Leno Bill Requiring Disclosure of Pesticide Ingredients Approved by Senate Health Committee
"In case of an emergency, it is critical that our health care professionals can easily access a complete list of pesticide ingredients so they can properly treat anyone who was exposed to them," said Senator Leno. "Current law keeps emergency responders in the dark by permitting pesticide manufacturers to shield many of the ingredients they use from public disclosure," he said.
Federal regulation requires pesticide manufacturers to disclose the ingredients of industrial chemicals only if they are classified as "active" ingredients. More than 99 percent of the ingredients in certain pesticides are designated as inert or inactive, so they are never disclosed to the public. According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, many consumers have a misleading impression of the term "inert ingredient," believing it to be water or other harmless ingredients, when in fact the ingredient may have biological activity of its own, be toxic to humans and be chemically active.
In the fall of 2007, the California Department of Food and Agriculture sprayed aerial pesticides in coordination with the federal government as part of a campaign to eradicate the Light Brown Apple Moth. In the communities where these chemicals were applied, hundreds of Californians reported falling ill with everything from headaches and rashes to chest pains and asthma attacks.
"I am concerned that we, as citizens and health care providers, don´t know what is in the environmental chemicals we are exposed to," said Dr. Ann Haiden, a Bay Area physician and internist who testified before the committee. "We need and deserve to have this information to be able to prevent harm and better help people who develop symptoms after exposure."
SB 759 is co-sponsored by Pesticide Watch and the Center for Environmental Health. It also has the support of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors, which adopted a resolution on April 21 that urges the California Legislature to pass the measure.
"Pesticide manufacturers have a special responsibility to provide emergency responders with the full list of their products´ ingredients when pesticides are sprayed around California communities." said Paul Schramski, State Director of Pesticide Watch. "A trip to the hospital shouldn't turn into a guessing game for health care providers."
SB 759 will be heard next in the Senate Environmental Quality Committee.