Case IH Power Tab

Farm Futures
   Search Site:   Saturday, May 26, 2012 | Bookmark This Site   
Skip Navigation Links
Home
Markets
News
Weather
Farm Futures NOW!
Magazine Online
RSS News
Land For Sale
Mobile
Subscribe
Reprints
Register
Login
About Us
Advertise
 
Share This
 

Farm Dust Regulation Prevention Act Passes Committee

Legislation to keep EPA from regulating rural dust heads to the House floor.
Compiled by staff 
Published: Dec 1, 2011

Farm dust or fairy dust? That was the question before a Congressional panel Wednesday that approved a bill to suspend any EPA tightening of dust standards on farms for one year. The House Energy and Commerce Committee easily passed H.R. 1633, the Farm Dust Prevention Act of 3011 on a 33 to 16 vote, but not before a lively debate on the wisdom of tying the Environmental Protection Agency's hands in enforcing the Clean Air Act.

Democrats tried unsuccessfully to limit the scope of the measure to non-industrial sources, or even neutralize it if EPA scientists find rural or nuisance dust harms health.

Representative John Dingell, D-Mich., charged the GOP with attacking a myth, what EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson has billed "fairy dust," since she's dropped any plans to tighten EPA's dust standard.

"It's a myth, the EPA reinforced that fact in a recent letter to two U.S. Senators," Dingell said. "Here we have a vast tempest in a teapot, where we are attacking a problem that does not exist, where we are beating a strong man and wasting the time of the Congress and the committee on a problem that does not exist."

Energy and Power Subcommittee Chair Ed Whitfield, R-Ky., disagreed.

"It doesn't make any difference what Administrator Jackson says," Whitfield said. "We know that groups are prepared to file lawsuits to require this ambient air quality particulate matter standard to be changed. For example Wild Earth Guardians is considering suing the EPA over this very matter."

Representative Lee Terry, R-Neb., argued EPA is just one lawsuit away from being forced to regulate farm dust, and John Shimkus, R-Ill. spoke about health perceptions.

"I come from rural America," Shimkus said. "I visit community health clinics, I visit all my hospitals, visit with my doctors; not once in my 15 years has any health care professional in my rural district ever complained about rural dust. Never, ever."

The anti-dust rule bill, like many other GOP bills targeted at government regulation, is expected to easily pass in the House. But the measure faces a bigger hurdle in the Senate, where Mike Johanns, R-Neb., and Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, continue to push a similar stand-alone bill.



Permalink: Click here

Tagged: EPA, farm, Environmental Protection Agency

Comments
Read comments from others and share your own thoughts.
Please provide the answer to the following question:

 = 
I have farm all my life some 60 years and still enjoy good health and have inhale a lot of dust from open air tractors. I believe these activist will change there mind when they set down for dinner and there is nothing to eat. A hunger pain is very convinceing. Illinois farmer
Posted by Anonymous on December 1 at 8:40 PM
Thank God I am Nearing the end of my farming career!! All this political correctness,govt. red tape, dust cops,and the ever growing need to produce more,animal rights activist,EPA,ASCS,USDA,IRS,OSHA,and numerous other alphabet agencies, etc. I have come to the conclusion Liberty and Freedom are just a couple words in a dictionary. Maybe it is time to man the bridge at concord once again
Posted by Anonymous on December 1 at 7:53 PM
Doesn't our govt have a national debt to worry about.Maybe we can add cow farts in with dust regulations and harass dairy farmers qnd beef producers at the same time. god help us before we destroy ourselves!!
Posted by Anonymous on December 1 at 6:03 PM
The only dust that should be regulated is the dust that Obama and Company kicks up as they pack up their moving van! Oh - and I hope Lisa Jackson has a CDL so she can drive it...............
Posted by Anonymous on December 1 at 10:20 AM
Again in their infinite wisdom the very people that supposedly work for us,seem bent on controlling us.Why stop at dust controll..Lets go after Rain,Sun,Wind,Darkness and whatever other control that they can dream up .Again common sense seems to have escaped their thought process.I hope I live long enough to see the day when the little EPA cars pull up next to the farmers in their fields in the fall,combining their beans on a windy day and tell them they will have to stop under penalty of being fined and/or jail time.When and if it comes to that we're done.Farmer Mike
Posted by Anonymous on December 1 at 6:55 AM
 
Search this site:   

Read More Stories
USDA Seeks Comment on Report Timing
Read this storyWith new market hours,USDA is looking into the right time to release information to the market.
Read this story

CME Group Alters Hours…Again
Read this storyAs it settles into the new 21-hour trading day, open outcry pit hours will change on key USDA report days. And KC Board of Trade matches move.
Read this story

CRP Signup Results Announced
Read this storyUSDA reports interest is high in the 26-year-old program.
Read this story

 
USDA Seeks Comment on Report Timing
Afternoon Recap by Arlan Suderman
Morning Call by Bryce Knorr
Weekend Forecast Changes Pivotal for Grain Futures
Farm Markets Rise Ahead of Holiday
Satellite Imagery Shows the Good and the Bad
Top 50 Tags
4-H afternoon recap American Farm Bureau Federation American Soybean Association animal health arlan suderman biodiesel biofuels bryce knorr BSE Bushel checkoff cotton Drought Environmental Protection Agency EPA ethanol Extension extension service farm farm bill Farm Bureau farm futures farm futures magazine farm futures market farm progress Farm Service Agency farmfutures farmfutures.com farming farmprogress.com fertilizer FFA free trade agreement Harvest insurance labor legal National Cattlemen's Beef Association National Corn Growers Association NCGA soybean soybean association soybeans SURE usda wheat winter wheat www.farmfutures www.farmfutures.com