Community air monitoring for pesticides. Part 1: selecting pesticides and a community.

Environ Monit Assess

Environmental Monitoring Branch, California Department of Pesticide Regulation, CA Environmental Protection Agency, P.O. Box 4015, Sacramento, CA, 95812, USA,

Published: March 2014

AI Article Synopsis

  • The CA Department of Pesticide Regulation (CDPR) developed a scoring system to evaluate 100 pesticides and 83 communities for an air monitoring study within the framework of California's Environmental Justice Action Plan.
  • The evaluation considered factors like pesticide usage, volatility, community demographics, and health impacts to identify candidates for monitoring, distinguishing more heavily impacted communities and high-risk pesticides.
  • Following public input and the scoring process, CDPR recommended 40 pesticides and one community for a yearlong study, which will inform future monitoring efforts using similar transparent and quantifiable methods.

Article Abstract

The CA Department of Pesticide Regulation (CDPR) developed methods to select pesticides and a community to fulfill criteria for an ambient air monitoring study it conducted as part of the CA Environmental Protection Agency's Environmental Justice Action Plan. Using a scoring system, CDPR evaluated 100 pesticides based on statewide-reported pesticide use, volatility, and priority in CDPR's risk assessment process (indicators of exposure and toxicity) to produce a list of pesticides to consider as candidates for monitoring. The CDPR also evaluated and scored 83 communities based on demographics and health factors, availability of cumulative impacts data, and reported pesticide use to create a list of community candidates. The scores provide relative rankings to distinguish more highly impacted communities from less impacted ones and to identify which pesticides might contribute most to potential adverse health effects. These methods use criteria that can be quantified, validated, and verified in order to provide a transparent and fair selection process. Based on public comments and highest scores, CDPR recommended 40 pesticides (including some of their degradation products) and one community for its yearlong monitoring study. The CDPR then further refined its list of pesticides by soliciting input from local and technical advisory groups. The CDPR plans to use these methods to select pesticides and communities in future monitoring activities.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10661-013-3507-6DOI Listing

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