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Children and farmworker communities will yet again be in harm’s way, as a harmful pesticide is allowed to return to the market. For nearly half of a century, U.S. staple foods such as apples, cherries, peaches, and citrus were sprayed with chlorpyrifos (pronounced: klawr-pir-uh-fos), a dangerous pesticide that poisons farmworkers and in even smaller doses harms the developing brains of children. In 2021, thanks to a court win for farmworkers, civil rights, disability, and public health advocates in partnership with Earthjustice, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) banned all food uses of chlorpyrifos. Unfortunately, that ban didn’t last. After a lawsuit from Gharda, a chemical company, and agri-business groups, the 8th Circuit Court of Appeals revoked the ban and ordered EPA to reconsider some food uses. Tell the EPA to protect children from neurodevelopmental harm and put the chlorpyrifos ban back in place.
Based on an extensive body of peer-reviewed science, the EPA and its Scientific Advisory Panel have repeatedly found that chlorpyrifos harms the developing brain at exposures below what EPA has allowed. In the 2021 ruling in Earthjustice’s lawsuit, the 9th Circuit Court directed the EPA to end food uses of chlorpyrifos based on these findings unless it can affirmatively ensure children would be protected. Gharda and the agri-business groups that appealed the 2021 ban and obtained the 8th Circuit Court ruling this year are relying on a 2020 EPA proposal that fails to protect children from learning disabilities and behavioral disorders and cannot be pursued consistent with EPA’s past findings and the 9th Circuit’s 2021 ruling.
This decades-long fight is an indictment of the systems we have in place to protect public health. We’ve known for well over a decade that chlorpyrifos and other organophosphates harm children's brain development. With the ban overturned and sent back to EPA for a do-over, we must fight this battle again. We must protect our children form chlorpyrifos — a dangerous pesticide that could subject them to lifelong learning disabilities. It's time for the EPA to act on the science and ban chlorpyrifos.TAKE ACTION