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September 12, 2002
Contact: Eric Cárdenas, EDC (805) 963-1622
GOVERNOR SIGNS PESTICIDE SAFETY BILL
Environmental Defense Center is Co-Sponsor of
AB 947
SANTA BARBARA, CA - Yesterday, Governor Gray Davis signed into
law Assembly Bill 947 (AB 947), a bill that will help protect
school-aged children from the potential harm posed by pesticide
drift. Written by Assemblymember Hanna-Beth Jackson and co-sponsored
by the Environmental Defense Center (EDC) and Ventura County Farm
Bureau, this bill is a victory for children across the state.
"We are pleased that Governor Davis has placed children's
health first by passing this common sense bill," said Eric
Cárdenas, Director of the Central Coast Environmental Health
Project (CCEHP). "We have added one more tool to the pesticide
tool box with the passage of AB 947."
AB 947 allows County Agricultural Commissioners the authority
to regulate any pesticides/materials within ¼ miles of
schools. Currently, restricted materials have special conditions
set upon them, while non-restricted materials follow a different
set of less restrictive guidelines. AB 947 will now give the CAC
discretion to regulate any pesticide application around schools,
regardless of the pesticide.
AB 947 also increases the maximum fine for serious pesticide
related violations from the current $1,000 to $5,000.
AB 947 was first drafted as a result of a pesticide drift incident
over a Ventura County elementary school in 1999. A citrus grower
had applied Lorsban, an non-restricted pesticide, to his lemon
orchard adjacent to Mound Elementary School. When children at
the school began feeling sick later that day, officials determined
pesticides had drifted and closed the school. Resulting samples
later confirmed that pesticides had indeed drifted.
"Drift around schools should never occur," stated Cárdenas.
"This bill will help ensure that it doesn't."
As a result of the incident, Assemblymember Hannah-Beth Jackson,
EDC, the Ventura County Agricultural Commissioner and the Ventura
County Farm Bureau began discussing potential options for preventing
a similar drift event in the future. The result was a policy that
would limit pesticide use around sensitive school sites and increase
the penalties for violations. Indirectly, the bill also resulted
in increased communication between growers, schools, the public
and governmental agencies.
AB 947 was first introduced by Hannah-Beth Jackson in 2000, and
has been supported by the EDC, American Lung Association, the
California Farm Bureau and many other organizations.
The EDC is a non-profit, public interest environmental law firm
serving California's Central Coast since 1977.
The CCEHP's mission is to raise awareness about the health risks
posed by pesticide exposure while decreasing our reliance on pesticides
through education and advocacy. For more information, please call
(805) 963-1622 ext. 111.
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