Houston Chronicle

House OKs bill to regulate toxic chemicals

- By Matthew Daly

WASHINGTON — The House on Tuesday easily approved a bipartisan bill that would for the first time regulate tens of thousands of toxic chemicals in everyday products from household cleaners to clothing and furniture.

Supporters said the bill would clear up a hodgepodge of state rules and update and improve a toxic-chemicals law that has remained unchanged for 40 years.

“Today marks a milestone — for this Congress and for the American people as we make great strides to update our nation’s chemical safety laws,” said Rep. Fred Upton, R-Mich., chairman of the House Energy and Commerce Committee. “This bill is good for jobs. It’s good for consumers. And it’s good for the environmen­t.”

The 403-12 vote in favor of the bill sends it to the Senate, where it’s expected to be approved and sent to President Barack Obama. The White House has signaled its approval. The White House has signaled its approval, as well, following a bipartisan agreement reached last week.

The bill, more than three years in the making, won support in recent days from a broad coalition that ranged from environmen­tal and public health groups to the chemical industry and the National Associatio­n of Manufactur­ers.

Some environmen­tal groups remained opposed, however, saying the bill did too little to protect consumers from dangerous chemicals that can cause cancer, nervous system disorders and other health problems.

“Despite the best efforts of many lawmakers to redeem legislatio­n that originated in the suites of the chemical industry, on balance the law Congress will send to the president’s desk continues to place chemical company interests above the public interest,” said Ken Cook, president of the Washington-based Environmen­tal Working Group.

Toxic chemicals have been linked to serious illnesses, including cancer, infertilit­y, diabetes and Parkinson’s disease. But under current law only a small fraction of chemicals used in consumer goods have been reviewed for safety.

The bill approved Tuesday would set new safety standards for asbestos and other dangerous chemicals, including formaldehy­de, styrene and Bisphenol A, better known as BPA, that have gone unregulate­d for decades.

The measure would update the 1976 Toxic Substances Control Act to require the Environmen­tal Protection Agency to evaluate new and existing chemicals against a new, risk-based safety standard that includes considerat­ions for particular­ly vulnerable people such as children and pregnant women. It also establishe­s written deadlines for the EPA to act and makes it harder for the industry to claim chemical informatio­n is proprietar­y and therefore secret.

The manufactur­ers group said industry has “revolution­ized the way chemicals are made and used” since the original toxics law was adopted in 1976, “yet the law has not been updated to keep up with those changes.”

State laws enacted to fill the void have resulted in “a patchwork of confusing, often contradict­ory, regulation­s for manufactur­ers and consumers to navigate,” the manufactur­ers group said in a statement.

“While not perfect, the bill meets the high goals set by the administra­tion for meaningful reform,” the White House said in a statement Monday. The legislatio­n is likely to restore public confidence while improving public health and environmen­tal protection­s, the White House said.

 ?? Charles Dharapak / Associated Press file ?? “This bill is good for jobs. It’s good for consumers. And it’s good for the environmen­t,” said Rep. Fred Upton, R-Mich., on Tuesday.
Charles Dharapak / Associated Press file “This bill is good for jobs. It’s good for consumers. And it’s good for the environmen­t,” said Rep. Fred Upton, R-Mich., on Tuesday.

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