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Kristi O'Harran
Columnist Kristi O'Harran writes about people in Snohomish County.
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WEEK IN REVIEW
Thursday
Boeing schedules 787's first flight for Tuesday
Payout of $44.7 million to clean up Asarco cont...
Girl's death in car crash stuns Granite Falls
Wednesday
Gregoire unveils budget with deep cuts, will pr...
Sultan brothers plead guilty in death of rival ...
Bikini coffee stands to be regulated as adult e...
Tuesday


Arlington brothers’ fight led to death, p...
Burn ban issued in Snohomish County
Woman found dead at Bothell house fire
Monday


Pearl Harbor's voices of the past
Taxes needed to close state's growing deficit?
Grant could help county's residents all be heal...
Sunday


Swine flu lingers, making traditional flu seaso...
Two vie to serve as Snohomish County prosecutor
Families get an early gift: free Christmas trees
Saturday


Gift charity draws Snohomish County families in...
Fears over commercial air service at Paine Fiel...
Donated safe gives Marysville museum a mystery
Friday


From behind bars, pal tells Colton Harris-Moore...
Commercial airlines would cause few problems at...
Fund set up to benefit children of couple kille...
 

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Published: Saturday, February 23, 2008

Farm group asks judge for pesticide protection

SEATTLE -- One day in 1995, Juan Angulo arrived for work at an Eastern Washington apple orchard only to begin vomiting. A terrible headache gripped him and his eyes and nose began to run. The same thing happened to the rest of his work crew, all from exposure to a pesticide called AZM, Angulo believed.

Citing his case and others, lawyers for the United Farmworkers argued to a federal judge Friday that the Environmental Protection Agency's decision to allow the use of AZM until 2012 was unconscionable. The EPA did not consider harm to farm workers, their families, or to rivers, lakes and salmon, they said, and the agency should be forced to reconsider.

"There are workers getting sick," Patti Goldman, of the environmental law firm Earthjustice, told U.S. District Judge Ricardo S. Martinez. "This isn't just hypothetical."

AZM, or azinphos-methyl, was derived from World War II-era nerve gas agents and has been used as a pesticide since the late 1950s. Because of its danger, the EPA in 2001 barred growers from using AZM on two dozen crops.

In 2006, the EPA decided to phase out all uses of the pesticide by 2012 -- two years later than it had initially proposed.

Cynthia Morris, a Justice Department lawyer who argued on the agency's behalf, told the judge that the short-term benefits of allowing growers to keep using AZM for the next five years outweigh the potential harm. She also said the phase out gave farmers time to come up with mitigation plans.

Goldman responded that the mitigation measures are far from adequate; for example, she said, they include no requirements that children be protected from AZM that drifts onto nearby fields during application. In its cost-benefit analysis, the EPA did not weigh harm to the environment or long-term health effects.

1. Girl's death in car crash stuns Granite Falls
2. 787 starts ‘final gantlet' of tests before first flight
3. Inmates to help families of police
4. Lewd baristas face stricter rules
5. Swine flu shots to be available to all in county
6. Woman who died in fire named
7. Roe picked as interim prosecutor
8. Gregoire's budget offers no easy way out of deficit
9. Payout of $44.7 million to clean up Asarco contamination in Everett
10. Roche Harbor's second derby a big hit
Enterprise Newspaper Snohomish County Business Journal
Zambian woman thanks students for their help
Food banks see rise in use
‘Making Spirits Bright’ in Edmonds
Wolfpack takes aim at state
Seahawks help students smile
95 and still volunteering
Sno-King joined by local TV king
Veterans back for Wildcats
Lynnwood seeks to plug $2 million budget gap
The Enterprise Online Newspaper


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