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Financial effect of limiting pesticide use near schools for almonds in nine counties depends on soils and weather
- Goodhue, Rachael E;
- Klonsky, Karen;
- DeMars, Christopher;
- Blecker, Steve;
- Steggall, John;
- Zhang, Minghua;
- Van Steenwyk, Robert
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.3733/ca.2020a0001Abstract
Effective Jan. 1, 2018, the California Department of Pesticide Regulation enacted a regulation regarding the use of pesticides near public K-12 schools and licensed child day care centers, including a provision that bans specific types of applications, including air-blast and air-assist, during weekday school hours (6 a.m. to 6 p.m.) to provide an additional safety margin for pesticide exposure beyond those provided by other regulations. We considered the financial effect on almond growers in nine counties, accounting for four-fifths of total almond production in 2014, if they had been unable to complete a standard spring disease management program on any buffer zone acreage. Results indicated that total annual losses for those counties if such a regulation had been in effect would have been $8.7 million, with per-acre losses ranging from 22% to over 50% of total operating costs, depending on the county. However, using a methodology that took into account historical weather and soil hydrologic group data, we estimated average annual losses in the nine counties among almond growers would have been under $0.2 million because the regulation would have affected the number of sprays completed for relatively few acres in relatively few years.
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