Related To Story |
Woman Sprayed With Weed Killer Wants Tougher Penalties
Couple Covered With Herbicide Under EPA Review
POSTED: 5:29 pm EDT June 1, 2010
GREENFIELD, Ind. -- A Hancock County woman who was sprayed with a controversial weed killer wants tougher consequences for those who apply pesticides illegally.Debbie Horn said she and her husband were standing in their back yard in 2008 when an herbicide being applied to a neighboring farm field during windy conditions blew their way, 6News' Joanna Massee reported."We tried to stop them. We were waving them down ... and he drove right by, sprayed us fully, and then came back and said 'What's the problem?'" Horn said.The couple was covered with atrazine, a popular weed killer at the center of a review by the Environmental Protection Agency after some scientists claim they have linked the chemical to birth defects.After the incident, Horn said she contacted the Office of the Indiana State Chemist, and an investigation led to the applicator being fined $250.Horn called the punishment a slap in the face."If you sent an envelope with white powder you'd go to jail, but if you spray somebody, you really don't have any consequences for that," she said.State Pesticide Administrator David Scott said the $250 fine in the Horns' case is the maximum penalty allowed by the law, and that the agency rarely moves to revoke an applicator's license."It's rare that we find an applicator that doesn't want to cooperate to some degree," he said.Scott said that when the EPA registers a pesticide, it's a risk-benefit decision, not a zero-risk decision. Horn said she's doesn't like what rural life has become."When I moved into the country, I loved living in the country, away from everything," she said. "But since then, it just feels like we're living in the middle of a chemical exposure."Syngenta, the major manufacturer of atrazine, disputes research showing birth defects peak among the children of women who conceive in the summer months, when atrazine use is the most prevalent.
More Information:
Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry -- Atrazine Facts
EPA Information On Atrazine
Syngenta's Page On Atrazine
Previous Stories:
- May 26, 2010: Utility Could Join Suit Against Chemical Company
- May 25, 2010: Farmers Defend Chemical's Use; Utilities File Cleaning Cost Suit
- May 25, 2010: Crop Chemical Suspected In Boost Of Birth Defects
Copyright 2010 by TheIndyChannel.com All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
The following are comments from our users. Opinions expressed are neither created nor endorsed by TheIndyChannel.com. By posting a comment you agree to accept our Terms of Use. Comments are moderated by the community. To report an offensive or otherwise inappropriate comment, click the "Flag" link that appears beneath that comment. Comments that are flagged by a set number of users will be automatically removed.




