Advertisement · 728 × 90
#
Hashtag
#EPAfailure
Advertisement · 728 × 90
Post image

Institutional culture at #EPA starts with the presumption that toxic #pesticides are necessary for economic and quality of life purposes. They are not! Get the facts:#EPAfail #EPAfailure

beyondpesticides.org/assets/media/d…

0 0 0 0
Beyond Pesticides Makes Science-based Case that It Is Imperative to Phase Out Pesticides in a Decade - Beyond Pesticides Daily News Blog The organic solutions to problems highlighted in the latest issue of Pesticides and You—based on the importance of healthy ecosystems and public health protection—are within reach, and the data creates an imperative for action now that phases out pesticides within a decade, while ensuring food productivity, resilient land management, and safe food, air, and water. (Beyond Pesticides, April 15, 2022) The current issue of Pesticides and You, RETROSPECTIVE 2021: A Call to Urgent Action, is a look at a year of science, policy, and advocacy that informs both the existential problems that the U.S. and the world are facing due to toxic pesticide dependency, and solutions that can be adopted now. The information in this issue captures the body of science that empowers action at the local, state, and federal level, and provides a framework for challenging toxic pesticide use and putting alternatives in place. The issue finds that 2021 was a pivotal year in both defining the problem and advancing the solution. This year in review is divided into nine sections that provide an accounting of scientific findings documenting serious pesticide-induced health and environmental effects, disproportionate risk to people of color and those with preexisting conditions, regulatory failures, at the same time […]

This issue provides a framework for moving ahead—given existing scientific analyses, identified #regulatory failure, & effective action available to us for a livable future. #climatecrisis #environment #sustainability #organic #biodiversity #EPAfailure

beyondpesticides.org/dailynewsblog/…

0 0 0 0
Industry, Money, and Politics Drive Legislation to Squelch Local Pesticide Restrictions - Beyond Pesticides Daily News Blog (Beyond Pesticides, April 7, 2022) Legislation introduced by U.S. Representative Rodney Davis (R-IL) last week would roll back, preempt, and prohibit local jurisdictions from enacting policies that protect resident health and a community’s unique local environments from hazardous pesticides. The bill, H.R.7266, is a direct attack on the scores of local communities that have enacted common sense safeguards from toxic pesticides, and represents the pesticide industry’s response to the growing momentum of the pesticide reform movement. Health and environmental advocates are expecting Rep. Davis and his partners in the agrichemical industry to attempt to work the provisions of the legislation into the upcoming 2023 farm bill. The industry had previously attempted to work federal preemption into the 2018 farm bill, an effort that ultimately failed after massive pushback from health advocates, local officials, and Congressional allies. Rep. Davis’ press release for the bill, in which he was joined with quotes from a range of agrichemical industry leaders, is titled “Davis Introduces Legislation to Prevent Liberal Local Governments from Banning or Restricting Pesticide Use,” striking a partisan tone. Caring about public and environmental health is typically not viewed as a liberal or conservative, Democratic or Republican issue. Those monitoring local governments […]

#HR7266 is a direct attack on communities that enacted common sense safeguards from toxic #pesticides & represents the pesticide industry’s response. #preemption #pesticidereform #organic #EPA #EPAfailure #pesticidefree #farmbill #environment #health

beyondpesticides.org/dailynewsblog/…

0 0 0 0
Coverup of Dog Deaths at EPA, According to Internal Emails on Seresto Flea and Tick Collars - Beyond Pesticides Daily News Blog (Beyond Pesticides, April 1, 2022) According to reporting by E&E’s Greenwire, internal emails at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) show that career scientists at the agency expressed worry about pesticide-laced pet collars, such as the notorious Seresto flea and tick collars, but that EPA managers “instructed them to avoid documenting those worries in publicly accessible records.” The emails were released pursuant to a 2021 FOIA (Freedom of Information Act) lawsuit, brought by the Center for Biological Diversity (CBD), that sought records of internal communications. The documents evidence staff concern about the collars that has not been a part of EPA’s public communications on the subject. EPA staff, in the emails, expressed a range of degrees of outrage at managers’ behavior and at the very registration of the product, given the significant harms. Seresto collars are plastic pet collars embedded with pesticides designed to kill fleas, ticks, and lice; they contain the active ingredients flumethrin and imidacloprid. Flumethrin, a chemical in the pyrethroid class of synthetic neurotoxic insecticides, has been linked repeatedly to neurological issues, such as seizures and learning disabilities in children, to gastrointestinal distress, and to damage to nontarget invertebrates, according to EPA’s own analysis. Imidacloprid is a commonly used pesticide linked to […]

#EPA scientists expressed worry about pesticide-laced #petcollars but managers “instructed them to avoid documenting those worries in publicly accessible records.” #fleas #ticks #seresto #pesticides #dogs #pets #fleacollars #seresto #EPAfailure

beyondpesticides.org/dailynewsblog/…

0 0 0 0
Despite Past Findings of Insecticide's Threat to 1,284 Species, EPA Reverses and Allows Continued Use - Beyond Pesticides Daily News Blog (Beyond Pesticides, March 11, 2022) With a history of unenforceable and impractical pesticide label restrictions resulting in U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) findings of ludicrously small or no risk, the agency is at it again with its latest announcement that allows the continued use of the deadly organophosphate insecticide malathion. This just the latest example of what advocates see as an irresponsible federal agency falling far short, as the nation and world sit on the brink of biodiversity collapse and deadly pesticide-induced diseases.   In a head-spinning development, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) announced on March 8 its final Biological Opinion (BiOp) on malathion, which opinion claims that the commonly used insecticide poses no extinction risk to any protected animal or plant. The FWS review and BiOp are part of EPA’s evaluation of whether malathion — an organophosphate insecticide that causes serious damage to many organisms — should retain its registration. The Executive Summary of the BiOp concludes: “Our findings suggest that no proposed species or candidate species would experience species-level effects from the action [i.e., registration and thus, permitted use of malathion], and, therefore, are not likely to be jeopardized. We also conclude the proposed action is not […]

#EPA reversed its stand on deadly #organophosphate #insecticide #malathion & is allowing continued use of deadly #organophosphate #insecticide #malathion. #biodiversity #disease #pesticides #endangeredspecies #insecticides #science #EPAfailure #environment

beyondpesticides.org/dailynewsblog/…

0 0 0 0
Secret Inert Ingredient in 'Bee Safe' Pesticide Found to Kill Bumblebees - Beyond Pesticides Daily News Blog (Beyond Pesticides, November 11, 2021) Evidence is building that so-called ‘inert’ ingredients in pesticide formulations are harming pollinators and undermining regulatory determinations that designate products as ‘bee-safe.’ According to a new study published in Scientific Reports, the fungicide Amistar causes lethal and sublethal effects that can be primarily attributed not to its active ingredient azoxystrobin, but to alcohol ethoxylates, a co-formulant, or inert ingredient intentionally added to a pesticide formulation. While the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) utilizes a ‘bee advisory box’ on pesticide labels to indicate danger to pollinators, results of this and previous studies on inert ingredients underline how EPA’s ‘cute little bee icon’ is little more than window dressing for massive regulatory failures and a pollinator crisis that has shown no signs of abating. Scientists at Royal Holloway University in London, UK began their study with three packaged colonies of Bombus terrestris, a European bumblebee often bred for commercial use in greenhouses throughout the world. In order to suss out differences in toxicity between the various ingredients in the formulated Amistar fungicide, bees were separated into multiple groups. One group acted as a positive control, and was dosed with dimethoate, a pesticide known to be highly toxic […]

Another study finds ‘inert’ ingredients in pesticide formulations are harming #pollinators & undermining regulatory determinations that designate products as ‘bee-safe.’ #pesticides #health #bees #insectapocalypse #environment #EPAFailure

beyondpesticides.org/dailynewsblog/…

0 0 0 0