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Regulatory Processes for Pesticides. Mark Hartman Antimicrobials Division (AD) Office of Prevention, Pesticides and Toxic Substances United States Environmental Protection Agency. Program Goals. Protect public health and the environment from pesticide risks.
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Regulatory Processes for Pesticides Mark Hartman Antimicrobials Division (AD) Office of Prevention, Pesticides and Toxic Substances United States Environmental Protection Agency
Program Goals • Protect public health and the environment from pesticide risks. • Ensure pesticide users have access to appropriate tools.
Main Statutes • Federal Insecticide, Fungicide and Rodenticide Act (FFIRA) • Food Quality Protection Act (FQPA) • Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act (FFDCA) • Pesticide Registration Improvement Act (PRIA)
Regulatory Framework • Registration • Reregistration • Registration Review
Registration • Gateway to the marketplace • Granting license necessary to use a pesticide in the U.S. • New active ingredients • New uses • New products • Amended products • Goal – Ensure that new pesticides/use patterns do not pose risk of concern to human health or the environment
Pesticide Reregistration • Ensures older pesticides meet today’s standards • Scope – Pesticides initially registered before November 1984 • Goal – Mitigate risks of concern without disrupting agriculture, public health, other vital uses
Registration Review • 15-year review cycle for all pesticides • Implementation projected to begin in 2007
General Process • Data Collection • Risk Assessment • Risk Management • Regulatory Decision
Data • EPA has authority under FIFRA to require data to support a registration • Toxicity • Product and Residue Chemistry • Ecological Effects • Environmental Fate • Exposure • Efficacy • Other available data is also reviewed
FIFRA Framework • Consider wide range of risks • Food • Occupational • Water resources • Residential • Terrestrial and aquatic organisms • Endangered species • Acceptable risk standard (“unreasonable adverse effects”)
FQPA Framework • FQPA introduced new safety standard, “reasonable certainty of no harm” • Consider and assess: • Aggregate exposure • Cumulative effects of pesticides with a common mechanism of toxicity • Effects on infants and children • Endocrine effects (program in early stages)
Public Participation Process • Provides framework for stakeholder and public involvement in reregistration • Offers consistent, defined, predictable opportunities for public involvement • Gives EPA flexibility to tailor the process to each pesticide’s uses and risks
Tailored Approach • 6-phase full process for pesticides with complex uses and issues; significant risk mitigation needed • 4-phase modified process for pesticides with limited uses and risks; nominal risk mitigation needed • Low risk process for pesticides requiring little or no risk mitigation
Public Process: Phases 1-3 • Phase 1: Registrant "Error Only" Review • Phase 2: EPA Considers Error Comments • Phase 3: Release of Risk Assessment for Public Comment
Phase 4 • EPA considers public comments received during Phase 3, revises the risk assessments as necessary, prepares a preliminary benefits characterization (if needed) and works on risk reduction options • With input from other EPA offices, other agencies and stakeholders, EPA develops a risk management decision
Get Involved Early • EPA encourages stakeholders and the public to use our schedules and the public participation process • Plan to get involved early in reviews of pesticides of interest • See EPA’s website for pesticide information and contacts
Triclosan as a Pesticide • First registered in 1969 • 22 currently registered products • Major use patterns • Hard surface disinfection and sanitization • Materials preservatives (textiles etc.) • Coatings • Swimming pool water systems
Triclosan Process • Tentative Reregistration Decision Date of 9/07 • Data review and risk assessment development to begin late in 2006
Information on EPA Website • EPA Office of Pesticide Programs www.epa.gov/pesticides/