A first-ever analysis of votes on state laws aimed at protecting the public from toxic chemicals found that 18 states have passed 71 chemical safety laws in the last eight years by an overwhelming margin with broad bipartisan support. According to the report released today, of more than 9,000 votes cast by state legislators, 73% of Republicans and 99% of Democrats favored stronger protection of children's health and the environment from dangerous chemicals, with equal support from governors of each party. The report found that the pace of state policymaking on chemicals has more than tripled in eight years.
Two national health-based coalitions, SAFER States and Safer Chemicals, Healthy Families, released the new report – Healthy States: Protecting Families from Toxic Chemicals While Congress Lags Behind. The report release marks the failure of the 111th Congress to pass pending legislation to overhaul the Toxic Substances Control Act of 1976 (TSCA) in the face of relentless, well-funded opposition from the chemical industry.
"The states are driven by the growing evidence of chemical harm, strong public outcry and the failure of Congress to act," said Mike Belliveau, report author and Executive Director of Environmental Health Strategy Center, which campaigned to pass nine chemical laws in the State of Maine, including a first-in-the-nation reform to broadly regulate chemicals in consumer products at the state level. "More states will pass more laws to restrict toxic chemicals until Congress fixes our broken federal safety system."
"The next Congress should recognize the urgent need and bipartisan support for chemical policy reform," said Andy Igrejas, Campaign Director of the Safer Chemicals Healthy Families coalition. "If the chemical industry wants a more predictable regulatory environment and restored consumer confidence, they should come to the table in support of meaningful, commonsense federal reform."
"The states will continue to respond to public demand for safer products that won't harm their family's health," said Sarah Doll, National Coordinator of SAFER States. "We expect to see legislation to restrict toxic chemicals in products proposed in as many as 25 states next year."
A growing body of new scientific research links toxic chemical exposures in early life to some of the most serious public health threats of our time, such as increased risks of breast and prostate cancer, infertility, and learning and developmental disabilities. A recent poll conducted by The Mellman Group found that 78% of Americans are seriously concerned about the threat to children's health from toxic chemicals in day-to-day life. Heeding the aggressive opposition of chemical industry lobbyists rather than the support of the American electorate, Congress failed to pass TSCA reform legislation three times in last six years.
The 111th Congress will soon come to a close without taking action on the currently pending TSCA reform legislation – H.R. 5820, the Toxic Chemicals Safety Act introduced by Reps. Bobby Rush (D-IL) and Henry Waxman (D-CA), and S. 3209, the Safe Chemicals Act of 2010, sponsored by Senator Frank Lautenberg (D-NJ).
Highlights of Findings from the Healthy States Report:
Quotes from the Report on State Chemical Policy Reform:
"Voting against this bill is like voting against brakes on a school bus," said Bob Sump, Washington State Representative (R), House floor speech on final passage of the Children's Safe Products Act, February 18, 2008
"As a cancer survivor, I know first-hand the physical, emotional and financial toll these deadly diseases can take on families across the state . . . I support the Kid-Safe Products Act because it will help prevent these devastating diseases — and that's good for our families and our pocketbooks." Meredith Strang Burgess, Maine State Representative (R), from a civic engagement mailer by the Alliance for a Clean and Healthy Maine, 2010
"I'm pleased the Connecticut Legislature has worked in a bipartisan way to pass laws that provide necessary and timely solutions to the problems of toxic chemicals in our daily environment." John McKinney, Republican Minority Leader, Connecticut State Senate, October 2010
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The Safer Chemicals, Healthy Families coalition represents more than 11 million individuals and includes parents, health professionals, advocates for people with learning and developmental disabilities, reproductive health advocates, environmentalists and businesses from across the nation. For more information visit our website at www.saferchemicals.org.