Pesticide’s reprieve met with relief from farmers, but fear on health front
Without it, said
But
"If I almost died, then what is the long-term impact for my child?" she said. Her son, who was an infant at the time, now has a neurodevelopmental disorder, one of the health risks that inspired the
Nowhere in the country will the government's reversal be felt more profoundly than in
"They can take a third of your yield away," said Trebesch. "That's your profitability."
Even though farmers must follow strict rules in applying chlorpyrifos, it is nonetheless polluting the state's waters. About 10 of
And on windy days, in the tiny farming towns in the central part of the state, some mothers call their children in from the backyard when they see a crop duster coming.
After hearing concerns from those communities, the
"Chlorpyrifos is ... causing harm to the most vulnerable in our population -- unborn children, infants and young children," said
On the brink of a ban
After a decade of pressure from environmental groups, court fights, and regulatory and scientific reviews, the Obama administration was ready to take chlorpyrifos off the market last year, citing risks to wildlife, drinking water and, most important, children.
In a 2000 agreement with the chemical industry, the
The agency found that some 1- to 2-year-olds who ate a lot of food grown with chlorpyrifos could get 140 times more of the chemical than is considered safe from their diet alone. It's widely used on fruit, vegetables, wheat and other food crops.
The
But early this year, in the weeks before the ban was to take effect,
And in March, Pruitt overruled his staff scientists, rescinding the ban while the scientific analysis continues until 2022.
In an interview with the
Infestation of aphids
While all that was taking place in
Trebesch follows the state's recommendations to minimize insecticide use, and he waited until there were 250 bugs per plant. Then he called in a friend who does his aerial spraying.
Aphids, an invasive import from
"Every year, somewhere in the state [there is] an outbreak that needs insecticides to protect yield," he said.
Farmers usually use pyrethroids, another class of insecticides, to control aphids -- in part because it doesn't require a hazmat suit. Recently, however, Trebesch and other farmers found that it wasn't killing the bugs.
Koch figured out why in his laboratory: They had become resistant. It's a frequent problem in agriculture. Pests evolve to survive the most common chemicals, so new weapons become necessary.
Koch said he and other researchers are studying other ways to deal with aphids -- with predator insects, for example, or removing nearby stands of buckthorn.
Farmers in hazmat suits
But for now chlorpyrifos, which does require a hazmat suit and a respirator, is the answer. Trebesch does his best not to apply it too early in the season so he doesn't kill off the lady beetles and parasitic wasps that are the aphid's natural predators. And he's careful not to go into the field for at least 24 hours after it's sprayed. He knows the risks.
"We live where we are farming," he said. "My kids are 9 and 6, and I don't want to do anything that would hurt them."
Spray planes are supposed to stay up to 100 feet from homes, but the one that flew near her farm in 2012 got too close, said Wirtz. The air conditioner sucked the spray right into her house.
"It looked like a white mist," she said. "It was straight out of a horror movie."
Her husband rushed her to the hospital, where her heart almost stopped. After that she got active with the
"We found the levels were four times the
The drift data they collected helped persuade the
Wirtz and her family live in
Now she helps lobby
"We have a generation in jeopardy," she said.
___
(c)2017 the Star Tribune (Minneapolis)
Visit the Star Tribune (Minneapolis) at www.startribune.com
Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.


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