Laws & Regulations
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Managing Spray Drift to Minimize Problems: SPANISH [2024]
Este curso en línea cubre el manejo de la deriva de aspersión para minimizar los problemas. La gestión de la deriva de la pulverización (SDM) ha sido un elemento crítico para la agricultura occidental durante décadas. Mantener los productos químicos para la protección de cultivos en el cultivo al que están destinados ha sido una piedra angular de la agricultura occidental no sólo para proteger los cultivos vecinos, sino también para evitar el desperdicio de dinero al permitir que los productos se desvíen del objetivo previsto. La gestión de la deriva de la pulverización ha adquirido mayor importancia a medida que las ciudades invaden las zonas rurales. Cada año, surgen cada vez más casas y otros tipos de urbanizaciones en zonas de cultivo privilegiadas, a menudo junto a campos, huertos o viñedos. Esto genera una mayor preocupación sobre el uso de productos químicos agrícolas y las formas en que se aplican. Este curso revisará muchos aspectos de la deriva de la aspersión, desde formas prácticas para minimizar la deriva hasta las cuestiones regulatorias que la rodean.
This online course covers managing spray drift to minimize problems. Spray drift management (SDM) has been a critical element of Western agriculture for decades. Keeping crop protection chemicals on the crop they are intended for has been a cornerstone of Western agriculture not only to protect neighboring crops, but also to avoid wasting money by allowing products to stray from their intended target. Spray drift management has taken on greater importance as cities encroach on rural areas. Every year, more and more homes and other types of developments are springing up in prime growing areas, often adjacent to fields, orchards, or vineyards. This is leading to increased concern about the use of agricultural chemicals and the ways in which they are applied. This course will review many aspects of spray drift, from practical ways to minimize drift to the regulatory issues surrounding it.
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California Groundwater Protection Regulations [2024]
California Governor Jerry Brown signed the Sustainable Groundwater Management Act (SGMA) on September 16, 2014.
As the name implies, the legislation created a framework for sustainable groundwater management, defined as: Management and use of groundwater in a manner that can be maintained during the planning and implementation horizon without causing undesirable results. This course was updated for 2019 to reflect current regulations.
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Hemp Agronomy/Cannabis Production and IPM [2024]
In 1996, California voters approved the use of cannabis for medical use, with the requirement that patients must have a licensed physician’s recommendation. Then in November 2016, California voters approved Proposition 64, allowing adult use of cannabis under some specific use and quantity conditions. In June 2017, the California legislature passed the Medicinal and Adult-Use Cannabis Regulation and Safety Act (MAUCRSA) which Governor Jerry Brown signed into law. Each of these legal actions provided information on specific legal restrictions and requirements. MAUCRSA created one regulatory system for both medicinal and recreational use of cannabis.
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Pesticide Essentials for Advisers and Applicators [2024]
This course will provide an overview of several areas that are key to pesticide safety and application. We will cover subjects such as types of licenses, Personal Protective Equipment (PPE), labeling and label interpretations, application equipment and techniques, first aid and decontamination procedures, and Integrated Pest Management (IPM) and techniques. It is critical that the fundamentals are taught and reviewed regularly by all applicators and advisers.
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VOC Regulations [2024]
Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs) or Reactive Organic Gases (ROGs) are natural and man-made gases that can combine with nitrogen oxides (NOx) and react with sunlight to form ground-level ozone, one component of smog.
Ozone can damage lung tissue in humans and animals, cause respiratory illnesses, compromise immune systems, and harm crops. Ground-level ozone is harmful to both human health and vegetation when present in high concentrations. VOCs play a part in the formation of ground-level ozone.
California must reduce every source of VOCs to help solve its air pollution issues.
This course will familiarize applicators with California's regulations regarding pesticide use and was last updated with 2019 information.
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Managing Spray Drift to Minimize Problems [2024]
This online course covers the management of spray drift to minimize problems. Spray Drift Management (SDM) has been a critical element for Western agriculture for decades. Keeping crop protection chemicals on the crop for which they are intended has been a cornerstone of Western farming not only to protect neighboring crops, but to avoid wasting money by allowing products to drift off the intended target. Spray drift management has taken on greater significance as cities encroach upon rural areas. Every year, increasingly more houses and other types of developments are springing up in prime growing areas, oftentimes alongside fields, orchards or vineyards. This leads to increased concerns about the use of agricultural chemicals and the ways they are applied. This course will review many aspects of spray drift – from practical, hands-on ways to minimize drift, to the regulatory issues surrounding it.
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Lepidopterous Pest Management/Pesticide Safety Review [2024]
This course is sponsored by Western Farm Press. There are an estimated 150,000 named species in the insect group called Lepidoptera. Outnumbered only by the beetles, Lepidoptera represent the second-most diverse order of insect pests, and virtually every cultivated plant is attacked by at least one type. They are ready to defoliate and weaken plants or mine plant tissues, leaving holes and frass behind and rendering crops unmarketable. Their scientific name comes from the Greek Lepidos, for “scale,” and Pteron, for “wing”--literally “scale wing,”--because the wings of adult butterflies and moths are covered with microscopic scales. This course will specifically highlight six lepidopterous pests: the beet armyworm, cabbage looper, diamondback moth, tomato fruitworm, tomato pinworm and western yellowstriped armyworm. The course will also cover managing Lepidopterous pests in a wide array of crops and includes an additional section on Pesticide Safety.