Orlando Sentinel

President Trump’s EPA nominee has deep ties to industry

Dourson’s clients include Dow, Koch, Chevron Corp.

- By Michael Biesecker and Jeff Horwitz

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s nominee to oversee chemical safety at the Environmen­tal Protection Agency has for years accepted payments for criticizin­g studies that raised concerns about the safety of his clients’ products, according to a review of financial records and his published work by The Associated Press.

Michael Dourson’s nomination as head of EPA’s Office of Chemical Safety and Pollution Prevention was to be considered by a Senate committee Wednesday, but was postponed when the Senate adjourned early for the week. If confirmed, ethics experts said, Dourson’s past writings and the money paid to him and a nonprofit he founded could represent potential conflicts of interest.

Dourson’s past corporate clients include Dow Chemical Co., Koch Industries Inc. and Chevron Corp. His research has also been underwritt­en by industry trade and lobbying groups representi­ng the makers of plastics, pesticides, processed foods and cigarettes.

A toxicologi­st, Dourson worked at the EPA for more than a decade, leaving in 1994 as the manager at a lab that assessed the health risks of exposure to chemicals.

The following year, he founded Toxicology Excellence for Risk Assessment, a private toxicity evaluation nonprofit organizati­on that tests chemicals and produces reports on which chemicals are hazardous in what quantities.

Dourson’s views toward industry are consistent with others Trump has selected as top federal regulators. Among them is EPA Administra­tor Scott Pruitt, who in March overruled the findings of his agency’s own scientists to reverse an effort to ban chlorpyrif­os, one of the nation’s most widely used pesticides.

Dourson and his organizati­on previously worked under contract for Dow AgroScienc­es, the Dow subsidiary that makes chlorpyrif­os.

In three papers, Dourson and his colleagues pointed to what they said were flaws in peer-reviewed studies that linked delays in fetal developmen­t with even low levels of exposure to the pesticide, commonly sprayed on citrus fruits and apples.

In a 2005 paper on the topic, Dourson and his coauthors thanked Dow for its support over a number of years to study chlorpyrif­os’ toxicology and assess its risk and said that money in no way influenced their findings favoring the company’s position.

Dourson did not immediatel­y respond to emails or phone messages seeking comment.

Sheldon Krimsky, a Tufts University professor who studies ethics in science and medicine, said appointing Dourson to oversee EPA’s chemical safety programs is part of a broader effort to undermine federal regulation­s protecting public health.

“It is not even subtle,” said Krimsky, who reviewed Dourson’s recent published work. “He has chosen to be the voice of the chemical industry. His role as a scientist is simply the role of an industry-hired lawyer — only to give the best case for their client.”

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