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Farmworker advocates decry AgMart settlement

Post on June 21, 2010 by 1 Comment »

For those who may have missed it, a collection of farmworker advocates delivered an open letter to the chairman of the state Pesticide Board last Friday that spells out many of the deficiencies in the recent settlement of the AgMart farmworker poisoning case. It is a damning letter. Here is a key segment:

For more than five years, the Pesticide Section staff worked diligently with the resources they had available to collect good evidence and make a case for Ag-Mart’s accountability in this matter. We understand that settling this case brought an end to significant public expense and extra workloads for the Pesticide Section staff.

However, in the final settlement, the Pesticide Board chose to back away from its own findings. In agreeing to make a public statement absolving Ag-Mart and Mr. Oxley from any negligence or responsibility in the matter, the board sent a much louder statement that the state ultimately will not hold violators responsible when a preventable pesticide incident has the potential to cause irreparable harm to farmworkers and their families. How much worse would a case have to be in order to make the charges stick?

The Pesticide Board has now completed five years of hearings on this heartbreaking case. In all of those years, the Board has only once touched on the underlying problems that gave rise to this case, when ordered to do so by the NC General Assembly, and board members chose to do so in the narrowest possible way. As observers of your work throughout these five years, we have been astounded that members did not seriously discuss what the board could do to prevent such pesticide violations from ever happening in our state again. The NC Pesticide Board has the authority and the power to make significant changes in the working conditions faced by farmworkers, who face some of the most difficult and dangerous conditions of any workers in North Carolina, yet have chosen instead to absolve the worst violator in our state’s history.”

You can read the entire open letter by clicking here. You can also read a summary of some the group’s specific and common sense recommendations for preventing agricultural pesticide exposure by clicking here.

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