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ASA Appreciates EPA Offer to Clarify Dust Issue
October 19, 2006…Saint Louis, Missouri…The American Soybean
Association (ASA) expressed appreciation that U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) Administrator Stephen Johnson has offered to
send a letter to the states clarifying that a new EPA rule does not
change the existing status of agricultural dust regulations. Johnson
offered the letter yesterday during a visit to the Perry, Iowa, farm of
ASA past-President Ron Heck. The top EPA official was invited to meet
with Senator Chuck Grassley (R-IA) to listen to producers’ concerns
about EPA’s proposed dust control regulations.
Grassley requested the meeting because EPA did not include an
exemption for agricultural sources of dust, as was proposed earlier by
the agency, when EPA recently announced revisions to the National
Ambient Air Quality Standards, which address fine and course particle
pollution. Instead, the agency included some additional information in
the preamble that says agricultural sources shall not be subject to
meeting the proposed standards. Johnson said EPA cannot put an exemption
in the rule because Congress does not allow them to include exemptions.
Johnson emphasized that no new rules have been imposed on
agriculture. "We want to make it clear that we see agriculture as a
producer of solutions, not problems," he said. "Our concern is focused
on urban and industrial sources of coarse particulate matter. We don’t
want to regulate dirt – we don’t think it’s the right thing for the EPA
to do."
Grassley expressed concern that state agencies might feel compelled
to enforce the rules differently, disregarding EPA’s intent, which he
maintains puts farmers in jeopardy. Farmers at the meeting were
concerned about being exposed to lawsuits because they aren’t exempt
from the regulations.
Heck, who is also a director of the Iowa Soybean Association (ISA),
said he was comfortable with Johnson’s intentions, but without an
exemption for farmers in the rule, there are no guarantees against
lawsuits.
"I’m still concerned about the application of this somewhere down the
road, someone taking it out of context and interpreting the rule and
using it as an excuse to sue a farmer over dust even though EPA does not
intend this rule to cover farm dust," Heck said. "But Administrator
Johnson did agree that he would send a letter to the states clarifying
that the new rule does not change the existing status of agricultural
dust regulations."
ISA President Ray Gaesser told Johnson, "We need a very clear
statement about your position on agricultural particulate matter, both
for livestock and crop farmers, to protect us from lawsuits. Even if a
lawsuit is frivolous, it can break a farmer while he fights it."
Heck said, "Soybean farmers also appreciate Senator Grassley’s
leadership on this issue, and support his requests that the Senate
Environment and Public Works Committee hold a hearing on the revised
final EPA rule and that USDA’s Economic Research Service study the
economic impact this rule could have on agriculture."
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For more information, contact:
Ron Heck, ASA past-President, 515/275-2853, checkers@netins.net
Ray Gaesser, ISA President,
641/344-2327, gaesserfarms@ll.net
Bob Callanan, ASA Communications Director, 314/576-1770, bcallanan@soy.org
Access this release at www.soygrowers.com
Audio with Ron Heck available at: www.soygrowers.com/newsroom/srn.htm |