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Judge rules: no right to know hazardous pesticide ingredients
A federal judge has ruled that the US Environmental Protection Agency
is under no obligation to force pesticide makers to disclose supposedly
'inert' ingredients in their products - even where Reviews those
ingredients are seriously hazardous to health or environment.A federal judge in California has ruled that the US Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) has no duty under federal pesticide law to
complete rulemaking on the disclosure of hazardous ingredients in
pesticide products.If the decision stands the EPA will therefore be allowed to keep the
public in the dark on the full list of toxic ingredients in pesticides
registered by the agency.

The judgment Came last week in response to a lawsuit filed by the
Center for Environmental Health, Beyond Pesticides, and Physicians for
Social Responsibility, arguing that EPA is failing in its legal duty to
protect consumers from supposedly 'inert' but Often harmful pesticide
ingredients.US District Judge William Orrick stated in his ruling: "The EPA has no
mandatory duty to require disclosure of 'inert' ingredients in
pesticides, even if Reviews those ingredients qualify as hazardous
chemicals under separate statutes."Instead, he ruled, the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide and Rodenticide
Act (FIFRA) states that the EPA "may require" disclosure of inert
ingredients, and so enjoys broad discretion on Whether to force
manufacturers to divulge the ingredients.But Yana Garcia, attorney for the plaintiffs, INSISTED that the EPA's
effort to encourage voluntary disclosures has "simply not worked", and
that the toxic ingredients Clearly meet the standard for 'unreasonable
risk' - the which the EPA is tasked with combating under FIFRA.The litigants are now considering Whether to appeal the judgment. "It
defies logic that EPA finds chemicals to cause cancer and permanent
neurological conditions would not meet this standard," Garcia stated. "EPA
has been dragging its feet for Decades. We do not want to be back here
in 10 years. We hope the EPA can solve this problem now."
Judge rules: no right to know hazardous pesticide ingredients
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