Mandatory vs. Voluntary IPM in Schools...ants, ‘sugar’ ants) – Spiders –Rodents –...
Transcript of Mandatory vs. Voluntary IPM in Schools...ants, ‘sugar’ ants) – Spiders –Rodents –...
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
Mandatory vs. Voluntary IPM Mandatory vs. Voluntary IPM in Schoolsin Schools
Michael Merchant, Ph.D., BCETexas A&M University Research and
Extension Center, Dallas
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
Major Points
• Trends toward IPM• IPM in schools in Texas• Should it be a federal law?• Will it cost schools more?• Effects of mandated IPM in Texas• Challenges of working in a voluntary
state
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
The trend toward IPM• 1993 Pest control in the school
environment: Adopting integrated pest managementU.S. EPA
• 1999 Pesticides: Use, affects and alternatives to pesticides in schools GAO report
• Illinois, Louisiana, Maryland, Michigan, Texas, West Virginia were first states to mandate IPM
• Federal law to mandate IPM in schools being considered
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
The Texas law
• Most comprehensivestate law in Nation– IPM policy– IPM coordinator– Notification– Record keeping– Licensed applicators– Pesticide approval
process
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
History of IPM in Schools in Texas
• Pesticide misapplication in a rural school district prompted legislation
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
Texas • Second largest public school system in nation• 4 million enrolled students – 2001• 1,040 school districts/ 180 Charter schools
– Average size campus 544 students– 7621 campuses– 60% of districts have less than 1,000 students
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
Consumer’s Union Report CardSeptember, 1999
• Pampa ISD - D• Paris ISD - F• Fort Stockton ISD - D• Conroe ISD - C• McAllen ISD - B• Austin ISD - A• Dallas ISD - C
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
Stakeholders in School IPM
Parents
Teachers
School boards
Voters
Extension specialists
PoliticiansLawyersMaintenance staff
Advocacy Groups
School Administrators
Public Health Officials
Children
Regulatory AgenciesRegulatory Agencies
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
Role of Cooperative Extension
• Position/strength of CES will vary from state to state
• Ability of CES to respond dependent on funding– Sufficient funding for manpower– Stability of funding
• Potential for multi-state cooperative programs
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
Should IPM in Schools be mandatory?
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
Children’s Environmental Protection Act
• S.1112 Sen. Boxer, D-CA; H.R. 199, Rep. Moran, D-VA
• Each school and day care center that receives Federal funding shall take steps to reduce the exposure of children to pesticides on school grounds, both indoors and outdoors; and provide parents with advance notification of any pesticide
application on school grounds
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
School Environment Protection Act of 1999
• H.R. 3275, Rep. Holt, S.1716 introduced 10/99 by Sen. Torrecelli
• To amend FIFRA to require local educational agencies and schools to implement integrated pest management systems to minimize the use of pesticides in schools and to provide parents, guardians, and employees with notice of the use of pesticides in schools, and for other purposes.
• House bill 21 Co-sponsors, Senate bill 4 Co-sponsors
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
Integrated pest management system means a managed pest control system that uses integrated methods, site or pest inspections, pest population monitoring, an evaluation of the need for pest control [e.g., thresholds], and one or more pest control methods; [IPM] minimizes the use of pesticides and the risk to human health and the environment…(condensed from Senate bill 1716)
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
Potential Problems:Potential Problems:
• Current legislation does not acknowledge the integral part that pesticides play in IPM systems. Assumption is that pesticides are last resort, after all other methods are tried and fail
• “…[if] a pest in the school or on school grounds cannot be controlled after having used the integrated pest management system ... and least toxic pesticides, the school may use a pesticide (other than space spraying of the pesticide) to control the pest ...” SEPA subsection (f) USE OF PESTICIDES
This is NOT how IPM works in practice!
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
Potential Problems:Potential Problems:• Approved
pesticides list• Large number
of registered pesticide products
• Continually changing
10,104
5,560
205
7,593
4,843
0
2,000
4,000
6,000
8,000
10,000
12,000
AntsCockr
oaches
Rodents
AllIndoor
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
What do informed decision makers think?
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
Should IPM practices be mandated for Should IPM practices be mandated for schools?schools?• Majority said NO• Even those who
said NO, felt that IPM was an important thing for schools to do
• Not an easy question for many to answer
36%
58%
6%
Yes
No
Don't know
N=32
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
Would mandatory IPM legislation be more effective Would mandatory IPM legislation be more effective on a federal or state level?on a federal or state level?
26%
64%
10%
Federal
State
Don't know
N=31
• Several respondents pointed out that severity of pest problems, and pesticide use, varied significantly by region
• “Federal government would just screw it up!”
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
Are children regularly being exposed to [unsafe] Are children regularly being exposed to [unsafe] levels of pesticides… as a result of pest control levels of pesticides… as a result of pest control activities in schools?activities in schools?
• 85% said NO• Many felt that
unsafe exposures do occur, but rarely
• Chemically sensitive were mentioned, but respondents tended to view them as a special needs group
6%
85% 9%
Yes
No
Don't know
N=31
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
Are children regularly being exposed to [unsafe] Are children regularly being exposed to [unsafe] levels of pesticides… as a result of pest control levels of pesticides… as a result of pest control activities in schools?activities in schools?
• Several noted that health benefits of reduced pest presence ought to be weighed
• Motivation for wanting to see IPM practiced was “better pest control” rather than protecting children from pesticides
6%
85% 9%
Yes
No
Don't know
N=31
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
Does IPM Cost More?Focus group feedback from schools and PCOs
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
IPM in Schools: Economics 101• Does IPM cost more than conventional
(pesticide intensive) pest control?– NO, over the long-run IPM is
comparable or cheaper than conventional approaches
– YES, you don’t get something for nothing. It takes more time to provide increased service and monitoring.
• Both sides have valid points, but…
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
There’s no right answer…
Don’t have a cow, man…
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
no right answer• Schools with poor service will pay more• Inefficient, pesticide-based programs
can save money with IPM
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
IPM Budget Calculator• “IPM Tool for schools” being developed by
Texas A&M University • Spreadsheet-based calculator• Includes default costs of budget items
related to IPM• Estimate the cost of different levels of IPM
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
Phase 1: Focus groups• Pest Control Operator Group (5)
–Experienced servicing schools– Large and small companies
• School facilities Managers (9)– IPM Coordinators–Large and medium districts
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
Most common pest problems(identified by schools and PCOs)
• Monthly– Ants (esp. fire
ants, ‘sugar’ ants)– Spiders– Rodents– Cockroaches
• Seasonal– Swarming ants– Termites– Crickets– Bees and wasps– Grasshoppers
• Occasional – Crickets, boxelder
bugs, millipedes– Fleas– Venomous spiders– Carpenter ants– Scorpions– Cicada killer wasps– Birds– Skunks/other wildlife– Head lice– Indoor flies
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
Products/Practices avoided• RED list products (Warning or
Danger signal words)• Products with odor• Preventive treatments• Pyrethroids used, but less often • Baits (in open areas)• Glue boards
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
Pesticides used• Baits
– Fire ant baits (MaxForce Granular preferred because of dark color)
– Gel baits – Termite baits
• Botanical products (e.g., Citrus oil, pyrethrum, EcoPCO®)– Granular, aerosols, liquids
• Insect growth regulators• Bacterial drain cleaners• Boric acid products
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
Non-chemical controls used• Pre-baited glue traps• Other traps• Laser lights (for starlings, grackles,
sparrows)• Caulking/pest proofing (small jobs only)• Expanding foam• Stuff-it, vent screening• Air curtains
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
Non-chemical controls (cont)• Door sweeps• Dumpster design, placement, cleaning • Bird barriers, tape, netting, wires• Steam cleaning• Wire brush drain cleaners• Fly traps (expensive)• Rat zappers
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
School IPM BudgetsDistrict No.
CampusesAnnual Maintenance Budget (Millions)
Annual IPM Budget(Thousands)
A 14 $1.3 $1
B 19 $9.5 $14
$37
$115
$71
C 25 $0.9
D 37 $19
E 74 $17
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
PCO comments• Mandatory IPM improving schools’
response to sanitation recommendations• “Set expectations, do what you say, it’ll
be OK”• Response times very important to
schools• “We don’t kill a lot of bugs. It’s all about
communication.”• Less profit with schools. Typically bid
Schools at 2/3 rate of a commercial account
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
PCO comments• “You don’t make money servicing
schools. You build your business.”• Schools don’t necessarily relate time
spent to good service, but we base bids on estimated service times.
• “A small operator might make money, but a large company rarely does.”
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
Issues with contracting out• Perceived Pros of contracting
– no overtime, weekends– Promptness of service– Lower cost per hour – no chemical storage issues– Eliminates growing hassles with personnel law
• Perceived Cons of Contracting– Loss of control– Poor record of paperwork completion– Scheduling a problem– Don’t know the people (high turnover a
concern)
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
School comments
• Can’t get good service for termite control (rural districts, esp.)
• Industry trend is to hire large maintenance contractors for 3-5 year contracts (“We’re family, they’re profit”)
• “We would like to get to the point where we’re absolutely toxin-free”
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
School comments• Contracting out for pest control is an
easier sell for administrators• “To us, hours spent is not as important as
the bottom line.”• “Response time is the most important
thing.”• Proven experience with IPM, references,
an entomologist on staff, listed as important things to see in bidders.
• IPM coordinators “swing a small bat”
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
Reality Check: Will schools do IPM if they are not forced to?
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
Relationship between enforcement level and interest in school IPM programs
• Level of interest in IPM training depends on amount of enforcement activity
• Enforcement activity depends on accountability at state government level
• Budget issues directly affect level of enforcement activity
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
Southwestern Technical Resource Center Southwestern Technical Resource Center for IPMfor IPM
• EPA funded project to promote school IPM in Texas, Oklahoma and New Mexico
• Full-time coordinator: Janet Hurley• Board of directors:
– Pat Bolin and Jim Criswell, Oklahoma Cooperative Extension– Lonnie Mathews, Carol Sutherland, New Mexico Cooperative
Extension– Michael Merchant, Don Renchie, Texas Cooperative Extension
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
Accomplishments
• Trained 191 school personnel from 130 school districts, 9 pest control and 3 municipalities
• Compliance assistance for 303 school districts (Texas)
• Newsletter subscribers: 340 IPM Coordinator recipients (3 states)
• Database of 1042 schools and pest control professionals with interest in IPM info
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
Southwest Technical Resource Center for School IPM• Free, interactive assistance for schools• Resources, free e-newsletter• Training courses for PCOs and schools• Toll-free hotline (877) 747-6872• Website http://schoolipm.tamu.edu
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
Interest in school IPM programs in Texas associated with enforcement level
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Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
School IPM Education on large scale will not succeed unless:• Clear mandate on part of state or federal
government• Funding and enforcement will• Funding for compliance assistance
– Trained personnel willing to make site visits and conduct face-to-face training
• Support and cooperation of stakeholder agencies
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
U.S. EPA regional school IPM Directory
http://www.epa.gov/pesticides/ipm/#bkmrk8
Texas Cooperative Extension © 2003Midwest School IPM Workshop, Ames, IA 2003
Questions?