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In
an apparently inadvertent irony of timing, the Environmental
Protection Agency announced in the Federal Register its intention
to seek public comment on a draft Pesticide Registration (PR)
notice entitled "Guidance for Pesticide Registrants on Bee
Precautionary Labeling". This announcement came on November
22, the day before Thanksgiving. In the war movies, this moment
is typically accompanied by the panic cry "INCOMING"!
Pesticides hazardous to honey bees have carried a label restriction
since the early 1980s. It reads: "[This product] is HAZARDOUS
TO BEES exposed to direct treatment or residues on blooming crops
an/or blooming weeds. Do not apply [this product] or allow it
to drift to blooming crops and/or blooming weeds if bees are
foraging the areas to be treated."
The label restriction came about as a consequence of massive
bee kills from pesticides in the 1970s. Unfortunately the chemical
industry and State Regulators (the agencies typically delegated
the authority by EPA for pesticide regulation) found the restriction
cumbersome, problematical and inconvenient. While the label restriction
was frequently ignored or skirted, it nevertheless gave beekeepers
standing before the law when their bees were killed by illegal
pesticide use. Even under these conditions of unenthusiastic
and even hostile enforcement, commercial beekeepers in many parts
of the country had over 30% of their colonies killed or damaged
by pesticides.
The current PR Notice would propose sweeping changes to not only
the wording but the intent of bee protection language.
New pesticides presented for registration which fail to provide
residual bee toxicity data automatically will be assumed to have
a toxic period of 24 hours. This will encourage applicants to
neglect this detail, and beekeepers will spend years enduring
bee kills and uncompensated damages as they attempt to establish
their case against new pesticides which may have residual toxicity's
of 1 to 2 weeks. In other words the toxicity data will be generated
at the expense of the beekeeping industry.
It dismisses the issue of drift, which is often the major culprit
in bee kills, by simply omitting any reference to it. By this
logic, polluters in other arenas would be free to release toxic
substances into a waterway and be held harmless for any damage
done downstream. The only difference between the two cases is
that with agricultural pesticides it isn't a waterway but an
airstream which is polluted.
Perhaps the worst part of this proposal is its caveat to the
chemical industry, which says that an applicator is not responsible
for following even the feeble language proposed if they participate
in a "formal, state-approved bee protection program".
The EPA plans to take no role in the formation, approval or monitoring
of the state approved program, despite the clear evidence that
it has often been State Departments of Agriculture which are
the problem in protecting pollinators. In 1997 AAPCO (the American
Association of Pesticide Control Officers), a professional organization
to which many state regulatory people belong, formally requested
that the EPA make bee protection language ADVISORY. This gives
you an idea of the philosophy of many of these states and what
protections they might provide given a free hand. The EPA proposed
to not only put the foxes back in charge of the chicken coop
despite the loss of all these chickens, it proposed to let the
foxes make the rules and doesn't even intend to ask what the
rules are.
Beyond the specific labeling language, the EPA is failing to
carry out its basic responsibilities under the law (FIFRA). Ultimately
Congress is responsible for the implementation of FIFRA. It assigns
this responsibility to EPA, which in turn delegates the authority
to another agency, typically a State Department Of Agriculture.
It is apparent that the EPA is not only prepared to cave in to
the convenience of the chemical industry, but they are willing
to sacrifice American beekeeping and violate the law in the bargain.
They are either incapable or unwilling to hold their delegees
(the states) accountable for administering the law properly,
nor are they willing to do so themselves.
Beekeepers are urged to familiarize themselves with this issue
and contact their Congresspeople immediately. This matter will
effect all beekeepers, large or small. The indiscriminate and
uncontrolled use of pesticides around bees, which is likely to
result from the current posture of the EPA, will result in enormous
and costly losses for almost all beekeepers. The EPA must be
called to account by Congress and required to follow the law.
The current proposal provides little or no protection to honey
bees or any other pollinators, after years of input from the
beekeeping industry.
More detailed information on the PR can be obtained at
http://www.epa.gov/pesticides/
The comment period ends Jan 22, 2001. In addition to anything
you may have to say to the EPA, you should inform your Congressperson
or nothing will change.
Tom Theobold is a commercial beekeeper, freelance writer and
has been a beekeeper's advocate in the pesticide arena for over
25 years. If you have further questions please email Bee Culture
Magazine at
kim@airoot.com
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Bee Culture Magazine
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