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Pesticide Regulation "One Matter" Safeguards Spring Farming Production
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Spring management and sowing are in full swing, with agricultural supply safety serving as the cornerstone. Recently, the Municipal Agriculture and Rural Affairs Bureau, in collaboration with relevant departments, conducted a comprehensive inspection of agricultural supply stores at the grassroots level. Inspectors utilized mobile law enforcement applications and completed multiple checks—including business qualifications, product quality, labeling, and purchase-sale records—against the unified checklist, streamlining the process. This efficient scenario was made possible by the "one matter" reform in pesticide regulation pioneered by the Municipal Agriculture and Rural Affairs Bureau.

To address the long-standing pain points of "multiple inspections and repeated enforcement" in pesticide business regulation, the Municipal Agriculture and Rural Affairs Bureau took the lead this year by collaborating with the Municipal Market Supervision Administration, the Municipal Comprehensive Administrative Law Enforcement Bureau, and other departments to formulate the "Integrated Approach to Pesticide Business Regulation Implementation Plan." This initiative establishes a cross-departmental coordination mechanism. By integrating the entire process of approval, supervision, enforcement, and service, it promotes the "one comprehensive inspection" model, enabling information exchange and resource sharing among departments. As of now, five cross-departmental joint inspections have been conducted, five online pesticide business entities have been registered, and regulatory efficiency has significantly improved.

Focusing on the critical agricultural period of spring sowing and management, the Municipal Agriculture and Rural Affairs Bureau simultaneously launched the "Green Sword Grain Security" special enforcement campaign, intensifying inspections of agricultural supply operators and increasing the frequency of quality sampling tests for agricultural supplies. Illegal activities such as counterfeit and substandard products, unauthorized sales, and exaggerated labeling were severely cracked down on. Since March, over 40 law enforcement officers have been dispatched, inspecting 15 agricultural supply operators, creating a high-pressure environment of "detecting one case, investigating one case, and warning all.".

In addition, the Municipal Agriculture and Rural Affairs Bureau organized agricultural technicians and law enforcement personnel to visit farmland and agricultural supply stores through activities such as agricultural technology outreach. They distributed informational brochures, provided on-site consultations and Q&A sessions, and explained typical cases to educate agricultural supply businesses and farmers about regulations like the "Pesticide Administration Regulations." Practical knowledge was also shared, including techniques for identifying counterfeit agricultural supplies, standardized scientific pesticide use, and the recycling of pesticide packaging waste. Farmers were taught hands-on methods to detect and avoid counterfeit products, ensuring proper pesticide application, thereby enhancing grassroots compliance with laws and safe production standards.



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