Indiana Administrative Code Title 357 - INDIANA PESTICIDE REVIEW BOARD

Here’s an enhanced summary of Title 357 IAC – Indiana Pesticide Review Board, specifically Article 1: Definition; Use of Pesticides:

🧭 Scope & Structure

Title 357 covers the regulatory framework governing pesticide definitions, distribution, application, and safety standards. All directives fall under Article 1 (Sections 0.5–1‑17)

📌 Key Provisions That Are ACTIVE

✅ Definitions (357 IAC 1‑0.5)

“Drift”: Movement through air during application, excluding post-application volatility, erosion, or soil particle drift 

“Lawn,” “Turf,” “School,” “Nontarget site,” “Notification registry,” etc., are clearly defined 

⚠️ Pesticide Drift Rule (357 IAC 1‑12‑2)

Prohibits pesticide application that allows drift causing harm to non-target areas 

🛡️ Restrictions on Distribution (357 IAC 1‑3‑2 / 1‑3‑3)

Restricted-use pesticides can only be distributed to certified users via registered dealers 

📏 Outdoor Lawn Applications (357 IAC 1‑5‑2 & 1‑5‑3)

Requires visible lawn markers at application time with specific wording and size.

Operators must provide a written notification to customers detailing brand, applicator ID, date/time, type of treatment, etc. 

🏫 Pesticide Use at Schools (357 IAC 1‑16‑1 to 1‑16‑8)

Purpose: minimize student exposure—requires certified applicators, locked storage, advance notifications to parents/guardians/staff, record-keeping, and use of least hazardous options 

📌 Notable Sections That Have Been EXPIRED/REPEALED

Many older rules have been removed:

Definitions of “Pest” (post-2008) and “Prescription-use pesticides” (pre-2002)

Lists of restricted-use pesticides

Civil penalty schedules

Pesticide consultants/technicians

Open burning regulations

Golf-course applicator licensing

Several water well and mosquito abatement rules

✅ Summary Table

SectionActive?Description
Definitions (1‑0.5)Key terms: drift, lawn, turf, school, etc.
Pesticide Drift (1‑12‑2)No off-target drift causing harm
Distribution RestrictionsOnly certified users via dealers
Outdoor Lawn ApplicationsMarkers & customer notices required
School ApplicationsCertified applicators, storage, notifications
Multiple other rules⚠️ RepealedOlder definitions, penalties, consultant regs

🧠 What This Means for You

If you're involved in applying or distributing pesticides in Indiana, you'll need to:

Understand drift liability and comply with definitions.

Ensure restricted-use products only go to certified users via licensed dealers.

Follow labeling: lawn markers and flyers for outdoor treatments.

For school grounds, ensure certified applicators, locked storage, advance notice, and minimal-hazard chemicals.

🔍 Next Steps

Let me know if you'd like to:

Drill into specific active rules (e.g., drift enforcement, school notifications).

Review any recent changes (e.g., LSA proposals like dicamba in 1‑17).

Understand enforcement mechanisms or penalties related to these rules.

 

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