Oregon Pesticide Application Test Latest Version Graded A+
Oregon Pesticide Application Test Latest Version Graded A+ FIFRA The Federa Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA) - Requires U.S. EPA register all pesticides - Requires EPA to approve each use of pesticed and approve the product label - Requires all registered pesticides be classified as either general-use or restricted-use - Requires users of restricted-use be certified or work under liscenced supervision - Provides penalties for "use inconsistent with the labeling" of a pesticide. FFDCA The Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetics Act of 1938 - Under FFDCA, a certain amount of residue is allowed on food and feed crops after harvest. - The FFDCA created the FDA. - The EPA sets the tolerance, but FDA is responsible for enforcement of tolerances. - In Oregon, the Oregon Deparment of Agriculture Food Safety Division cooperates with FDA to make sure that the pesticide residue on food crops and in milk are not greater than the tolerance. Residue After applying a pesticide, a small amount of it remains on plants and produce. Tolerance The amount of legally permitted residue. FAA The Federal Aviation Administration - In charge of the rules for applying pesticides by airplane. - FAA certifies commercial and private farm aircraft pilots. - Pilots must have the correct pesticide liscense from Oregon Deparment of Agriculture (ODA), before applying pesticides. Label Directions The Pesticide label is a legal document under both federal and state laws. Anyone who applies a pesticide in a way that does not agree with label directions is breaking the law. Supplemental Labeling You must have special labeling for uses that are not stated on the container label. Restricted-Use Pesticide -Any pesticide that poses special risks, even when used according to the label, is classified as a restricted-use pesticide (RUP). - You must have a pesticide aapplicator license to buy or use a RUP or be working under the supervision of someone who does. General-Use Pesticide - If a product's label does not state "restricted-use pesticide," then it is a general-use pesticide. - General-use pesticides should not harm people, animals, or the environment when used according to label directions. 3 types of pesticide registrations Section 3 Section 24(c) Section 18 Section 3 Oregon Revised Statutes (ORS 634) and the Oregon Pesticide Regulations are the main Pesticide Control laws. ORS 634 states that each pesticide product distributed, sold or offered for sale in Oregon must be registered with ODA. Each product must be registered every year. ODA registers products that the EPA has registered first unser Section 3 of FIFRA. Section 24(c) Special Local Need - If a pest causes serious damage to a crop and there is no pesticide that already is registered to control it, section 24(c) of FIFRA allows states to give a Special Local Need. -24(c) may add sites, increase rates, or change the way to apply the pesticide. These are different from the federally registered label. - The person or group asking for a SLN registration must give specific data to ODA. The data must show that the product will control the pest and not harm the treated animals, plants, or crop. The pesticide must have an existing tolerance set by EPA. - You must have the SLN label with you when you use a pesticide registered under Section 24(c). If you do not have the label, you are breaking federal and state law. Section 18 Emergency Exemption -Sometimes, there is a pest crisis for farmers. 1) A pest may invade a site for which
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oregon pesticide application test latest version
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