Market buzz

White House releases National Pollinator Strategy


Last June, President Barack Obama issued a presidential memorandum directing an interagency task force to create a Strategy to Promote the Health of Honey Bees and Other Pollinators.

Under the leadership of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), the Task Force is releasing its Strategy with three overarching goals

  • Reduce honey bee colony losses to economically sustainable levels;
  • Increase monarch butterfly numbers to protect the annual migration; and
  • Restore or enhance millions of acres of land for pollinators through combined public and private action.
     

AmericanHort, Society of American Florists, American Floral Endowment and Horticultural Research Institute issued a joint statement supporting the national strategy.

“The national strategy’s overarching goals dovetail well with the focus of the ongoing Horticultural Industry Bee and Pollinator Stewardship Program,” the statement reads. “Under that initiative, we have directly funded several priority research projects, and collaborated on additional research funded by others, to provide critical scientifically sound guidance for professional horticulturists. We are developing a grower stewardship program based on best practices.”
 


 

AmericanHort appointed to global horticulture association


AmericanHort has been appointed as the official United States representative to the International Association of Horticultural Producers (AIPH). Founded in 1948, AIPH is the global association of horticulture industry trade organizations. The mission of AIPH is to stimulate increased demand for ornamental trees, plants and flowers worldwide; to protect and promote the interests of the industry, including plant breeders’ rights; and to be an international hub for industry information and knowledge exchange. 

Twenty trade organizations from 18 countries are members of AIPH. AIPH also organizes the International Grower of the Year competition and is responsible for approving international horticultural expositions. In 2016, these include expositions in Turkey and China.
 


 

EPA issues final Clean Water Act rule


The Environmental Protection Agency and the U.S. Army issued the Final Clean Water Act May 27, defining the scope of “waters of the United States.”

The rule is meant to clarify which smaller streams, tributaries and wetlands are covered by the Clean Water Act, which was created to protect the drinking water of 117 million citizens.

Proponents of the rule say it does not expand the Clean Water Act’s coverage or add new permitting requirements, but opponents are calling the rule a “power grab.” Many are concerned about the impact this will have on land use and construction, as well as public and environmental health.

“Along with thousands of stakeholders, we asked EPA and the Corps for clarity on the definition of the waters of the U.S. What we got in return is a regulation so expansive it includes golf course ponds or water collecting in ditches,” said Aaron Hobbs, RISE president, in a statement. “The sweeping redefinition impacts every pesticide treatment near water, including those to treat mosquitoes and help prevent mosquito-borne diseases; to keep power, highway, rail and shipping infrastructure safe and useable; and to eradicate invasive and non-native plant and insect species.”

According to the EPA, the final rule would place upstream waters or tributaries under the protection of the Clean Water Act.

This could include ditches and trenches, but only if they act as tributaries that could move pollution downstream. Ponds and man-made lakes may also fall under the rule if they have overflow water during heavy rainfall.

The EPA said this will be determined by signs of flowing water like a bank, a bed and an ordinary high water mark. The rule also protects water features like prairie potholes, coastal prairie wetlands and more when they impact downstream waters.

“For the water in the rivers and lakes in our communities that flow to our drinking water to be clean, the streams and wetlands that feed them need to be clean too,” said EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy in a release.

“Protecting our water sources is a critical component of adapting to climate change impacts like drought, sea level rise, stronger storms, and warmer temperatures – which is why EPA and the Army have finalized the Clean Water Rule to protect these important waters, so we can strengthen our economy and provide certainty to American businesses.”

The EPA says most ditches will not be regulated by the act, and groundwater, shallow subsurface flows or tile drains are not covered.

In 2001 and 2006, Supreme Court rulings left 60 percent of the country’s wetlands and streams without protection as they are not “navigable waters.”

The EPA said those rulings made protection “confusing, complex and time-consuming,” necessitating a better definition of the Clean Water Act’s scope.

The House of Representatives voted May 12 to overturn the rule. Passage of the legislation fell largely along party lines by a vote of 261-155. However, 24 Democrats voted for the legislation, H.R. 1732, also known as the Regulatory Integrity Protection Act. Passage of H.R. 1732 would require the EPA and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to withdraw the proposed Waters of the United States (WOTUS) rule within 30 days and craft a new one in consultation with state and local governments and other affected stakeholders.

Similar legislation could be introduced in the Senate soon.

The rule will be effective 60 days after publication in the Federal Register.

— Kate Spirgen, Lawn & Landscape

June 2015
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