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PESTICIDE SAFETY EDUCATION: STILL NEEDED?. Barry M. Brennan, PhD Pesticide Coordinator College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources University of Hawaii-Manoa. Background. Pesticide Safety Education Chlorinated hydrocarbons replaced by organophosphates. Background.
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PESTICIDE SAFETY EDUCATION: STILL NEEDED? Barry M. Brennan, PhD Pesticide Coordinator College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources University of Hawaii-Manoa
Background Pesticide Safety Education • Chlorinated hydrocarbons replaced by organophosphates
Background Pesticide Safety Education • Chlorinated hydrocarbons replaced by organophosphates • USDA creates Operation Safe
Background Pesticide Safety Education • Chlorinated hydrocarbons replaced by organophosphates • USDA creates Operation Safe • 1960 – the Administrator of the FES ask extension directors to appoint a Pesticide Coordinator to -
“…receive, interpret, and disseminate information regarding pesticides and pest management.”
The (Extension Service) Administrator envisioned educational programs, schools, conferences and intensive training courses for farmers and other pesticide users.
Significant Dates • Silent Spring • Environment Protection Agency • FIFRA amended • State Plans for Certification of Pesticide Applicators approved 1976 Training begins 1988-89 Joint EPA/USDA evaluation
The 80s and 90s • IPM becomes the buzz word • Endangered Species Act • Worker protection issuesWPS • Water quality protection • Drift management • Structural pest management
Pesticide Safety Education • Proposed at 1993 National C&T Workshop • New programs = Increased workload • Funding from new CSREES programs (%-age)
Pesticide Safety Education • Proposed at 1993 National C&T Workshop • New programs = Increased workload • Funding from new CSREES programs (%-age) • GPRA passed
Pesticide Safety Education • Proposed at 1993 National C&T Workshop • New programs = Increased workload • Funding from new programs • GPRA passed • CTAG created to assess C&T • CES, SLA, EPA, USDA partnership • C&T in the 21st Century
Are the problems that justified creation of PSEP still valid? • Number of farms down
Are the problems that justified creation of PSEP still valid? • Number of farms down • Number of private applicators down
Are the problems that justified creation of PSEP still valid? • Number of farms down • Number of private applicators down • Environmental contamination down
Are the problems that justified creation of PSEP still valid? • Number of farms down • Number of private applicators down • Environmental contamination down • Fewer instances of pesticide poisoning
Are the problems that justified creation of PSEP still valid? • Number of farms down • Number of private applicators down • Environmental contamination down • Fewer instances of pesticide poisoning • Number of illegal residues down
Changes in the last 30 years • Number of RUPs down
Changes in the last 30 years • Number of RUPs down • Alternatives developed (e.g., baits, “less toxic” pesticides, non-chemical controls)
Changes in the last 30 years • Number of RUPs down • Alternatives developed (e.g., baits, “less toxic” pesticides, non-chemical controls) • Fewer manufacturers = fewer products
Changes in the last 30 years • Number of RUPs down • Alternatives developed (e.g., baits, “less toxic” pesticides, non-chemical controls) • Fewer manufacturers = fewer products • Most private and commercial applicators trained (and recertified)
Changes in the last 30 years • Number of RUPs down • Alternatives developed (e.g., baits, “less toxic” pesticides, non-chemical controls) • Fewer manufacturers = fewer products • Most private and commercial applicators trained (and recertified) • Funding in real dollars down every year
Positive changes in the last 30 years • Enforcement more effective (numbers up?)
Positive changes in the last 30 years • Enforcement more effective (numbers up?) • Awareness among applicators up
Positive changes in the last 30 years • Enforcement more effective (numbers up?) • Awareness among applicators up • Support from applicator organizations up
Positive changes in the last 30 years • Enforcement more effective (numbers up?) • Awareness among applicators up • Support from applicator organizations up • Fewer serious incidents of misuse
Positive changes in the last 30 years • Enforcement more effective (numbers up?) • Awareness among applicators up • Support from applicator organizations up • Fewer serious incidents of misuse • Increased number of training materials and formats available • Quality up • Interactive
Positive changes in the last 30 years • Enforcement more effective (numbers up?) • Awareness among applicators up • Support from applicator organizations up • Fewer serious incidents of misuse • Increased number of training materials and formats available • Certification required for employment
Current situation • PSEP is low priority for many land grants
Current situation • PSEP is low priority for many land grants • CSREES does not support
Current situation • PSEP is low priority for many land grants • CSREES does not support • Base funding always uncertain
Current situation • PSEP is low priority for many land grants • CSREES does not support • Base funding always uncertain • Pesticide coordinators not being replaced
Current situation • PSEP is low priority for many land grants • CSREES does not support • Base funding always uncertain • Pesticide coordinators not being replaced • Fewer applicators need certification
Current situation • PSEP is low priority for many land grants • CSREES does not support • Base funding always uncertain • Pesticide coordinators not being replaced • Fewer applicators need certification • Non-English proficient applicators up
Current situation (cont.) • Agroterrorism is a real concern
Current situation (cont.) • Agroterrorism is a real concern • Applicators want training, not certification
Current situation (cont.) • Agroterrorism is a real concern • Applicators want training, not certification • Commercial applicators available for hire or on staff • Aerial applicators • Pest management specialists
Recommendations • Prioritize training needs • Laws and regulations • Pest management • Environmental protection • Pesticide application • Personal protection and poisoning
Recommendations • Assign responsibilities • Laws and regulations - SLA • Pest management – PM coordinator • Environmental protection – SLA • Pesticide application – PSEP • Personal protection and poisoning – PSEP
Recommendations • Regionalize program (5-15 programs)
Recommendations • Regionalize program (5-15 programs) • Focus on non-certification training • Special needs applicators • Train the trainer • Professional development
Recommendations • Regionalize program (5-15 programs) • Focus on non-certification training • Develop partnerships to deliver program (other faculty, associations, private industry, NGOs, etc)
Recommendations • Regionalize program (5-15 programs) • Focus on non-certification training • Develop partnerships to deliver program (other faculty, associations, private industry, NGOs, etc) • Seek extramural funding, fees
Recommendations • Regionalize program (5-15 programs) • Focus on non-certification training • Develop partnerships to deliver program (other faculty, associations, private industry, NGOs, etc) • Seek extramural funding, fees • Utilize technology • Internet, Pesticide PDA, handheld computers
Summary and Conclusions • Original reasons for program have been met • Emphasis has moved from education and training to enforcement • CSREES is not an effective partner • Extension directors ambivalent • Alternatives to state extension available
Summary and Conclusions (cont.) • Programs may be regionalized • Programs should be more focused • Funding will always be an issue
Thank you! Questions and comments?
Summary and Conclusions • Regarding funding • CSREES will not support • SLAs should assume responsibilities for some aspects (laws and regs, environment, etc) • EPA set up competitive grants program OR regionalize program