N.J. Admin. Code § 7:30-10.6 - Aerial application of pesticides
(a) All
agricultural aircraft operations in New Jersey shall comply with those parts of
14 CFR Part 137, Agricultural Aircraft Operations, not covered in this section.
In the case of conflict, a regulation of 14 CFR Part 137, Agricultural Aircraft
Operations shall take precedence over any of this section.
1. An agricultural aircraft operator may be
required to provide proof of current licensing as an agricultural aircraft
operator in order to obtain a New Jersey pesticide applicator
license.
(b) The pilot
of an agricultural aircraft shall, prior to any pesticide application, learn
and confirm:
1. The boundaries and exact
location of the target area(s); and
2. The identity of non-target areas and
safety hazards located on or adjacent to the target area.
(c) Spray and spreading equipment shall be
thoroughly rinsed after each agricultural aircraft operation , except when the
next application will be made using the same pesticide or, if another pesticide
is to be used, it is compatible with that previously in the equipment and will
not result in illegal residues or significant risk of injury or damage when
applied to the new target site .
(d)
During pesticide application, the flow and mixture of the pesticide (s) shall be
uniform and applied with spray or spreading equipment suited for the
pesticide (s) used. Application equipment shall be properly calibrated,
according to the manufacturers' specification for the equipment utilized, for
the specific type of pesticide application being performed and proof of this
proper calibration shall be maintained by the aerial pesticide applicator
business and be provided, upon request, to the Department .
(e) For interpretation of (d) above,
participation of the individual aircraft in the Operation SAFE program, or its
equivalent, as determined by the Department , shall presume proper equipment
calibration; providing, the type of application(s) for which calibrated remains
the same and the equipment set-up is not modified from that determined to be
the most efficient under Operation SAFE , or its equivalent, as determined by
the Department .
(f) Participation
of each aerial pesticide applicator business in the Operation SAFE program, or
its equivalent, as determined by the Department , shall be mandatory; providing,
the program addresses the type of application to be performed and providing the
program is offered within New Jersey and for a sufficient time period to allow
this participation.
(g) Aircraft of
the exact type and conformation, including, but not limited to, the application
equipment utilized, shall also be considered to be properly calibrated if
set-up to the specification determined from Operation SAFE , or its equivalent,
as determined by the Department , to be the most efficient for that type
aircraft ; provided, this extension provision shall only apply to aircraft owned
and operated by the aerial pesticide applicator business that has calibrated at
least one of each type of aircraft under Operation SAFE or its equivalent, as
determined by the Department .
(h)
The Department may require full participation of all aerial application
aircraft if experience in working with the Operation SAFE program, or its
equivalent, as determined by the Department , shows the need, as determined by
the Department , to require the participation of each aircraft regardless of
sameness of conformation.
(i) All
aerial spray or spreading equipment shall be free of leaks and shall have a
positive shutoff system to prevent leaking and dissemination of pesticide on
any non-target areas over which the flight is made.
(j) The shape of the tank or hopper of the
spray or spreading equipment shall be such as to allow the complete drainage
during flight and on the ground.
(k) Any emergency or accidental release of
pesticide (s) from the aerial application or auxiliary equipment shall be
subject to the reporting provisions of
N.J.A.C.
7:30-9.17.
(l) All pesticides applied aerially as
liquids, in liquid carriers, or as dusts shall be released within 15 feet above
the target, except for applications to forests and/or trees, such application
height shall be within 50 feet above the target, and except where obstructions
in or adjacent to the target would endanger the safety of the pilot while
applying pesticides at that altitude.
(m) All pesticide applied aerially as dry
granules or pellets shall be released within 40 feet above the target, except
where obstructions in or adjacent to the target would endanger the safety of
the pilot while applying pesticides at that altitude.
(n) (Reserved)
(o) Aerial pesticide application for
non-agricultural purposes may be performed on application sites of less than
three acres provided the application site is part of a larger property or
contiguous properties, which together make up three or more acres, and for
which the owner 's or owners' consent has been obtained. Consent may be verbal
except when an occupied dwelling is within 100 feet of the target spray block.
If such an occupied dwelling is within 100 feet of the target spray block,
consent shall be in writing.
1. The written
consent agreement shall include at a minimum:
i. The date of agreement;
ii. The location or designation of the
consenting owner 's property ; and
iii. The signature of the owner of the
consenting owner 's property .
2. Consent shall remain valid until
withdrawn.
3. Any consenting owner
may withdraw consent by notifying, in writing, the party who requested the
consent. Consent may be withdrawn at the end of the calendar year, or may be
withdrawn at any time following a pesticide misapplication involving the
consenting owner 's property , cited under this chapter. Upon such notification,
the previous consent shall be invalidated.
4. Copies of all written consent agreements
shall be maintained by the aerial pesticide applicator or applicator business
for three years.
5. The written
consent agreements shall be immediately provided to the Department , upon
request.
(p) Aerial
pesticide application to an agricultural commodity may be performed on any size
field ; providing, the field being sprayed is part of a larger property of three
or more acres wholly owned or controlled by the person contracting for the
application.
(q) No pesticide shall
be applied by aircraft within 300 feet horizontally of the premises of schools,
hospitals, nursing homes, houses of religious worship, or any building, other
than a private residence , which is used for business or social activities, if
either the premise or the building is occupied by people, except:
1. Pesticide application within 100 feet of a
building used for an agricultural business shall be allowed; providing, only a
general use pesticide is applied and warning is given prior to application so
that doors and/or windows on the building are closed and the occupants thereof
allowed time to vacate the building.
(r) No pesticide shall be directly sprayed by
aircraft on the right-of-way of a public road, except when the right-of-way is
included as the target site .
(s) No
pesticide shall be deposited by aircraft within 100 feet of any private
residence unless the aerial pesticide applicator and/or applicator business has
written consent of an inhabitant of said private residence of legal age . The
aerial applicator or applicator business may obtain the written consent
directly, or the party who is contracting for the services of an aerial
applicator business may obtain the written consent and forward it to the aerial
applicator or applicator business for record keeping purposes. The consent
agreement shall include:
1. The date of
agreement;
2. The time period for
which the consent is valid;
3. The
location or designation of the private residence ; and
4. The signature of the consenting inhabitant
of the private residence .
i. Any consenting
inhabitant may withdraw consent by notifying, in writing, the party which
requested the consent. Consent may be withdrawn at the end of the calendar year
or at any time following a pesticide misapplication involving the consenting
inhabitant's property , cited under this chapter. Upon such notification, the
previous consent shall be invalidated.
ii. Copies of all consent agreements shall be
maintained by the aerial pesticide applicator and/or applicator business for
three years; and
iii. Such copies
shall be immediately provided, upon request, to the Department .
(t) No person may
aerially apply any broad spectrum pesticide for non-agricultural purposes
except for the following:
1. Pest control
where the Department determines, with recommendations from Rutgers University,
that no practical alternative is available.
i. If the Department determines that Rutgers
University is unable to provide such recommendations, the Department may seek
other expert advice as necessary;
2. Pest control where it can be shown that
the pest has reached a stage of development , or where population pressure is
such, that any non-broad spectrum pesticide is ineffective;
3. Environmental, health, or agricultural
emergencies, as defined below:
i.
"Agricultural emergency " for the purposes of this section means an occurrence
of any pest , whether through population growth beyond economic injury levels,
or through introduction of a foreign or exotic pest , which presents a
significant risk of harm or injury to any agricultural commodity , as determined
by the New Jersey Department of Agriculture and/or the United States Department
of Agriculture (USDA ) in concurrence with the Department .
ii. "Environmental emergency " for the
purposes of this section means the occurrence of any pest which presents a
significant risk of harm or injury to the environment , including, but not
limited to, exotic or foreign pests which may need preventive quarantine
measures to avert or prevent that risk, as determined by the Department in
concurrence with Rutgers University, and/or the New Jersey Department of Health
and Senior Services.
iii. "Health
emergency " for the purposes of this section means the occurrence of any pest
which presents a significant risk of harm or injury to the public health as
determined by the New Jersey Department of Health and Senior Services in
concurrence with the Department ; and
4. Experimental work pursuant to
N.J.A.C.
7:30-2.3.
(u) Where it has been determined that a
situation described in (t)1 or 2 exists, then the applicator or applicator
business shall petition the Department at least two working days prior to the
proposed application for approval to use a broad spectrum pesticide .
1. Once the Department has confirmed that a
situation described in (t)1 exists, then no further petition shall be needed to
use broad spectrum pesticides aerially, until the following calendar year, or
until a practical alternative becomes available earlier than the end of the
calendar year.
2. Situations such
as those described in (t)2 above shall be reviewed by the Department on a
case-by-case basis, unless it can be determined that the pest population or
development has resulted in a situation which is more general throughout larger
areas of the State. Should this occur, the Department shall announce the
situation and any limitations, geographic or otherwise, to the aerial use of
broad spectrum pesticides.
(v) If it can be shown that an emergency
application must take place without delay, the applicator or applicator
business shall inform the Department of the application and provide
justification for the application satisfactory to the Department no later than
one working day after the application takes place.
(w) Where an application takes place pursuant
to (t) above, and compliance with community or area-wide notification
requirements pursuant to
N.J.A.C.
7:30-9.10 is not possible due to the timing
of the application, the applicator shall request a waiver from the provisions
of N.J.A.C. 7:30-9.10, pursuant to
N.J.A.C.
7:30-9.10(c).
(x) No person shall apply any pesticide by
aerial application equipment, unless the pesticide is specifically labeled for
aerial application .
(y) No person
shall be exempt from any of the provisions of this section except under these
conditions:
1. During an emergency proclaimed
by the Commissioner , specific aerial applicators may be exempted from all, or
from specific regulations as deemed necessary by the Department to handle the
emergency situation.
2. Any State,
Federal, or public agency or aerial applicator under contractual agreement with
such an agency, when conducting a pest control operation, shall be exempted
from (l) through (o) and (q) through (s)
above.
3. The provisions of (s)
above shall not apply to any private residence that is occupied by the person
contracting to have the spray performed and which is located on a property
which includes the target site .
Notes
See: 17 N.J.R. 242(b), 17 N.J.R. 2609(b).
Originally "Containers and container
Amended by R.1988 d.538, effective
See: 20 N.J.R. 579(a), 20 N.J.R. 2865(a).
Subsection(s) added "
Recodified from N.J.A.C 7:30-10.5 and amended by R.2001 d.427, effective
See: 33 N.J.R. 474(a), 33 N.J.R. 3956(b).
Rewrote the section. Former N.J.A.C. 7:30-10.6,
Amended by R.2008 d.126, effective
See: 39 N.J.R. 5010(a), 40 N.J.R. 2451(b).
In the introductory paragraph of (a), substituted "14 CFR Part 137, Agricultural
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