Title 7 › Chapter CHAPTER 6— - INSECTICIDES AND ENVIRONMENTAL PESTICIDE CONTROL › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - ENVIRONMENTAL PESTICIDE CONTROL › § 136i
If a State does not have an EPA‑approved plan, the EPA Administrator must run a program to certify people who apply pesticides in that State, working with the Governor. The program must follow the same rules States would follow. Private applicators cannot be forced to take an exam to be certified. For private applicators, filling out a certification form can meet the requirement. The Administrator must publish a summary of the federal plan in the Federal Register and make copies available in the State. If the Governor asks within 30 days of that notice, the Administrator must hold public hearings within 30 days of the request. The Administrator can require people who sell, distribute, or commercially apply restricted‑use pesticides to keep records and send reports as the Administrator sets by regulation. The Administrator may also require pesticide dealers in the program to be licensed under a State program the Administrator approves. States may send a plan to the Administrator to run their own certification program. The Administrator will approve a plan if it names a State agency to run it, shows the agency will have legal authority and qualified staff, promises enough funding, agrees to report as required, and meets the Administrator’s standards. If a plan is rejected, the State gets notice and a chance for a hearing. If a State fails to run the program as approved, the Administrator will notify the State, allow a hearing if asked, and may withdraw approval if the State does not fix problems within a reasonable time, not to exceed 90 days. Instructional materials on integrated pest management must be made available on request, but no one can be required to take that instruction or prove they know those techniques. Regulations may not force private applicators to keep records or file reports. The Administrator must have separate standards for commercial and private applicators.
Full Legal Text
Agriculture — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
7 U.S.C. § 136i
Title 7 — Agriculture
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73