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Organic Farmer Wins Pesticide Suit PDF Print E-mail
Written by Kiki Hubbard   
Wednesday, 01 October 2008

Organic farmers have long been concerned about pesiticide drift, where residues of chemicals applied in nearby fields show up in their products or kill their crops outright. Even the National Organic Program acknowledges the risk, and requires certified organic farmers to include in their "organic plan" measures for avoiding contamination by area pesticide applications and by setting a tolerance level for chemical residues in organic products (no more than 5% of the EPA tolerance level).

Recently, an organic farmer in California won $1 million in damages for crops injured by pesticide drift.

The story goes like this: Organophosphate chemicals (known to persist in the environment) were applied to brussel sprouts on a nearby farm. The pesticides evaporated and drifted via coastal fogs to neighboring fields. Some of these fields were farmed by Jacobs Farm Del Cabo, an organic farm that reported having its culinary herbs "wiped out."

The case brought to light that regulations don't provide adequate protections for organic farmers. The liability imposed on the company that applied the pesticides will certainly set a precedent for future cases, since state and federal regulations pertaining to pesticide applications and drift have never before been applied to pesticide evaporation. 

Source: San Francisco Chronicle & Environmental News Service

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written by Gordon, October 03, 2008
it is one thing if they carelessly sprayed the pesticides, but this seems a little much. They evaporated and drifted in the fog, and the guy gets sued?

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