HR-9528-119
Referred to the House Committee on Agriculture.
Sponsored by Chellie Pingree (D-ME)
What it does
This bill would amend the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA) to clarify that its existing preemption provision does not block state-law tort claims related to pesticide labeling or packaging. Currently, FIFRA prohibits states from imposing labeling requirements that differ from federal ones; this bill would add language specifying that this prohibition does not prevent individuals from suing pesticide manufacturers in state court over labeling-related harms.
Who benefits
People who have been harmed by pesticides and wish to bring state tort claims against manufacturers — including agricultural workers, farmworkers' families, and residential pesticide users. Plaintiffs' attorneys who handle personal injury and product liability cases. State courts, which would gain clearer jurisdiction over these claims. Consumers who believe federal labeling standards are insufficient to warn of health risks.
Who is hurt
Pesticide manufacturers and chemical companies, who would face expanded liability in state courts across all 50 jurisdictions, potentially with varying standards and outcomes. Agricultural businesses that rely on pesticides and could face indirect cost increases if manufacturers raise prices to offset litigation exposure. Farmers who may see reduced availability or higher costs for certain pesticide products if manufacturers exit markets due to litigation risk. Retailers of pesticide products who could be named in state tort suits.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the Supreme Court's ruling in Bates v. Dow Agrosciences (2005) already suggested FIFRA does not categorically preempt state tort claims, but that manufacturers have successfully used FIFRA's preemption language to defeat lawsuits — most notably in cases involving glyphosate (Roundup) — leaving injured people without legal recourse. They contend that allowing state tort claims restores a fundamental check on corporate accountability and ensures that individuals harmed by inadequate pesticide warnings can seek compensation in court, consistent with the traditional role of state tort law.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that exposing pesticide manufacturers to 50 different state tort standards would create a patchwork of conflicting liability rules that effectively forces companies to redesign labels for each state, undermining the uniformity that FIFRA's federal labeling system was designed to provide. They contend that this litigation exposure could drive smaller pesticide manufacturers out of the market, reduce the availability of agricultural and consumer pest-control products, and ultimately raise costs for farmers and consumers — all without any new scientific review of whether existing federal labels are actually inadequate.