressman @JoeNeguse for this reform bill. And the many co-sponsors. We’ve still got a long way to go, but today is the day we start moving forward and stop moving backward

tomudall.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/…

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More from @Nathan_Donley

Jun 21, 2022
The House Subcommittee on Economic and Consumer Policy just released an investigation into seresto that found the flea collar should be taken off the market

A lot of new info in the report that had not been reported on previously

I'll sum it up 🧵

investigatemidwest.org/2022/06/15/con…
Here’s the report. It takes you through the approval of the collar in 2012 to the present. It provides examples of EPA failing to stand up to an industry that feels so entitled, that even the mention of commonsense restrictions was met with derision

oversight.house.gov/sites/democrat…
We have a lot more detail of what EPA was seeing and saying – stuff that was redacted in our FOIA documents

Seresto had 163% more incidents labeled either “Death” or “Major” than the 2nd most dangerous product, and 428% more than the 3rd
Read 17 tweets
Jul 20, 2021
As someone who is not opposed to genetic engineering but often at odds with how it is currently used in agriculture, I think we need more nuanced looks at GMOs in the media.

Instead we get this

nytimes.com/2021/07/20/mag…
In academia I genetically engineered non-pathogenic bacterial cells and human cells to better understand the genetic basis of chronic diseases like cancer. I understand how genetic engineering works and the promises it can hold, particularly in the biomedical field
It’s easy to find some small company that genuinely wants to better people’s nutrition through genetic engineering and use that as a poster child

But it's a disservice to not adequately explain “what is” instead of “what could be” in some fairytale world that does not exist
Read 10 tweets
Sep 24, 2020
We’re in the middle of a public health crisis and the pesticide industry and USDA are working to weaken international guidance aimed at making sure lifesaving medicines still work in the future

How and why is the pesticide industry doing this? 👇

nytimes.com/2020/09/24/hea…
For starters, medically important antibiotics are used as pesticides to kill bacteria on crops. Fungicides, similar to antifungals used in humans, are also widely used as pesticides

The more you use them, the more likely it is that fungi or bacteria will become resistant
Increasingly, there is worry that the overuse of these medicines as pesticides can lead to antibiotic and antifungal resistance in human pathogens and cause these medicines to not work when our lives depend on it
Read 18 tweets
Sep 23, 2020
There's a small bright spot in EPA’s atrazine re-approval

Thanks to a legal settlement by conservation groups, atrazine will be prohibited in Hawaii, Puerto Rico, Guam, American Samoa, the U.S. Virgin Islands and the North Mariana Islands

biologicaldiversity.org/w/news/press-r…
This is an incredible conservation win as these places are biodiversity hotspots. Use of atrazine will also be prohibited along roadsides, in forests and on X-mas trees in the continental U.S.

The harm from atrazine’s re-approval is immeasurable, but these areas will be spared
This is being billed by the EPA and industry as “voluntary” measures they are taking, but there is nothing voluntary about this.

They had to do this as the absolute minimum step of beginning to come into compliance with the Endangered Species Act.
Read 5 tweets
Sep 22, 2020
The ecological risk assessment for #chlorpyrifos was released today. The career scientists at EPA found that invertebrates could be exposed to more than 8,600-fold more than the level known to harm them

content.govdelivery.com/accounts/USAEP…
For mammals it's 1,900-fold more than the level known to cause harm. For birds it's 380-fold. For fish it's 160-fold.
The Fish and Wildlife Service found that #chlorpyrifos would put 1,400 endangered species at risk of extinction?

No wonder

nytimes.com/2019/03/26/us/…
Read 5 tweets
Sep 21, 2020
I need to do something to stop stewing over the supreme court, so I'm just going to tell the story of how the endocrine disrupting pesticide #atrazine went from being on its last leg in the U.S. to being rubberstamped for the foreseeable future

biologicaldiversity.org/w/news/press-r…
No one is going to tell this story because there are a thousand other scandals happening right now and because it's super wonky.

Unlike a lot of the big environmental rollbacks that will hopefully be reversed after the election, this will likely fall under the radar
In 2016, under the Obama admin., EPA put out a devastating eco risk assessment of atrazine basically saying that its use has to be scaled back dramatically or there will be serious environmental consequences

In 50 years, this was the most hard-lined position EPA had taken
Read 13 tweets

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