Hawaii House lawmakers have deferred indefinitely a bill that would have created vegetative buffer zones around five schools as part of a pilot project to protect against inadvertent exposure to pesticides sprayed at nearby farm fields.
The expressed its聽“deep disappointment” in the decision by the Agriculture Committee, chaired by Rep. Clift Tsuji, in particular to not pass .
The House Environmental Protection and Energy Committee, chaired by Rep. Chris Lee, also recommended deferring the bill although Lee introduced the legislation and supported its passage.
“I look forward to the Department of Health and others re-engaging on this issue moving forward. As long as there鈥檚 questions unanswered 鈥 and I think it鈥檚 clear there are some 鈥 we have an obligation as leaders to make sure that we put the health of the communities first and foremost,” Lee said.
The group’s director, Ashley Lukens, said in a release Tuesday that聽state agencies need to聽step up in the interim and address community concerns.
鈥淲e know this issue is not going anywhere. It鈥檚 time for the state to take the necessary actions to protect Hawaii鈥檚 keiki from harmful pesticide exposure,鈥澛爏he said.
On a positive note, Lukens said lawmakers’ discussion of the bill last week with state officials and the public brought to light “major gaps聽in the state鈥檚 approach to pesticide regulation, and the total lack of coordination between the departments of Education, Health and Agriculture in addressing these issues.”
Critics of the bill have said it’s not GMO seed companies that are to blame for school closures in recent years due to pesticide drift. They said it’s individuals who use pesticides inappropriately at their homes.
The opposed the bill, saying pesticides are already well regulated.
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Nathan Eagle is a deputy editor for Civil Beat. You can reach him by email at neagle@civilbeat.org or follow him on Twitter at , Facebook and Instagram .