Former EPA Executives work to keep pesticides on the Market
Profit Before People
The Pombo bill essentially would reverse the burden of proof, requiring the EPA to provide detailed justification before it sought to apply any additional safety margins for children.
...manufacturers that want to register new types of pesticides would still be allowed to use assumptions or calculations rather than conducting studies, making it easier for them to sell new compounds at the same time it would be harder for EPA to restrict old ones..
[ Pesticide Poisoning and Kids ] * [ Symptoms of Pesticide Poisoning ]
[ MEMORIAL TO VICTIMS ]
Subject: Where will You Go After You Retire?
Date: Sat, 13 May 2000 17:19:42 -0400
From: Stephen Tvedten <steve@getipm.com>
Organization: Get Set Inc. (www.getipm.com)
To: Lyndon Hawkins <hawkins@empm.cdpr.ca.gov>
Senior Research
Scientist
State of California,
Department of Pesticide Regulation - Integrated Pest Management
Dear Lyndon, I thought you might like to read an article
entitled: Pesticide Coalition Tries to Blunt Regulation, By George Lardner Jr.
and Joby Warrick - Washington Post Staff Writers, Saturday, May 13, 2000; Page
A01.
When Rep. Richard W. Pombo (R-Calif.) introduced the
Regulatory Fairness and Openness
Act of 1999, he said it was needed to improve the process of regulating potentially dangerous pesticides. Pombo's
colleagues have since rallied to his cause, with a majority of the House and 38
senators signing on to the legislation.
But, unknown outside the small circle of those involved in
the drafting process, much of the text of the bill was written not on Capitol
Hill but in Arlington, by a consulting firm working for a coalition of pesticide
manufacturers, agricultural organizations and food processors. Many of those at
the firm previously worked on pesticide regulation at the Environmental Protection
Agency.
The legislation would make it more difficult for federal
regulators to restrict existing pesticides while giving manufacturers broad
leeway to introduce new ones.
Pombo and his allies say his measure deals only with
"process" and does not change any of the laudable goals or "basic
structure" of a sweeping food safety law passed unanimously by Congress
four years ago. Critics say it would effectively undo the protections put in
place in 1996. No immediate hearings are planned.
The large number of congressional sponsors of the bill is
in part a measure of the intensity of the lobbying campaign by supporters.
Chemical and agribusiness trade groups have mounted an aggressive campaign on
Capitol Hill, sponsoring "lobbying days" that bring farmers to
Washington to meet with their representatives.
Articles and editorials in the farming trade press
predicted that continuing with the current law would produce economic disaster
for growers and mean less fresh fruit and vegetables for children, who would
suffer more illnesses and deaths as a result. One November article in the
magazine The Packer even likened EPA Administrator Carol M. Browner to infamous
mass murderer John Wayne Gacy.
The 1996 law set a new, stringent safety standard for using
pesticides, requiring "a reasonable certainty of no harm" for raw and
processed food. It focused on making sure that food was safe for children,
requiring that permissible exposures to pesticides be reduced tenfold to protect
infants and children unless the EPA was presented with "reliable data"
showing that so great a reduction was unnecessary.
The extra protections for children were urged by a 1993 report of the National Academy of Sciences, which concluded that developing brains and bodies are especially vulnerable to damage from the neurotoxins present in many pesticides. While the EPA had occasionally established additional safety margins for children, the academy's scientists said the threat to children's health was grave enough to warrant applying the protections in every case, unless there was solid evidence showing that extra safeguards weren't needed.
The Pombo bill essentially would reverse the burden of
proof, requiring the EPA to provide detailed justification before it sought to
apply any additional safety margins for children. The agency would face new
obligations to explain itself whenever it used computer models or statistical
assumptions "in the absence of data that could be obtained."
At the same time, manufacturers that want to register new
types of pesticides would still be allowed to use assumptions or calculations
rather than conducting studies, making it easier for them to sell new compounds
at the same time it would be harder for EPA to restrict old ones, opponents say.
An outspoken defender of private property rights who once
said the "eco-federal coalition owes more to communism than to any other
philosophy," Pombo says his
proposed rules are needed to keep the EPA from making worst-case assumptions and
rushing to judgments without "doing the science."
But others instrumental in the passage of the 1996 law
disagree. "The Pombo bill would be a major step backward," said Rep.
Henry A. Waxman (D-Calif.). "It
would guarantee that the law we passed would never be implemented." Rather,
he said, the EPA should be moving "faster and more forcefully to deal
with pesticides that are a threat to human health. I certainly don't
think we should put barriers in their way."
The Pombo bill is almost a word-for-word duplicate of a
typewritten draft dated March 22, 1999, and marked in hand-writing "IWG,"
for Implementation Working Group, the coalition of pesticide manufacturers,
agricultural interests and food processors. It was composed on IWG's behalf at
Jellinek, Schwartz & Connolly Inc. by JSC vice president Edward C. Gray, a
former EPA attorney and head of EPA's pesticides branch. He identified it when supplied
with a copy as "a draft I helped prepare for IWG."
The document was obtained by the Environmental Working
Group which provided it to The Washington Post. The head of the Environmental
Working Group, Kenneth Cook, asserted that Pombo "broke House ethics
rules" if he "took money from the pesticide industry; asked it to
write a sweeping pro-pesticides bill for him; then represented it as his work
product."
Pombo, who has received about $23,000 from IWG members for
his 1998 and 2000 election
campaigns, angrily denied any impropriety and accused environmentalists of
trying to tarnish his bill by saying industry wrote it.
He said environmentalists should look to themselves for all the
legislation they help draft.
"The bill I introduced started with this office,"
Pombo said. "Did I ask them [IWG] for input? Sure I did. I asked a whole
bunch of different groups for input on the draft legislation."
According to an advisory opinion Pombo obtained from the
House ethics committee following a call from The Post, "you may consult
with an outside organization on issues and accept such memoranda, legislative
drafts and other materials that it chooses to prepare," the advisory said.
"However, as a general matter, it would be impermissible for you to request
or suggest that a private organization prepare any such materials for you. Put
another way, you may not utilize employees or agents of a private organization
as de facto congressional staff members."
A rancher from Tracy, Calif., Pombo said he decided to push
for legislation after meeting in Stockton around the late summer of 1998 with
growers of grapes, pears and various minor crops worried that an EPA crackdown
might put them out of business.
Pombo said he put together a bill "over the next
couple of months" when someone from the Implementation Working Group
apparently heard about it and asked to see it. "We shared a draft with
them," Pombo said. "That became the draft everybody was working
off."
IWG Chairman Mark Maslyn, deputy Washington office director
of the American Farm Bureau Federation, confirmed the sequence. He said his
group was devoting its attention, with Jellinek, Schwartz & Connolly serving
as staff, to commenting on the rules that the EPA was drawing up "when the
Pombo bill surfaced" around mid-February of 1999.
According to Maslyn, the IWG didn't particularly like what
they saw. "It was rough and a little bit hard-edged," Maslyn said.
"Had he worked with people with experience in drafting legislation,
certainly if he had consulted us, we would have suggested he do things a little
differently. . . . Our interest was in legislation that didn't do anything
foolish or adverse."
Gray was assigned to come up with an IWG version.
"There was a feeling that if bills [on this subject] were going to be
floating around, it would be good to have one instead of many and it would be
good if our ideas were in it," he said. "I was the guy with the
typewriter."
Pombo's bill has attracted an impressive assortment of
cosponsors, with 219 in the House and 37 backers of a similar bill introduced in
the Senate by Chuck Hagel (R-Neb.). The list includes Rep. John D. Dingell
(Mich.), ranking Democrat on the Commerce Committee, who said he is concerned
about the uncertainties confronting "Michigan agriculture in particular
because of its high number of minor-use crops" such as asparagus, beans and
ornamental plants. Minor crop growers are fearful that pesticide companies faced
with the expenses of new tests for
each use might abandon asparagus, for example, in favor of major crops such as
wheat and corn.
Even without the Pombo bill, farm and industry groups have
already racked up a string of victories. After the passage of the 1996 bill, the
EPA promised fast action on the riskiest pesticides, particularly a group known
as organophosphates or OPs, nerve agents originally developed by Nazi Germany in
the 1930s. But in the law's first three years the agency imposed use
restrictions last August on only two OPs, methyl parathion and azinphos methyl,
known as Gulthion.
Methyl parathion, used on more than a dozen major fruits
and vegetables, was allowed for use until this spring's growing season. Apples
sold during the winter, as a result, continued to show potentially dangerous
levels of the chemical, according to a laboratory analysis last week by the
Environmental Working Group.
"Pesticide levels in two [samples] were so high that a
2-year-old would exceed the government's safety standard just by eating half an
apple," the EWG said in its report.
Vice President Gore waded into the controversy over how to
implement the law in May 1998 after warnings from Democratic members of Congress
that rumors of an imminent ban on widely used pesticides were causing an uproar
in key political states. In a memo widely hailed by agribusiness, Gore ordered
establishment of a panel to review pesticides and directed that the Department
of Agriculture--long viewed by environmentalists as favoring the pesticide
interests of farmers--be included in "a sound regulatory approach"
that would give "due regard" to the "needs of our nation's
agricultural producers."
Environmentalists named to the review panel walked out
after several meetings. Cook, president of the Environmental Working Group and
the first to quit, said that "overall, pesticide risks have only gotten
worse during the Clinton administration," which he described as
"unwilling to act to reduce those risks in deference to the economic
concerns of agribusiness groups, pesticide companies and food processors."
For their part, farm groups lobbying for Pombo's bill say
the EPA's interpretation of the law is already hurting growers and eventually
could put many out of business. Risks from pesticides are being "vastly
overstated" in the absence of real-world data showing actual harm to
children or anyone else, Arizona Farm Bureau President Ken Evans said in 1998
testimony to Congress.
"It [EPA's policy] will increase prices and reduce the
quality, selection and availability of the most abundant, wholesome and
affordable food supply in the world," Evans said. "It will reduce, not
enhance, consumer's and children's opportunities for healthy diets."
Staff researcher Lynn Davis contributed to this report.
Revolving Door?
The consulting firm that helped write the Pombo bill,
Jellinek, Schwartz & Connolly Inc., employs a number of former senior
managers of the Environmental Protection Agency (former EPA positions are listed
below in parentheses).
Steven D. Jellinek (Assistant administrator for prevention,
pesticides and toxic substances)
Dan Barolo (Director of Office of Pesticide Programs)
Judith Hauswirth (Chief of toxicology branch of Office of
Pesticide Programs)
Edward C. Gray (General counsel for pesticides)
Edwin F. Tinsworth (Deputy director of toxic substances
office)
© 2000 The Washington Post Company
Well Lyndon, what can I say, over one-half of all pest
species are already resistant to your "registered" POISONS - with an
exponential increase in the remaining "control" group.
You have never bothered to consider anything but the active poison
ingredient in your "risk formula" and have totally ignored all of the
safe and far more effective alternatives, all of the chronic health effects, all
of the possible synergistic effects, all of the metabolites, all of the
transformation products, all of the contaminants, and you have only considered
strong young men and totally have ignored women, children, the sick and the aged
in your "risk/benefit compilations" - yet you want to pretend you have
used "sound science" to produce and/or "register" these
dangerous and useless POISONS!
I have
safely and effectively removed all of the pest problems in orchards, groves,
fields, gardens and inside and outside in over 350 schools without ever using
any of your volatile toxins - and I have gotten far better PEST CONTROL!
THAT IS SOUND SCIENCE -BUT, IT IS "ILLEGAL" IN CALIFORNIA!
What possible reason can there be other than greed to continue to push
these dangerous and useless toxins? The
world did not starve before their advent, nor will it starve when they are gone.
In fact, despite your ever-increasing use of your supposedly
"registered" POISONS we now lose more crops to the pests than we did
before we had these "registered" POISONS!
Respectfully, Stephen L. Tvedten
(Editor's Note: Anyone wonder what Mr. Edward Gray of Jellinek, Schwartz & Connolly Inc. does when he's not making sure that deadly pesticides stay registered and in use? Well, he has written to us. Click here to see what he wrote)
Please!
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