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From:
James Fischer <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Date:
Fri, 5 Jan 2001 17:02:38 -0500
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Please forward to other beekeepers by all means
possible.  Time is short, and e-mail and letters to
the EPA from as many beekeepers as possible has
a good chance of having an impact.

The phrase "pesticide kill" needs no explanation
to beekeepers.  Our sole protection against the
mis-use of pesticides has been the EPA "Label Law",
a law created as a direct result of excessive hive
losses in the 1970s.

Now, the EPA is considering removing the "Bee
Precautionary Labeling", or making the wording
so weak as to render it useless.

The EPA has a "public comment period" open until
Jan 22, 2001, so I'd like to ask every beekeeper
to take the time to both read this (rather long)
message, and send an e-mail to the EPA to object
to weakening the "label law".

The following text is long, but it is an attempt
to provide complete information on one place, so
that all can be well-informed.  (Clearly, well
thought-out and well-written "public comments" can
be more effective.)

Each section is divided by a line of "<><><><>",
and the sections are as follows:

1) An overview of the situation, by
   Tom Theobold, a commercial
   beekeeper and freelance writer.

2) The e-mail address and requirements
    for "public comments".

3) The specific questions asked by the EPA
    in their request for public comments.

4) The complete text of the EPA "draft
   guidelines" that are proposed. (So that
   hardcopy can be distributed to those
   without web-browsers).

<><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><>
AN OVERVIEW (BY TOM THEOBOLD)

The EPA, Pesticides and Beekeepers.
An Editorial and call to Arms.
By Tom Theobold

In an apparently inadvertent irony of timing, the
Environmental Protection Agency announced in the
Federal Register its intention to seek public
comment on a draft Pesticide Registration (PR)
notice entitled "Guidance for Pesticide Registrants
on Bee Precautionary Labeling". This announcement
came on November 22, the day before Thanksgiving.

In the war movies, this moment is typically
accompanied by the panic cry "INCOMING"!

Pesticides hazardous to honey bees have carried a
label restriction since the early 1980s. It reads:

  "[This product] is HAZARDOUS TO BEES
  exposed to direct treatment or residues
  on blooming crops and/or blooming weeds.
  Do not apply [this product] or allow it
  to drift to blooming crops and/or blooming
  weeds if bees are foraging the areas to be
  treated."

The label restriction came about as a consequence
of massive bee kills from pesticides in the 1970s.

Unfortunately the chemical industry and State
Regulators (the agencies typically delegated
the authority by EPA for pesticide regulation)
found the restriction cumbersome, problematical
and inconvenient. While the label restriction
was frequently ignored or skirted, it nevertheless
gave beekeepers standing before the law when their
bees were killed by illegal pesticide use.

Even under these conditions of unenthusiastic and
even hostile "enforcement", commercial beekeepers
in many parts of the country had over 30% of their
colonies killed or damaged by pesticides.

The current PR Notice would propose sweeping
changes to not only the wording but the intent of
bee protection language.

New pesticides presented for registration which
fail to provide residual bee toxicity data
automatically will be assumed to have a toxic period
of 24 hours. This will encourage applicants to
neglect this detail, and beekeepers will spend years
enduring bee kills and uncompensated damages as
they attempt to establish their case against new
pesticides which may have residual toxicity's of
1 to 2 weeks. In other words the toxicity data will
be generated at the expense of the beekeeping industry.

It dismisses the issue of drift, which is often the
major culprit in bee kills, by simply omitting any
reference to it. By this logic, polluters in
other arenas would be free to release toxic substances
into a waterway and be held harmless for any damage
done downstream. The only difference between the two
cases is that with agricultural pesticides it isn't a
waterway but an airstream which is polluted.

Perhaps the worst part of this proposal is its caveat
to the chemical industry, which says that an applicator
is not responsible for following even the feeble
language proposed if they participate in a "formal,
state-approved bee protection program". The EPA plans
to take no role in the formation, approval or
monitoring of the state approved program, despite the
clear evidence that it has often been State Departments
of Agriculture which are the problem in protecting
pollinators.

In 1997 AAPCO (the American Association of Pesticide
Control Officers), a professional organization to which
many state regulatory people belong, formally requested
that the EPA make bee protection language ADVISORY. This
gives you an idea of the philosophy of many of these
states and what protections they might provide given a
free hand.

The EPA proposed to not only put the foxes back in
charge of the chicken coop despite the loss of all
these chickens, it proposed to let the foxes make
the rules and doesn't even intend to ask what the
rules are.

Beyond the specific labeling language, the EPA is
failing to carry out its basic responsibilities under
the law (FIFRA). Ultimately Congress is responsible
for the implementation of FIFRA. It assigns this
responsibility to EPA, which in turn delegates the
authority to another agency, typically a State
Department Of Agriculture. It is apparent that the
EPA is not only prepared to cave in to the
convenience of the chemical industry, but they are
willing to sacrifice American beekeeping and violate
the law in the bargain. They are either incapable
or unwilling to hold their delegees (the states)
accountable for administering the law properly,
nor are they willing to do so themselves.

Beekeepers are urged to familiarize themselves with
this issue and contact their Congresspeople immediately.
This matter will effect all beekeepers, large or small.
The indiscriminate and uncontrolled use of pesticides
around bees, which is likely to result from the current
posture of the EPA, will result in enormous and costly
losses for almost all beekeepers. The EPA must be called
to account by Congress and required to follow the law.

The current proposal provides little or no protection
to honey bees or any other pollinators, after years of
input from the beekeeping industry.

More detailed information on the PR can be obtained at
http://www.epa.gov/pesticides/

The comment period ends Jan 22, 2001. In addition to
anything you may have to say to the EPA, you should
inform your Congressperson or nothing will change.

  Note:  Tom did not give the exact address of the
  web page for the document at issue.  It is as
  follows:

www.epa.gov/fedrgstr/EPA-PEST/2000/November/Day-22/p29815.htm

<><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><>
HOW TO MAKE A "PUBLIC COMMENT"

To comment via e-mail:

1) Send your comments to [log in to unmask]

2) Put "OPP-00684" in the subject line, to
   make it easy for federal clerks to route
   your comment correctly.

3) They can handle plain text or Wordperfect
   6.1 format. (When in doubt, plain text in
   the body of the e-mail works best.
   Attachments can be a pain.)

4) Recall that your comments will likely be
   used to evaluate your credibility, so don't
   get too wild.

To comment via postal mail,
use the following address:

 Public Information and Records
 Integrity Branch (PIRIB)
 Information Resources and Services Division (7502C),
 Office of Pesticide Programs (OPP)
 Environmental Protection Agency
 1200 Pennsylvania Ave. NW
 Washington, DC 20460.

...and the same considerations listed in
(2) through (4) above apply.

<><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><>
THE EPA QUESTIONS, ASKED IN THE TEXT OF
THEIR REQUEST FOR COMMENTS

Even though the entire subject of weakening the
"label law" is an issue in itself, one may wish to
address the questions asked by the EPA.
Here they are, quoted from the "draft notice":

 Commenters are free to raise any issue,
 but the following questions are of
 particular interest to the Agency, and
 comments on them are invited.

 1. Should the precautionary labeling
    language in the new policy allow
    for an exception from bee precautions
    for wide-area public health spray
    programs? In a number of communications
    to the Agency, officials involved in
    public health programs have noted that
    strict interpretation of the current
    bee precautionary labeling could prevent
    effective wide-area pest control in an
    emergency situation. The Agency's proposed
    new labeling language could also be very
    restrictive of wide-area spraying, for
    example, if a state had no bee protection
    program, or could not operate the program
    during an emergency. The suggestion has
    been made that the label language include
    a clause to the effect that precautions
    apply ``...except when applications are
    made to prevent or control a declared public
    health threat.'' The Agency requests comment
    on whether such an exception on the label is
    necessary or appropriate, and if it is
    appropriate, what authority could invoke the
    exception. Should an exception be applicable to
    treatments intended to prevent possible disease
    outbreaks, or limited to significant emergencies
    like the aftermath of flooding or a proven
    outbreak of human or animal disease?

 2. Should the new policy described in the PR Notice
    allow a 24 hour period of toxicity statement on
    labels in the absence of data as a permanent
    option, or only temporarily until registrants
    submit residual toxicity data?

 3. From the commenter's perspective as a pesticide
    user, beekeeper, state regulator, or other
    interested party, would a specific time period
    of toxicity to bees on the label be more or less
    useful than the current policy which includes a
    label prohibition on applications while bees are
    visiting the treatment area?

 4. Is the label condition that pesticides can be
    applied if the user participates in a state bee
    protection program likely to encourage
    bee-protection efforts? From the commenter's
    perspective, is such a condition more or less
    useful in achieving bee protection that the
    current label prohibition against application
    when bees are visiting the treatment area?

The EPA also has suggestions for how to address
these questions, as follows:

 What Should I Consider as I Prepare My
 Comments for EPA?

  You may find the following suggestions
  helpful for preparing your comments:

 1. Explain your views as clearly as possible.

 2. Describe any assumptions that you used.

 3. Provide copies of any technical information
    and/or data you used that support your views.

 4. If you estimate potential burden or costs,
    explain how you arrived at the estimate that
    you provide.

 5. Provide specific examples to illustrate your
    concerns.

 6. Offer alternative ways to improve the notice
    or collection activity.

 7. Make sure to submit your comments by the
    deadline in this notice.

 8. To ensure proper receipt by EPA, be sure to
    identify the docket control number assigned
    to this action in the subject line on the
    first page of your response. You may also
    provide the name, date, and Federal Register
    citation.

<><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><>
THE COMPLETE TEXT OF THE NOTICE

[Federal Register: November 22, 2000
(Volume 65, Number 226)]
[Notices]
[Page 70350-70352]
From the Federal Register Online via
GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr22no00-61]

ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
[OPP-00684; FRL-6750-9]

Pesticides; Draft Guidance for Pesticide Registrants on Bee
Precautionary Labeling

 AGENCY:  Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).

 ACTION:  Notice of availability.

 SUMMARY:  The Agency seeks public comment on a draft Pesticide
 Registration (PR) Notice entitled ``Guidance for Pesticide Registrants
 on Bee Precautionary Labeling.'' This draft notice provides guidance to
 registrants and others concerning EPA's policy on bee labeling
 statements for pesticide products which are toxic to bees, such as
 honey bees, alfalfa leaf-cutting bees, alkali bees, and other native
 and non-indigenous pollinating insects that are important to crop
 production. The purpose of the proposed label changes is to help ensure
 that pesticide products used outdoors can be used without posing
 unnecessary risks of bee mortality. EPA believes that these revisions
 will make the labeling clearer and more easily understood by pesticide
 users and by regulatory officials who enforce label provisions.

 DATES:  Comments, identified by docket control number OPP-00684, must
 be received on or before January 22, 2001.

 ADDRESSES:  Comments may be submitted by mail, electronically, or in
 person. Please follow the detailed instructions for each method as
 provided in Unit I.C. of the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION. To ensure
 proper receipt by EPA, it is imperative that you identify docket
 control number OPP-00684 in the subject line on the first page of your
 response.

 FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:  Jim Roelofs (7506C), Environmental
 Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave., NW., Washington, DC 20460;
 telephone number: (703) 308-2964; fax number: (703) 308-1850; e-mail
 address: [log in to unmask]

 SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

 I. General Information

 A. Does this Action Apply to Me?

 This action is directed to pesticide registrants, pesticide
 regulatory officials, beekeepers, pesticide users and to the public in
 general. Although this action may be of particular interest to those
 persons who have a specific interest in precautionary labeling to
 protect bees, the Agency has not attempted to describe all the specific
 entities that may be affected by this action. If you have any questions
 regarding the information in this notice, consult the person listed
 under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.

 B. How Can I Get Additional Information, Including Copies of this
 Document and Other Related Documents?

 1. Electronically. You may obtain electronic copies of this
 document and the PR Notice from the Office of Pesticide Programs' Home
 Page at http://www.epa.gov/pesticides/. You can also go directly to the
 listings from the EPA Internet Home Page at http://www.epa.gov/. To
 access this document, on the Home Page select ``Laws and Regulations''
 ``Regulations and Proposed Rules,'' and then look up the entry for this
 document under the ``Federal Register-- Environmental Documents.'' You
 can also go directly to the Federal Register listings at http://
 www.access.gpo.gov/sup--docs/.
 2. Fax on demand. You may request a faxed copy of the draft PR
 Notice entitled ``Bee Precautionary Labeling Statements,'' by using a
 faxphone to call (202) 401-0527 and selecting item PR 2000-6133. You
 may also follow the automated menu.
 3. In person. The Agency has established an official record for
 this action under docket control number OPP-00684. The official record
 consists of the documents specifically referenced in this action, any
 public comments received during an applicable comment period, and other
 information related to this action, including any information claimed
 as confidential business information (CBI). This official record
 includes the documents that are physically located in the docket, as
 well

 [[Page 70351]]

 as the documents that are referenced in those documents. The public
 version of the official record does not include any information claimed
 as CBI. The public version of the official record, which includes
 printed, paper versions of any electronic comments submitted during an
 applicable comment period, is available for inspection in the Public
 Information and Records Integrity Branch (PIRIB), Rm. 119, Crystal Mall
 #2, 1921 Jefferson Davis Highway, Arlington, VA, from 8:30 a.m. to 4
 p.m., Monday through Friday, excluding legal holidays. The PIRIB
 telephone number is (703) 305-5805.

 C. How and to Whom Do I Submit Comments?

 You may submit comments through the mail, in person, or
 electronically. To ensure proper receipt by EPA, it is imperative that
 you identify docket control number OPP-00684 in the subject line on the
 first page of your response.
 1. By mail. Submit your comments to: Public Information and Records
 Integrity Branch (PIRIB), Information Resources and Services Division
 (7502C), Office of Pesticide Programs (OPP), Environmental Protection
 Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20460.
 2. In person or by courier. Deliver your comments to: Public
 Information and Records Integrity Branch (PIRIB), Information Resources
 and Services Division (7502C), Office of Pesticide Programs (OPP),
 Environmental Protection Agency, Rm. 119, CM #2, 1921 Jefferson Davis
 Highway, Arlington, VA. The PIRIB is open from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.,
 Monday through Friday, excluding legal holidays. The PIRIB telephone
 number is (703) 305-5805.
 3. Electronically. You may submit your comments electronically by
 E-mail to: [log in to unmask],'' or you can submit a computer disk as
 described above. Do not submit any information electronically that you
 consider to be CBI. Avoid the use of special characters and any form of
 encryption. Electronic submissions will be accepted in Wordperfect 6.1,
 Suite 8, or ASCII file format. All comments in electronic form must be
 identified by docket control number OPP-00684. Electronic comments may
 also be filed online at many Federal Depository Libraries.

 D. How Should I Handle CBI That I Want to Submit to the Agency?

 Do not submit any information electronically that you consider to
 be CBI. You may claim information that you submit to EPA in response to
 this document as CBI by marking any part or all of that information as
 CBI. Information so marked will not be disclosed except in accordance
 with procedures set forth in 40 CFR part 2. In addition to one complete
 version of the comment that includes any information claimed as CBI, a
 copy of the comment that does not contain the information claimed as
 CBI must be submitted for inclusion in the public version of the
 official record. Information not marked confidential will be included
 in the public version of the official record without prior notice. If
 you have any questions about CBI or the procedures for claiming CBI,
 please consult the person identified under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
 CONTACT.

 E. What Should I Consider as I Prepare My Comments for EPA?

 You may find the following suggestions helpful for preparing your
 comments:
 1. Explain your views as clearly as possible.
 2. Describe any assumptions that you used.
 3. Provide copies of any technical information and/or data you used
 that support your views.
 4. If you estimate potential burden or costs, explain how you
 arrived at the estimate that you provide.
 5. Provide specific examples to illustrate your concerns.
 6. Offer alternative ways to improve the notice or collection
 activity.
 7. Make sure to submit your comments by the deadline in this
 notice.
 8. To ensure proper receipt by EPA, be sure to identify the docket
 control number assigned to this action in the subject line on the first
 page of your response. You may also provide the name, date, and Federal
 Register citation.

 II. Background

 To help determine whether pesticide products used outdoors pose
 risks of bee mortality, the Agency generally requires acute toxicity
 data on bees to be submitted with a registration application. See e.g.,
 40 CFR 158.590(a). Depending on the results of the acute study, EPA may
 require additional residual toxicity data. EPA pesticide labeling
 regulations require that ``...pesticides toxic to pollinating insects
 must bear appropriate label cautions.'' 40 CFR 156.10(h)(2)(ii)(E). In
 the 1980s, the Agency published a policy which described a set of
 standard bee precautionary labeling statements it believed appropriate
 where results from the bee data indicated toxicity. The most recent
 version of this policy is found in the 1996 Label Review Manual (USEPA,
 Office of Prevention, Pesticides and Toxic Substances, Label Review
 Manual, 2nd Ed. (EPA 737-B-96-001) December, 1996). Under the 1980s
 policy, where a product displayed extended residual toxicity to bees,
 the label language EPA believed to be appropriate for precautionary
 purposes stated: ``This product is highly toxic to bees exposed to
 direct treatment or residues on blooming crops or weeds. Do not apply
 this product or allow it to drift to blooming crops or weeds if bees
 are visiting the treatment area.''
 Controversy has continued for many years among beekeepers, growers,
 commercial applicators and State regulators about the adequacy of these
 statements. For example, many beekeepers believe that the labeling
 statements are not adequately protective, while many growers believe
 that the labeling statements are overly restrictive and prevent them
 from managing pests adequately during the bloom period. State
 regulators believe that the labeling statements need to be clarified
 regarding the obligations of applicators with respect to bees.

 III. Summary of the Draft PR Notice

 A. What Guidance Does the PR Notice Provide?

 The PR Notice states EPA's proposed new policy regarding
 appropriate standard label language to protect bees. This new language
 would include a specific statement about the length of time in hours or
 days that the residues of the pesticide product remain a toxic threat
 to bees. This new proposed labeling statement is based on a study of
 residual toxicity to bees for a specific product submitted to the
 Agency, or, in the absence of such a study, it states a default period
 of toxicity of 24 hours. The proposed label language provides two
 conditions under which pesticide application would be allowed without
 limitation to the label-stated period of toxic hazard to bees. The
 first of these conditions is if the pesticide application method is
 such that bees will not be exposed even if they are visiting the crop.
 An example of such a method would be soil incorporation, which would
 not produce pesticide residues on the foliage, blooms or nectar
 producing parts of plants, so that bees would not be exposed. The other
 condition under which use is allowed during the period of toxicity to
 bees, is when the user actively participates in and meets all the
 applicable

 [[Page 70352]]

 requirements of a state-approved bee protection program.
 The Agency believes that label precautions should be supplemented
 by additional efforts to protect bees, and that state programs are
 appropriate to this purpose. EPA does not intend to set specific
 criteria or approve state bee protection programs. The PR Notice
 recommends that state pesticide regulatory agencies consider a variety
 of regulatory and non-regulatory measures to include in bee-protection
 efforts. EPA believes that state agencies are in the best position to
 understand the localized crop-pesticide combinations and other factors
 that pose the greatest risks to bees, and can implement appropriate
 measures to mitigate those risks under varying local and geographic
 conditions.

 B. What Questions/Issues Should You Consider?

 Commenters are free to raise any issue, but the following questions
 are of particular interest to the Agency, and comments on them are
 invited.
 1. Should the precautionary labeling language in the new policy
 allow for an exception from bee precautions for wide-area public health
 spray programs? In a number of communications to the Agency, officials
 involved in public health programs have noted that strict
 interpretation of the current bee precautionary labeling could prevent
 effective wide-area pest control in an emergency situation. The
 Agency's proposed new labeling language could also be very restrictive
 of wide-area spraying, for example, if a state had no bee protection
 program, or could not operate the program during an emergency. The
 suggestion has been made that the label language include a clause to
 the effect that precautions apply ``...except when applications are
 made to prevent or control a declared public health threat.'' The
 Agency requests comment on whether such an exception on the label is
 necessary or appropriate, and if it is appropriate, what authority
 could invoke the exception. Should an exception be applicable to
 treatments intended to prevent possible disease outbreaks, or limited
 to significant emergencies like the aftermath of flooding or a proven
 outbreak of human or animal disease?
 2. Should the new policy described in the PR Notice allow a 24 hour
 period of toxicity statement on labels in the absence of data as a
 permanent option, or only temporarily until registrants submit residual
 toxicity data?
 3. From the commenter's perspective as a pesticide user, bee
 keeper, state regulator, or other interested party, would a specific
 time period of toxicity to bees on the label be more or less useful
 than the current policy which includes a label prohibition on
 applications while bees are visiting the treatment area?
 4. Is the label condition that pesticides can be applied if the
 user participates in a state bee protection program likely to encourage
 bee-protection efforts? From the commenter's perspective, is such a
 condition more or less useful in achieving bee protection that the
 current label prohibition against application when bees are visiting
 the treatment area?

 C. What is the Scope of this PR Notice?

 The draft PR Notice discussed in this notice is intended to provide
 guidance to pesticide registrants, EPA personnel, state regulatory
 personnel, and to the public. As a guidance document, this policy is
 not binding on either EPA or any outside parties, and EPA may depart
 from the guidance where circumstances warrant and without prior notice.
 Registrants and applicants may propose alternatives to the recommended
 labeling statements described in the Notice and the Agency will assess
 them for appropriateness on a case-by-case basis. If a product does not
 meet the requirements of 40 CFR Part 156, the Agency may find the
 product to be misbranded. As stated above, the Agency believes that the
 statements outlined in the Notice should reduce the potential for
 adverse effects to the environment and are ``appropriate'' within the
 meaning of 40 CFR 156.10(h)(2)(ii)(E).
 EPA will make available revised guidance after consideration of
 public comment. Public comment is not being solicited for the purpose
 of converting this guidance document into a binding rule. EPA will not
 be codifying this policy in the Code of Federal Regulations. EPA is
 soliciting public comment so that it can make fully informed decisions
 regarding the content of this guidance.
 The revised guidance will not be an unalterable document. Once a
 revised guidance document is issued, EPA will continue to treat it as
 guidance. Accordingly, on a case-by-case basis EPA will decide whether
 it is appropriate to depart from the guidance or to modify the overall
 approach in the guidance.

 List of Subjects

 Environmental protection, Administrative practice and procedure,
 Agricultural commodities, Pesticides and pests.

 Dated: November 9, 2000.

 Marcia Mulkey,

 Director, Office of Pesticide Programs

 [FR Doc. 00-29815 Filed 11-21-00; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 6560-50-

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