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Start Here
Your journey begins when you
plan to use pesticides with this
statement on the label. You must
follow the requirements of the
Worker Protection Standard (WPS).
This map gives you a quick route
to understanding compliance.
AGRICULTURAL USE REQUIREMENTS
Use this product only in accordance with its labeling and with
the Worker Protection Standard, 40 CFR 1 70. This standard
contains requirements for the protection of agricultural workers
on farms, forests, nurseries, and greenhouses, and handlers of
agricultural pesticides. It contains requirements for training,
decontamination, notification, and emergency assistance. It
also contains specific instructions and exceptions pertaining to
the statements on this label about personal protective equip¬
ment, restricted-entry intervals and notification of workers.
WPS is designed for agricultural establishments
An agricultural establishment is any farm, forest operation,
or nursery engaged in the production of agricultural plants
outdoors, or in an enclosed space such as a greenhouse.
The WPS also covers family-owned agricultural operations
in which family members are the only persons who work on
the establishment
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You have two great resources that can help you:
• North Carolina Cooperative Extension
• North Carolina Department of
Agriculture and Consumer Services
(NCDA&CS)
There are a number of requirements for different
categories:
^ Pesticide safety training
R Central posting of information
PPE and decontamination supplies
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Record keeping of pesticide
1 applications
Emergency assistance provisions
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Establishment-specific information
5^1 Employer information exchange
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Retaliation prohibition policies
■o;- Communication with farm-servicing
personnel
For all the general responsibilities for agricultural
employers, see page 20 of the How to Comply with
the 2015 Revised Worker Protection Standard
for Agricultural Pesticides - What Owners and
Employers Need to Know manual for details.
How to Comply manual:
http://www.pesticideresources.org/wps/htc/htomanual.pdf
To purchase a printed copy, visit npsecstore.com
Inspection Station
First, it is important to know
responsibilities:
Farm Manager
An owner or manager who employs workers
and/or handlers. This includes family-owned
farms that hire non-family agricultural labor.
The kinds of tasks your em ployees do, within 30
days of a pesticide application, will determine
whether you have workers, handlers, or both.
Someone may be a worker while completing one
task and a handler while completing a different
task.
Handler
Handlers are paid to mix, load, transfer, or apply
pesticides, or to do other tasks that bring them
into direct contact with pesticides.
Worker
Workers are paid to do tasks involved in the
production of agricultural plants such as plant¬
ing, harvesting, weeding, re-potting, pruning, or
watering. Workers do not apply pesticides or
handle the equipment used to apply pesticides.
This group includes the “early-entry worker,” a
fully-trained and equipped worker who is able to
perform limited tasks before the restricted-entry
interval (REI) expires. Early entry within the first 4
hours after a pesticide application is prohibited.
Family Farmer
The farm is majority-owned and operated
(NOT rented or leased to outsiders) by one or
more members of the same immediate family.
If qualified, the family farmer is exempt from
most WPS requirements that pertain to
immediate family members.
See Family Reunion for more information.
COURT
HOUSE
Farm managers are
subject to civil and criminal
penalties if they do not
comply with the WPS.
Owners and employers
are also liable for all other
individuals employed by
or acting for them who fail
to comply.
WRONG TURN,
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Farm Journal and
Application Log
As a farm manager, you must
keep a record of all pesticides
applied and the SDS for
each pesticide applied
for two years from the
expiration date of the REI of
the pesticides that were applied (https://pesticidesafetv.
ces.ncsu.edu/recordkeepina-forms/).
1. Pesticide records must contain:
• Pesticide name
•Active ingredient(s)
• EPA registration number
•REI
• Crop or site treated
• Field ID/ Location
• Application start & end dates and times
2. Hazard information includes of a copy of the OSHA
safety data sheet (SDS) for each pesticide product.
Records may be provided to the following individuals by
request:
• Workers and handlers
• An employee of EPA or an NCDA&CS pesticide inspector
• Medical personnel involved in treatment
• A representative designated by a worker or handler
Complete details are available in the How to Comply manual
on page 25.
Central Sign Shop
Pesticide Safety Information
Pick up the signage and materials you need to
successfully create your central posting. All farm
managers must display the following information
at a central location — a place that is accessible
at all times during normal work hours — and at
decontamination sites. The information must be
displayed at the central site within 24 hrs of an
application and remain posted for 30 days after the
REI has expired.
The three — “central posting” — requirements are:
1 . Pesticide safety information poster
http://pesticideresources.ora/wps/cp.html. OR
display the information in an equivalent written document
(see page 23 of the How to Comply manual).
2. Pesticide application information
Pesticide name, active ingredient®, EPA registration
number, REI, crop or site treated, location and description
of treated area(s), application start and end dates and
times (See Farm Journal and Application Log).
3. Hazard information
OSHA safety data sheet (SDS) for each pesticide.
WPS Learning Center
Pesticide safety training is an absolute must.
All handlers and workers MUST be trained before they perform
any worker or handler task on the establishment (except as
listed for in the exemptions) and they must complete the
training every 1 2 months thereafter.
Teacher’s
Lounge
Only certificated private or commercial pesticide
applicators or those who have completed the EPA’s WPS
Train-the-Trainer-Program can provide the training.
ft
ave a cup of coffee with
your WPS Inspector from
the NCDA&CS, (919) 733-3556,
your best source for compliance
advice and WPS resources.
The key requirements for WPS training:
• There is no grace period for WPS training. The farm
manager must ensure that the WPS training is completed
within the last 1 2 months before:
-Any worker enters a treated area where a
WPS-labeled pesticide was used within the last 30 days,
or an REI for such pesticide has been in effect.
-Any handler conducts any handling task.
• Workers and handlers are exempt from the WPS training
if they are currently:
-Certified as an applicator of restricted-use pesticides.
-Certified as a crop advisor by a program acknowledged
as appropriate in writing by the Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA), or a state or tribal agency responsible for
pesticide enforcement.
- Identified as a worker who completed the WPS handler
training within the previous 12 months.
• Use only qualified trainers for the WPS training.
• Train workers and handlers annually.
• Provide training that can be understood, and use a
translator when necessary.
• Present training with EPA-approved materials.
• Keep records of worker/handler training for two years.
• Make training records available to employees on request.
For more information about worker training see page 36, and
for handler training, see page 58, of the How to Comply manual.
5
Field Orientation
Personal protective equipment (PPE)
is specific to the pesticide product
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are usin9- Handlers and workers
may have different requirements as
specified on the label.
Handlers
The PPE that is required by the pesticide product labeling
must be provided by the handler's employer. The PPE must
be clean and in proper working condition. Standard work
attire does not have to be provided by the employer even if
required.
Handlers are individually responsible for following the
pesticide labeling directions and wearing the clothing and
PPE required by the pesticide product labeling. The use
of any pesticide product must be consistent with the label
directions or it is a violation of federal law.
Workers
In most cases, the workers who will require PPE are the
early-entry workers. It is the farm manager’s responsibility
to provide each early-entry worker with the PPE specified in
the pesticide product labeling for early entry and to ensure
that the early-entry worker uses the PPE according to the
manufacturer’s instructions and follows any other applicable
requirements on the pesticide product labeling. Details are
listed on page 53 of the How to Comply manual.
Respiratory Protection
The correct respirator specified by the label must be used
whenever the pesticide product labeling requires that a
respirator be worn. Prior to using a respirator, the farm
manager must provide the handler with:
- Medical evaluation,
- Annual fit testing, and
- Annual respirator training
Before allowing persons not directly employed by the establishment
to clean, repair, or adjust pesticide application equipment, you must
provide the following information:
1 . The equipment may be contaminated with pesticides.
2. The potentially harmful effects of pesticide exposure.
3. Methods for handling equipment to limit exposure to
pesticides.
4. Procedures for washing themselves and/or their clothes to
remove and prevent exposure to
pesticide residues.
■0
Quick Care Transit
I The farm manager must provide
transportation and emergency
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д
information promptly for their
^9^ workers. Your motto should be, “Be Prepared.”
Have working transportation available.
Knowing what to do and how you will do it ahead of
time can make a world of difference.
Provide emergency transportation
• If there is reason to believe that a worker or handler
experienced a potential pesticide exposure during his
or her employment on their employer’s agricultural
establishment, or
• The worker shows symptoms similar to those associated
with acute exposure to pesticides during or within 72
hours after his or her employment in the agricultural
establishment and needs emergency medical treatment.
Provide emergency information for the emergency
medical personnel
• Copies of the applicable SDS, the pesticide product name,
EPA registration number, and active ingredient® for each
pesticide product to which the person may have been
exposed.
• Type of application or how the pesticide was used on the
agricultural establishment.
• The circumstances that may have resulted in exposure to
the pesticide.
As a farm manager, you must provide information
specific to your farm to workers and handlers when
they first enter the area and before beginning WPS
tasks in areas where, within the last 30 days, a WPS-
labeled pesticide product has been applied or an REI
for such pesticide has been in effect.
Inform workers and handlers with the location of:
• Pesticide safety information
• Pesticide application and hazard information
• Decontamination supplies
• This farm -specific information must be provided even
if the worker or handler has already completed the
annual pesticide safety training on another agricultural
establishment.
10
Family Reunion
Immediate family members include spouse, parents,
stepparents, foster parents, children, stepchildren, foster
children, brothers, sisters, in-laws (mother, father, sister,
brother, son, daughter), grandparents, grandchildren, aunts,
uncles, nieces, nephews, and first cousins.
The EPA expects managers to protect the health of
their family members who work in a family operation.
Therefore, the WPS exempts owners of agricultural
establishments and members of their immediate family
from certain requirements.
It is important to note that:
• No agricultural establishments that use WPS-labeled pesticide
products are completely exempt from the WPS requirements.
• Owners/agricultural employers must provide full WPS
protections for workers and handlers who are not members of
the owners’ immediate families, and
• Owners and their immediate family members that qualify for
the exemption must comply with some WPS requirements.
Complete details about exceptions and requirements are
available in the How to Comply manual on pages 88-91 .
“DECON”&Wash Sites
Here is where you check on your decontamination
supplies for workers and handlers. The farm
manager is required to provide supplies for each
worker (including early-entry workers) and handler
for routine washing to remove pesticide residues,
emergency decontamination, and immediate eye
flushing as described below. Decontamination
supplies for early-entry workers are similar to those
for handlers.
1. Decontamination supplies, as listed below, must be
located within
1/4
mile of all workers and handlers who
have worked where a pesticide was used within the past
30 days.
• 1 gallon of water per worker and 3 gallons of water per
handler at the beginning of each work period for routine
and emergency decontamination.
• Plenty of soap and single-use towels. Note: hand sanitizers
and wet towelettes are insufficient.
• A clean coverall (or other clean change of clothes) for
handlers.
2. Provide water that is safe and cool enough for washing,
eye-flushing, and drinking. Do not use water that is also
used for mixing pesticides unless steps have been taken to
ensure safety.
3. Provide handlers with decontamination supplies where PPE
is removed at the end of a task.
4. Provide handlers with decontamination supplies at each
mixing and loading site.
5. When a product requires protective eyewear for handlers,
and/or when using a closed system under pressure,
provide the following in the mixing and loading areas: an
eye-flushing system that can deliver gently running water
at 0.4 gallons per minute for at least 15 minutes, or
6 gallons of water in containers suitable for providing a
gentle eye-flush for about 15 minutes.
6. When applying a product that requires protective eyewear,
provide 1 pint of water per handler in portable containers
that are immediately available to each handler.
7. Do not put decontamination supplies for workers in areas
being treated or under an REI.
8. For handlers, decontamination supplies must be kept
outside the treated area, or any area under an REI, unless
they are protected from contamination in closed containers.
*
Application Exclusion Zone (AEZ)
This is the area encircling the application equipment that must
generally be free of all persons while the pesticide is being
applied. The size of the AEZ, either a radius of 25 or 1 00 ft, is
determined by the application method and spray height: S
• The AEZ is 1 00 ft for outdoor applications made aerially; by air ™
blast or air-propelled applications; as a spray with a spray quality
smaller than medium; or as a fumigant, smoke, mist, or fog.
• The AEZ is 25 ft during applications that use a spray method not
listed for the 1 00 ft AEZ and when sprayed from a height of greater
than 1 2 inches from the planting medium (soil) with a spray quality
of medium or larger.
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Reading the WPS Road Map gives you a
good overview for successful compliance,
but there is one more thing...
WPS Success Checklist
□ Central posting with safety poster
□ Pesticide application records — 2 years
□ Safety data sheets (SDS) — 2 years
□ Required info displayed before entry/within 24 hrs of application
□ Required info displayed at least 30 days after REI has expired
□ Workers and handlers trained (in past 12 months)
□ EPA approved training material used
□ Trainer qualified to train workers/handlers
□ Safety training records complete and retained for 2 years
□ Emergency assistance provided to workers/handlers
□ Pesticide product info provided to medical personnel
□ Decontamination supplies within
1/4
mile
□ Workers notified of applications
□ Warning signs used if required — language/size/placement
□ Applications made with no contact or drift to others <
□ Workers kept out of treated area during REI except early entry workers
□ Workers and others kept out of application exclusion zone
□ PPE provided for early-entry handlers and workers
□ PPE in proper operating condition and inspected before use
□ PPE in pesticide free area for storage and to change
□ Contaminated PPE disposed of properly
□ Measures taken to prevent heat related illness
(see page 65 in the How to Comply manual)
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Harvest Payload
Your journey ends with a
safer operation and less
downtime, when your
establishment is in compliance,
you have protected yourself,
protected your workers, and
protected your profits.
ADDED BONUS
Authors: Wayne Buhler, PhD and Tom Bowman, North Carolina State University,
Carmina Hanson and Gwen Minton, North Carolina Department of Agriculture and
Consumer Services.
Reviewers: Thomas Woods, Extension Agent-Horticulture. Norman Harrell, County
Extension Director, and Roberto Rosales, Health & Safety Educator. NC State Extension:
Field Compliance Staff, NCDA&CS.
Design Concept & Illustration: Larry Thompson, Gravitation, Raleigh, NC
This publication does not replace the "How to Comply Manual' which provides detailed information to help you comply with
WPS. This is a simplified tool that can quickly guide farm managers, handlers, workers, and family farmers.
NC State Unkersity provides equal opportunity and affirmative action efforts, and prohibits discrimination and harassment
based upon a person's age, cotor, disability, family and marital status, gender identity, genetic information, national origin,
political beliefs, race, religion, sex (including pregnancy), sexual orientation and \eteran status.
Published 1
0/2022
7.5M copies of this public document were printed at a cost of $0.35 per copy. AG-91 6