Wednesday, July 27, 2016

EPA Highlights Importance of Updated Standards to Protect the Health of New Jersey Farmworkers










EPA Highlights Importance of Updated Standards to Protect the Health of New Jersey Farmworkers

Regional Administrator Visits Atlantic Blueberry Farm in Hammonton



Contacts: Jennifer May-Reddy, (212) 637-3658, may.jennifer@epa.gov; Barbara Pualani, (212) 637-3638, pualani.barbara@epa.gov

(New York, NY – July 27, 2016) Today, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Regional Administrator Judith A. Enck was joined by Denny Doyle from Atlantic Blueberry Company; Assistant Commissioner of Compliance and Enforcement Ray Bukowski from the NJ Department of Environmental Protection; and NJ Farm Loan Manager Ellen Schmidt from the U.S. Department of Agriculture to discuss stronger protections for agricultural workers and pesticide handlers required by the recently updated Worker Protection Standard. EPA finalized new federal regulations in September 2015, which will go into effect in January 2017. Regional Administrator Enck visited the Atlantic Blueberry Farm in Hammonton, NJ today to focus on how the new standards will help NJ farmworkers.

“There are approximately 13,000 farmworkers in the state of New Jersey, and every farmworker deserves a safe and healthy work environment,” said EPA Regional Administrator Judith Enck. “EPA is committed to reducing the exposure of toxic pesticides to farmworkers and their families.”

EPA's Worker Protection Standard rule provides stronger protections for the nation's two million agricultural workers and handlers working on farms, forests, nurseries and greenhouses. The updated EPA regulation strengthens requirements for training, notification, pesticide safety and hazard communication, as well as the use of personal protective equipment and the availability of supplies for routine washing and emergency decontamination. The revisions announced in September 2016 were the first changes made to the rule in 24 years.

These provisions will help ensure farmworkers nationwide receive annual safety training; that children under the age of 18 are prohibited from handling pesticides; and that workers are aware of the protections they are afforded under today’s action and have the tools needed to protect themselves and their families from pesticide exposure. Every farm will need to comply with the new standard. In New Jersey, this standard will be enforced by the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, with technical support from the EPA.

For workers and handlers of pesticide products on agricultural establishments, EPA will require:
  • The minimum age for pesticide handlers and early-entry workers has been established at 18 years of age. The minimum age in New Jersey was previously 16 years old. Although members of owner’s immediate family are exempt from this and most other requirements of the WPS.
  • Annual mandatory training for farmworkers so they can be informed on how to protect themselves and their families from pesticide exposures. Previously, trainings happened once every five years in NJ.
  • Each farmworker must now be provided with at least 1 gallon of water at the beginning of each work period and handlers must get 3 gallons of water for decontamination. No quantities of water were specifically spelled out previously.
  • Farmworkers will now be trained on safety before they go out into the field to work. Previously, farms had up to five days to offer the training.
  • Content and availability of hazard communications need to be posted.
  • Employers must now provide respirator and fit testing, training and medical evaluation that conforms to Occupational Safety and Health Administration standards for any handler required to wear any respirator by the labeling. Recordkeeping of completion of fit test, training and medical evaluation is now also required.
  • Each farm must now provide a system capable of delivering .4 gallons of water for eye washing per minute for 15 minutes, or 6 gallons of water able to flow for 15 minutes if handlers use products requiring eye protection or use a pressurized closed system.


Additionally, EPA is making improvements to the training programs including limiting pesticide exposure to farmworker families. By better protecting agricultural workers, EPA anticipates fewer pesticide exposure incidents among farmworkers and their family members. Fewer incidents means a healthier workforce and avoiding lost wages and medical bills.

View the video to learn more about EPA’s revised worker protection standards:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p0PMYSirxlY

Here are thoughts from a former farmworker on EPA’s revised worker protection standards:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TAYGb1-LUH4

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Farmworkers And Pesticides: Workers Under 18 To Be Barred From Handling Pest-Killing Chemicals: New EPA Rules
By Cole Stangler @colestangler On 09/28/15 AT 4:31 PM




U.S. farmworkers under the age of 18 will no longer be able to handle pesticides. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) unveiled the landmark move as part of a broad revision to health standards that cover the nation’s 2 million agricultural workers.

“Farmworkers deserve to be healthy and safe while they earn a living and it’s our job to ensure they have fair and equitable working standards to protect them,” EPA head Gina McCarthy said on a call with reporters Monday, joined by Labor Secretary Thomas Perez.

The EPA’s rules, adopted over two decades ago, formerly had no age restriction for workers handling pesticides on farms, forests, nurseries and greenhouses. Every year, between 1,800 and 3,000 agricultural workers covered by the current standards report suffering from overexposure to pesticides, but the true rate is likely much higher, according to the agency. Effects can range from headaches, spells of dizziness and sometimes even death in the short-term to neurological problems in the long-term. Under current rules, there is no minimum age restriction for handling pesticides on farms. In this photo, a farmworker picks table grapes in Maricopa, California, July 24, 2015. Photo: Reuters/Lucy Nicholson

Among other key changes, which are expected to be implemented in the fall of 2016: Agricultural workers will receive mandatory training sessions on the health and safety risks of pesticides every year instead of every five years; growers will be forced to expand the posting of mandatory no-entry signs for especially hazardous pesticides and keep more up-to-date records; farmworkers will also benefit from new whistleblower protections that most other workers currently receive.

Farmworkers are excluded from many of the nation’s basic labor laws -- from rules that cover minimum wage and overtime pay to health and safety. McCarthy framed the revisions as an attempt to plug this gap.


Agricultural Workers Salaries & Employment by State | StartClass

United Farmworkers President Arturo Rodriguez celebrated the move, which comes days after the union commemorated the 50th anniversary of the Delano grape strike -- a work stoppage and boycott campaign led by Cesar Chavez that culminated in the establishment of major agricultural labor regulations in California. “Today’s announcement is a dream come true for all of those folks who fought so hard in those very early days,” said Rodriguez, who was also on the press call.

In California, New York and New Jersey, environmental agencies will enforce the new standard, officials told reporters. In others, state agricultural departments will be responsible.

Farm owners and their immediate families remain exempt from the rules. McCarthy said the cost of compliance is low -- about $300 or $400 for large farms and half that amount for smaller farms.