Sunday, November 10, 2024

Environmental Protection Agency publishes notice on Sept. 20

The US Environmental Protection Agency published a two page notice on Sept. 20, according to the U.S. Government Publishing Office.

The notice is focused on Notice of Filing of a Pesticide Petition for Establishment of Regulations for Residues of a Pesticide Chemical in or on Various Commodities.

More than half of the Agency's employees are engineers, scientists and protection specialists. The Climate Reality Project, a global climate activist organization, accused Agency leadership in the last five years of undermining its main mission.

Notices are required documents detailing rules and regulations being proposed by each federal department. This allows the public to see what issues legislators and federal departments are focusing on.

Any person or organization can comment on the proposed rules. Departments and agencies must then address “significant issues raised in comments and discuss any changes made,” the Federal Register says.

Notices published by the Environmental Protection Agency on Sept. 20

Title
Etofenprox; Pesticide Tolerances for Emergency Exemptions
Metrafenone; Pesticide Tolerance
Control of Air Pollution From New Motor Vehicles; Second Amendment to the Tier 2/Gasoline Sulfur Regulations
Pantoea Agglomerans Strain E325; Exemption from the Requirement of a Tolerance
Dithianon; Pesticide Tolerance
Chlorpropham, Linuron, Pebulate, Asulam, and Thiophanate-methyl; Proposed Tolerance Actions
Notification of Closure of the EPA Headquarters Library
Notice of Receipt of Requests for Amendments to Delete Uses in Certain Pesticide Registrations; Technical Correction
Notice of Filing of a Pesticide Petition for Establishment of Regulations for Residues of a Pesticide Chemical in or on Various Commodities
Adequacy Status of Motor Vehicle Budgets in Submitted State Implementation Plan for Transportation Conformity Purposes; Maine; Maintenance Plan Motor Vehicle Emissions Budgets for the Portland Maine 8-Hour Ozone Area, and the Hancock, Knox, Lincoln and Waldo Counties Maine 8-Hour Ozone Area