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House passes phased restrictions on neonicotinoid-treated seeds after lengthy debate

March 21, 2024 | HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES, Committees, Legislative , Vermont


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House passes phased restrictions on neonicotinoid-treated seeds after lengthy debate
The Vermont House on March 21 approved a committee strike-all to restrict the use and sale of neonicotinoid pesticides and to establish timelines, exemptions, and best management practices. The bill targets treated article seeds (corn and soybean seed treated with neonicotinoids), restricts certain field applications during bloom, and creates a process for emergency exemptions and BMP development.

"Neonicotinoids are highly toxic including at extremely low concentrations, specifically to bees," the bill's presenter, the member from Dorset, told the House, citing committee testimony and studies. The presenter stressed alignment with New York's timeline and a phased approach to protect seed availability and farmers.

Opponents, including several members representing dairy and large-scale crop districts, warned of potential economic consequences and seed availability. Member from Berkshire and others said the Agricultural Innovation Board previously urged caution and more study. Proponents pointed to national and regional evidence and 5 years' experience from Quebec where treated-seed bans did not produce observed crop-yield declines.

The bill includes a January 1, 2029 prohibition on sale or use of neonicotinoid-treated article seeds for cereal-grain crops, and an earlier July 1, 2025 restriction on many outdoor applications during bloom. The bill creates processes for emergency exemptions, requires BMPs be developed, and ties timelines to market availability (notably aligning with New York's schedule).

On the floor the House recorded a roll-call related to the committee recommendation and later ordered third reading; the roll-call vote reported in the transcript on the committee-recommended amendment/final disposition recorded 112 yeas and 29 nays. Supporters said the bill gives farmers transition time and addresses a documented threat to pollinators; opponents said more study and attention to human-health, seed supply and dairy impacts were needed.

Next steps: with third reading ordered and passage recorded on the floor, the bill will continue through legislative processing.

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