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Apple pesticides
& the
Emergency
Planning and
Community Right to Know Act
The Emergency Planning and
Community Right to Know Act (EPCRA) requires that anyone storing
materials included on the Extremely Hazardous substance list (Section 302
list from SARA - Superfund Amendments and Reauthorization Act of
1986) must make a one-time report to county and state emergency planning
agencies. A common misconception is that agriculture is exempt from this
regulation. There is an exemption for normal agricutlural
use for materials on the Hazardous Substances list. But agriculture is
not exempt from reporting amounts of Extremely
Hazardous substances that exceed the reportable thresholds. There
is also no exemption for quick turn-around between delivery and
application. Having these materials on your farm site
for more than a millisecond counts as on-site storage.
There are some commonly used apple pesticides on the Extremely Hazardous list,
as shown below. The minimum amount of active ingredient that can be
stored is shown after the name. In the list below, the reportable amount
is translated into the amount of a common formulation, and is also stated as
the number of acre treatments this amount of formulation could provide.
The term acre has little meaning for a three dimensional crop like
apples. For these calculations, acre was assumed to refer to trees
requiring 240 gallons tree row volume dilute spray per acre. Where there
is a range of label dosage, the number of equivalent acres is also stated as a range. For
blocks of larger trees requiring higher spray volume,
the number of acres would be less. For example, for a block of 300 gallon
tree row volume dilute trees, the amount of Imidan that will require reporting
to emergency management agencies is the amount required to treat 4.75 acres.
Apple pesticides on the Extremely
Hazardous Materials list:
(reportable
amounts that represent less than 20 treated acres are in bold)
Thiodan (or other endosulfan
product) @ 10 lbs. = 20 lbs. 50WSB = 6 treated acres
Guthion (or other azinphosmethyl product)
@ 10 lbs. = 20 lbs. 50WSB = 13 treated acres
Gramoxone (or other paraquat product) @ 10
lbs. = 4 gallons Gramoxone Extra = 1016 acres of
treated tree row, which in turn would represent about 3048 acres of
orchard if the herbicide strip is 6 feet wide with 18 row spacing.
Di-Syston (disulfoton)
@ 500 pounds = 3333 lbs. 15% granules = enough to treat 14,220 nonbearing trees
with 1.5 inch trunk diameter. At 500 trees per acre that would be about
28 acres.
Carzol @ 500 pounds = 544 lbs. 92SP
= 81163 treated acres.
Lannate (or other methomyl product) @ 500 lbs. = 556 lbs. 90SP = 83167
treated acres.
Vydate
@ 100 lbs.
= 50 gals.
Vydate 2L = 166333 treated acres.
Supracide (methidathion)
@ 500 lbs. = 2000 lbs. 25WP = 278833 treated acres.
Digon, Dimate
(or other dimethoate product) @ 500 pounds = 125 gals. 4EC = 417556
treated acres.
zinc phosphide
bait @ 500 lbs. = > 2500 treated acres
The Federal regulations only require a one-time report for each
material. State regulations may impose annual reporting, but this is not
the case in
The Federal statute requires submitting an updated report if new materials
are added to the storage list, or if there is a change in contact person, phone
numbers etc.
The initial reporting form is a simple two pager that asks for the names and
addresses of storage facility and contact persons, along with the name and CAS
number (available on Material Safety Date Sheet for each material).
However, once under regulation, a more complete form that requires storage
outline map, route information for delivery of regulated materials, D.O.T.
approval for transporting vehicles, intake, outtake, and average inventory
estimates are required. On-site visits by emergency planning personnel
may be required. There are no statutory prior notification protocols for
these visits.
Once included in emergency management planning, the site is assigned an
appropriate radius for emergency notification in case a fire or other hazardous
incident occurs. The identity of each hazardous storage facility and its
emergency management zone is public information and may be actively
disseminated. Once covered by EPCRA regulatory oversight, the facility
owner is supposed to develop and exercise an emergency management plan
annually, and submit a letter documenting such each year. In
Home:
Maine Apple IPM Prgram
Apple pest
publications
General IPM and Apple industry links
Glen W.
Koehler
Associate Scientist
Tel: 207-581-3882, (within Maine: 800-287-0279)
Pest Management Office
491 College Avenue
Orono, ME 04473-1295
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