CropLife America (CLA), a national trade association which
represents virtually all the leading U.S. crop protection companies, has
encountered a remarkable mosaic of twists and turns during its 75-year
history. The challenges and changes which CLA has managed include a
constantly evolving landscape of industry companies and products,
coupled with a mind-boggling array of public policy and communications
issues attendant to modern crop protection tools.
The Washington, D.C.-based group, which has had four different
names since its 1933 inception in New York City, currently has 66
members, including basic pesticide manufacturers, formulators, and
distributors. Its annual budget is more than $9 million.
CropLife activities run the gamut from Capitol Hill lobbying to
litigation to scientific task force coordination to the endless task of
studying, and responding to regulatory proposals from federal and, in
some cases, state agencies. The group also communicates the benefits of
pesticides to policy makers and the general public.
The association's research and education affiliate, the
CropLife Foundation, conducts a wide range of studies and message
development in support of the crop protection industry. At the same
time, CLA's companion organization, RISE (Responsible Industry for
a Sound Environment), engages in various advocacy efforts on behalf of
specialty pesticides used in non agricultural markets--for turf
management, nurseries, landscaping, disease vector control and
structural pest control to name just a few segments RISE represents.
Allan Noe, Dir of Special Projects for CropLife and VP, Development
for the CropLife Foundation, points out that CLA is in tune with crop
protection issues and developments far beyond U.S. borders.
"We have a global network under the umbrella of CropLife
International consisting of national associations in more than 90
countries, including one of our newest affiliates, CropLife China,"
Noe says. "This helps facilitate coordination of plant science
goals and objectives throughout the world, including intellectual
property protection."
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Considering the early CLA predecessor entities dealt with greater
numbers of member companies in a different market era and simpler and
fewer issues, it's clear the association has had to dramatically
change the scope of its work to maintain its strong advocacy success
record for the crop protection industry.
CLA Pres Jay Vroom, who grew up on a family farm near Princeton,
IL, and majored in agricultural science at the University of Illinois,
has navigated through some of the most difficult of these changes during
his nearly 20 years at the helm.
"I started work at the association, then known as the National
Agricultural Chemicals Association (NACA), barely three months before
the 'Alar crisis' erupted," Vroom recalls.
"Fortunately for me and the industry, member companies were already
preparing for something big before I arrived. We quickly assembled a
special Food Safety Task Force of the NACA Board, gathered our resources
and prepared for what turned into quite a media storm."
PIVOTAL YEAR
"1996 was one of the most pivotal years in the crop protection
industry's policy history," Vroom says. "It was the
culmination of our success in staving off bad policy reactions from the
Alar scare, and turning that into the most comprehensive pesticide
reform legislative packages ever enacted.
"Of course, even though this major environmental law, the Food
Quality Protection Act (FQPA), was passed without a single dissenting
vote in either the House or Senate, it was still far from a perfect law.
But again with strong support and involvement of farm groups and the
food industry, coupled with a sound political set of relationships in
the Clinton Administration and in Congress, we were successful in
steering a reasonable implementation of a law that took ten years, until
August 2006, to deploy."
Vroom reports, "The experiences of working across broad and
active coalitions which we built in dealing with passage of the Delaney
Clause reform and all the rest of the provisions of FQPA ... and the
ensuing work to ensure reasonable implementation of that sweeping law,
have forged the pathways for CLA to deal with a host of other
significant issues challenging our members."
He cites the challenges of the Endangered Species Act and Clean
Water Act as examples of current issues that continue to be addressed by
multifaceted coalitions which CLA helps lead.
The impacts of the transformations in pesticide regulation and
industry consolidation over the past 20 years have had both positive and
negative consequences for the industry. "At CLA we always strive to
advocate policy that affords opportunity for forward-looking companies
to keep advancing scientific and technological solutions, to improve our
farm customer's economic outcomes and enhance safety and
environmental protection," says Vroom.
Looking forward, the only certainty is much more change is probably
on the way. It is also certain that the executives who led CLA precursor
groups in the '20s, '30s and '40s never could have
imagined the regulatory challenges faced by their successors.
THE BEGINNING
CLA officially evolved from the Agricultural Insecticide and
Fungicide (AIF) Association which was formed by the Insecticide
Committee of the Agricultural Insecticides and Manufacturers Association
(AIFMA) in 1933. Lee Hitchner was elected as the first Pres and served
in that capacity until 1962. To date, Hitchner is the longest-tenured
Pres of the association and its most acclaimed annual award is named for
him.
FIFRA '47
The modern era of pesticide regulation started in 1947, with the
passage of the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act
(FIFRA). The law granted the United States Department of Agriculture
(USDA) the authority to regulate pesticides at the national level and,
for the first time, required all pesticide products to be registered and
labeled with much more information.
Because FIFRA was to be administered by a federal agency, the AIF
relocated to Washington, D.C., and changed its name to the National
Agricultural Chemicals Association (NACA).
However, it was actually the Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
which elicited the lion's share of NACA's attention during the
1950s. It was then that, for the first time, pesticide residue
tolerances were established for agricultural commodities.
NACA had successfully lobbied Congress to include language
requiring a scientific basis for tolerances in the enabling legislation
of 1954, and NACA coordinated industry input into the tolerance
regulation eventually issued by FDA.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
NACA had supported the tolerance legislation. However, in 1958, an
amendment to the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act directed FDA to
prohibit the use of any known, or suspected, carcinogens, as food
additives. NACA's lobbying efforts precluded the application of
this amendment, known as the Delaney Clause, to pesticide residues in
crops, although the use of specific pesticides on some processed, or
semi-processed food and feed products triggered a Delaney requirement
for tolerances.
Delaney would remain in place, and cause a great deal of
controversy, for the next 38 years.
"SILENT SPRING"
In the early 1960s, NACA launched a major pesticide safety
campaign, including a new iteration of its 1943 "Read the
Label" campaign. The outreach effort included posters, leaflets,
special product labels, TV and radio announcements, and newspaper
editorials.
But, the campaign was overshadowed by the publication of
"Silent Spring," a book which sparked public fears about
pesticides and led to a series of Congressional hearings and federal
studies. The book also led, if indirectly, to the tougher data
requirements mandated in the 1972 amendments to FIFRA.
FIFRA '72
The Environmental Pesticide Control Act of 1972 shifted the
regulatory purview over pesticides and pesticide tolerances from USDA
and FDA, respectively, to the newly established Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA). The law ushered in a period of intense activity at NACA
because so many things changed and no one knew how the law would affect
the industry.
The '70s and '80s were formative and formidable times for
NACA because the association was part of the process to implement and
understand FIFRA '72. There was a lot of brainstorming going on and
varying expectations among different member companies regarding ultimate
interpretation of the new law.
NEW LEADERSHIP
Parke Brinkley was Pres of NACA at this time, having succeeded Lea
Hitchner who retired in 1962. Brinkley was approaching retirement
himself and industry leaders decided to bring aboard an experienced
industry scientist and regulatory expert, Jack Early, from the Monsanto
Company.
PATENTS AND DATA
Early faced a host of difficult issues, particularly the lobbying
effort to increase patent life for novel molecules. For the crop
protection industry, the plea for patent restoration was driven by the
uncertain, and often extremely long, approval process for new active
ingredients under the data requirements of FIFRA '72.
Driven by the new law's expanded data requirements and the
fact that a new regulatory entity, the EPA, was now reviewing and
approving pesticide licenses, the regulatory process started to consume
14 or more years of the then 17-year patent life.
COPYRIGHT 2008 Doane Information
Service Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
Copyright 2008 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights
reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.
NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.