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    New Data Shows Pesticide Use in California Remains at Record High

     

     

    Californians for Pesticide Reform

    Sacramento: Agricultural pesticide use in California remains at a near-record high, according to data quietly released at the end of the year by the state agency responsible for tracking pesticide use. The California Department of Pesticide Regulation’s (DPR) latest numbers paint a stark picture of the state’s continued reliance on vast quantities of agricultural pesticides – 209 million pounds in 2018. That’s the third highest since reporting began in 1990, and the fourth year in a row the total has topped 200 million pounds. Many pesticides are hazardous to human health, some are classified as Toxic Air Contaminants and Volatile Organic Compounds, and there’s an increasing awareness of their contribution to climate change and biodiversity loss, including bees and other pollinators.

    In the Central Coast region, while both Ventura and Santa Barbara Counties saw decreased overall pesticide use from 2017 to 2018, the latest figures are still far above applications from recent years. The more than 6 million (6,110,556) pounds of pesticides applied in Ventura County in 2018 was the lowest since 2009 (5,782,307), according to the DPR’s annual published reports, which have been removed from online access. Similarly, in Santa Barbara County, DPR’s 2018 report counts 4,865,420 pounds applied, the least since 2014’s 4,782,176.

    “Agricultural pesticides are linked to a wide range of human health harms,” said Mechelle Perea-Ryan, a San Joaquin Valley nurse and member of the Alliance of Nurses for Health Environments.  “The health risks include cancer, birth defects, autism, Parkinson’s, and asthma.”    

    “These numbers are cause for great concern,” said Sarah Aird, co-director of the statewide coalition Californians for Pesticide Reform. “Over the past four years, we’ve returned to the record high levels of pesticide use of the 1990s. It appears that California agriculture is continuing down the same unsustainable path, as reliant on hazardous chemicals as we were thirty years ago. Our state’s regulators have to do more than just report these numbers. It’s time for a shift toward policies that actually reduce their use.”

    Analysis of the latest pesticide data combined with demographic data reveals a pronounced racial disparity in concentration of pesticide use between counties with the largest share of Latinx residents and those with the smallest. California counties with a majority Latinx population use 900% more pesticides per person than counties with fewer than 24% Latinx residents [See table below]. The two groups of counties have a similar total population and area.  In the eleven counties with a majority Latinx population, there were 22 pounds of pesticides used per person in 2018, or 2,373 pounds per square mile. By contrast, for the 25 counties with the lowest proportion of Latinx residents (fewer than 24%), pesticide use was just 2.4 pounds per person, or 262 pounds per square mile. 

    “Racial injustice is baked into California’s system of agriculture, and the latest pesticide use numbers confirm that these egregious inequities won’t go away by themselves,” said Nayamin Martinez, Executive Director of Fresno-based Central California Environmental Justice Network. “There are state and federal civil rights laws that forbid this kind of systemic discrimination that unduly burdens one group over another, and yet it persists. California’s racial reckoning must extend to agriculture, and must address the toxic burden that is overwhelmingly borne by communities of color.”

    The continued high rates of agricultural pesticide use have amplified calls from public health advocates for new policies that provide advance notice before hazardous pesticide applications. Currently, despite the prevalence of pesticides and their known health impacts, Californians have no right to know about planned pesticide use. 

    “As long as our agricultural system continues to depend on vast inputs of pesticides, the state must do better at letting people know what’s planned on our farms and fields,” said Bianca Lopez, founder of Modesto-based Valley Improvement Projects. “Many of these chemicals are highly toxic and yet they continue to be sprayed by the millions of pounds on our food crops, right next to homes and schools, endangering residents and workers alike. The lack of transparency needs to end. We want to know where and when those 200 million pounds are being sprayed before it happens, not years after.”

    While the picture from 2018 is bleak, there are signs of a shift that began with the arrival of the Newsom Administration in 2019 and new leadership at the Department of Pesticide Regulation, along with a renewed focus on public and environmental health. One of the first acts of the new administration was to announce a ban of the brain-harming pesticide chlorpyrifos, which took effect on January 1. Because of lengthy delays in reporting – 2018 data only became available in the last week of 2020 – it will be another year before it’s known whether new leadership has translated into changes in farming practices across the state that are substantial enough to shift pesticide use patterns. 

    “We know there’s a better way to grow food that doesn’t harm the very communities that grow it, and recent increases in organic production in the Monterey Bay region point the way for the rest of the state,” said Héktor Calderón, coordinator of the Monterey Bay area-based coalition Safe Ag Safe Schools. “Ending our state’s dependence on harmful chemical pesticides is the path toward a sustainable future for agriculture in California.”

    Californians for Pesticide Reform is a diverse, statewide coalition of 200+ member groups working to strengthen pesticide policies in California to protect public health and the environment. Member groups include public and children’s health advocates, clean air and water groups, health practitioners, environmental justice groups, labor, education, farmers and sustainable agriculture advocates from across the state.

     

     

     


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