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Ballot dropbox ban a barrier in SD primary; former President Donald Trump says jail threat won't stop him from violating gag order; EBT 'skimming' on the rise, more Ohioans turn to food banks; new maps show progress on NY lead service line replacement.

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Hamas accepts a ceasefire deal amid warnings of a ground attack on Rafah by Israel, some faculty members defend protesters as colleges cancel graduation ceremonies, and Bernie Sanders announces his re-election run.

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Bidding begins soon for Wyoming's elk antlers, Southeastern states gained population in the past year, small rural energy projects are losing out to bigger proposals, and a rural arts cooperative is filling the gap for schools in Pennsylvania and West Virginia.

Lawsuit Claims EPA Holding Back Pesticide Safety Information

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Thursday, May 31, 2018   

INDIANAPOLIS — A new lawsuit accuses the Environmental Protection Agency of putting farmworkers in Indiana, as well as other states, at increased risk of pesticide exposure.

Earthjustice and Farmworker Justice are suing the agency for its failure to issue a notice that updated pesticide training materials available under the Worker Protection Standard passed in 2015. Earthjustice staff attorney Hannah Chang said the materials have been ready for more than a year, and are needed to protect workers and their families from chemical poisoning.

"It makes no sense to withhold this type of training from people who really need it, who EPA have recognized need it to protect themselves,” Chang said. “I don't know what their justifications are. I'm sure they'll provide some. But in the meantime, there are tens of thousands of workers who are not getting the kind of training they should be getting."

An EPA spokesperson said the agency does not comment on pending litigation. Attorneys general in California, Maryland and New York filed similar lawsuits against the EPA on Wednesday.

Chang said agriculture is among the most hazardous occupations, and argued these workers are being kept in the dark about the best ways to prevent injury from pesticides.

"Pesticide exposures are not just acute, but also chronic exposures - from daily, minimal exposures over a long period of time that may not result in an obvious poisoning incident, but have chronic, well-documented cancer and non-cancer health effects on workers,” she said.

She adds the EPA is also reconsidering other federal safeguards for pesticides.

"This piece of it is a smaller piece of a larger effort by this administration to roll back on some very common sense safeguards that have already been put into place by the Obama administration," Chang said.

Earthjustice has already filed more than 85 lawsuits against the Trump Administration.


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