Court Orders EPA to Ban Pesticide Harmful to Children and Birds Within 60 Days

Last year the agency revoked a proposed ban on chlorpyrifos, which causes brain damage, against the recommendation of its own science.

Yesterday the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ordered the Environmental Protection Agency to ban chlorpyrifos, a common insecticide linked to neurological damage in both people and wildlife, following a confounding 2017 decision by former EPA head Scott Pruitt , drawing immediate and widespread criticism.

For decades, the EPA has known of the harms caused by the organophosphate pesticide, which targets the nervous system and disrupts signals in the brain. In 1998 the agency banned indoor use of chlorpyrifos over fears of the effects of cumulative exposure to infants and children. Indeed, studies and reviews by EPA scientists linked the pesticide to delayed physical and mental development in children, including lower IQ, attention problems, and delayed motor development, as well as to adverse impacts on virtually all species listed under the Endangered Species Act. Yet in 2015 more than five million pounds of the pesticide were applied to food crops like grapes, soybeans, wheat, and corn, according to the .

The court has now given the EPA 60 days to ban chlorpyrifos. The agency says it is reviewing the court鈥檚 decision and continues to insist there is not enough data to declare the pesticide a threat to human health. The court also reprimanded the EPA for failing to act earlier and denying the dangers posed by this chemical. 

鈥淭here was no justification for the EPA鈥檚 decision in its 2017 order to maintain a tolerance for chlorpyrifos in the face of scientific evidence that its residue on food causes neurodevelopmental damage to children,鈥 judges Jacqueline Nguyen and Jed Rakoff write in . 鈥淚n such circumstances, federal law commands that the EPA ban such a pesticide from use on food products.鈥 Judge Ferdinand Fernandez dissented on jurisdictional grounds.

The agency has delayed banning the pesticide for more than a decade, starting in 2007 when the Natural Resources Defense Council and the Pesticide Action Network petitioned the EPA to ban all outdoor uses of chlorpyrifos. After several more back-and-forth volleys, with no action taken by EPA, in 2014 the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals stepped in and ordered the agency to evaluate the pesticide and make a decision about its safety by the following year. The court declared the delayed response 鈥渆gregious鈥 given the EPA鈥檚 own evidence hinting at the pesticides鈥 dangers.   

In 2015, the agency finally responded and proposed a chlorpyrifos ban, but failed to finalize it before President Trump took office. Scott Pruitt鈥檚 EPA revoked the proposal in March 2017 after (now DowDuPont), the leading chlorpyrifos manufacturer. Environmental and medical groups immediately objected to the decision, but 鈥渢he EPA鈥檚 utter failure to respond,鈥 the judges write in the decision, left the issue in the lurch and the insecticides in circulation.

Twelve environmental and farmworkers' rights groups鈥攊ncluding NRDC, PANNA, GreenLatinos, National Hispanic Medical Association, and United Farm Workers鈥 sued the EPA over the revocation. The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals heard oral arguments in July, and passed down its decision yesterday.

鈥淸This decision] was a long time coming and finally children, farmworkers, and consumers in America are going to be protected,鈥 says Marisa Ordonia, an attorney for Earthjustice. 鈥淭he court sent a message to the EPA that they have to follow the law just like anyone else.鈥

Mark Maga帽a, CEO of Green Latinos, says the ruling is a win for the health of the Latin American community: 鈥淎s Latinos make up a high percentage of farm workers, it鈥檚 specifically a victory for our community and those who are most vulnerable and on the front lines of toxins and pesticides.鈥

Given the detrimental effects the pesticide has on insects and humans, it comes as no surprise that it鈥檚 highly toxic for birds as well. As 爆料公社 has previously reported, birds that have simply walked on contaminated vegetation or eaten insects or seeds laced with the pesticide can grow sick or die. The pesticide causes sparrows to lose their sense of direction and makes it difficult for Japanese Quail to breathe.

The EPA could still appeal the decision to the Supreme Court. 鈥淓PA is reviewing the decision,鈥 agency spokesperson Michael Abboud wrote in an email to 爆料公社.

Abboud questioned the science underlying the health assessments鈥攕pecifically that followed hundreds of mothers and newborn children and monitored their chemical exposure and neurodevelopment for many years. 鈥淭he Columbia Center鈥檚 data underlying the Court鈥檚 assumptions remains inaccessible and has hindered the Agency鈥檚 ongoing process to fully evaluate the pesticide using the best available, transparent science,鈥 he wrote.

Columbia scientists say they cannot submit the raw data to the agency without exposing the children鈥檚 and mothers鈥 private information. The argument follows an agency trend to question scientific research and restrict the kinds of data it uses in decisionmaking. The EPA is currently pursuing a rule that would require scientists to submit their raw data for agency consideration, even at the risk of breaching patient privacy鈥攁n idea that as a threat to public health.

鈥淲e are going to stay on top of them to make sure this ruling is followed through on based on undisputed findings that this pesticide is unsafe for public health,鈥 Maga帽a says. 

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