AFBF: EPA regulations threaten family farms

What is in this article?:

The coming changes from EPA threaten the continued operation of family farms and ranches, according to the American Farm Bureau Federation.

Chesapeake Bay concerns

The Chesapeake Bay is one area of concern to Farm Bureau, due to the burdensome and unlawful nutrient management plan EPA is taking steps to implement. Other areas of concern include EPA’s proposals to expand the scope of waters subject to federal regulation under the Clean Water Act, which require costly and duplicative permits for normal pesticide applications, proposed standards for regulation of dust, and unjustified attempts to collect data from livestock farms.

In his testimony, Shaffer said that “EPA is literally piling regulation on top of regulation, and guidance on top of guidance, to the point of erecting barriers to economic growth,” said Shaffer.

Philip Nelson, president of Illinois Farm Bureau, also testified at the hearing, on behalf of farmers and ranchers in his state. Nelson raises corn, soybeans, alfalfa, cattle and hogs. He testified to the subcommittee regarding a new regulation, the Pesticide General Permit, that went into effect Nov. 1.

“This new permit is a needless duplication of existing law. We do not need this entirely new permit program,” Nelson said, noting that the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide and Rodenticide Act has covered pesticide labeling and application very effectively since 1947.

Further, the pesticide permit “doesn’t improve food safety, doesn’t add any additional environmental protection or benefit for society, and does nothing to improve my bottom line,” Nelson said.

Nelson also commented briefly on the potential impacts of proposed dust regulations on agriculture, urging support for legislation such as H.R. 1633, the Dust Regulation Prevention Act. The act would provide the certainty that farmers, ranchers and residents of rural areas need to ensure that normal activities that are essential parts of their farming operations are not unduly regulated by a standard for which there is no proven benefit to human health.

Discuss this Article 4

Joyceann (not verified)
on Nov 22, 2011

Our government at work, and ready to shut the family farm down so they can run it for the government. The backbone of our USA will now be used to feed us at twice the price.

Kirk D. Smith (not verified)
on Nov 22, 2011

Wow, Dust regulation. . . perhaps we could regulate pests! You know the bureaucratic pests at all levels of government!

ChuckNTexas (not verified)
on Nov 24, 2011

It is time to end the EPA. It may take some time to get an honest election again in this country, but when it happens, the honest patriots who are still around need to slice the funding to the EPA and all other agencies and bureaus that suck all the freedoms from the producers of this country.

David A (not verified)
on Nov 28, 2011

And what amazes me is time and time again our farm states vote democrat/big government

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