Monday, August 25, 2014
Federal court rules State, not county, can regulate pesticides and GMOs
Kaua’i’s controversial Bill 2491/Ordinance 960 was slapped
down today by Federal Magistrate Barry M. Kurren.
The County may not enforce the law
And while the judge’s ruling is complex, the message is
simple.
The county can’t regulate pesticides or genetically modified
crops, because the state already has global” and “comprehensive” regulatory
mechanisms in place.
The County, thus, is pre-empted from enacting its own
regulatory scheme.
The court case was brought after a messy little drama, in
which the County Council passed Bill 2491 to regulate pesticides and GMOs in
Kaua`i County, and then the mayor vetoed the bill, and then the County Council
filled an empty Council seat in order to have enough votes to override the
veto, and then the Council did override the veto by a 5-2 vote.
That meant the ordinance could take effect. But the new ordinance was immediately appealed by Syngenta
Seeds, Syngenta Hawaii, Pioneer Hi-Bred International, Agrigenetics and BASF
Plant Science.
Those seed companies sued Kauai County, since was required to enforce 960. Intervenors in the action
included Ka Makani Ho`opono, Center for Food Safety, Pesticide Action Network
North America and Surfrider Foundation, all of whom supported 960.
There were more than a dozen claims, but two ended up being
enough to kill Ordinance 960.
“The Court’s ruling simply recognizes that the State of
Hawaii has established a comprehensive framework for addressing the application
of restricted use pesticides and the planting of GMO crops, which presently
precludes local regulation by the county."
In short: The state already comprehensively regulates pesticides, so the county can't. And the state already comprehensively regulates dangerous weeds and restricted plans, to the county can't.
© Jan TenBruggencate 2014
Posted by Jan T at 11:04 AM
Labels: Agriculture, Botany, Government, Health/Medical, Pollution, technology
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