Chlorpyrifos; Notice of Intent To Cancel Pesticide Registrations, 76474-76481 [2022-27130]
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of Environmental Conservation (DEC) of
the following:
Date of Receipt of the Certification
Request: November 30, 2022.
Reasonable Period of Time to Act on
the Certification Request: One year
(November 30, 2023).
If the New York DEC fails or refuses
to act on the water quality certification
request on or before the above date, then
the agency certifying authority is
deemed waived pursuant to section
401(a)(1) of the Clean Water Act, 33
U.S.C. 1341(a)(1).
Dated: December 8, 2022.
Kimberly D. Bose,
Secretary.
BILLING CODE 6717–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission
Notice of Denial of Water Quality
Certification
Project No.
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Creek
Creek
Creek
Creek
Creek
Creek
Creek
Creek
Creek
Hydro Power, LLC ............
Water Resources, LLC.
Land Resources, LLC.
Hydro Power, LLC ............
Water Resources, LLC.
Land Resources, LLC.
Hydro Power, LLC ............
Water Resources, LLC.
Land Resources, LLC.
9690–115
10481–069
10482–122
On March 31, 2020, Eagle Creek
Hydro Power, LLC, Eagle Creek Water
Resources, LLC, and Eagle Creek Land
Resources, LLC (co-licensees
collectively referred to as Eagle Creek)
jointly filed an application for a new
license for each of the ‘‘Mongaup River
Projects’’ consisting of the Swinging
Bridge Hydroelectric Project (P–10482),
Mongaup Falls Hydroelectric Project (P–
10481), and the Rio Hydroelectric
Project (P–9690). Eagle Creek filed with
the New York Department of
Environmental Conservation (New York
DEC) a request for water quality
certification for the Mongaup River
Projects under section 401(a)(1) of the
Clean Water Act on March 30, 2021. On
March 24, 2022, the New York DEC
denied certification for the project.
Eagle Creek filed a copy of New York
DEC’s denial of certification on
November 14, 2022. Pursuant to 40 CFR
121.8, we are providing notice that New
York DEC’s denial satisfies the
requirements of 40 CFR 121.7(e).
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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
[FR Doc. 2022–27121 Filed 12–13–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6717–01–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
Elissa Reaves, Pesticide Re-Evaluation
Division (7508M), Office of Pesticide
Programs, Environmental Protection
Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave. NW,
Washington, DC 20460–0001; telephone
number: (202) 566–0700; email address:
OPPChlorpyrifosInquiries@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
[EPA–HQ–OPP–2022–0417; FRL–10108–01–
OCSPP]
I. Executive Summary
Chlorpyrifos; Notice of Intent To
Cancel Pesticide Registrations
EPA is announcing its intent to cancel
the registrations of three pesticide
products containing the insecticide
chlorpyrifos due to the revocation of all
chlorpyrifos tolerances. Specifically,
EPA intends to cancel each of the
following pesticide products, which
allow for use on food crops, listed in
sequence by EPA registration number.
• EPA Reg. No. 93182–3 Chlorpyrifos
Technical.
• EPA Reg. No. 93182–7 Pilot 4E
Chlorpyrifos Agricultural Insecticide.
• EPA Reg. No. 93182–8 Pilot 15G
Chlorpyrifos Agricultural Insecticide.
The following information is the
address on record for Gharda, the
registrant of the products listed in this
unit and subject to this notice, and
includes the company number which
corresponds to the first part of the EPA
registration number of the products:
• EPA Co. No. 93182—Gharda
Chemicals International, Inc., 4932
Crockers Lake Blvd., Suite 818,
Sarasota, Florida 34238.
In addition, this document
summarizes EPA’s legal authority for
the proposed cancellation (see unit II.);
the revocation of tolerances for residues
of chlorpyrifos on food commodities
(see unit III.); the Agency’s rationale for
issuance of this NOIC (see unit IV.); the
timing of the proposed cancellations,
EPA’s existing stocks determination,
and the potential scope of any final
cancellation order (see unit V.); the
results of the Agency’s coordination
with the U.S. Department of Agriculture
(USDA) and the FIFRA Science
Advisory Panel (SAP) (see unit VI.); and
how eligible persons may request a
hearing and the consequences of
requesting or failing to request such a
hearing (unit VII.).
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
Pursuant to the Federal
Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide
Act (FIFRA), the Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) hereby
announces its intent to cancel the
registrations of three pesticide products
containing the insecticide chlorpyrifos
due to the Agency’s revocation of all
tolerances for chlorpyrifos. This
document identifies the products at
issue, summarizes EPA’s basis for this
Notice of Intent to Cancel (NOIC), and
explains how adversely affected persons
may request a hearing and the
consequences of requesting or failing to
request such a hearing.
DATES: The affected registrant must
request a hearing within 30 days from
the date that the affected registrant
receives EPA’s NOIC, or on or before
January 13, 2023, whichever occurs
later. Other adversely affected parties
must request a hearing on or before
January 13, 2023. Please see unit VII. for
specific instructions.
ADDRESSES: The docket for this action,
identified under docket identification
(ID) number EPA–HQ–OPP–2022–0417,
is available online at https://
www.regulations.gov. Additional
instructions on visiting the docket,
along with more information about
dockets generally, is available at https://
www.epa.gov/dockets. For the latest
status information on EPA/DC services
and docket access, visit https://
www.epa.gov/dockets.
All persons who request a hearing
must comply with the Agency’s Rules of
Practice Governing Hearings, 40 CFR
part 164. Requests for hearing must be
filed with the Hearing Clerk in EPA’s
Office of Administrative Law Judges
(OALJ), in conformance with the
requirements of 40 CFR part 164. The
OALJ uses different addresses
depending on the delivery method.
Please see unit VII. for specific
instructions.
SUMMARY:
[FR Doc. 2022–27127 Filed 12–13–22; 8:45 am]
Eagle
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Dated: December 8, 2022.
Kimberly D. Bose,
Secretary.
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A. What action is the Agency taking?
B. What is the Agency’s authority for
this action?
The Agency’s authority to cancel a
pesticide that does not comply with the
provisions of FIFRA is contained in
FIFRA section 6(b), 7 U.S.C. 136d(b).
C. Who may be affected by this action?
This announcement will directly
affect the pesticide registrant listed in
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unit I.A., supplemental distributors, and
others who may distribute, sell, or use
the products listed in unit I.A. This
announcement may also be of particular
interest to a wide range of stakeholders
including environmental, human health,
farmworker, and agricultural advocates;
the chemical industry; pesticide users;
and members of the public interested in
the sale, distribution, or use of
pesticides. EPA believes the
stakeholders described above
encompass those likely to be affected;
however, more remote interests may
also be affected, and the Agency has not
attempted to describe all specific
entities that may be affected by this
action.
II. Legal Authority
With minor exceptions not at issue
here, as provided in FIFRA section 3(a),
a pesticide product may not be lawfully
sold or distributed in the United States
unless and until the product is
registered by EPA. 7 U.S.C. 136a(a). A
pesticide registration is a license
allowing a pesticide product to be sold
and distributed and includes a label
with use instructions that delineates the
specific uses for which the pesticide
may be used, including precautions and
other terms and conditions established
by EPA when it grants the registration.
As a general matter, in order to obtain
or maintain a registration for a pesticide
under FIFRA, an applicant or registrant
must demonstrate that the pesticide
satisfies the statutory standard for
registration. 7 U.S.C. 136a(c)(5). That
standard requires, among other things,
that the pesticide perform its intended
function without causing ‘‘unreasonable
adverse effects on the environment.’’ Id.
The term ‘‘unreasonable adverse effects
on the environment’’ is defined under
FIFRA section 2(bb) as including two
parts: (1) ‘‘[A]ny unreasonable risk to
man or the environment, taking into
account the economic, social, and
environmental costs and benefits of the
use of any pesticide’’ and (2) ‘‘[A]
human dietary risk from residues that
result from a use of a pesticide in or on
any food inconsistent with the standard
under section 346a of title 21.’’ 7 U.S.C.
136(bb). It is under the second part of
the definition that the FIFRA
registration standard incorporates the
Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act
(FFDCA), 21 U.S.C. 346a, safety
standard.
EPA establishes, modifies, or revokes
tolerances for pesticide residues under
FFDCA section 408. 21 U.S.C. 346a. A
‘‘tolerance’’ represents the maximum
level for residues of a pesticide legally
allowed in or on raw agricultural
commodities and processed food. Under
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the FFDCA, ‘‘any pesticide chemical
residues in or on a food shall be deemed
unsafe,’’ unless a tolerance or
exemption for such residues ‘‘is in
effect’’. 21 U.S.C. 346a(a)(1). In other
words, without a tolerance or an
exemption from the requirement of a
tolerance, pesticide residues in or on
food are considered unsafe, as a matter
of law. The consequence of having
pesticide residues in or on food that are
not covered by a tolerance, or an
exemption is that the food containing
such residues is rendered adulterated
under the FFDCA. 21 U.S.C.
342(a)(2)(B). It is a violation of the
FFDCA to introduce adulterated food
into interstate commerce. 21 U.S.C.
331(a).
Because the FIFRA registration
standard incorporates the FFDCA safety
standard, a pesticide that results in
residues in or on food that are unsafe,
which includes residues not covered by
a tolerance or tolerance exemption, does
not meet the FIFRA registration
standard. EPA will not approve any
application to register a pesticide with
food uses that may reasonably be
expected to result in pesticide residues
on food without appropriate tolerances
or exemptions in place, see 40 CFR
152.112(g), and registrations bearing
labeling for food use must be modified
or cancelled, pursuant to FIFRA section
6(b).
The burden of demonstrating that a
pesticide product satisfies the statutory
criteria for registration is at all times on
the proponents of the initial or
continued registration and continues as
long as the registration is in effect. 40
CFR 164.80(b); see also Industrial Union
Dept. v. American Petroleum Institute,
448 U.S. 607, 653 n.61 (1980); Stearns
Electric Paste v. EPA, 461 F.2d 293 (7th
Cir. 1972); Environmental Defense Fund
v. EPA, 510 F.2d 1292, 1297 (D.C. Cir.
1975).
Under FIFRA section 6(b), the Agency
may issue a notice of its intent to cancel
a registration of a pesticide product
whenever it appears either that ‘‘a
pesticide or its labeling or other material
required to be submitted does not
comply with FIFRA, or when used in
accordance with widespread and
commonly recognized practice, the
pesticide generally causes unreasonable
adverse effects on the environment.’’ 7
U.S.C. 136d(b). The cancellation
proposed in the notice shall become
final 30 days after publication of the
notice, or the date the registrant receives
the notice, whichever is later, unless the
registrant makes the necessary
corrections to the registrations, or a
hearing is requested by a person
adversely affected by the notice. If a
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hearing is requested by an adversely
affected person, the final order
concerning cancellation of the product
is not issued until after an
administrative hearing.
A cancellation hearing shall be
conducted in accordance with the
regulations establishing the procedures
for hearings under FIFRA set forth at 40
CFR part 164. Under those regulations,
the Agency has the burden of presenting
an affirmative case for cancellation. 40
CFR 164.80(a). However, the ultimate
burden of proof is on the proponent of
the registration. 40 CFR 164.80(b);
Industrial Union Dept., 448 U.S. at 653,
n. 61; Stearns Electric Paste v. EPA, 461
F.2d 293 (7th Cir. 1972). Once the
Agency makes its prima facie case that
a product’s continued use fails to meet
the FIFRA standard for registration, the
responsibility to demonstrate that the
product meets the FIFRA standard is
upon the proponents of continued
registration. 40 CFR 164.80(b); Dow v.
Ruckelshaus, 477 F.2d 1317, 1324 (8th
Cir. 1973).
III. Revocation of Chlorpyrifos
Tolerances
Chlorpyrifos is a broad-spectrum,
chlorinated organophosphate
insecticide that is registered for a wide
variety of food and non-food uses. In
September 2007, Pesticide Action
Network North America and Natural
Resources Defense Council filed a
petition with EPA requesting revocation
of all chlorpyrifos tolerances alleging
that, among other things, the pesticide
caused adverse neurodevelopmental
effects in children at exposure levels
below the Agency’s regulatory standard
(i.e., 10% acetylcholinesterase
inhibition). See Petition to Revoke All
Tolerances and Cancel All Registrations
for the Pesticide Chlorpyrifos, available
at https://www.regulations.gov, using
document identification number EPA–
HQ–OPP–2007–1005–0005. Following
several years of proposed responses and
litigation, EPA issued a final response to
the petition on March 29, 2017. See 82
FR 16581, April 5, 2017 (FRL–9960–77).
That response denied the many claims
of the petition, including by concluding
that, despite several years of study, the
science addressing neurodevelopmental
effects remained unresolved and that
further evaluation of the science on this
issue during the remaining time for
completion of registration review was
warranted. See id. at 16590. As
permitted under the FFDCA, objections
to EPA’s denial were filed, and EPA
responded to those objections on July
18, 2019. See 84 FR 35555, July 18, 2019
(FRL–9997–06). In its denial of those
objections, rather than issuing a
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determination concerning the safety of
chlorpyrifos, EPA denied the objections
in part on the grounds that the data
concerning neurodevelopmental toxicity
were not sufficiently valid, complete,
and reliable to meet the petitioners’
burden. See id. at 35562. EPA’s denial
of the petition and denial of objections
were subsequently challenged by
several advocacy groups and states in
the Ninth Circuit.
On April 29, 2021, the Ninth Circuit
Court of Appeals ruled against EPA in
litigation involving the question of
whether the chlorpyrifos tolerances
should be revoked. See League of
United Latin American Citizens et al., v.
Regan, 996 F.3d 673 (9th Cir. 2021)
(‘‘LULAC’’). In that case, the Court
concluded that EPA violated the FFDCA
by not making a safety determination to
support the retention of the chlorpyrifos
tolerances, as required under the
FFDCA. Consequently, the Court
ordered EPA to issue a final rule in
which the Agency would either revoke
the tolerances (if it could not make the
requisite safety finding to leave
tolerances in place) or modify the
existing chlorpyrifos tolerances,
provided that the Agency concurrently
issued a safety determination
supporting the modified tolerances. The
Court imposed a tight deadline for EPA
to issue the final rule and told EPA not
to engage in further fact-finding or
delay. Specifically, the court said: ‘‘To
be clear, however, this is not an openended remand or a remand for further
factfinding. The EPA must act based
upon the evidence and must
immediately revoke or modify
chlorpyrifos tolerances. For these
reasons, the Court remands this matter
to the EPA with instructions to publish
a legally sufficient final response to the
2007 Petition within 60 days of the
issuance of the mandate.’’
In implementing the Court’s order
within the mandated timeframe, EPA
found that it could not make a safety
finding to support leaving the current
tolerances for residues of chlorpyrifos in
place, as required under the FFDCA
section 408(b)(2). 21 U.S.C. 346a(b)(2).
Under the FFDCA, a tolerance may be
left in place only if the Agency
determines that the tolerances are safe,
i.e., that ‘‘there is a reasonable certainty
that no harm will result from aggregate
exposure to the pesticide chemical
residues, including all anticipated
dietary exposures and all other
exposures for which there is reliable
information.’’ Id. Because EPA found
that at the time it could not determine
that there was a reasonable certainty
that no harm would result from
aggregate exposure to chlorpyrifos
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residues, including all anticipated
dietary (food and drinking water)
exposures and all other exposures, EPA
published the final rule revoking all
tolerances for chlorpyrifos in the
Federal Register on August 30, 2021. 86
FR 48315, August 30, 2021 (FRL–5993–
04–OCSPP) (the Final Rule). As
described in greater detail in the Final
Rule, the Agency’s analysis indicated
that aggregate exposures (i.e., exposures
from food, drinking water, and
residential exposures), which stem from
then-currently registered uses, exceeded
safe levels. Id. at 48317. That analysis
relied on the well-established 10% red
blood cell acetylcholinesterase (RBC
AChE) inhibition level as an endpoint
for risk assessment and included the
FFDCA default tenfold (10X) margin of
safety to account for uncertainties
related to the potential for adverse
neurodevelopmental effects to infants,
children, and pregnant women. Id. The
Final Rule revoked the chlorpyrifos
tolerances but provided a transition
period of six months, until February 28,
2022. Id. at 48334.
Pursuant to FFDCA section 408(g)(2),
EPA provided an opportunity to file
objections to the Final Rule and seek an
evidentiary hearing on those objections.
See also 21 U.S.C. 346a(g)(2); 40 CFR
178.32(b). In response to the Final Rule,
several objections, hearing requests, and
requests to stay the Final Rule were
filed by parties representing a wide
variety of growers and pesticide users.
On February 28, 2022, EPA published
its order denying all objections, hearing
requests, and requests to stay the Final
Rule in the Federal Register (87 FR
11222, February 28, 2022) (FRL–5993–
05–OCSPP) (the Denial Order). EPA’s
publication of the Denial Order
completed the Agency’s administrative
process for the Final Rule. Pursuant to
the terms of the Final Rule, all
chlorpyrifos tolerances expired on
February 28, 2022. EPA notes that EPA’s
Final Rule revoking chlorpyrifos
tolerances is a separate final agency
action, and as such, comments
challenging EPA’s action in that Final
Rule are outside the scope of this
Notice. Gharda and several other grower
groups have challenged that rule in the
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth
Circuit, see Red River Valley Sugarbeet
Growers Ass’n et al., v. Regan (9th Cir.
No. 22–1422).
Because at this time there are no
tolerances or exemptions from the
requirement of a tolerance for
chlorpyrifos residues in or on food,
there is no basis for allowing food uses
to remain on chlorpyrifos registered
products. See 21 U.S.C. 346a(a)(1).
Therefore, between March 1 and March
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9 of 2022, after EPA’s publication of the
Denial Order, EPA issued letters to all
registrants of chlorpyrifos products with
food uses confirming revocation of the
tolerances and recommending that such
registrants consider various cancellation
and label amendment options. EPA
requested that registrants submit a letter
formally expressing their intention to
submit registration amendments to
remove food uses from product labels or
to submit a voluntary cancellation for
products where all uses are subject to
the tolerance revocation by March 30,
2022. All chlorpyrifos registrants to
whom that letter was sent have
submitted requests to voluntarily cancel
their pesticide products and/or label
amendments to remove food uses from
their chlorpyrifos pesticide product
labels, with the exception of Gharda, the
registrant of products listed in this
Notice. While Gharda submitted
requests for voluntary cancellation for
some uses and some label amendments,
that request does not fully align with the
revocation of chlorpyrifos tolerances
(i.e., it does not result in the removal of
all food uses from those registered
products); therefore, Gharda’s products
identified in unit I.A. are subject to this
Notice.
IV. Basis for Issuance of Notice of
Intent To Cancel
EPA has determined that the
chlorpyrifos registrations listed in unit
I.A. must be cancelled because they
each bear labeling for use on food crops.
Due to the lack of tolerances for residues
of chlorpyrifos, these products, bearing
labeling for use on food crops, (i) pose
unreasonable adverse effects on the
environment under FIFRA section
2(bb)(2), 7 U.S.C. 136(bb)(2), because
use of chlorpyrifos on food results in
unsafe pesticide residues under the
FFDCA and (ii) are misbranded and thus
not in compliance with FIFRA, 7 U.S.C.
136j(a)(1)(E).
As noted in unit II., tolerances
establish the maximum amount of
pesticide residues that are allowed in or
on a food. In situations where no
tolerance exists to cover residues of a
particular pesticide in or on food, those
residues are ‘‘deemed unsafe,’’ as a
matter of law under the FFDCA. 21
U.S.C. 346a(a)(1). As a consequence, a
pesticide resulting in residues in or on
food for which there is no tolerance
does not meet the FIFRA standard for
registration. See 7 U.S.C. 136(bb).
Moreover, any food containing ‘‘unsafe’’
pesticide chemical residues is ‘‘deemed
to be adulterated,’’ and introduction of
that food into interstate commerce is a
violation of the FFDCA. 21 U.S.C.
342(a)(2)(B), 331(a).
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A. The Pesticide Generally Causes
Unreasonable Adverse Effects on the
Environment Because It Is Unsafe as a
Matter of Law
As discussed in unit II., in order to
maintain a registration for a pesticide
under FIFRA, a registrant has the
burden to demonstrate that the pesticide
satisfies the statutory standard for
registration. 40 CFR 164.80(b); see also
7 U.S.C. 136a(c)(5). One element of that
standard is that the pesticide performs
its intended function without
unreasonable adverse effects on the
environment, which is defined under
FIFRA section 2(bb) to include ‘‘a
human dietary risk from residues that
result from a use of a pesticide in or on
any food inconsistent with the standard
under section 346a of title 21.’’ 7 U.S.C.
136(bb). The standard referenced in the
FIFRA definition is the FFDCA safety
standard, i.e., that tolerances, which
cover the amount of pesticide residues
in or on food, must be safe. See 21
U.S.C. 346a(b)(2).
Also noted in unit II., it is a matter of
law that pesticide chemical residues in
or on food are ‘‘deemed unsafe,’’ unless
covered by a tolerance or exemption. 21
U.S.C. 346a(a)(1). Any residues from
pesticides used on food where no
tolerances exist for those residues are,
therefore, unsafe. Unsafe residues are
not consistent with the FFDCA safety
standard. Thus, any pesticide resulting
in such residues, causes, as a legal
matter, unreasonable adverse effects on
the environment. Such pesticide is
subject to cancellation under FIFRA
section 6(b).
Because all tolerances for chlorpyrifos
have been revoked, chlorpyrifos
residues in or on food are unsafe as a
matter of law. Because the chlorpyrifos
registrations listed in unit I.A. bear
labeling for use on food, use of which
would result in unsafe pesticide
residues on food, these products pose
unreasonable adverse effects on the
environment under FIFRA section
2(bb)(2). 7 U.S.C. 136(bb)(2).
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B. The Pesticide and Its Labeling Do Not
Comply With FIFRA
Additionally, because the chlorpyrifos
products in unit I.A. bear labeling for
use on food, for which the registrant did
not submit the necessary label
amendments and/or cancellations to
remove all food uses, and because all
tolerances for chlorpyrifos have been
revoked, these products are misbranded
and thus not in compliance with FIFRA.
It is a violation of FIFRA to sell and
distribute pesticides that are
misbranded. 7 U.S.C. 136j(a)(1)(E).
FIFRA’s definition of ‘‘misbranded’’
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provides many ways in which a
pesticide may be misbranded, including
if its labeling ‘‘bears any statement . . .
that is false or misleading.’’ 7 U.S.C.
136(q)(1)(A). Pesticide labeling bearing
directions for use on food crops that
results in adulterated food is misleading
because it is illegal to distribute that
food in commerce. A commercial farmer
complying with approved use directions
would apply the pesticide to crops but
then, in the absence of necessary
tolerances or an exemption, would be
producing adulterated food, which
cannot be delivered into interstate
commerce without violating the FFDCA.
Thus, the label misleads the consumer
into believing a pesticide can be applied
to food crops, but ultimately results in
adulterated food or feed crops that
cannot be sold. To avoid this conflict,
EPA’s regulations prevent EPA from
issuing a registration for a pesticide that
‘‘bears labeling with directions for use
on food, animal feed, or food or feed
crops, or may reasonable be expected to
result, directly or indirectly, in pesticide
residues (or results of any active or inert
ingredient of the product, or of any
metabolite or degradate thereof) in or on
food or animal feed,’’ unless tolerances
or exemptions covering such residues
have been issued. 40 CFR 152.112(g).
In summary, because the
aforementioned products would result
in pesticide residues in or on food that
are, as a matter of law, unsafe, the
products pose unreasonable adverse
effects on the environment. Moreover,
EPA has determined that because the
aforementioned products are
misbranded, continued sale and
distribution would not comply with the
provisions of FIFRA. Consequently, EPA
has determined that these products
must be cancelled.
V. Status of Products That Become
Cancelled
A. Timing of Cancellation
The cancellation of registration for the
specific products identified in unit I.A.
of this document will be final and
effective 30 days after the affected
registrant receives notice of EPA’s intent
to cancel the pesticide registrations
listed in unit I.A., or on January 13,
2023, unless within that time the
registrant makes the necessary
corrections (see unit V.C.) or a hearing
is requested by an adversely affected
person regarding such product. 7 U.S.C.
136d(b).
In the event a hearing is held
concerning a particular product, the
cancellation of the registration for that
product will not become effective
except pursuant to (i) an initial decision
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of the presiding Administrative Law
Judge that becomes a final order
pursuant to 40 CFR 164.90(b) or (ii) if
the Administrative Law Judge’s initial
decision is appealed or subject to
Administrator review pursuant to 40
CFR 164.101, a final order issued by the
Environmental Appeals Board or (if the
matter is referred to the Administrator
pursuant to 40 CFR 164.2(g)) the
Administrator. Final cancellation orders
following a public hearing are subject to
judicial review within 60 days of the
entry of the order. 7 U.S.C. 136d(h).
B. Existing Stocks Issues
FIFRA section 6(a)(1) allows the
Agency to permit the continued sale and
use of existing stocks of pesticides
whose use has been cancelled, to the
extent the Administrator determines
that such sale or use would not be
inconsistent with the purposes of this
Act. 7 U.S.C. 136d(a)(1). EPA has
defined ‘‘existing stocks’’ as ‘‘those
stocks of a registered pesticide which
are currently in the United States and
which have been packaged, labeled, and
released for shipment prior to the
effective date of the cancellation
action.’’ 56 FR 29362, June 26, 1991
(FRL–3846–4). This section addresses
how the Agency intends to treat existing
stocks when and if pesticide
registrations are cancelled pursuant to
this Notice.
The Agency does not believe that
continued sale or use of existing stocks
of any chlorpyrifos registrations
identified in this Notice following
cancellation would be consistent with
FIFRA. The continued sale and
distribution of products cancelled in a
proceeding pursuant to this Notice
would be the sale and distribution of
misbranded products, which, if used in
accordance with the labeling, would
lead to the production of adulterated
food and the use of products that would
pose unreasonable adverse effects on
human health due to residues in or on
food that are inconsistent with the
FFDCA safety standard. Accordingly,
EPA has determined that the continued
sale and distribution of existing stocks
of pesticide products cancelled
pursuant to this Notice should not be
permitted, with the exception of
movement of existing stocks for the sole
purposes of lawful export consistent
with FIFRA; disposal consistent with
applicable state disposal requirements;
or return to the registrant consistent
with the terms of a return program
agreement with EPA, if any. Moreover,
EPA does not intend to allow existing
stocks in the hands of end-users to
continue to be used, unless they are
being used for non-food uses. Any use
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of chlorpyrifos on food would result in
adulterated food, which is illegal to
deliver into interstate commerce;
therefore, use of existing stocks for use
on food cannot be permitted.
It is settled law that existing stocks
issues are not required to be a part of a
cancellation proceeding, and that the
treatment of existing stocks issues is
only included as an issue in a
cancellation proceeding when the
Notice giving rise to the right to a
hearing voluntarily identifies and
includes existing stocks as an issue for
examination. See In the Matter of Cedar
Chemical Co., et al., 2 E.A.D. 584, nn.
7, 9, 1988 WL 525242 (June 9, 1988)
(Decision of the Administrator). The
Administrator’s decision in Cedar
Chemical on whether existing stocks
had to be included as an issue in the
hearing was affirmed by the United
States Court of Appeals for the Ninth
Circuit in Northwest Food Processors
Association v. Reilly, 886 F. 2d 1075,
1078 (9th Cir. 1989). In the case of this
Notice, EPA has determined not to
include existing stocks as an issue in
any hearing arising from this Notice,
since the lack of tolerances means that
any continued sale, distribution, or use
of the pesticide would be inconsistent
with the purposes of FIFRA. Instead, the
only issue for hearing under this Notice
is whether the subject products should
be cancelled.
C. Potential Scope of Final Action
FIFRA section 6(b) allows the
registrant, within the 30 days following
publication or receipt of EPA’s notice, to
‘‘make the necessary corrections, if
possible’’. 7 U.S.C. 136d(b). As noted in
unit IV., the chlorpyrifos products listed
in unit I.A. must be cancelled because
they bear labeling for use on food
although no tolerances exist to cover
chlorpyrifos residues in or on food for
those uses. Terminating food uses and
removing those uses from labels would
resolve the violations EPA has
identified in this Notice. Therefore, EPA
recognizes that the registrant has an
opportunity to make corrections by
requesting cancellation of these uses
and amending labels.
FIFRA section 6(b) also states ‘‘in
taking any final action under this
subsection, the Administrator shall
consider restricting a pesticide’s use or
uses as an alternative to cancellation
and shall fully explain the reasons for
these restrictions, and shall include
among those factors to be taken into
account the impact of such final action
on production and prices of agricultural
commodities, retail food prices, and
otherwise on the agricultural economy,
and the Administrator shall publish in
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the Federal Register an analysis of such
impact.’’ Id.
Accordingly, in any final action on
this Notice, EPA may consider, as an
alternative to cancellation of the whole
registrations, cancelling only those uses
that result in residues in or on food. As
part of its registration review of
chlorpyrifos, EPA considered the
potential economic impacts on growers
if chlorpyrifos use was eliminated for
various registered food crops. See
Revised Benefits of Agricultural Uses of
Chlorpyrifos (PC# 059101) (November
18, 2020), available at https://
www.regulations.gov/document/EPAHQ-OPP-2008-0850-0969; Chlorpyrifos
Revocation Small Business and
Employment Analysis (August 12,
2021), available at https://
www.regulations.gov/document/EPAHQ-OPP-2021-0523-0031. Although
EPA may consider benefits for certain
uses under FIFRA, economic impacts to
growers is not a consideration for EPA
in making a safety determination under
the FFDCA. Because EPA determined
that the tolerances did not meet the
safety standard under the FFDCA, EPA
revoked all chlorpyrifos tolerances. See
86 FR 48315. As a result, chlorpyrifos
may not be used in or on food without
resulting in adulterated food, which
cannot be distributed in interstate
commerce. Restricting the chlorpyrifos
products listed in unit I.A. to only those
uses that do not result in residues in or
on food would have no economic
impact, beyond the impact already
resulting from the revocation of the
chlorpyrifos tolerances, since these
products already cannot be used on food
due to the lack of tolerances.
VI. Mandated FIFRA Reviews
A. What is required?
When EPA intends to issue a NOIC,
it must furnish a draft of that Notice and
an analysis of the impact of the
proposed action on the agricultural
economy to the Secretary of the USDA
for comment at least 60 days prior to
sending such Notice to the registrant or
making such Notice public. 7 U.S.C.
136d(b). When a public health use is
affected, FIFRA section 6(b) also directs
the Secretary of the Department of
Health and Human Services (HHS) to
provide available benefits and use
information, or an analysis thereof.
Within the same time period, the
Agency must also submit the proposed
cancellation action to the FIFRA
Scientific Advisory Panel (SAP) for
comment concerning the impact of the
proposed action on health and the
environment, unless the SAP agrees to
waive its review. 7 U.S.C. 136w(d).
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In the event that written comments
are received from the USDA, HHS, or
the SAP within 30 days of such referral,
the Agency must publish those
comments and the Agency’s response to
the comments.
B. What are the results of this review?
Because all tolerances for chlorpyrifos
have already been revoked for the
reasons set forth in the Final Rule and
Denial Order, this proposed cancellation
action itself is not anticipated to have
any impacts on the agricultural
economy. This NOIC is purely an
administrative action to address three
registrations that the registrant is unable
or unwilling to cancel or modify to
comply with the Agency’s tolerance
revocation. EPA provided a draft of this
NOIC to the SAP requesting a waiver
due to the lack of scientific issues for
consideration by the SAP. The SAP
waived its review of this NOIC on
August 19, 2022.
This NOIC is not subject to review by
HHS because there are no public health
uses affected by this NOIC.
On August 11, 2022, EPA provided a
draft of this NOIC to USDA for review
and received a response from USDA on
September 11, 2022. USDA expressed
three major concerns in its comments:
(1) that an economic analysis was not
provided for review in conjunction with
the draft NOIC; (2) USDA’s opinion that
historical precedent and procedures was
not followed; and (3) USDA’s opinion
that EPA could have retained some
tolerances consistent with the proposal
in the Proposed Interim Registration
Review Decision for Chlorpyrifos (2020
PID) instead of revoking all tolerances
and should initiate action to reestablish
tolerances consistent with the
conclusions of the 2020 PID. USDA’s
comments are available at https://
www.regulations.gov in the docket for
this action, docket ID EPA–HQ–OPP–
2022–0417.
The Agency has considered each of
these comments prior to finalizing this
Notice. Below is a summary of these
comments and the Agency’s detailed
responses to these comments.
Comment: USDA notes that FIFRA
requires EPA to consider the impact of
the action proposed in the NOIC on
production and prices of agricultural
commodities, retail food prices, and
otherwise on the agricultural economy
and to provide that analysis to the
USDA. USDA expressed concern with
statements in EPA’s draft NOIC that the
cancellation of the products would
produce no negative effects beyond
those that were already imposed when
EPA revoked the chlorpyrifos
tolerances. Since, as USDA notes in
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their comments, the FFDCA does not
provide for consideration of economic
impacts in a determination of whether
to retain tolerances, the USDA had
concerns about the lack of consideration
to the economy.
EPA Response: As noted in unit III,
EPA revoked the chlorpyrifos tolerances
in a final rule issued in August 2021, as
a result of concluding that the
chlorpyrifos tolerances were not safe. As
USDA recognizes, the FFDCA does not
authorize EPA to consider economic
impacts to farmers when determining
whether to retain tolerances. As noted
in the Final Rule and the Denial Order,
the FFDCA permits EPA to leave a
tolerance in place only if it is safe;
whether a tolerance is important to the
agricultural economy is not a
permissible consideration for EPA in
determining whether to leave a
tolerance in place.
When the tolerances were revoked,
chlorpyrifos was no longer permitted to
be used on food crops. Although not a
consideration under the FFDCA, as part
of its assessment of chlorpyrifos in
registration review, EPA prepared a
benefits assessment and a small
business analysis of the economic
benefits of chlorpyrifos for a variety of
crops as well as the potential economic
impact if chlorpyrifos were not
available. See Revised Benefits of
Agricultural Uses of Chlorpyrifos (PC#
059101) (November 18, 2020), available
at https://www.regulations.gov/
document/EPA-HQ-OPP-2008-08500969; Chlorpyrifos Revocation Small
Business and Employment Analysis
(August 12, 2021), available at https://
www.regulations.gov/document/EPAHQ-OPP-2021-0523-0031.
Although the benefits assessment and
small business analysis did indicate
some economic impacts as a result of
chlorpyrifos not being available for
growers, those impacts have already
occurred as a result of the revocation of
the tolerances and would not be
attributable to the cancellation of these
products. Even if these products were
not cancelled, the products could still
not be used as a result of the tolerance
revocation; thus, the same economic
impact would result with or without
this cancellation action. To the extent
the products being cancelled are
registered for non-food uses, these are
not the only chlorpyrifos products
registered for these non-food uses.
Consequently, EPA concluded that the
cancellation action being proposed in
this NOIC itself does not actually result
in any impact on agricultural
commodities, retail food prices, or the
agricultural economy.
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Comment: USDA notes that it
considers EPA’s process for revoking
tolerances as ‘‘harmful precedent’’ that
has created confusion and concern
among agricultural stakeholders and
international trading partners. USDA
asserts that the lack of a phase-out
period has caused a widespread
disposal problem for existing stocks of
chlorpyrifos, and that the ‘‘divergence
from normal procedures caused
confusion and concerns’’ and may
‘‘harm the economic viability of U.S.
producers in the long-term’’ by
undercutting U.S. credibility in future
trade negotiations.
EPA Response: As an initial matter,
EPA notes that this comment does not
appear to be directly relevant to the
cancellation of the particular products
identified in this NOIC, but rather a
commentary on EPA’s issuance and
implementation of the final rule
revoking tolerances. Prior to the
issuance of the final rule, EPA
coordinated with FDA and USDA to
ensure they could develop any
necessary enforcement guidance, such
as how long legally treated food and
feed commodities may be in the
channels of trade, and FDA released a
document entitled Guidance for
Industry: Questions and Answers
Regarding Channels of Trade Policy for
Human Food Commodities with
Chlorpyrifos Residues, https://
www.fda.gov/regulatory-information/
search-fda-guidance-documents/
guidance-industry-questions-andanswers-regarding-channels-tradepolicy-human-food-commodities, in
order to provide guidance to
stakeholders in the food industry. In
addition, in the Final Rule itself and
contrary to the USDA’s assertion, EPA
did provide a six-month transition
period between the publication of the
final revoking tolerances and the
effective date of the revocation
consistent with the Agency’s obligations
under the World Trade Organization
Agreement on the Application of
Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures.
Although EPA recognizes that there has
been confusion in the regulated
community on what to do with
registered chlorpyrifos products that can
no longer be used on food, EPA is, and
has been, working with registrants to
provide for an appropriate transition.
Specifically, the Agency continues to
work with the registrants in the
development of their return programs
and update stakeholders and the
Agency’s website with the latest
information regarding chlorpyrifos.
To the extent this comment expressed
a concern about the process EPA used
for terminating use of chlorpyrifos on
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food, EPA fully addressed this comment
in its Denial Order. See 87 FR at 11247–
49. Objectors to EPA’s Final Rule
alleged that EPA was required to
negotiate with chlorpyrifos registrants
and cancel food uses under FIFRA
before revoking tolerances under the
FFDCA. Consistent with EPA’s position
in the Denial Order, neither FIFRA nor
the FFDCA direct that the Agency
proceed with cancellation under FIFRA
prior to revoking tolerances under the
FFDCA. Id. Where EPA determines that
tolerances are not safe, the FFDCA
requires that tolerances be revoked,
regardless of the economic impact of
that revocation. In addition, in this
particular instance, the Ninth Circuit
prioritized the Agency taking action
under the FFDCA over taking action
under FIFRA, by ordering EPA to take
action on the tolerances within 60 days
of the issuance of the mandate in that
case, i.e., August 20, 2021, and to take
action to cancel food uses ‘‘in a timely
fashion’’. LULAC, 996 F.3d. at 703–04.
Nonetheless, even with the restricted
timeframe imposed by the Ninth Circuit
and the need to prioritize tolerance
actions under the FFDCA over
cancellations under FIFRA, EPA did
attempt to coordinate the tolerance
revocations with cancellation actions.
While EPA was unable to complete the
necessary steps for that process to
impact the tolerance revocation rule for
chlorpyrifos by the Court’s deadline,
EPA recognizes that coordinating
tolerance revocations and FIFRA
cancellations can be helpful since
product cancellation orders can provide
clarity around existing stocks and
disposal procedures.
Comment: USDA’s comments outline
its opinion that the Agency could have
pursued a pathway on the 11 high
benefit uses outlined in the 2020 PID
instead of revoking all tolerances. USDA
also requests Agency-initiated action to
reestablish tolerances consistent with
the conclusions of the 2020 PID.
EPA Response: EPA notes that this
comment appears to be more
appropriately directed towards the Final
Rule itself rather than the cancellation
action that is the subject of this NOIC.
Under FFDCA section 408(g), 21 U.S.C.
346a, any person may file an objection
to any aspect of the 2021 final tolerance
rule and may also request a hearing on
those objections. USDA did not file any
such objection, although several other
parties did, asserting that EPA should
have left tolerances in place associated
with 11 uses as described in the 2020
PID rather than revoking all the
tolerances. EPA denied that objection in
its Denial Order. See 87 FR at 11244–
47. The Denial Order fully explained the
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rationale for not adopting the proposal
presented in the 2020 PID. Briefly, in
the December 2020 PID, EPA proposed
that all chlorpyrifos uses contributing
aggregate exposures be cancelled except
for 11 specific uses in specific
geographic areas. Those 11 uses were
identified by registrants and EPA as
having high benefits, although the
Agency recognized that it was just one
possible subset of uses that might be
retainable. The Agency’s proposed
safety determination for those uses was
contingent on other uses being
cancelled and additional use restrictions
being in effect. It is also important to
note that the findings in the PID were
simply proposals, and those proposals,
and the underlying risk assessments on
which those proposals were based, were
subject to public comment and did not
represent a final safety determination.
Despite the potential for supporting a
safety finding consistent with the PID, at
the time that EPA was required to
expeditiously issue a rule by the Ninth
Circuit, no concrete steps had been
taken by registrants under FIFRA to
implement the PID proposal: no uses
had been cancelled, no labels had been
revised to geographically limit
applications or limit maximum
application rates, nor had any
applications to initiate such actions
been filed with the Agency. Therefore,
at the time of the Final Rule, the option
to leave certain tolerances in place was
not available. Thus, EPA assessed
aggregate exposure based on all
currently registered uses of chlorpyrifos
as required by the FFDCA and
consistent with its guidance, finding
that it could not determine that there
was a reasonable certainty of no harm
from aggregate exposure. As a result,
chlorpyrifos tolerances were revoked
and expired as of February 28, 2022.
A challenge to the Final Rule is
outside the scope of this NOIC. All the
chlorpyrifos tolerances have been
revoked, so the products identified in
this document must be cancelled
because they bear labeling for use on
food. As noted above, the Agency views
this NOIC as an administrative action,
as once tolerances were revoked,
chlorpyrifos products cannot bear
labeling for use on food, since the
products could no longer be used
without rendering food and feed crops
adulterated.
The request to reestablish tolerances
associated with those 11 uses is also
outside the scope of this NOIC. At this
time, the Agency does not intend to
initiate a rulemaking to re-establish
those tolerances. Initiating tolerance
rulemaking under section 408(e) of the
FFDCA is a discretionary action, 21
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U.S.C. 346a(e), and at this time, no
petition has been submitted requesting
specific tolerances to be established
under section 408(d) of the FFDCA, 21
U.S.C. 346a(d). Even if EPA initiated
such a rulemaking, or if a petition were
submitted, EPA would need to follow
the statutory process and make a
determination that the tolerances were
safe in order to establish them. It is
important to note that the proposal in
the 2020 PID was only a proposed safety
finding based on a subset of uses; it was
not a final determination of safety. Any
final safety determination supporting
the re-establishment of the tolerances
would need to take into consideration
aggregate exposures to chlorpyrifos.
VII. Requesting a Hearing
This unit explains how eligible
persons may request a hearing and the
consequences of requesting or failing to
request such a hearing.
A. Who can request a hearing?
A registrant or any other person who
is adversely affected by a cancellation of
registration as described in this Notice
may request a hearing.
B. When must a hearing be requested?
A request for a hearing by a registrant
must be submitted in writing within 30
days after the date of receipt of the
NOIC, or within 30 days after
publication of this announcement in the
Federal Register, whichever occurs
later. A request for a hearing by any
other person adversely affected by the
Agency’s proposed action must be
submitted within 30 days after the date
of publication of this Notice in the
Federal Register. See the DATES section
of this document.
C. How must a hearing be requested?
All persons who request a hearing
must comply with the Agency’s Rules of
Practice Governing Hearings, 40 CFR
part 164. Among other requirements,
these rules include the following
requirements:
• Each hearing request must
specifically identify by registration or
accession number each individual
pesticide product for which a hearing is
requested, 40 CFR 164.22(a);
• Each hearing request must be
accompanied by a document setting
forth specific objections that respond to
the Agency’s reasons for proposing
cancellation as set forth in this Notice,
and stating the factual basis for each
such objection, 40 CFR 164.22(a); and
• Each hearing request must be
received by the OALJ within the
applicable 30-day period, 40 CFR
164.5(a).
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Failure to comply with any one of
these requirements will invalidate the
request for a hearing and, in the absence
of a valid hearing request, result in final
cancellation for the products in question
by operation of law.
D. Where does a person submit a
hearing request?
Requests for hearing must be
submitted to the OALJ. The OALJ
strongly encourages electronic filing due
to the coronavirus pandemic. See Order
Urging Electronic Service and Filing,
issued by Chief ALJ Biro (April 10,
2020), available at https://www.epa.gov/
sites/default/files/2020-05/documents/
2020-04-10_-_order_urging_electronic_
service_and_filing.pdf.
1. Submitting the hearing request
electronically. To file a document
electronically, a party shall use a webbased tool known as the OALJ E-Filing
System by visiting the OALJ’s website at
https://www.epa.gov/alj. Documents
filed electronically are deemed to
constitute both the original and one
copy of the document.
Any party choosing to file
electronically must first register with
the OALJ E-Filing System at https://
yosemite.epa.gov/oa/eab/EAB-ALJ_
Upload.nsf. There may be a delay of one
to two business days between the time
a party applies for registration and the
time at which the party is able to upload
documents into the system.
A document submitted to the OALJ EFiling System is considered ‘‘filed’’ at
the time and date of electronic
reception, as recorded by the OALJ EFiling System immediately upon
reception. To be considered timely,
documents submitted through the OALJ
E-Filing System must be received by
11:59 p.m. Eastern Time on the date the
document is due, unless another time is
specified by the Judge. Within an hour
of a document being electronically filed,
the OALJ E-Filing System will generate
an electronic receipt of the submission
that will be sent by email to both the
party submitting the document and the
Headquarters Hearing Clerk. This
emailed electronic receipt will be the
filing party’s only proof that the OALJ
received the submitted document. The
absence or presence of a document on
the OALJ’s E-Docket Database web page,
available at https://yosemite.epa.gov/
oarm/alj/alj_web_docket.nsf, or on the
Agency’s Administrative Enforcement
Dockets web page, available at https://
yosemite.epa.gov/oa/rhc/epaadmin.nsf,
is not proof that the document was or
was not received. If the filing party does
not receive an electronic receipt within
one hour after submitting the document
through the OALJ E-Filing System, the
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Headquarters Hearing Clerk may be able
to confirm receipt of the document but
not earlier than one hour after the
document was submitted.
The OALJ E-Filing System will accept
any type of digital file, but the file size
is limited to 70 megabytes.
Electronically filed textual documents
must be in Portable Document Format
(‘‘PDF’’). If a party’s multimedia file
exceeds 70 megabytes, the party may
save the file on a compact disc and send
it by U.S. mail to the Hearing Clerk
mailing address identified in unit
VII.D.2. of this Notice, or the party may
contact the Headquarters Hearing Clerk
at (202) 564–6281 for instructions on
alternative electronic filing methods.
A motion and any associated brief
may be filed together through the OALJ
E-Filing System. However, any
documents filed in support of a brief,
motion, or other filing, such as copies of
proposed exhibits submitted as part of
party’s prehearing exchange, should be
filed separately as an attachment. Where
a party wishes to file multiple
documents in support of a brief, motion,
or other filing, rather than filing a
separate attachment for each such
document, the documents should be
compiled into a single electronic file
and filed as a single attachment, to the
extent technically practicable.
2. Submitting the hearing request by
non-electronic means. Alternatively, if a
party is unable to file a document
utilizing the OALJ E-Filing System, e.g.,
the party lacks access to a computer, the
party may file the document by U.S.
mail or facsimile, although the OALJ’s
ability to receive filings via those
methods is limited. U.S. mail is
currently being delivered to the OALJ at
an offsite location on a weekly basis
only, and documents sent by facsimile
will also be received offsite. If a party
must file documents by U.S. mail or
facsimile, the party shall notify the
Headquarters Hearing Clerk each time it
files a document in such a manner by
calling (202) 564–6281.
To file a document using U.S. mail,
the document shall be sent to the
following mailing address: Mary
Angeles, Headquarters Hearing Clerk,
Office of Administrative Law Judges
(Mail Code 1900R), U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania
Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20460.
Please note that mail deliveries to
federal agencies are screened off-site,
and this security procedure can delay
delivery.
Facsimile may be used to file a
document if it is fewer than 20 pages in
length. To file a document using
facsimile, the document shall be sent to
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OALJ’s offsite location at (916) 550–
9639.
A document submitted by U.S. mail
or facsimile is considered ‘‘filed’’ when
the Headquarters Hearing Clerk
physically receives it, as reflected by the
inked date stamp physically applied by
the Headquarters Hearing Clerk to the
paper copy of the document.
At this time, the OALJ is not able to
accept filings or correspondence by
courier or commercial delivery service,
such as UPS, FedEx, and DHL.
Likewise, the physical office of the
OALJ is not currently accessible to the
public, and the OALJ is not able to
receive documents by personal delivery.
For further information on filings with
the OALJ, please see https://
www.epa.gov/alj.
3. Important reminders. Regardless of
the method of filing, all filed documents
must be signed in accordance with 40
CFR part 164 and must contain the
contact name, telephone number,
mailing address, and email address of
the filing party or its authorize
representative. A copy of each
document filed in this proceeding shall
also be ‘‘served’’ by the filing party on
the presiding judge and on all other
parties.
E. The Hearing
If a hearing concerning any product
affected by this Notice is requested in a
timely and effective manner, the hearing
will be governed by the Agency’s Rules
of Practice Governing Hearings, 40 CFR
part 164, and the procedures set forth in
this unit. Any interested person may
participate in the hearing, in accordance
with 40 CFR 164.31.
F. Separation of Functions
EPA’s Rules of Practice forbid anyone
who may take part in deciding this case,
at any stage of the proceeding, from
discussing the merits of the proceeding
ex parte with any party or with any
person who has been connected with
the preparation or presentation of the
proceeding as an advocate or in any
investigative or expert capacity, or with
any of their representatives. 40 CFR
164.7. To facilitate compliance with the
ex parte rule, the following are
designated as adjudicatory personnel for
purposes of this proceeding: the
Administrative Law Judges and their
staff and the Environmental Appeals
Board and its staff. None of the persons
identified as adjudicatory personnel
may discuss the merits of the
proceeding with any person with an
interest in the proceeding, or
representative of such person, except in
compliance with 40 CFR 164.7.
PO 00000
Frm 00030
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
76481
List of Subjects
Environmental protection, Pesticides
and pests, Cancellation.
Dated: December 9, 2022.
Michal Freedhoff,
Assistant Administrator, Office of Chemical
Safety and Pollution Prevention.
[FR Doc. 2022–27130 Filed 12–13–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
[EPA–HQ–OPPT–2016–0732; FRL–9942–02–
OCSPP]
Perchloroethylene (PCE); Revision to
Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA)
Risk Determination; Notice of
Availability
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is announcing the
availability of the final revision to the
risk determination for the
perchloroethylene (PCE) risk evaluation
issued under the Toxic Substances
Control Act (TSCA). The revision to the
PCE risk determination reflects the
announced policy changes to ensure the
public is protected from unreasonable
risks from chemicals in a way that is
supported by science and the law. EPA
determined that PCE, as a whole
chemical substance, presents an
unreasonable risk of injury to health
when evaluated under its conditions of
use. In addition, this revised risk
determination does not reflect an
assumption that workers always
appropriately wear personal protective
equipment (PPE). EPA understands that
there could be adequate occupational
safety protections in place at certain
workplace locations; however, not
assuming use of PPE reflects EPA’s
recognition that unreasonable risk may
exist for subpopulations of workers that
may be highly exposed because they are
not covered by Occupational Safety and
Health Administration (OSHA)
standards, or their employers are out of
compliance with OSHA standards, or
because many of OSHA’s chemicalspecific permissible exposure limits
largely adopted in the 1970’s are
described by OSHA as being ‘‘outdated
and inadequate for ensuring protection
of worker health,’’ or because EPA finds
unreasonable risk for purposes of TSCA
notwithstanding OSHA requirements.
This revision supersedes the condition
of use-specific no unreasonable risk
determinations in the December 2020
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\14DEN1.SGM
14DEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 87, Number 239 (Wednesday, December 14, 2022)]
[Notices]
[Pages 76474-76481]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2022-27130]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
[EPA-HQ-OPP-2022-0417; FRL-10108-01-OCSPP]
Chlorpyrifos; Notice of Intent To Cancel Pesticide Registrations
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Pursuant to the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and
Rodenticide Act (FIFRA), the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
hereby announces its intent to cancel the registrations of three
pesticide products containing the insecticide chlorpyrifos due to the
Agency's revocation of all tolerances for chlorpyrifos. This document
identifies the products at issue, summarizes EPA's basis for this
Notice of Intent to Cancel (NOIC), and explains how adversely affected
persons may request a hearing and the consequences of requesting or
failing to request such a hearing.
DATES: The affected registrant must request a hearing within 30 days
from the date that the affected registrant receives EPA's NOIC, or on
or before January 13, 2023, whichever occurs later. Other adversely
affected parties must request a hearing on or before January 13, 2023.
Please see unit VII. for specific instructions.
ADDRESSES: The docket for this action, identified under docket
identification (ID) number EPA-HQ-OPP-2022-0417, is available online at
https://www.regulations.gov. Additional instructions on visiting the
docket, along with more information about dockets generally, is
available at https://www.epa.gov/dockets. For the latest status
information on EPA/DC services and docket access, visit https://www.epa.gov/dockets.
All persons who request a hearing must comply with the Agency's
Rules of Practice Governing Hearings, 40 CFR part 164. Requests for
hearing must be filed with the Hearing Clerk in EPA's Office of
Administrative Law Judges (OALJ), in conformance with the requirements
of 40 CFR part 164. The OALJ uses different addresses depending on the
delivery method. Please see unit VII. for specific instructions.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Elissa Reaves, Pesticide Re-Evaluation
Division (7508M), Office of Pesticide Programs, Environmental
Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20460-
0001; telephone number: (202) 566-0700; email address:
[email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Executive Summary
A. What action is the Agency taking?
EPA is announcing its intent to cancel the registrations of three
pesticide products containing the insecticide chlorpyrifos due to the
revocation of all chlorpyrifos tolerances. Specifically, EPA intends to
cancel each of the following pesticide products, which allow for use on
food crops, listed in sequence by EPA registration number.
EPA Reg. No. 93182-3 Chlorpyrifos Technical.
EPA Reg. No. 93182-7 Pilot 4E Chlorpyrifos Agricultural
Insecticide.
EPA Reg. No. 93182-8 Pilot 15G Chlorpyrifos Agricultural
Insecticide.
The following information is the address on record for Gharda, the
registrant of the products listed in this unit and subject to this
notice, and includes the company number which corresponds to the first
part of the EPA registration number of the products:
EPA Co. No. 93182--Gharda Chemicals International, Inc.,
4932 Crockers Lake Blvd., Suite 818, Sarasota, Florida 34238.
In addition, this document summarizes EPA's legal authority for the
proposed cancellation (see unit II.); the revocation of tolerances for
residues of chlorpyrifos on food commodities (see unit III.); the
Agency's rationale for issuance of this NOIC (see unit IV.); the timing
of the proposed cancellations, EPA's existing stocks determination, and
the potential scope of any final cancellation order (see unit V.); the
results of the Agency's coordination with the U.S. Department of
Agriculture (USDA) and the FIFRA Science Advisory Panel (SAP) (see unit
VI.); and how eligible persons may request a hearing and the
consequences of requesting or failing to request such a hearing (unit
VII.).
B. What is the Agency's authority for this action?
The Agency's authority to cancel a pesticide that does not comply
with the provisions of FIFRA is contained in FIFRA section 6(b), 7
U.S.C. 136d(b).
C. Who may be affected by this action?
This announcement will directly affect the pesticide registrant
listed in
[[Page 76475]]
unit I.A., supplemental distributors, and others who may distribute,
sell, or use the products listed in unit I.A. This announcement may
also be of particular interest to a wide range of stakeholders
including environmental, human health, farmworker, and agricultural
advocates; the chemical industry; pesticide users; and members of the
public interested in the sale, distribution, or use of pesticides. EPA
believes the stakeholders described above encompass those likely to be
affected; however, more remote interests may also be affected, and the
Agency has not attempted to describe all specific entities that may be
affected by this action.
II. Legal Authority
With minor exceptions not at issue here, as provided in FIFRA
section 3(a), a pesticide product may not be lawfully sold or
distributed in the United States unless and until the product is
registered by EPA. 7 U.S.C. 136a(a). A pesticide registration is a
license allowing a pesticide product to be sold and distributed and
includes a label with use instructions that delineates the specific
uses for which the pesticide may be used, including precautions and
other terms and conditions established by EPA when it grants the
registration.
As a general matter, in order to obtain or maintain a registration
for a pesticide under FIFRA, an applicant or registrant must
demonstrate that the pesticide satisfies the statutory standard for
registration. 7 U.S.C. 136a(c)(5). That standard requires, among other
things, that the pesticide perform its intended function without
causing ``unreasonable adverse effects on the environment.'' Id. The
term ``unreasonable adverse effects on the environment'' is defined
under FIFRA section 2(bb) as including two parts: (1) ``[A]ny
unreasonable risk to man or the environment, taking into account the
economic, social, and environmental costs and benefits of the use of
any pesticide'' and (2) ``[A] human dietary risk from residues that
result from a use of a pesticide in or on any food inconsistent with
the standard under section 346a of title 21.'' 7 U.S.C. 136(bb). It is
under the second part of the definition that the FIFRA registration
standard incorporates the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (FFDCA),
21 U.S.C. 346a, safety standard.
EPA establishes, modifies, or revokes tolerances for pesticide
residues under FFDCA section 408. 21 U.S.C. 346a. A ``tolerance''
represents the maximum level for residues of a pesticide legally
allowed in or on raw agricultural commodities and processed food. Under
the FFDCA, ``any pesticide chemical residues in or on a food shall be
deemed unsafe,'' unless a tolerance or exemption for such residues ``is
in effect''. 21 U.S.C. 346a(a)(1). In other words, without a tolerance
or an exemption from the requirement of a tolerance, pesticide residues
in or on food are considered unsafe, as a matter of law. The
consequence of having pesticide residues in or on food that are not
covered by a tolerance, or an exemption is that the food containing
such residues is rendered adulterated under the FFDCA. 21 U.S.C.
342(a)(2)(B). It is a violation of the FFDCA to introduce adulterated
food into interstate commerce. 21 U.S.C. 331(a).
Because the FIFRA registration standard incorporates the FFDCA
safety standard, a pesticide that results in residues in or on food
that are unsafe, which includes residues not covered by a tolerance or
tolerance exemption, does not meet the FIFRA registration standard. EPA
will not approve any application to register a pesticide with food uses
that may reasonably be expected to result in pesticide residues on food
without appropriate tolerances or exemptions in place, see 40 CFR
152.112(g), and registrations bearing labeling for food use must be
modified or cancelled, pursuant to FIFRA section 6(b).
The burden of demonstrating that a pesticide product satisfies the
statutory criteria for registration is at all times on the proponents
of the initial or continued registration and continues as long as the
registration is in effect. 40 CFR 164.80(b); see also Industrial Union
Dept. v. American Petroleum Institute, 448 U.S. 607, 653 n.61 (1980);
Stearns Electric Paste v. EPA, 461 F.2d 293 (7th Cir. 1972);
Environmental Defense Fund v. EPA, 510 F.2d 1292, 1297 (D.C. Cir.
1975).
Under FIFRA section 6(b), the Agency may issue a notice of its
intent to cancel a registration of a pesticide product whenever it
appears either that ``a pesticide or its labeling or other material
required to be submitted does not comply with FIFRA, or when used in
accordance with widespread and commonly recognized practice, the
pesticide generally causes unreasonable adverse effects on the
environment.'' 7 U.S.C. 136d(b). The cancellation proposed in the
notice shall become final 30 days after publication of the notice, or
the date the registrant receives the notice, whichever is later, unless
the registrant makes the necessary corrections to the registrations, or
a hearing is requested by a person adversely affected by the notice. If
a hearing is requested by an adversely affected person, the final order
concerning cancellation of the product is not issued until after an
administrative hearing.
A cancellation hearing shall be conducted in accordance with the
regulations establishing the procedures for hearings under FIFRA set
forth at 40 CFR part 164. Under those regulations, the Agency has the
burden of presenting an affirmative case for cancellation. 40 CFR
164.80(a). However, the ultimate burden of proof is on the proponent of
the registration. 40 CFR 164.80(b); Industrial Union Dept., 448 U.S. at
653, n. 61; Stearns Electric Paste v. EPA, 461 F.2d 293 (7th Cir.
1972). Once the Agency makes its prima facie case that a product's
continued use fails to meet the FIFRA standard for registration, the
responsibility to demonstrate that the product meets the FIFRA standard
is upon the proponents of continued registration. 40 CFR 164.80(b); Dow
v. Ruckelshaus, 477 F.2d 1317, 1324 (8th Cir. 1973).
III. Revocation of Chlorpyrifos Tolerances
Chlorpyrifos is a broad-spectrum, chlorinated organophosphate
insecticide that is registered for a wide variety of food and non-food
uses. In September 2007, Pesticide Action Network North America and
Natural Resources Defense Council filed a petition with EPA requesting
revocation of all chlorpyrifos tolerances alleging that, among other
things, the pesticide caused adverse neurodevelopmental effects in
children at exposure levels below the Agency's regulatory standard
(i.e., 10% acetylcholinesterase inhibition). See Petition to Revoke All
Tolerances and Cancel All Registrations for the Pesticide Chlorpyrifos,
available at https://www.regulations.gov, using document identification
number EPA-HQ-OPP-2007-1005-0005. Following several years of proposed
responses and litigation, EPA issued a final response to the petition
on March 29, 2017. See 82 FR 16581, April 5, 2017 (FRL-9960-77). That
response denied the many claims of the petition, including by
concluding that, despite several years of study, the science addressing
neurodevelopmental effects remained unresolved and that further
evaluation of the science on this issue during the remaining time for
completion of registration review was warranted. See id. at 16590. As
permitted under the FFDCA, objections to EPA's denial were filed, and
EPA responded to those objections on July 18, 2019. See 84 FR 35555,
July 18, 2019 (FRL-9997-06). In its denial of those objections, rather
than issuing a
[[Page 76476]]
determination concerning the safety of chlorpyrifos, EPA denied the
objections in part on the grounds that the data concerning
neurodevelopmental toxicity were not sufficiently valid, complete, and
reliable to meet the petitioners' burden. See id. at 35562. EPA's
denial of the petition and denial of objections were subsequently
challenged by several advocacy groups and states in the Ninth Circuit.
On April 29, 2021, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled against
EPA in litigation involving the question of whether the chlorpyrifos
tolerances should be revoked. See League of United Latin American
Citizens et al., v. Regan, 996 F.3d 673 (9th Cir. 2021) (``LULAC''). In
that case, the Court concluded that EPA violated the FFDCA by not
making a safety determination to support the retention of the
chlorpyrifos tolerances, as required under the FFDCA. Consequently, the
Court ordered EPA to issue a final rule in which the Agency would
either revoke the tolerances (if it could not make the requisite safety
finding to leave tolerances in place) or modify the existing
chlorpyrifos tolerances, provided that the Agency concurrently issued a
safety determination supporting the modified tolerances. The Court
imposed a tight deadline for EPA to issue the final rule and told EPA
not to engage in further fact-finding or delay. Specifically, the court
said: ``To be clear, however, this is not an open-ended remand or a
remand for further factfinding. The EPA must act based upon the
evidence and must immediately revoke or modify chlorpyrifos tolerances.
For these reasons, the Court remands this matter to the EPA with
instructions to publish a legally sufficient final response to the 2007
Petition within 60 days of the issuance of the mandate.''
In implementing the Court's order within the mandated timeframe,
EPA found that it could not make a safety finding to support leaving
the current tolerances for residues of chlorpyrifos in place, as
required under the FFDCA section 408(b)(2). 21 U.S.C. 346a(b)(2). Under
the FFDCA, a tolerance may be left in place only if the Agency
determines that the tolerances are safe, i.e., that ``there is a
reasonable certainty that no harm will result from aggregate exposure
to the pesticide chemical residues, including all anticipated dietary
exposures and all other exposures for which there is reliable
information.'' Id. Because EPA found that at the time it could not
determine that there was a reasonable certainty that no harm would
result from aggregate exposure to chlorpyrifos residues, including all
anticipated dietary (food and drinking water) exposures and all other
exposures, EPA published the final rule revoking all tolerances for
chlorpyrifos in the Federal Register on August 30, 2021. 86 FR 48315,
August 30, 2021 (FRL-5993-04-OCSPP) (the Final Rule). As described in
greater detail in the Final Rule, the Agency's analysis indicated that
aggregate exposures (i.e., exposures from food, drinking water, and
residential exposures), which stem from then-currently registered uses,
exceeded safe levels. Id. at 48317. That analysis relied on the well-
established 10% red blood cell acetylcholinesterase (RBC AChE)
inhibition level as an endpoint for risk assessment and included the
FFDCA default tenfold (10X) margin of safety to account for
uncertainties related to the potential for adverse neurodevelopmental
effects to infants, children, and pregnant women. Id. The Final Rule
revoked the chlorpyrifos tolerances but provided a transition period of
six months, until February 28, 2022. Id. at 48334.
Pursuant to FFDCA section 408(g)(2), EPA provided an opportunity to
file objections to the Final Rule and seek an evidentiary hearing on
those objections. See also 21 U.S.C. 346a(g)(2); 40 CFR 178.32(b). In
response to the Final Rule, several objections, hearing requests, and
requests to stay the Final Rule were filed by parties representing a
wide variety of growers and pesticide users. On February 28, 2022, EPA
published its order denying all objections, hearing requests, and
requests to stay the Final Rule in the Federal Register (87 FR 11222,
February 28, 2022) (FRL-5993-05-OCSPP) (the Denial Order). EPA's
publication of the Denial Order completed the Agency's administrative
process for the Final Rule. Pursuant to the terms of the Final Rule,
all chlorpyrifos tolerances expired on February 28, 2022. EPA notes
that EPA's Final Rule revoking chlorpyrifos tolerances is a separate
final agency action, and as such, comments challenging EPA's action in
that Final Rule are outside the scope of this Notice. Gharda and
several other grower groups have challenged that rule in the U.S. Court
of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, see Red River Valley Sugarbeet
Growers Ass'n et al., v. Regan (9th Cir. No. 22-1422).
Because at this time there are no tolerances or exemptions from the
requirement of a tolerance for chlorpyrifos residues in or on food,
there is no basis for allowing food uses to remain on chlorpyrifos
registered products. See 21 U.S.C. 346a(a)(1). Therefore, between March
1 and March 9 of 2022, after EPA's publication of the Denial Order, EPA
issued letters to all registrants of chlorpyrifos products with food
uses confirming revocation of the tolerances and recommending that such
registrants consider various cancellation and label amendment options.
EPA requested that registrants submit a letter formally expressing
their intention to submit registration amendments to remove food uses
from product labels or to submit a voluntary cancellation for products
where all uses are subject to the tolerance revocation by March 30,
2022. All chlorpyrifos registrants to whom that letter was sent have
submitted requests to voluntarily cancel their pesticide products and/
or label amendments to remove food uses from their chlorpyrifos
pesticide product labels, with the exception of Gharda, the registrant
of products listed in this Notice. While Gharda submitted requests for
voluntary cancellation for some uses and some label amendments, that
request does not fully align with the revocation of chlorpyrifos
tolerances (i.e., it does not result in the removal of all food uses
from those registered products); therefore, Gharda's products
identified in unit I.A. are subject to this Notice.
IV. Basis for Issuance of Notice of Intent To Cancel
EPA has determined that the chlorpyrifos registrations listed in
unit I.A. must be cancelled because they each bear labeling for use on
food crops. Due to the lack of tolerances for residues of chlorpyrifos,
these products, bearing labeling for use on food crops, (i) pose
unreasonable adverse effects on the environment under FIFRA section
2(bb)(2), 7 U.S.C. 136(bb)(2), because use of chlorpyrifos on food
results in unsafe pesticide residues under the FFDCA and (ii) are
misbranded and thus not in compliance with FIFRA, 7 U.S.C.
136j(a)(1)(E).
As noted in unit II., tolerances establish the maximum amount of
pesticide residues that are allowed in or on a food. In situations
where no tolerance exists to cover residues of a particular pesticide
in or on food, those residues are ``deemed unsafe,'' as a matter of law
under the FFDCA. 21 U.S.C. 346a(a)(1). As a consequence, a pesticide
resulting in residues in or on food for which there is no tolerance
does not meet the FIFRA standard for registration. See 7 U.S.C.
136(bb). Moreover, any food containing ``unsafe'' pesticide chemical
residues is ``deemed to be adulterated,'' and introduction of that food
into interstate commerce is a violation of the FFDCA. 21 U.S.C.
342(a)(2)(B), 331(a).
[[Page 76477]]
A. The Pesticide Generally Causes Unreasonable Adverse Effects on the
Environment Because It Is Unsafe as a Matter of Law
As discussed in unit II., in order to maintain a registration for a
pesticide under FIFRA, a registrant has the burden to demonstrate that
the pesticide satisfies the statutory standard for registration. 40 CFR
164.80(b); see also 7 U.S.C. 136a(c)(5). One element of that standard
is that the pesticide performs its intended function without
unreasonable adverse effects on the environment, which is defined under
FIFRA section 2(bb) to include ``a human dietary risk from residues
that result from a use of a pesticide in or on any food inconsistent
with the standard under section 346a of title 21.'' 7 U.S.C. 136(bb).
The standard referenced in the FIFRA definition is the FFDCA safety
standard, i.e., that tolerances, which cover the amount of pesticide
residues in or on food, must be safe. See 21 U.S.C. 346a(b)(2).
Also noted in unit II., it is a matter of law that pesticide
chemical residues in or on food are ``deemed unsafe,'' unless covered
by a tolerance or exemption. 21 U.S.C. 346a(a)(1). Any residues from
pesticides used on food where no tolerances exist for those residues
are, therefore, unsafe. Unsafe residues are not consistent with the
FFDCA safety standard. Thus, any pesticide resulting in such residues,
causes, as a legal matter, unreasonable adverse effects on the
environment. Such pesticide is subject to cancellation under FIFRA
section 6(b).
Because all tolerances for chlorpyrifos have been revoked,
chlorpyrifos residues in or on food are unsafe as a matter of law.
Because the chlorpyrifos registrations listed in unit I.A. bear
labeling for use on food, use of which would result in unsafe pesticide
residues on food, these products pose unreasonable adverse effects on
the environment under FIFRA section 2(bb)(2). 7 U.S.C. 136(bb)(2).
B. The Pesticide and Its Labeling Do Not Comply With FIFRA
Additionally, because the chlorpyrifos products in unit I.A. bear
labeling for use on food, for which the registrant did not submit the
necessary label amendments and/or cancellations to remove all food
uses, and because all tolerances for chlorpyrifos have been revoked,
these products are misbranded and thus not in compliance with FIFRA. It
is a violation of FIFRA to sell and distribute pesticides that are
misbranded. 7 U.S.C. 136j(a)(1)(E). FIFRA's definition of
``misbranded'' provides many ways in which a pesticide may be
misbranded, including if its labeling ``bears any statement . . . that
is false or misleading.'' 7 U.S.C. 136(q)(1)(A). Pesticide labeling
bearing directions for use on food crops that results in adulterated
food is misleading because it is illegal to distribute that food in
commerce. A commercial farmer complying with approved use directions
would apply the pesticide to crops but then, in the absence of
necessary tolerances or an exemption, would be producing adulterated
food, which cannot be delivered into interstate commerce without
violating the FFDCA. Thus, the label misleads the consumer into
believing a pesticide can be applied to food crops, but ultimately
results in adulterated food or feed crops that cannot be sold. To avoid
this conflict, EPA's regulations prevent EPA from issuing a
registration for a pesticide that ``bears labeling with directions for
use on food, animal feed, or food or feed crops, or may reasonable be
expected to result, directly or indirectly, in pesticide residues (or
results of any active or inert ingredient of the product, or of any
metabolite or degradate thereof) in or on food or animal feed,'' unless
tolerances or exemptions covering such residues have been issued. 40
CFR 152.112(g).
In summary, because the aforementioned products would result in
pesticide residues in or on food that are, as a matter of law, unsafe,
the products pose unreasonable adverse effects on the environment.
Moreover, EPA has determined that because the aforementioned products
are misbranded, continued sale and distribution would not comply with
the provisions of FIFRA. Consequently, EPA has determined that these
products must be cancelled.
V. Status of Products That Become Cancelled
A. Timing of Cancellation
The cancellation of registration for the specific products
identified in unit I.A. of this document will be final and effective 30
days after the affected registrant receives notice of EPA's intent to
cancel the pesticide registrations listed in unit I.A., or on January
13, 2023, unless within that time the registrant makes the necessary
corrections (see unit V.C.) or a hearing is requested by an adversely
affected person regarding such product. 7 U.S.C. 136d(b).
In the event a hearing is held concerning a particular product, the
cancellation of the registration for that product will not become
effective except pursuant to (i) an initial decision of the presiding
Administrative Law Judge that becomes a final order pursuant to 40 CFR
164.90(b) or (ii) if the Administrative Law Judge's initial decision is
appealed or subject to Administrator review pursuant to 40 CFR 164.101,
a final order issued by the Environmental Appeals Board or (if the
matter is referred to the Administrator pursuant to 40 CFR 164.2(g))
the Administrator. Final cancellation orders following a public hearing
are subject to judicial review within 60 days of the entry of the
order. 7 U.S.C. 136d(h).
B. Existing Stocks Issues
FIFRA section 6(a)(1) allows the Agency to permit the continued
sale and use of existing stocks of pesticides whose use has been
cancelled, to the extent the Administrator determines that such sale or
use would not be inconsistent with the purposes of this Act. 7 U.S.C.
136d(a)(1). EPA has defined ``existing stocks'' as ``those stocks of a
registered pesticide which are currently in the United States and which
have been packaged, labeled, and released for shipment prior to the
effective date of the cancellation action.'' 56 FR 29362, June 26, 1991
(FRL-3846-4). This section addresses how the Agency intends to treat
existing stocks when and if pesticide registrations are cancelled
pursuant to this Notice.
The Agency does not believe that continued sale or use of existing
stocks of any chlorpyrifos registrations identified in this Notice
following cancellation would be consistent with FIFRA. The continued
sale and distribution of products cancelled in a proceeding pursuant to
this Notice would be the sale and distribution of misbranded products,
which, if used in accordance with the labeling, would lead to the
production of adulterated food and the use of products that would pose
unreasonable adverse effects on human health due to residues in or on
food that are inconsistent with the FFDCA safety standard. Accordingly,
EPA has determined that the continued sale and distribution of existing
stocks of pesticide products cancelled pursuant to this Notice should
not be permitted, with the exception of movement of existing stocks for
the sole purposes of lawful export consistent with FIFRA; disposal
consistent with applicable state disposal requirements; or return to
the registrant consistent with the terms of a return program agreement
with EPA, if any. Moreover, EPA does not intend to allow existing
stocks in the hands of end-users to continue to be used, unless they
are being used for non-food uses. Any use
[[Page 76478]]
of chlorpyrifos on food would result in adulterated food, which is
illegal to deliver into interstate commerce; therefore, use of existing
stocks for use on food cannot be permitted.
It is settled law that existing stocks issues are not required to
be a part of a cancellation proceeding, and that the treatment of
existing stocks issues is only included as an issue in a cancellation
proceeding when the Notice giving rise to the right to a hearing
voluntarily identifies and includes existing stocks as an issue for
examination. See In the Matter of Cedar Chemical Co., et al., 2 E.A.D.
584, nn. 7, 9, 1988 WL 525242 (June 9, 1988) (Decision of the
Administrator). The Administrator's decision in Cedar Chemical on
whether existing stocks had to be included as an issue in the hearing
was affirmed by the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth
Circuit in Northwest Food Processors Association v. Reilly, 886 F. 2d
1075, 1078 (9th Cir. 1989). In the case of this Notice, EPA has
determined not to include existing stocks as an issue in any hearing
arising from this Notice, since the lack of tolerances means that any
continued sale, distribution, or use of the pesticide would be
inconsistent with the purposes of FIFRA. Instead, the only issue for
hearing under this Notice is whether the subject products should be
cancelled.
C. Potential Scope of Final Action
FIFRA section 6(b) allows the registrant, within the 30 days
following publication or receipt of EPA's notice, to ``make the
necessary corrections, if possible''. 7 U.S.C. 136d(b). As noted in
unit IV., the chlorpyrifos products listed in unit I.A. must be
cancelled because they bear labeling for use on food although no
tolerances exist to cover chlorpyrifos residues in or on food for those
uses. Terminating food uses and removing those uses from labels would
resolve the violations EPA has identified in this Notice. Therefore,
EPA recognizes that the registrant has an opportunity to make
corrections by requesting cancellation of these uses and amending
labels.
FIFRA section 6(b) also states ``in taking any final action under
this subsection, the Administrator shall consider restricting a
pesticide's use or uses as an alternative to cancellation and shall
fully explain the reasons for these restrictions, and shall include
among those factors to be taken into account the impact of such final
action on production and prices of agricultural commodities, retail
food prices, and otherwise on the agricultural economy, and the
Administrator shall publish in the Federal Register an analysis of such
impact.'' Id.
Accordingly, in any final action on this Notice, EPA may consider,
as an alternative to cancellation of the whole registrations,
cancelling only those uses that result in residues in or on food. As
part of its registration review of chlorpyrifos, EPA considered the
potential economic impacts on growers if chlorpyrifos use was
eliminated for various registered food crops. See Revised Benefits of
Agricultural Uses of Chlorpyrifos (PC# 059101) (November 18, 2020),
available at https://www.regulations.gov/document/EPA-HQ-OPP-2008-0850-0969; Chlorpyrifos Revocation Small Business and Employment Analysis
(August 12, 2021), available at https://www.regulations.gov/document/EPA-HQ-OPP-2021-0523-0031. Although EPA may consider benefits for
certain uses under FIFRA, economic impacts to growers is not a
consideration for EPA in making a safety determination under the FFDCA.
Because EPA determined that the tolerances did not meet the safety
standard under the FFDCA, EPA revoked all chlorpyrifos tolerances. See
86 FR 48315. As a result, chlorpyrifos may not be used in or on food
without resulting in adulterated food, which cannot be distributed in
interstate commerce. Restricting the chlorpyrifos products listed in
unit I.A. to only those uses that do not result in residues in or on
food would have no economic impact, beyond the impact already resulting
from the revocation of the chlorpyrifos tolerances, since these
products already cannot be used on food due to the lack of tolerances.
VI. Mandated FIFRA Reviews
A. What is required?
When EPA intends to issue a NOIC, it must furnish a draft of that
Notice and an analysis of the impact of the proposed action on the
agricultural economy to the Secretary of the USDA for comment at least
60 days prior to sending such Notice to the registrant or making such
Notice public. 7 U.S.C. 136d(b). When a public health use is affected,
FIFRA section 6(b) also directs the Secretary of the Department of
Health and Human Services (HHS) to provide available benefits and use
information, or an analysis thereof. Within the same time period, the
Agency must also submit the proposed cancellation action to the FIFRA
Scientific Advisory Panel (SAP) for comment concerning the impact of
the proposed action on health and the environment, unless the SAP
agrees to waive its review. 7 U.S.C. 136w(d).
In the event that written comments are received from the USDA, HHS,
or the SAP within 30 days of such referral, the Agency must publish
those comments and the Agency's response to the comments.
B. What are the results of this review?
Because all tolerances for chlorpyrifos have already been revoked
for the reasons set forth in the Final Rule and Denial Order, this
proposed cancellation action itself is not anticipated to have any
impacts on the agricultural economy. This NOIC is purely an
administrative action to address three registrations that the
registrant is unable or unwilling to cancel or modify to comply with
the Agency's tolerance revocation. EPA provided a draft of this NOIC to
the SAP requesting a waiver due to the lack of scientific issues for
consideration by the SAP. The SAP waived its review of this NOIC on
August 19, 2022.
This NOIC is not subject to review by HHS because there are no
public health uses affected by this NOIC.
On August 11, 2022, EPA provided a draft of this NOIC to USDA for
review and received a response from USDA on September 11, 2022. USDA
expressed three major concerns in its comments: (1) that an economic
analysis was not provided for review in conjunction with the draft
NOIC; (2) USDA's opinion that historical precedent and procedures was
not followed; and (3) USDA's opinion that EPA could have retained some
tolerances consistent with the proposal in the Proposed Interim
Registration Review Decision for Chlorpyrifos (2020 PID) instead of
revoking all tolerances and should initiate action to reestablish
tolerances consistent with the conclusions of the 2020 PID. USDA's
comments are available at https://www.regulations.gov in the docket for
this action, docket ID EPA-HQ-OPP-2022-0417.
The Agency has considered each of these comments prior to
finalizing this Notice. Below is a summary of these comments and the
Agency's detailed responses to these comments.
Comment: USDA notes that FIFRA requires EPA to consider the impact
of the action proposed in the NOIC on production and prices of
agricultural commodities, retail food prices, and otherwise on the
agricultural economy and to provide that analysis to the USDA. USDA
expressed concern with statements in EPA's draft NOIC that the
cancellation of the products would produce no negative effects beyond
those that were already imposed when EPA revoked the chlorpyrifos
tolerances. Since, as USDA notes in
[[Page 76479]]
their comments, the FFDCA does not provide for consideration of
economic impacts in a determination of whether to retain tolerances,
the USDA had concerns about the lack of consideration to the economy.
EPA Response: As noted in unit III, EPA revoked the chlorpyrifos
tolerances in a final rule issued in August 2021, as a result of
concluding that the chlorpyrifos tolerances were not safe. As USDA
recognizes, the FFDCA does not authorize EPA to consider economic
impacts to farmers when determining whether to retain tolerances. As
noted in the Final Rule and the Denial Order, the FFDCA permits EPA to
leave a tolerance in place only if it is safe; whether a tolerance is
important to the agricultural economy is not a permissible
consideration for EPA in determining whether to leave a tolerance in
place.
When the tolerances were revoked, chlorpyrifos was no longer
permitted to be used on food crops. Although not a consideration under
the FFDCA, as part of its assessment of chlorpyrifos in registration
review, EPA prepared a benefits assessment and a small business
analysis of the economic benefits of chlorpyrifos for a variety of
crops as well as the potential economic impact if chlorpyrifos were not
available. See Revised Benefits of Agricultural Uses of Chlorpyrifos
(PC# 059101) (November 18, 2020), available at https://www.regulations.gov/document/EPA-HQ-OPP-2008-0850-0969; Chlorpyrifos
Revocation Small Business and Employment Analysis (August 12, 2021),
available at https://www.regulations.gov/document/EPA-HQ-OPP-2021-0523-0031.
Although the benefits assessment and small business analysis did
indicate some economic impacts as a result of chlorpyrifos not being
available for growers, those impacts have already occurred as a result
of the revocation of the tolerances and would not be attributable to
the cancellation of these products. Even if these products were not
cancelled, the products could still not be used as a result of the
tolerance revocation; thus, the same economic impact would result with
or without this cancellation action. To the extent the products being
cancelled are registered for non-food uses, these are not the only
chlorpyrifos products registered for these non-food uses. Consequently,
EPA concluded that the cancellation action being proposed in this NOIC
itself does not actually result in any impact on agricultural
commodities, retail food prices, or the agricultural economy.
Comment: USDA notes that it considers EPA's process for revoking
tolerances as ``harmful precedent'' that has created confusion and
concern among agricultural stakeholders and international trading
partners. USDA asserts that the lack of a phase-out period has caused a
widespread disposal problem for existing stocks of chlorpyrifos, and
that the ``divergence from normal procedures caused confusion and
concerns'' and may ``harm the economic viability of U.S. producers in
the long-term'' by undercutting U.S. credibility in future trade
negotiations.
EPA Response: As an initial matter, EPA notes that this comment
does not appear to be directly relevant to the cancellation of the
particular products identified in this NOIC, but rather a commentary on
EPA's issuance and implementation of the final rule revoking
tolerances. Prior to the issuance of the final rule, EPA coordinated
with FDA and USDA to ensure they could develop any necessary
enforcement guidance, such as how long legally treated food and feed
commodities may be in the channels of trade, and FDA released a
document entitled Guidance for Industry: Questions and Answers
Regarding Channels of Trade Policy for Human Food Commodities with
Chlorpyrifos Residues, https://www.fda.gov/regulatory-information/search-fda-guidance-documents/guidance-industry-questions-and-answers-regarding-channels-trade-policy-human-food-commodities, in order to
provide guidance to stakeholders in the food industry. In addition, in
the Final Rule itself and contrary to the USDA's assertion, EPA did
provide a six-month transition period between the publication of the
final revoking tolerances and the effective date of the revocation
consistent with the Agency's obligations under the World Trade
Organization Agreement on the Application of Sanitary and Phytosanitary
Measures. Although EPA recognizes that there has been confusion in the
regulated community on what to do with registered chlorpyrifos products
that can no longer be used on food, EPA is, and has been, working with
registrants to provide for an appropriate transition. Specifically, the
Agency continues to work with the registrants in the development of
their return programs and update stakeholders and the Agency's website
with the latest information regarding chlorpyrifos.
To the extent this comment expressed a concern about the process
EPA used for terminating use of chlorpyrifos on food, EPA fully
addressed this comment in its Denial Order. See 87 FR at 11247-49.
Objectors to EPA's Final Rule alleged that EPA was required to
negotiate with chlorpyrifos registrants and cancel food uses under
FIFRA before revoking tolerances under the FFDCA. Consistent with EPA's
position in the Denial Order, neither FIFRA nor the FFDCA direct that
the Agency proceed with cancellation under FIFRA prior to revoking
tolerances under the FFDCA. Id. Where EPA determines that tolerances
are not safe, the FFDCA requires that tolerances be revoked, regardless
of the economic impact of that revocation. In addition, in this
particular instance, the Ninth Circuit prioritized the Agency taking
action under the FFDCA over taking action under FIFRA, by ordering EPA
to take action on the tolerances within 60 days of the issuance of the
mandate in that case, i.e., August 20, 2021, and to take action to
cancel food uses ``in a timely fashion''. LULAC, 996 F.3d. at 703-04.
Nonetheless, even with the restricted timeframe imposed by the
Ninth Circuit and the need to prioritize tolerance actions under the
FFDCA over cancellations under FIFRA, EPA did attempt to coordinate the
tolerance revocations with cancellation actions. While EPA was unable
to complete the necessary steps for that process to impact the
tolerance revocation rule for chlorpyrifos by the Court's deadline, EPA
recognizes that coordinating tolerance revocations and FIFRA
cancellations can be helpful since product cancellation orders can
provide clarity around existing stocks and disposal procedures.
Comment: USDA's comments outline its opinion that the Agency could
have pursued a pathway on the 11 high benefit uses outlined in the 2020
PID instead of revoking all tolerances. USDA also requests Agency-
initiated action to reestablish tolerances consistent with the
conclusions of the 2020 PID.
EPA Response: EPA notes that this comment appears to be more
appropriately directed towards the Final Rule itself rather than the
cancellation action that is the subject of this NOIC. Under FFDCA
section 408(g), 21 U.S.C. 346a, any person may file an objection to any
aspect of the 2021 final tolerance rule and may also request a hearing
on those objections. USDA did not file any such objection, although
several other parties did, asserting that EPA should have left
tolerances in place associated with 11 uses as described in the 2020
PID rather than revoking all the tolerances. EPA denied that objection
in its Denial Order. See 87 FR at 11244-47. The Denial Order fully
explained the
[[Page 76480]]
rationale for not adopting the proposal presented in the 2020 PID.
Briefly, in the December 2020 PID, EPA proposed that all chlorpyrifos
uses contributing aggregate exposures be cancelled except for 11
specific uses in specific geographic areas. Those 11 uses were
identified by registrants and EPA as having high benefits, although the
Agency recognized that it was just one possible subset of uses that
might be retainable. The Agency's proposed safety determination for
those uses was contingent on other uses being cancelled and additional
use restrictions being in effect. It is also important to note that the
findings in the PID were simply proposals, and those proposals, and the
underlying risk assessments on which those proposals were based, were
subject to public comment and did not represent a final safety
determination. Despite the potential for supporting a safety finding
consistent with the PID, at the time that EPA was required to
expeditiously issue a rule by the Ninth Circuit, no concrete steps had
been taken by registrants under FIFRA to implement the PID proposal: no
uses had been cancelled, no labels had been revised to geographically
limit applications or limit maximum application rates, nor had any
applications to initiate such actions been filed with the Agency.
Therefore, at the time of the Final Rule, the option to leave certain
tolerances in place was not available. Thus, EPA assessed aggregate
exposure based on all currently registered uses of chlorpyrifos as
required by the FFDCA and consistent with its guidance, finding that it
could not determine that there was a reasonable certainty of no harm
from aggregate exposure. As a result, chlorpyrifos tolerances were
revoked and expired as of February 28, 2022.
A challenge to the Final Rule is outside the scope of this NOIC.
All the chlorpyrifos tolerances have been revoked, so the products
identified in this document must be cancelled because they bear
labeling for use on food. As noted above, the Agency views this NOIC as
an administrative action, as once tolerances were revoked, chlorpyrifos
products cannot bear labeling for use on food, since the products could
no longer be used without rendering food and feed crops adulterated.
The request to reestablish tolerances associated with those 11 uses
is also outside the scope of this NOIC. At this time, the Agency does
not intend to initiate a rulemaking to re-establish those tolerances.
Initiating tolerance rulemaking under section 408(e) of the FFDCA is a
discretionary action, 21 U.S.C. 346a(e), and at this time, no petition
has been submitted requesting specific tolerances to be established
under section 408(d) of the FFDCA, 21 U.S.C. 346a(d). Even if EPA
initiated such a rulemaking, or if a petition were submitted, EPA would
need to follow the statutory process and make a determination that the
tolerances were safe in order to establish them. It is important to
note that the proposal in the 2020 PID was only a proposed safety
finding based on a subset of uses; it was not a final determination of
safety. Any final safety determination supporting the re-establishment
of the tolerances would need to take into consideration aggregate
exposures to chlorpyrifos.
VII. Requesting a Hearing
This unit explains how eligible persons may request a hearing and
the consequences of requesting or failing to request such a hearing.
A. Who can request a hearing?
A registrant or any other person who is adversely affected by a
cancellation of registration as described in this Notice may request a
hearing.
B. When must a hearing be requested?
A request for a hearing by a registrant must be submitted in
writing within 30 days after the date of receipt of the NOIC, or within
30 days after publication of this announcement in the Federal Register,
whichever occurs later. A request for a hearing by any other person
adversely affected by the Agency's proposed action must be submitted
within 30 days after the date of publication of this Notice in the
Federal Register. See the DATES section of this document.
C. How must a hearing be requested?
All persons who request a hearing must comply with the Agency's
Rules of Practice Governing Hearings, 40 CFR part 164. Among other
requirements, these rules include the following requirements:
Each hearing request must specifically identify by
registration or accession number each individual pesticide product for
which a hearing is requested, 40 CFR 164.22(a);
Each hearing request must be accompanied by a document
setting forth specific objections that respond to the Agency's reasons
for proposing cancellation as set forth in this Notice, and stating the
factual basis for each such objection, 40 CFR 164.22(a); and
Each hearing request must be received by the OALJ within
the applicable 30-day period, 40 CFR 164.5(a).
Failure to comply with any one of these requirements will
invalidate the request for a hearing and, in the absence of a valid
hearing request, result in final cancellation for the products in
question by operation of law.
D. Where does a person submit a hearing request?
Requests for hearing must be submitted to the OALJ. The OALJ
strongly encourages electronic filing due to the coronavirus pandemic.
See Order Urging Electronic Service and Filing, issued by Chief ALJ
Biro (April 10, 2020), available at https://www.epa.gov/sites/default/files/2020-05/documents/2020-04-10_-_order_urging_electronic_service_and_filing.pdf.
1. Submitting the hearing request electronically. To file a
document electronically, a party shall use a web-based tool known as
the OALJ E-Filing System by visiting the OALJ's website at https://www.epa.gov/alj. Documents filed electronically are deemed to
constitute both the original and one copy of the document.
Any party choosing to file electronically must first register with
the OALJ E-Filing System at https://yosemite.epa.gov/oa/eab/EAB-ALJ_Upload.nsf. There may be a delay of one to two business days
between the time a party applies for registration and the time at which
the party is able to upload documents into the system.
A document submitted to the OALJ E-Filing System is considered
``filed'' at the time and date of electronic reception, as recorded by
the OALJ E-Filing System immediately upon reception. To be considered
timely, documents submitted through the OALJ E-Filing System must be
received by 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time on the date the document is due,
unless another time is specified by the Judge. Within an hour of a
document being electronically filed, the OALJ E-Filing System will
generate an electronic receipt of the submission that will be sent by
email to both the party submitting the document and the Headquarters
Hearing Clerk. This emailed electronic receipt will be the filing
party's only proof that the OALJ received the submitted document. The
absence or presence of a document on the OALJ's E-Docket Database web
page, available at https://yosemite.epa.gov/oarm/alj/alj_web_docket.nsf, or on the Agency's Administrative Enforcement
Dockets web page, available at https://yosemite.epa.gov/oa/rhc/epaadmin.nsf, is not proof that the document was or was not received.
If the filing party does not receive an electronic receipt within one
hour after submitting the document through the OALJ E-Filing System,
the
[[Page 76481]]
Headquarters Hearing Clerk may be able to confirm receipt of the
document but not earlier than one hour after the document was
submitted.
The OALJ E-Filing System will accept any type of digital file, but
the file size is limited to 70 megabytes. Electronically filed textual
documents must be in Portable Document Format (``PDF''). If a party's
multimedia file exceeds 70 megabytes, the party may save the file on a
compact disc and send it by U.S. mail to the Hearing Clerk mailing
address identified in unit VII.D.2. of this Notice, or the party may
contact the Headquarters Hearing Clerk at (202) 564-6281 for
instructions on alternative electronic filing methods.
A motion and any associated brief may be filed together through the
OALJ E-Filing System. However, any documents filed in support of a
brief, motion, or other filing, such as copies of proposed exhibits
submitted as part of party's prehearing exchange, should be filed
separately as an attachment. Where a party wishes to file multiple
documents in support of a brief, motion, or other filing, rather than
filing a separate attachment for each such document, the documents
should be compiled into a single electronic file and filed as a single
attachment, to the extent technically practicable.
2. Submitting the hearing request by non-electronic means.
Alternatively, if a party is unable to file a document utilizing the
OALJ E-Filing System, e.g., the party lacks access to a computer, the
party may file the document by U.S. mail or facsimile, although the
OALJ's ability to receive filings via those methods is limited. U.S.
mail is currently being delivered to the OALJ at an offsite location on
a weekly basis only, and documents sent by facsimile will also be
received offsite. If a party must file documents by U.S. mail or
facsimile, the party shall notify the Headquarters Hearing Clerk each
time it files a document in such a manner by calling (202) 564-6281.
To file a document using U.S. mail, the document shall be sent to
the following mailing address: Mary Angeles, Headquarters Hearing
Clerk, Office of Administrative Law Judges (Mail Code 1900R), U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania Ave. NW, Washington,
DC 20460.
Please note that mail deliveries to federal agencies are screened
off-site, and this security procedure can delay delivery.
Facsimile may be used to file a document if it is fewer than 20
pages in length. To file a document using facsimile, the document shall
be sent to OALJ's offsite location at (916) 550-9639.
A document submitted by U.S. mail or facsimile is considered
``filed'' when the Headquarters Hearing Clerk physically receives it,
as reflected by the inked date stamp physically applied by the
Headquarters Hearing Clerk to the paper copy of the document.
At this time, the OALJ is not able to accept filings or
correspondence by courier or commercial delivery service, such as UPS,
FedEx, and DHL. Likewise, the physical office of the OALJ is not
currently accessible to the public, and the OALJ is not able to receive
documents by personal delivery. For further information on filings with
the OALJ, please see https://www.epa.gov/alj.
3. Important reminders. Regardless of the method of filing, all
filed documents must be signed in accordance with 40 CFR part 164 and
must contain the contact name, telephone number, mailing address, and
email address of the filing party or its authorize representative. A
copy of each document filed in this proceeding shall also be ``served''
by the filing party on the presiding judge and on all other parties.
E. The Hearing
If a hearing concerning any product affected by this Notice is
requested in a timely and effective manner, the hearing will be
governed by the Agency's Rules of Practice Governing Hearings, 40 CFR
part 164, and the procedures set forth in this unit. Any interested
person may participate in the hearing, in accordance with 40 CFR
164.31.
F. Separation of Functions
EPA's Rules of Practice forbid anyone who may take part in deciding
this case, at any stage of the proceeding, from discussing the merits
of the proceeding ex parte with any party or with any person who has
been connected with the preparation or presentation of the proceeding
as an advocate or in any investigative or expert capacity, or with any
of their representatives. 40 CFR 164.7. To facilitate compliance with
the ex parte rule, the following are designated as adjudicatory
personnel for purposes of this proceeding: the Administrative Law
Judges and their staff and the Environmental Appeals Board and its
staff. None of the persons identified as adjudicatory personnel may
discuss the merits of the proceeding with any person with an interest
in the proceeding, or representative of such person, except in
compliance with 40 CFR 164.7.
List of Subjects
Environmental protection, Pesticides and pests, Cancellation.
Dated: December 9, 2022.
Michal Freedhoff,
Assistant Administrator, Office of Chemical Safety and Pollution
Prevention.
[FR Doc. 2022-27130 Filed 12-13-22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P