City slickers off target in pesticide report
By Michael Fumento
Copyright 1998 Idaho Statesman
December 15, 1998
Here's something you don't see everyday. A group of
suit-wearing city slickers 
who rarely get closer to a farm than watching "Green Acres" reruns
have 
produced a report telling farmers how to protect their children
from 
pesticides. The ultimate in arrogance? Perhaps. Or is it just 
another thinly disguised salvo in the environmentalists'
never-ending campaign 
against pesticides? 
"Trouble on the Farm: Growing up with Pesticides in
Agricultural 
Communities," recently released by the Natural Resources Defense
Council, is 
the latest in a series of environmentalist "studies" aimed right at
Americans' softest, most vulnerable spot - their children. 
(Another was their infamous, discredited Alar 
report). This one claims children on or near farms are exposed -
and often 
overexposed - to pesticides "from their parents' work clothes and
skin, from 
indoor and outdoor air, from their mothers' milk, and from water,
food and 
soil." 
Much of what the NRDC says is true. For example: Kids
exist. Farms exist. 
Pesticides exist. 
It's the, well, "finer" points on which the NRDC is wrong. 
For example, "Pesticide use in the United States is
increasing," it states. 
No national statistics follow, merely that from the last
few years of a single 
state. Could this be because agricultural pesticide use in the
United States 
has dropped 
sharply from 843 million pounds in 1979 to 771 million pounds in
1995, the last 
year for which there are data? 
How about chronic exposure? 
Studies repeatedly show that overall farmers have less
cancer and live longer 
than non-farmers. 
The largest and most recent study to date, 
published this year in the Annals of Epidemiology, combined 37
studies and 
found yet again that farmers have lower overall rates of cancer. 
Indeed, the only excess they found was that of the lip,
apparently from sun 
exposure. 
"I've got three, very, very healthy kids and it's sort of
ludicrous to think 
they're all 
going to die because they were exposed to pesticides,"says Bill
Spencer, who 
has spent his life raising lemons, tangelos and grapefruit in Yuma,
Ariz. 
"Farmers are trained in safe application of pesticides. I
think there's 
probably no more family-oriented people in the world than farmers
and they're 
not about to put their children at risk." 
Further, he says, "I don't think the NRDC is aiming their
material at farmers. 
I don't know any stupid farmers out there." 
"Unfortunately, EPA's record in enforcing child protection
requirements of the 
law has been poor," said Dr. 
Gina Solomon, the report's principal author. 
This is exactly the kind of criticism the EPA loves, giving
them an excuse to 
do what they already want: expand their bureaucracy by further
tightening farm 
regulations and enforcement. 
Ultimately the NRDC does not want safe use of pesticides;
it wants no use. 
This is the motivation 
for every pesticide attack it launches, and it's hardly surprising
therefore 
that among the recommendations in this latest one is to "Encourage
organic 
farming by instituting stringent national standards." 
Knowing it can never get an outright ban on pesticides, the
NRDC and similar 
environmental groups 
want to make their use so onerous that farmers will have to abandon
them. 
Then we'll all be forced to eat expensive, ugly,
shriveled-looking organic 
produce and foreign competitors will have our farmers foreclosing
at rates not 
seen since the dust bowl days. 
Meanwhile, I'm waiting for 
some farm group to release a report telling urban dwellers how to
keep their 
kids safe from drug pushers and gang influences. 
Michael Fumento is a senior fellow at the Hudson
Institute in Washington, where he specializes in science and health
issues.  
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