And if Congress and the chemical lobby have their way, none of that will change.
Because TSCA hasn't empowered the EPA to act for the last 40 years, 38 states began regulating dangerous chemicals, including BPA, formaldehyde, lead, mercury and toxic flame retardants. In many cases, these state rules have benefited people across the country, especially when national firms removed dangerous chemicals from their products.
But instead of nationalizing that trend, Congress is ignoring environmental, public health, worker safety, and environmental justice leaders who have championed chemical policy reform for decades. Instead, they chose to listen to the chemical lobbyists from Dow, DuPont, Exxon and their trade associations, like the American Chemistry Council (ACC).
Why? In the ACC's own words, the chemical lobby wants "predictability, consistency, and certainty." Translation: they wanted to stop states from restricting toxic chemicals.
Limiting stronger state regulation and keeping weak federal safety standards were the chemical lobby's twin priorities, and they became the "new" TSCA. Instead of the long overdue reform that is needed, we all got something worse.
As University of Maryland Law Professor and a Member Scholar of the Center for Progressive Reform (CPR) Rena Steinzor said, this bill will "undermine public health and environmental protections for many years to come."
Some of the reasons for that are:
- The rollback of most states' authority to take more protective action than EPA.
- The weak safety standard that continues to balance public health against economic impacts (cost-benefit-analysis).
- Allowing the chemical industry to choose up to half of the meager 40 chemicals that EPA may prioritize over the next 3.5 years.
- Making it easier for companies to import products that contain dangerous chemicals.
- Inadequate funding for the EPA.
Of course, the chemical lobby also opposed the REACH program, which is why they also favor trade agreements such as the pending Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP), which โ if approved by Congress โ would further undermine the integrity of environmental laws and treaties.
In the past, Republicans like Senators Stafford (R-VT) and Chafee (R-RI) championed the right of states to adopt more protective safety standards. Today, however, there were no Republican lawmakers calling for stronger legislation.
Instead, the stalwarts for safety included Senators Boxer (D-CA), Markey (D-MA) and Sanders (I-VT) and Representatives Pallone (D-NJ) and Tonko (D-NY) in the House.
Despite Congress's failure to act responsibly, President Obama can still veto this hijacking of public health. He has the power to send this law back to Congress and demand true reform โ so now is the time to let him know we're watching.
Give the White House a call and urge President Obama to veto this TSCA bill (H.R. 2576) today: (202) 456-1414.
Comment: More of the same...business as usual! Congress has neglected the problem of dangerous chemicals in consumer products for decades, to the great benefit of chemical industry profits. More than 80,000 synthetic chemicals are used in the U.S. - only 200 have been tested under the Toxic Substances Control Act of 1976. We are all guinea pigs in a vast experiment of the chemical alteration of our environment. Hope you are enjoying your daily chemical cocktails because Congress won't do a thing about it!