Jane Kloeckner has posted her paper, “Hold on to Tribal Sovereignty: Establishing Tribal Pesticide Programs that Recognize Inherent Tribal Authority and Promote Federal/Tribal Partnerships,” on SSRN.
Here is the abstract:
The partnership between the United States and Indian Nations (tribes) in regulating pesticide pollution in Indian country and governed under the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA or Pesticide Law) has become dysfunctional due to weak provisions in FIFRA and pesticide regulations and guidance from the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the federal agency authorized to implement FIFIA. The tribal/federal partnership under FIFRA is overwhelmingly federal, while the role for tribal governments is limited. In addition, long-standing EPA policy choices have resulted in inadequate environmental protection against potential misuse of pesticides in Indian country. For example, EPA has not interpreted FIFRA as authorizing Tribal governments to be the primary enforcement authority. Except for eight Indian reservations, pesticide applicators cannot be certified in Indian country to apply restricted use pesticides. Tribal governments should be eligible to implement pesticide control programs as co-regulators in partnership with EPA. Co-regulator pesticide programs would be a good example of United States leadership in collaborative partnering with indigenous peoples for the broader international community.
The FIFRA reforms suggested in this paper recognize the appropriate level of federal oversight of tribal environmental decisions affecting land use involving pesticides, a local decision with regional, national and international aspects. For example, Tribal Pesticide Programs would function best within the structure of a genuine tribal/federal partnership as described in this paper. As a foundation for a collaborative partnership, EPA should provide for tribal governments to be eligible for primary enforcement under FIFRA in Indian country. Also, EPA should provide continuing federal assistance, technical, administrative, and financial to tribal governments for building and maintaining tribal pesticide programs as tribal institutions. Furthermore, the co-regulator partnership must be flexible and ultimately, the federal government must oversee the tribal pesticide programs because of the complexities of tribal governance over tribal environmental institutions and because local, state, regional, tribal and international concerns over pesticide use sometimes conflict. Inside or outside Indian country, FIFRA and its regulations must support minimum federal standards that protect human health and the environment and a level playing field for pesticide users. Continue reading