Today, the
House Committee on Agriculture approved H.R.
897, the Reducing Regulatory Burdens Act of 2015. This legislation (H.R.
872 in the 111th Congress and H.R. 935 in the 112th) would clarify
Congressional intent regarding pesticide regulation in or near waters of the
United States.
A 2009
decision in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit erroneously
applied the provisions of the National Pollution Discharge Elimination System
permitting process under the Clean Water Act (CWA) to pesticide applications
that were already fully regulated under the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide
and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA). As a result, many farmers, ranchers, water
resource boards and public health professionals involved in mosquito control
are subject to costly and duplicative burdens providing no quantifiable
public health or environmental benefit.
The expansion of jurisdictional waters under the Administration's “waters of
the United States” proposed rule would likely, and significantly, increase
the regulatory cost and burden associated with this court decision on food
production costs and mosquito control programs. The Committee on Agriculture
and the full House passed this bill during the two previous Congresses, but
the Senate failed to act.
“Costly
and duplicative regulations and permitting requirements on farmers weaken the
economy in rural America,” said Rep.
K. Michael Conaway, Chairman of the Agriculture
Committee. “The money and time that farmers have to spend fulfilling
redundant, unnecessary requirements is time and money that can be put to
better, more productive use. Making pesticides readily accessible for use is
crucial to efficiently protect our nation's food supply and natural
resources. Correcting the erroneous court decision that created this
duplicative process has been a priority for public health, water resources,
and agricultural stakeholders."
“It was
never the intent of Congress to burden producers with additional permit
requirements that would have little to no environmental benefit. This
legislation restores Congressional intent and addresses the court’s ruling,
alleviating the massive burden of additional permitting requirements. The
House has consistently supported this legislation and I hope that the Senate
will quickly take action,”Ranking
Member Collin Peterson said.
"Unnecessary
and duplicative federal regulations like this one have made it much more
difficult for our family farms to operate," said Rep.
Rodney Davis (IL-13),
Chairman of the Subcommittee on Biotechnology, Horticulture, and Research.
"By simply exerting some common sense, the Reducing Regulatory
Burdens Act will save our farmers from yet another costly mandate
and help grow our economy."
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