Farmers Should Be Using These Hazmat Agricultural Exceptions
Several materials that are commonly used in farming and agricultural operations are considered hazardous materials under the Hazardous Materials Regulations (HMR). Fortunately for farmers, the HMR includes exceptions specific to agricultural operations, which provide less stringent regulatory requirements if certain conditions are met.
Keep in mind that even if an exception applies, these materials are still hazardous and appropriate safety precautions should always be observed.
Who is considered a farmer?
The HMR defines a farmer as “a person engaged in the production or raising of crops, poultry, or livestock”. This definition isn’t limited to only people, because the HMR includes the terms “individual, corporation, company, association, firm, partnership, and society” in its definition if a person.
Transporting hazmat between fields on local roads
Farmers transporting agricultural products, other than Class 2 gases, between fields of the same farm using local roads are exempt from the requirements of the HMR under the following conditions:
- You are a farmer who is an intrastate private motor carrier, and
- The movement of the agricultural product conforms to requirements of the state in which it is transported and is specifically authorized by a state statute or regulation in effect before October 1, 1998.
Transporting Class 2 gasses between fields on local roads
Farmers transporting Class 2 agricultural products, such as Anhydrous Ammonia, between fields of the same farm using local roads are only eligible for exemption from the emergency response information and hazmat training requirements of the HMR. All other requirements apply. This exception applies if:
- You are a farmer who is an intrastate private motor carrier, and
- The movement of the agricultural product conforms to requirements of the state in which it is transported and is specifically authorized by a state statute or regulation in effect before October 1, 1998.
150-mile agriculture exception
Farmers transporting agricultural products to or from a farm, within 150 miles, are excepted from emergency response information, hazmat training requirements, and packaging requirements if:
- You are a farmer who is an intrastate private motor carrier,
- The total amount of agricultural product transported on a single vehicle does not exceed:
- 16,094 lbs. of ammonium nitrate fertilizer properly classed as Division 5.1, Packaging Group III, in a bulk packaging.
- 502 gallons for liquids or gases, or 5,070 lbs. for solids, of any other agricultural product,
- The movement and packaging of the agricultural product conforms to requirements of the state in which it is transported and is authorized by a state statute or regulation in effect before October 1, 1998, and
- Each person having any responsibility for transporting the agricultural product or preparing it for shipment has been instructed in the applicable requirements of the HMR.
Security plan exception
Farmers who generate less than $500,000 annually in gross receipts from the sale of agricultural commodities or products are exempt from the security plan requirements of 49 CFR 172.800(b) if your transportation activities are:
- Conducted by highway or rail,
- In direct support of their farming operations, and
- Conducted within a 150-mile radius of those operations.
Key to remember: The agricultural exceptions apply only if you meet the definition of a farmer, and you meet the conditions of the exception.