From: "Sandi Schukar" , Oregonians for Food
and Shelter
4/11/07
Subject: /color>
SB-20 Hearing and news
coverage-Oregon Pesticides
/fontfamily>
What follows is today’s (April 11, 2007) Eugene
Register-Guard coverage of yesterday's Senate Bill
20 hearing. It gives a different perspective of
the hearing since the R-G is a very
environmentalist friendly newspaper. So far the
R-G is the only newspaper we know that had
coverage on the hearing./x-tad-bigger>/color>/fontfamily>
It was interesting that the Senate Agriculture and
Natural Resources Committee only scheduled ONE
HOUR for the hearing. After Senator Walker and
two proponents of the bill took over half of the
available time, only about 10 more folks got to
give an abbreviated version of their testimony.
One very pleasant surprise was that Senator Rick
Metsger (D-Hood River area) briefly testified in
OPPOSITION to the bill, stating the devastating
impact the large no-spray zones would have on
growers in his District. /x-tad-bigger>/color>/fontfamily>
OFS, OR Farm Bureau, Pest Control Operators of
Oregon, and about 20 more groups and businesses in
opposition to SB-20 had signed up to testify, but
did NOT have an opportunity as the committee only
had use of the hearing room until 8:30 A.M. /x-tad-bigger>/color>/fontfamily>
Opponents of the bill packed the hearing room and
far out numbered the supporters, easily by a 5 to
1 ratio. We also know that legislators did
receive many emails and phone calls in
opposition. OFS thanks everyone who took time to
forward information to their group members, called
or emailed legislators, wrote testimony and/or
drove to Salem early Tuesday morning for a 7:30
A.M. hearing. Your committed opposition was very
obvious to all of the legislators and does have an
impact./x-tad-bigger>/color>/fontfamily>
The attached R-G article also noted that committee
Chairman Brad Avakian, D-Portland, “…was
interested in a second session to hear from
opponents and supporters…” /x-tad-bigger>/color>/fontfamily>
We agree that yesterday will likely not be the
last we see of SB-20 (plus other anti-pesticide
bills) --- so stay tuned. /x-tad-bigger>/color>/fontfamily>
TERRY & PAULETTE/x-tad-bigger>/color>/fontfamily>
P.S. If you would like a /x-tad-bigger>
PDF/x-tad-bigger> file copy
of OFS’s four-page written testimony, just send an
email to /x-tad-bigger>terry@ofsonline.org/x-tad-bigger>/color>/fontfamily>
Terry L. Witt/bigger>/bigger>/bigger>/bigger>/bigger>/bigger>/color>/fontfamily>,
Executive Director/bigger>/bigger>/color>/fontfamily>
Oregonians for Food & Shelter (OFS)/bigger>/bigger>/color>/fontfamily>
3415 Commercial Street SE, Suite 100/bigger>/bigger>/color>/fontfamily>
Salem, OR 97302-4668/bigger>/bigger>/color>/fontfamily>
Office: 503.370.8092 Cell: 503.569.3300/bigger>/bigger>/color>/fontfamily>
Fax: 503.370.8565 /bigger>/bigger>/color>/fontfamily>370-8565
Cell: 503-569-3300/x-tad-bigger>/color>/fontfamily>
Pesticide buffer bill brings out crowds/bigger>/bigger>/bigger>/fontfamily>
/bigger>/bigger>/fontfamily>
Farmers and environmentalists pack a hearing room
in Salem to debate the idea of "no-spray" zones
around schools/x-tad-bigger>/fontfamily>
/bigger>/bigger>/fontfamily>
By David
Steves/x-tad-bigger>/fontfamily>
/bigger>/bigger>/fontfamily>
The Register-Guard/x-tad-bigger>/fontfamily>
/bigger>/bigger>/fontfamily>
Published: Wednesday, April 11, 2007/x-tad-bigger>/fontfamily>
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SALEM
-/x-tad-bigger>/fontfamily>
/bigger>/bigger>/fontfamily>A
bill creating "no-spray" buffers around schools
drew impassioned crowds to the Capitol on Tuesday,
where environmentalists, educators and scientists
urged the bill's passage while agriculture,
forestry and commercial pesticide applicators
argued that the bill was an unwarranted threat to
their livelihoods./x-tad-bigger>/fontfamily>
The bill
would prohibit a state- licensed pesticide
applicator from aerial spraying within one mile of
school property during the academic year and
within one mile of a road that services a school
property during morning and afternoon commute
times./x-tad-bigger>/fontfamily>
For
backpack pesticide applicators, the no-spray
buffer would be within a half-mile of school
property and roads that service schools./x-tad-bigger>/fontfamily>
Longtime
Springfield farm owner George Grier was among many
with an agricultural background to testify against
the bill. His farm has been next to Thurston
Middle School since its construction in 1964.
Grier said he tries to avoid using pesticides, but
some instances - infestations of tansy ragwort,
Canadian thistle, Scotch broom and other weeds -
leave him with no choice but to spray. Some can
only be controlled with herbicides. Those that can
be controlled by other means force a choice that's
not an environmental free ride, given that the use
of fuel for his tractor causes pollution. And
failing to remove weeds can lead to them spreading
to neighboring properties./x-tad-bigger>/fontfamily>
"The
cascade effect that this bill could unleash is
astounding," said Grier, who called Senate Bill
20's ambition "a noble cause, but it will not
accomplish that objective."/x-tad-bigger>/fontfamily>
Eric
Geyer, a forester and pesticide applicator for
Roseburg Forest Products, said laws already exist
to ensure that herbicides are applied with
meticulous care. He told lawmakers to be dubious
about warnings that schoolchildren's health could
be compromised by these forest-management
practices. He said restrictions on the use of
pesticides within buffers around schools would
infringe on the rights of landowners, based on
what he called "unfounded fears and personal
convictions."/x-tad-bigger>/fontfamily>
Supporters said protecting children whose brains
and bodies are still developing warranted SB 20's
targeted restrictions on pesticide use./x-tad-bigger>/fontfamily>
In
written testimony, the Lane Education Service
District said it was "particularly alarming" that
Marcola's Mohawk High School has been directly
beneath aerial spraying of pesticides. The
district drew that conclusion from a mapping
project coordinated by the Oregon Toxics Alliance
and the Forestland Dwellers./x-tad-bigger>/fontfamily>
Paul
Engelking, a University of Oregon chemistry
professor, cited his research for the U.S. Army on
the drift of chemical agents in leading him to
study the same phenomenon with agricultural
spraying./x-tad-bigger>/fontfamily>
Engelking said agricultural drift's exposure to
"human target" is far greater than the farm
industry's literature indicates. Larger drops that
reach plant surfaces - intended to kill insects,
weeds and other pests and plants - travel in
distances measured by the meter. The vapors and
small droplets that affect human health through
inhalation, however, "are characterized by
distances of kilometers," Engelking said./x-tad-bigger>/fontfamily>
Blachly
resident Jan Wroncy, a science researcher, organic
farmer and "no-spray" forest owner, said her
life's work had informed her on two important
issues in the debate over SB 20: that as children
develop they are especially vulnerable to the ill
effects of chemicals, and that all food and fiber
crops can be grown successfully without the use of
pesticides./x-tad-bigger>/fontfamily>
Wroncy
dismissed the claims of farmers and foresters that
the school buffer bill would force them out of
business./x-tad-bigger>/fontfamily>
After
the hearing, Chairman Brad Avakian, D-Portland,
said he was interested in a second session to hear
from opponents and supporters, but he said he was
undecided on whether to work the bill in an
attempt to push it to the Senate floor./x-tad-bigger>/fontfamily>
Fellow
committee member Sen. Alan Bates, D-Ashland, said
both sides had made their cases, and that perhaps
a task force could be created to study the issue./x-tad-bigger>/fontfamily>
Environmental lobbyist Sybil Ackerman, spokeswoman
for the multigroup Oregon Conservation Network,
said members of her group, especially the Oregon
Toxics Alliance, were working to get SB 20 passed./x-tad-bigger>/fontfamily>
But she
also acknowledged that when evaluating which
issues to coalesce around, this one didn't rise to
the top along those such as renewable energy,
keeping toxics out of rivers and improving
recycling of computers./x-tad-bigger>/fontfamily>
"Last
session, pesticides were an official priority,"
she said. "Now it's a subject a lot of our members
care a great deal about."/x-tad-bigger>/fontfamily>
In
contrast, one of the leading lobbyists opposed to
the bill, Paulette Pyle of the pro-pesticides
group Oregonians for Food and Shelter, said
defeating SB 20 was at the top of her clients'
order of business. "There's no compromise," she
said.
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