Blog about your topic of interest
Consider your topic of
interest for your literature review.
The topic of interest: What are the health
risks that may be incurred from pesticide drift to those living, working or attending school near farms which
employ elevated spraying equipment or crop duster planes to
apply chemicals to crops and fields?
What agencies at the local, state, federal, and/or international level
provide information, regulatory oversight, or are otherwise implicated in
addressing that topic?
Local: The Yolo County/General
Government Departments/Agriculture & Cooperative Extension/Agriculture
Weights & Measures/Pesticide Use Enforcement
Regulation of pesticide
use at the County level is mandated by the California Food and Agriculture
Code. In Yolo County this is performed by the Pesticide Use Enforcement program
(Program). The objective Program is to protect the public, pesticide
applicators, field workers, the environment and agricultural crops from the
adverse effects of pesticides resulting from misuse or improper handling. This
is accomplished through the regulation of activities of professional pest
control operators, advisors, dealers, private applicators (growers) and other
pesticide users County-wide. Additionally, the Agricultural Commissioner
(Commissioner) of Yolo County is under the direction and supervision of the
Director of the California Department of Pesticide Regulation (CDPR) for the
enforcement of State laws and regulations pertaining to pesticide use within
the State. The Commissioner has statutory authority to levy administrative
fines for violations of agricultural and structural pesticide use.
State: CDPR
CDPR monitors the use
of pesticides from farm fields to grocery shelves to assure the safety of
workers and the public. Regulatory activities are conducted by CDPR’s seven pesticide
program division branches: Pesticide Registration, Human Health Assessment,
Worker Health and Safety, Enforcement, Environmental Monitoring, Product
Compliance, and Pest Management and Licensing. Additionally, CDPR works closely with California’s county agricultural
commissioners, who serve as the primary enforcement agents for State pesticide
laws and regulations.
Federal: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
In
the United States, the EPA regulates pesticides at
the national level. Congress gives the EPA this authority through several
federal laws, including the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide and Rodenticide Act. EPA sets minimum
pesticide use standards and delegates pesticide enforcement regulatory
authority to the states.
International: The North American Free
Trade Agreement (NAFTA) Technical Working Group
The NAFTA
Technical Working Group on Pesticides is a collaboration among the pesticides
regulatory government agencies of the United States, Canada, and Mexico. Established
in 1997 to streamline pesticide shipments between Canada, Mexico, and the
United States, the primary objective of the of the NAFTA Technical Working
Group is to develop more efficient and less expensive pesticide regulation and
trade among the three countries and meet the environmental, ecological and human
health objectives of NAFTA.
References:
· Yolo
County/General Government Departments/Agriculture & Cooperative
Extension/Agriculture Weights & Measures/Pesticide Use Enforcement. Retrieved from: http://www.yolocounty.org/general-government/general-government-departments/agriculture-cooperative-extension/agriculture-and-weights-measures/pesticide-use-enforcement
· California
Environmental Protection Agency/California Department of Pesticide Regulation.
Retrieved from: http://www.cdpr.ca.gov/
· Environmental
Protection Agency. Retrieved from: https://www.epa.gov/pesticides
· International Activities Related to
Pesticides. Retrieved from: https://www.epa.gov/pesticides/international-activities-related-pesticides


Hello Angie! This is a very interesting topic. I know many farms use pesticides on their plants. This is a very sensitive issue because although these chemical can help grow these plants faster, is all this worth it if it costs us our well being?
ReplyDeletePesticide drift is an important topic because it can affect so many people at once by way of crops, dust, soil, air, and water. The misuse or mishandling of pesticide drift does indeed need to be regulated better and standards should be set higher at the State and Federal levels, in my opinion, because it is an important public health issue. Thanks!
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