2016-06-23



Source: Mike Lewinski

The Cornucopia Institute joined nearly 200 other organizations in sending letters to the USDA, EPA, and Congress urging that they take action to protect pollinators from harmful pesticides and that they support sustainable agriculture. You can read the letter to the EPA below, including the specific action plan outlined for pollinator protection. The letters to the USDA and Congress can be found in this PDF.

June 22, 2016

Administrator Gina McCarthy

Environmental Protection Agency

1200 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W.

Washington, DC  20460

Dear Administrator McCarthy,

Research shows, bee toxic pesticides are a leading contributor to honey bee decline. On behalf of the undersigned beekeepers and organizations representing millions of members and supporters nationwide, we urge the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to take the following specific actions to protect bees, butterflies, birds, bats and other pollinators as well as farmers, beekeepers, farmworkers, and consumers.

Bees and other pollinators are essential to our nation’s food supply, farming system, economy, and environment, but they are in great peril. A broad consensus of global scientists are gravely concerned about the world-wide dwindling of pollinators. Bees and other pollinators are responsible for one in every three bites of food we eat and provide nutritious and healthy food. Pollinators contribute significantly to the U.S. and world economy, accounting for nearly $30 billion to the U.S., and more than $217 billion to the world agricultural economies. The future of our diverse, healthy food is at risk, and we must reverse these pollinator declines.

The United States celebrates National Pollinator Week in June every year. This year, 2016, let us all work together to protect our food supply, support the pollination of our crops and wildlands, and strengthen the beekeeping industry, an integral member of the agricultural community.

We urge the EPA to take the following steps:

1. EPA needs to complete a cumulative assessment of the multiple stress factors that managed and native pollinators currently experience including tank mixes, fungicides, insect growth regulators, “other ingredients” in pesticide formulas, and their interactions with bee pests and pathogens.

2. Evaluate the efficacy of acaricides used for Varroa control, the synergisms with crop protection pesticides, and examine non-chemical Varroa controls options.

3. Evaluate systemic pesticide residue levels that may weaken pollinators in the soil prior to creating pollinator habitat. Research has shown the half-life of neonicotinoids remains toxic for up to three years depending upon the soil. Agricultural buffer/pollinator strips, and similar pollinator habitat needs to be protected from pesticide residues in the soil and water, as well as dust off onto plants in bloom or water sources from coated seed planting.

4. Revise the Tier II Risk Assessment: Field realistic, colony level assessments must be completed when assessing pesticides, including water quality, fungicides, herbicides, insect growth regulators, adjuvants, surfactants, degradates, metabolites, and “other ingredients” in the “formulated grade.”

5. Native pollinators must be included in colony level assessments. While there are unique concerns in assessing native pollinators, they are a valuable contributor to the agricultural economy.

6. Provide research funding of the symbiotic relationship between native pollinators and native plants sociologically and spiritually important to the 562 Tribes residing in the U.S.

7. Conduct research on bee attractive crops for the value of pollination, the value of crop pollination services, and the loss of crop yield when bees are killed.

8. Institute incident reporting of bee losses to include the sublethal effects upon bees; ensure the investigation is not retaliatory, but data collection driven; remove primacy of states that decline investigating bee kills that are under an arbitrary financial threshold. Trends of product use, as well as problem end users can be observed from the loss of one hive as well as the loss of 100 hives. All incident data should be reported to the EPA EIIS database.

9. Initiate prompt suspension based on an imminent hazard determination for systemic pesticides until the above assessments are completed.

10. Institute comprehensive organic and non-toxic based Best Management Practices to protect farmers, crop yields, and beekeepers from the impact of the prophylactic use of pesticides and coated seeds. Integrated Pest Management (IPM) has been co-opted and prophylactic us of pesticides and coated seeds violates the true practice of IPM.

We support beekeepers, we value honey bees and native pollinators, and we need sustainable, affordable, nutritious food. We urge you to implement these steps to support pollinator health, maintain sustainable agriculture, and protect the American food supply.

Sincerely,

Alliance for the Wild Rockies

All-creatures.org

American Bird Conservancy

American Grassfed Association

American Sustainable Business Council

Anacostia Watershed Society

Animals Are Sentient Beings

Appalachian Voices

As You Sow

Bee Love Sacramento

Bee Safe Boulder

Bee Safe Earth

Berkeley Food Institute

Berks Gas Truth

Beyond Pesticides

Black Warrior River Keeper

Blue Dasher Farm

Bold Visions Conservation

Borneo Project

Bus For Progress

California Peace and Freedom Party

Carolina Farm Stewardship Association

Cascade Girl Organization

CATA – El Comite de Apoyo a los Trabajadores Agricolas

Catholic Rural Life

Center for Biological Diversity

Center for Environmental Health

Center for Food Safety

Citizens for Safe Water Around Badger

Clean Air Watch

Coastal Monmouth Democrats

Collective Eye, Inc

Colorado Pesticide Reform Coalition

Community Alliance for Global Justice

Cottingham Farm, LLC

Cottonwood Environmental Law Center

DC Environmental Network

Dogwood Alliance

Eco-Justice Ministries

Ecological Farming Association

EConsulting

Endangered Habitats League

Endangered Species Coalition

Environment America

Environment Arizona

Environment California

Environment Colorado

Environment Connecticut

Environment Florida

Environment Georgia

Environment Illinois

Environment Iowa

Environment Maine

Environment Maryland

Environment Massachusetts

Environment Michigan

Environment Minnesota

Environment Missouri

Environment Montana

Environment Nevada

Environment New Hampshire

Environment New Jersey

Environment New Mexico

Environment New York

Environment North Carolina

Environment Ohio

Environment Oregon

Environment Rhode Island

Environment Texas

Environment Virginia

Environment Washington

Environmental Defenders of McHenry County

Environmental Protection Information Center

Experimental Farm Network

Family Farm Defenders

Farmworker Justice

Friends of Blackwater

Friends of the Earth

Fair World Project

Farmworker Association of Florida

Food Democracy Now!

Food Chain Workers Alliance

Food Craft Institute

Food First

Food for Maine’s Future

Food & Water Watch

Gap Mountain Goats

Georgia ForestWatch

Gifford Pinchot Task Force

GMO Free Florida

GMO Free PA

Go Green Northbrook

Grassroots International

Great Old Broads for Wilderness

Green America

Growing Power, Inc.

Health Care Without Harm

Humming for Bees

Illinois Right to Know GMO

Illinois Stewardship Alliance

Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy

International Fund for Animal Welfare (IFAW)

International Foundation for Organic Agriculture (IFOAM)

Iowa Farmers Union

Iowa Organic Association

Just Food

Kalmiopsis Audubon Society

Kansas Rural Center

Label GMOs Sonoma County

Laurie M. Tisch Center for Food, Education & Policy, Columbia University

Los Padres Forest Watch

Maine Organic Farmers and Growers Association

Mangrove Action Project

Maryland Conservation Council

Maryland League of Conservation Voters

Maryland Ornithological Society

Maryland Pesticide Education Network

Massachusetts Right to Know GMO

MOM’s Organic Market

National Family Farm Coalition

National Organic Coalition

NH Right to Know GMO

Noah’s Notes

North Branch Land Trust

North County Watch

Northeast Organic Dairy Producers Alliance

Northeast Organic Farm Association

Northern New Jersey Chapter of National Organization for Women

Northwest Atlantic Marine Alliance

Northwest Center for Alternatives to Pesticides

Oasis Earth

Ohio Ecological Food and Farm Association

Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition

Olympia Beekeepers Association

Our Family Farms

Oregonians for Safe Farms and Families

Oregon Honey Festival

Organic Seed Alliance

Organic Seed Growers and Trade Association

Other Worlds

PCC Natural Markets

Pesticide Action Network North America

Penn Environment

Planting Seeds of Hope

Plymouth County Beekeepers Association

Pollinate Minnesota

Pollinator Friendly Alliance

Pollinator Project Rogue Valley

Pollinator Revival

Powder River Basin Resource Council

Progress Ohio

Rachel Carson Council

Rainforest Relief

Raptors are the Solution

Raritan Headwaters Association

Rocky Mountain Peace and Justice Center

Roots Action

Rural Vermont

Save the Manatee Club

Save Our Sky Bluewaters

Seeds and Songs Bakery

Sierra Club North Carolina

Small Planet Institute

South Florida Wildlands Association

SumofUs

Sustainable Arizona

Texas Food Policy Group

The Blue Heron Nature Preserve

The Cornucopia Institute

The Ecology Center

The Lands Council

The Organic and Non -GMO Report

The Safina Center

Toxics Action Center

Turning Green

Tri -City Ecology Center

Trillium Assets Management

Utah Physicians for a Healthy Environment

Veda Stram – allcreatures.org

Vilicus Farms

War Is A Crime

Washtenaw Food Policy Council

WildCare

Wild Farm Alliance

Wilderness Watch

Wisconsin Environment

Worcester County Beekeeper Association

York County Beekeepers Association

The post Cornucopia Signs on to Protect Pollinators appeared first on Cornucopia Institute.

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