California

California Unveils Strict Rules on Pesticide

Farmers in California now must abide by the nation's strictest rules for a widely used pesticide under heightened regulations designed to protect farmworkers and people who live and work near the fields where it is used.

The restrictions target chloropicrin, a pesticide injected into the ground before planting crops such as strawberries, tomatoes and almond orchards. In recent years, the chemical has caused hundreds of people to suffer from irritated eyes, coughing fits and headaches, state officials said.

The new regulations surpass standards required by U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

Brian Leahy, director of the California Department of Pesticide Regulation, said Tuesday that the higher standard is needed in California, the nation's leading agricultural producer and most populated state, where farms are often next to people. Costs are sure to rise for farmers, who will pass it along to consumers, but Leahy said it is worth it.

"It is burdensome,'' Leahy said. "But if we're going to use these tools, we've got to ensure that they're used as safely as possible.''

Under the new regulation, farmers are limited to applying the pesticide on up to 40 acres in one day, a reduction of 75 percent. It also expands the distance between fields and human activity _ in some cases to double the distance. Farmers who use proper tarps to cover their fields while applying the pesticide will be required to follow less stringent regulations, said officials, who will immediately begin implementing the new standards.

The state documented 787 people as suffering from exposure to the pesticide drifting through the air between 2002 and 2011, according to the most recent records. In 2013, 19 people picking raspberries in Monterey County were sickened, and in 2012, 15 people in their homes and two firefighters near a Ventura County strawberry field reported irritated eyes, officials said.

California farmers fear that tighter restrictions will increase the costs of their fruits and vegetables, potentially driving the market out of state or the country. Almond and grape growers use chloropicrin once every 20 to 30 years when they plant a new orchard or vineyard, but California's strawberry growers, who use it each season, may be hit hardest.

California produces 88 percent of the nation's strawberry crop, supporting a $2.3 billion industry, said Carolyn O'Donnell, a spokeswoman for the California Strawberry Commission.

It will cost the state's strawberry growers an estimated $20 million to buy upgraded tarps to cover their crops and comply with the standards, she said.

"Farmers and their families live near their farms and work in their fields and care deeply about protecting the safety of their workers, neighbors and communities,'' O'Donnell said.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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