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Senators to EPA: Reverse Course and Ban Toxic Pesticide Chlorpyrifos Now

Led by Udall, group of 15 Democratic Senators call on EPA to take the brain-damaging chemical off our food and off the market

Senators cite EPA’s own studies that found chlorpyrifos harms children’s brains and poses a serious threat to farmworkers even with protective equipment and engineering controls

WASHINGTON U.S. Senator Tom Udall (D-N.M), top Democrat on the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee overseeing the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), led a group of 15 Senate Democrats in calling on EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler to ban chlorpyrifos, a toxic pesticide linked to brain damage in children and known to cause serious harm to human health. The letter comes in response to a recent EPA decision to reject a petition to ban chlorpyrifos. S everal states and public health groups petitioned for the removal of the chemical from the marketplace , but the EPA announced on July 18, 2019 that the agency would not ban the dangerous pesticide but would continue to monitor the safety of chlorpyrifos through 2020.

As a result, families across the country remain at risk of exposure to this toxic nerve agent through contaminated food, particularly children, farmers, and farmworkers living in rural Latino communities, who face disproportionate risk of exposure while applying the pesticide. In the letter, the senators urged the EPA to reverse course and institute a ban on chlorpyrifos immediately to protect public health.

“The EPA has repeatedly found that chlorpyrifos harms children’s brains at exposures far lower than what the EPA allows.  Nevertheless, it refuses to ban this pesticide supposedly because the agency is currently unable to pinpoint the precise exposures that cause this harm,” wrote the senators . “Additionally, the EPA’s rejection of the petition to ban chlorpyrifos has been accompanied by a new argument in which the EPA contends that the prohibition on allowing a pesticide to be on our food in the absence of an affirmative EPA safety finding does not apply to its action on public petitions.  The EPA apparently now seeks to cast aside public input from its work to protect public health.”

“Additionally, chlorpyrifos threatens agricultural workers who apply the pesticide.  Farm workers are exposed to chlorpyrifos from mixing, handling, and applying the pesticide, as well as from entering fields where chlorpyrifos was recently sprayed. Chlorpyrifos is one of the pesticides most often linked to acute pesticide poisonings, and in many States that monitor pesticide poisonings, it is regularly identified among the 5 pesticides linked to the highest number of pesticide poisoning incidents. This is significant given widespread under-reporting of pesticide poisonings due to such factors as inadequate reporting systems, fear of retaliation from employers, and reluctance to seek medical treatment,” continued the senators.

“The EPA’s decision to reject the petition to ban chlorpyrifos is deeply concerning.  It simply makes no sense from a public health or legal perspective for EPA to continue to resist taking action that would protect children’s brains.  If you fail to reverse this decision, more children, farmworkers and American families will be exposed to this pesticide and they will suffer as a result,” concluded the senators.

In addition to Udall, the letter was signed by Senators Cory A. Booker (D-N.J.), Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.), Kamala D. Harris (D-Calif.), Mazie K. Hirono (D-Hawaii), Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.), Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), Ben Cardin (D-Md.), Richard J. Durbin (D-Ill.), Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.), Robert Menendez (D-N.J.), Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.), and Michael F. Bennet (D-Colo.).

In March, Udall, Booker, Blumenthal, Harris, Van Hollen, Merkley, Gillibrand, Sanders, and Cardin introduced legislation to ban chlorpyrifos, and protect the health and safety of children, farmworkers, and families across the country from this dangerous nerve agent. Udall first introduced legislation to ban chlorpyrifos in 2017.

The full letter can be read below and HERE .

The Honorable Andrew Wheeler

Administrator

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

William Jefferson Clinton Building

1200 Pennsylvania Ave, N.W.

Washington, DC 20460

Dear Mr. Administrator:

We write to express our alarm with the recent Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) announcement that it would reject a petition by several states and public health groups to ban the pesticide chlorpyrifos.  We believe this decision to be reckless and dangerous for the health of both children and farmworkers and contrary to the requirements of federal law.  We urge you to reverse course and remove this pesticide from the marketplace without delay.

The Food Quality Protection Act of 1996 (Public Law 104-170, 110 Stat. 1489) (FQPA) directs the EPA to ensure with “reasonable certainty” that “no harm” will result from food, drinking water, and other exposures to a pesticide. If the EPA cannot make this safety finding, it must prohibit residues and the use of the pesticide on food. The FQPA mandates that the EPA must consider children’s special sensitivity and exposure to pesticide chemicals and must make an explicit determination that the pesticide can be used with a “reasonable certainty of no harm” to children. In determining acceptable levels of pesticide residue, the EPA must account for the potential health harm from pre-and postnatal exposures. The economic benefits of any particular pesticides cannot be used to override this health-based standard for children from food and other exposures.

There is no dispute that the EPA has not been able to make this safety finding.  In fact, the EPA has repeatedly found that chlorpyrifos harms children’s brains at exposures far lower than what the EPA allows.  Nevertheless, it refuses to ban this pesticide supposedly because the agency is currently unable to pinpoint the precise exposures that cause this harm. Additionally, the EPA’s rejection of the petition to ban chlorpyrifos has been accompanied by a new argument in which the EPA contends that the prohibition on allowing a pesticide to be on our food in the absence of an affirmative EPA safety finding does not apply to its action on public petitions.  The EPA apparently now seeks to cast aside public input from its work to protect public health.

The EPA is now seeking to avoid its statutory duties by pointing to a regulation it has adopted that requires petitions to present new scientific evidence to support the requested action.  However, the FQPA explicitly constrains the EPA’s discretion and prohibits the EPA from retaining tolerances without a safety finding.  And in this case, the EPA’s own scientists have already found chlorpyrifos harms children’s brains.  Therefore, we strongly oppose the idea that the EPA can unilaterally over-ride this congressional mandate with an agency regulation.

Rejecting this petition and pushing off further decision until 2022 leaves the public in harm’s way from a pesticide that has long been of concern to the EPA for yet many more years.  Residential uses of chlorpyrifos ended in 2000 after the EPA found unsafe exposures to children. The EPA also discontinued use of chlorpyrifos on tomatoes and restricted its use on apples and grapes in 2000, and required no-spray buffers around schools, homes, playfields, day cares, hospitals, and other public places, ranging from 10 to 100 feet. In 2015, the EPA proposed to ban all chlorpyrifos food tolerances, based on unsafe drinking water contamination, which would have ended use of chlorpyrifos on food in the United States.

After updating the risk assessment in November 2016 to account for prenatal exposures associated with brain impacts, the EPA found that expected residues from use on food crops exceeded the safety standard.  The EPA also found that the majority of estimated drinking water exposures from currently allowed uses of chlorpyrifos also exceeded acceptable levels, reinforcing the need to revoke all food tolerances for the pesticide.

Countless studies, including the EPA’s Revised Human Health Risk Assessment for Registration Review (2016), describe the threat of chlorpyrifos to healthy development of children. From these studies, we know that children experience greater exposure to chlorpyrifos and other pesticides because, relative to adults, they eat and drink more proportional to their body weight. A growing body of evidence shows that prenatal exposure to very low levels of chlorpyrifos can lead to lasting and possibly permanent neurological impairments, developmental delay, and attention deficit disorder. In the EPA’s revised human health risk assessment for chlorpyrifos in November 2016, the EPA confirmed that there are no acceptable uses for the pesticide and that all food uses exceed acceptable levels, with children ages 1 to 2 exposed to levels of chlorpyrifos that are 140 times what the EPA considers acceptable.

Additionally, chlorpyrifos threatens agricultural workers who apply the pesticide.  Farm workers are exposed to chlorpyrifos from mixing, handling, and applying the pesticide, as well as from entering fields where chlorpyrifos was recently sprayed. Chlorpyrifos is one of the pesticides most often linked to acute pesticide poisonings, and in many States that monitor pesticide poisonings, it is regularly identified among the 5 pesticides linked to the highest number of pesticide poisoning incidents. This is significant given widespread under-reporting of pesticide poisonings due to such factors as inadequate reporting systems, fear of retaliation from employers, and reluctance to seek medical treatment.

According to the EPA’s own data, all workers who mix and apply chlorpyrifos are exposed to unsafe levels of the pesticide even with maximum personal protective equipment and engineering controls. Field workers are currently allowed to re-enter fields within 1 to 5 days after chlorpyrifos is sprayed based on current restricted entry intervals on the registered chlorpyrifos labels but unsafe exposures continue on average 18 days after applications.

In 2015, leading scientific and medical experts, along with children’s health advocates, came together, under “Project TENDR: Targeting Environmental Neuro-Developmental Risks,” to issue a call to action to reduce widespread exposures to chemicals that interfere with fetal and children’s brain development. Based on the available and peer-reviewed scientific evidence, the TENDR authors identified prime examples of neuro-developmentally toxic chemicals “that can contribute to learning, behavioral, or intellectual impairment, as well as specific neurodevelopmental disorders such as ADHD or autism spectrum disorder,” and listed organophosphate pesticides, among them. In 2018, leading scientists involved with TENDR published an article in PLOS Medicine that found that prenatal exposure to organophosphate pesticides such as chlorpyrifos, even at low levels that were previously considered safe, are putting children at risk for cognitive and behavioral deficits and neurodevelopmental disorders. The scientists recommended phasing out chlorpyrifos.

The EPA’s decision to reject the petition to ban chlorpyrifos is deeply concerning.  It simply makes no sense from a public health or legal perspective for EPA to continue to resist taking action that would protect children’s brains.  If you fail to reverse this decision, more children, farmworkers and American families will be exposed to this pesticide and they will suffer as a result.

Sincerely,

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