| For Immediate Release, April 12, 2018 
 
 Unprecedented Farm Bill Provision  Allows EPA to OK Pesticides Without Looking at Harm to Endangered Species Proposal Follows Urging From Dow, $11 Million in Campaign Spending  WASHINGTON—  Echoing a suggestion by Dow Chemical,  Section 9111 of the Farm Bill released today  by House Republicans would allow the Environmental Protection Agency to approve  pesticides without ever analyzing whether they’d harm hundreds of endangered  species across the country, including salmon and California condors. If  approved, the bill sponsored by Rep. Mike Conaway (R-Texas) would be one of the  most significant and damaging changes to the Endangered Species Act in the past  40 years. “Without  question, this will accelerate extinctions for some of our most vulnerable  species,” said Lori Ann Burd, director of the Center for Biological Diversity’s  environmental health program. “Companies like Dow that have dumped millions  into congressional campaigns are now calling all the shots in D.C. on dangerous  pesticides.” The  bill essentially codifies a request by Dow  Chemical for EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt to ignore pesticides’ harms to  endangered species and eviscerate all meaningful protections for fish, animals  and plants under the Endangered Species Act. In  January 2017 Dow Chemical donated $1 million  to Trump’s inauguration. Over the past six years, the company has donated $11  million to congressional campaigns and political action committees and spent an  additional $75 million lobbying Congress.  In 2017 alone the pesticide industry  spent more than $34 million on congressional lobbying. Earlier  this year the National Marine Fisheries Service released a “biological opinion”  study showing the widely used insecticides chlorpyrifos, malathion and diazinon  harm virtually all endangered species. The Fisheries Service concluded that protected  salmon, steelhead and sturgeon, as well as Southern Resident killer whales, are  likely to be driven extinct by these pesticides in the near future.  “Protected  salmon and sturgeon on both our coasts are being wiped out at an alarming rate  because of the uncontrolled use of these pesticides,” said Burd. “But instead  of listening to expert biologists, Republicans want to give the pesticide  industry a free pass to kill these iconic species.” Rep. Conaway, chairman of the House  Agriculture Committee, has received $117,000 in campaign contributions from CropLife  America and the pesticide industry since 2012. Over that period those same  companies contributed nearly $1 million ($960,500) to the other committee members.
 “The  pesticide industry has quite literally bought the House Agriculture Committee,”  said Burd. “And to cash in on their investment, they’re launching this  dangerous, unprecedented attack on endangered species.”
 Contributions  from pesticide industry to members of House Agriculture Committee, 2012-present  
                            
                              | Republican House Members | Pesticide Industry Contributions | Democratic House Members | Pesticide Industry Contributions |  
                              | Conaway |  $117,000 | Peterson | $110,500 |  
                              | Thompson | $18,000 | Scott | $16,000 |  
                              | Goodlatte | $14,500 | Costa | $33,000 |  
                              | Lucas | $94,000 | Walz | $20,500 |  
                              | King | $14,000 | Fudge | $45,500 |  
                              | Rogers | $1,000 | McGovern | $1,000 |  
                              | Gibbs | $23,000 | Vela | $1,000 |  
                              | Scott | $68,000 | Lujan    Grisham | $0 |  
                              | Crawford | $38,500 | Kuster | $3,000 |  
                              | Desjarlais | $0 | Nolan | $1,000 |  
                              | Hartzler | $20,500 | Bustos | $19,500 |  
                              | Denham | $19,500 | Maloney | $0 |  
                              | Lamalfa | $18,500 | Plaskett | $5,500 |  
                              | Davis | $103,000 | Adams | $1,000 |  
                              | Yoho | $18,000 | Evans | $0 |  
                              | Allen | $0 | Lawson | $0 |  
                              | Bost | $14,500 | Panetta | $7,500 |  
                              | Rouzer | $44,500 | O’Halleran | $1,000 |  
                              | Abraham | $19,500 | Soto | $500 |  
                              | Kelly | $4,500 | Blunt    Rochester | $16,000 |  
                              | Comer | $4,500 |   |   |  
                              | Marshall | $4,500 |   |   |  
                              | Bacon | $2,000 |   |   |  
                              | Faso | $1,500 |   |   |  
                              | Dunn | $1,000 |   |   |  
                              | Arrington | $14,000 |   |   |  
                              | Total | $678,000 | Total | $282,500 |  Contributions  are from CropLife America, Dow Chemical, DuPont, Bayer, Monsanto, Syngenta and  BASF. |