May, 07 2019, 12:00am EDT

Lawsuits Challenge Trump Administration's Refusal to Release Documents on Pesticides
The Center for Biological Diversity filed four lawsuits today challenging the Trump administration's failure to release a trove of documents detailing how the administration is regulating dangerous pesticides, especially as they relate to endangered species.
WASHINGTON
The Center for Biological Diversity filed four lawsuits today challenging the Trump administration's failure to release a trove of documents detailing how the administration is regulating dangerous pesticides, especially as they relate to endangered species.
Today's lawsuits, involving 20 separate Freedom of Information Act requests, were filed in federal district court in Washington, D.C. The suits seek documents the Center requested from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Department of the Interior, Fish and Wildlife Service, Department of Agriculture, Department of Commerce, National Marine Fisheries Service and Council on Environmental Quality.
"Federal agencies that are supposed to be protecting human health, wildlife and our environment from dangerous pesticides have fallen into a terrible pattern of withholding critical information from the American people," said Lori Ann Burd, director of the Center's environmental health program. "It's ridiculous we have to sue to obtain public documents that are key to helping us understand how these dangerous poisons are, and are not, being regulated."
The first lawsuit seeks documents on the actual use of pesticides to evaluate the harm those pesticides cause to endangered species.
As reported by the New York Times, high-level Trump administration political appointees improperly halted the release of a scientific study detailing the harm that chlorpyrifos, malathion and diazinon cause to nearly 1,400 endangered plants and animals. In the scramble to justify this interference, they claimed to need additional actual use data, borrowing from the tobacco's industry's strategy of perpetually claiming a need for more data.
The second lawsuit seeks records of meetings between agency staff, including high-level Trump appointees and Croplife America, a pesticide industry trade group that has repeatedly lobbied to eliminate protections for endangered species from pesticides.
The third lawsuit seeks documents on the activities of an interagency working group of high-level Trump appointees created by disgraced former EPA administrator Scott Pruitt to weaken protections for endangered species.
The final lawsuit seeks records on whether the EPA has taken any steps to put in place conservation measures recommended by the National Marine Fisheries Service to prevent chlorpyrifos from jeopardizing the continued existence of 37 endangered species, including salmon, sturgeon and highly imperiled Puget Sound orcas.
The agencies have failed to disclose the documents responsive to these requests.
Documents previously obtained by the Center revealed that Fish and Wildlife Service scientists found that chlorpyrifos, the controversial pesticide linked to brain damage in children, jeopardizes the continued existence of 1,399 endangered plants and animals.
But at the request of pesticide companies, the Trump administration has worked to undermine the findings of government scientists and delay all further efforts to assess and reduce the impacts of chlorpyrifos and two other dangerous pesticides on endangered species.
"While the Trump appointees running these agencies scurry to do the bidding of the pesticide industry, endangered species like the San Joaquin kit fox are heading toward extinction," said Burd. "You can bet that when we finally get these documents, they'll reveal exactly why Team Trump worked so feverishly to hide them from public view."
Background
The Fish and Wildlife Service was required to complete an analysis called a "biological opinion" on the impacts of three pesticides -- chlorpyrifos, malathion and diazinon -- as part of a legal settlement with the Center. In that settlement the agency agreed to assess by Dec. 31, 2017 the harms the three widely used pesticides pose to protected plants and animals, as required by the Endangered Species Act.
The assessments were on track to be completed and released to the public in 2017.
But shortly after contributing $1 million to President Trump's inauguration, Dow Chemical, the maker of chlorpyrifos, directly requested that the assessments be scuttled.
In May 2017 the Service announced that the draft biological opinion assessing the three pesticides' harms was nearly complete and would be ready for public comment within months.
As Fish and Wildlife Service career staffers were preparing to make the biological opinion available for public comment, on Oct. 25, 2017, they briefed Trump's political appointees on the result of the agency's nearly four years of rigorous scientific review.
The officials briefed included then acting Interior Secretary David Bernhardt and Greg Sheehan, then acting director of the Fish and Wildlife Service.
After that meeting the consultation process halted, just as Dow had requested. The draft biological opinion was not released for public comment as promised. The agency missed the deadline it had agreed to in its settlement with the Center, and completion of the biological opinion has been indefinitely postponed.
At the Center for Biological Diversity, we believe that the welfare of human beings is deeply linked to nature — to the existence in our world of a vast diversity of wild animals and plants. Because diversity has intrinsic value, and because its loss impoverishes society, we work to secure a future for all species, great and small, hovering on the brink of extinction. We do so through science, law and creative media, with a focus on protecting the lands, waters and climate that species need to survive.
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