Showing posts with label EPA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label EPA. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

PFOA Still Unregulated 11 Years Later

Despite lawsuits and health studies, the controversial manufacturing substance C8 remains unregulated by the US Environmental Protection Agency. Cincinnati attorney Rob Bilott is urging the agency to take swift action in light of recent findings from the C8 Science Panel.

Eleven years ago, C8, also known as PFOA or perfluorooctanoic acid, was detected in area water supplies. At that time, Bilott notified the EPA of the presence of the “previously undisclosed threat to human health” – C8 contamination that had been making its way from DuPont Washington Works and into local drinking water for decades.

Since that time, the chemical compound, which is used to make Teflon and thousands of other consumer applications, has been the subject of litigation in four states. A class action lawsuit filed by Bilott on the part of local water consumers developed into a settlement intended to resolve the debate over potential human health outcomes. The case involved the consumers of several public water supplies, including Lubeck and Mason County, West Virginia and Belpre, Pomeroy, Tuppers Plains and Little Hocking, Ohio.

As a result of the settlement agreement, nearly 70,000 people were recruited to participate in the C8 Health Project and to have their data analyzed by the C8 Science Panel. Recently, the panel announced some of their conclusions – linking the manmade substance to pregnancy-induced hypertension, ulcerative colitis, thyroid disease, testicular cancer and kidney cancer – diseases Bilott says have impacted thousands of Mid Ohio Valley residents. The panel’s final results are expected before the end of October.   

Despite the collection of data and the passage of time, the EPA has yet to release any regulations or guidelines for chronic human exposures to C8 in drinking water. In 2009, the agency issued an informal, provisional health advisory for human short-term exposure, but Bilott says the agency has “never issued any regulatory or otherwise enforceable limits on long-term exposure to PFOA in drinking water”.

Bilott says he is concerned because he recently discovered EPA intends to delay actual regulatory activity until 2025 – or 24 years after he first requested action on the part of his Mid Ohio Valley clients.

“On behalf of our individual resident clients who have been and/or continue to be exposed to PFOA in their residential drinking water, we again urge US EPA to take action more quickly to release appropriate limits and guidelines for PFOA in drinking water applicable to long-term, chronic exposures, particularly given the recent data confirming thousands of cases of serious human disease linked to such exposures among impacted residential communities,” Bilott said in an Aug. 20 letter to EPA. “Twenty four years is far too long to ask our clients to wait.”

The EPA has committed to a nationwide monitoring program involving C8 and other substances of concern from 2013 to 2015, but regulatory limits seem little more than a distant possibility.  Through a public information request, Bilott uncovered the agency’s intent to delay the process with data analysis scheduled for 2016 – 2017 and a regulatory determination to be proposed in 2020 – 2023 and finalized 2022 – 2025. The information was part of an email exchange from the office of the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources to US EPA staff in response to an article by Ken Ward of the Charleston Gazette.    

“It seems clear the EPA should be acting expeditiously,” said David Altman, attorney for the Little Hocking Water Association – whose water supplies measured the greatest amount of C8 contamination. In a separate action, the water association has filed a federal suit against DuPont over the corruption of their natural resources - their aquifer and wellfield. That case is ongoing.

Altman said the EPA should regulate C8, but he cautioned “be careful what you wish for” because a hasty decision could be detrimental. He does not want to see a “rush to [arrive at] a number that doesn’t protect people.”

Saturday, November 7, 2009

EPA Campaign Features DuPont Driver

The US Environmental Protection Agency has teamed up with DuPont-sponsored NASCAR driver Jeff Gordon in the race to clean air.

This week the federal agency released a training DVD featuring Gordon to help auto body shops comply with a rule reducing air pollution from vehicle painting.

"This type of pollution, called toxic air emissions, can cause smog, cancer or other serious health effects," according to the EPA.

When asked, the agency provided this explanation as to why the DuPont racer was named as their spokesperson for the clean air campaign.

"EPA rule to reduce air toxics emissions from auto stripping and painting will affect hundreds of auto body shops that have not previously been subject to a federal air quality regulation. In an effort to improve compliance with the rule, we teamed up with several partners, including paint manufacturers, to educate paint shop owners and employees about the new requirements and offer training. The DVD is part of that outreach and training effort," said a statement provided by Dave Ryan, EPA Washington Headquarters Press Officer.

DuPont Automotive Systems is the largest global manufacturer of auto paint and high performance finishes. The company was not named in the press announcement regarding Gordon's involvement and the EPA seemed unable or unwilling to explain who made the decision to use him for the campaign.

"The decision to ask Jeff Gordon to host the training video did not rest on a single person, it was a group effort. We are working with several paint manufacturers (and other industry partners) as part of the overall Collision Repair Campaign. The goal of the campaign is to minimize the impact car painting has on air quality and to protect the health of those doing the work. We went with a NASCAR theme to help get the attention of autobody shops," Ryan said.

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Will EPA Finish What They Started?

Residents of the Mid Ohio Valley have been waiting for more than five years for the Environmental Protection Agency to complete a risk assessment on perfluorooctanoic acid, or C8. Now, a prominent attorney says they may have to wait forever.

Rob Bilott, who represented plaintiffs in the class action lawsuit against DuPont over local water supplies contaminated with C8, recently sent a letter to the EPA and the Agency for Toxic Substance and Disease Registry, urging them not to delay any further release of information.

Bilott says the agencies are under pressure to drop their work on the manmade chemical, which has been the target of a voluntary global phaseout agreement with industry initiated by EPA.

It has been two years since the EPA released any new information about its risk assessment, despite the fact that new scientific data is becoming available.

Bilott said the “new studies should be evaluated to determine whether present agency conclusions warrant modification, but the present conclusions should not be held by the agencies while researchers continue their work.”

Wednesday, April 30, 2008

GAO Blames White House for Delay in Regulatory Action on PFOA

The Government Accountability Office claims that the White House is holding up the EPA when it comes to regulatory action on PFOA – or C8 – a manufacturing substance used to make Teflon and thousands of other consumer products.

The recent report specifically blames the EPA's lack of productivity on the management decision to suspend activity pending the outcome of additional scientific studies. The GAO says that in the 1990s the EPA's general approach was to use the best science available as the basis for assessment. But, the administration's new means of assessing chemicals for harm is delaying the completion of the process - sometimes for years.

The PFOA risk assessment is used by the GAO as one prime example of such a delay. The agency says the EPA should complete chemical reviews within a reasonable amount of time and minimize the need for conducting several levels of rework.

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Report Calls for Innovation in Toxicity Testing

This is interesting. Even the feds believe there are more efficient ways to test the toxicity of chemicals for humans.
http://www8.nationalacademies.org/onpinews/newsitem.aspx?RecordID=11970