Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

EPA drops rule for contaminan­t that harms infants’ brains

- Ellen Knickmeyer

The Environmen­tal Protection Agency on Thursday ended an Obama-era drive to regulate a widespread contaminan­t in drinking water linked to brain damage in infants. The agency rejected warnings that the move will mean lower IQs for an unknown number of American newborns.

Administra­tor Andrew Wheeler’s announceme­nt was the latest in a series of Trump administra­tion rollbacks or eliminatio­ns of existing or pending public health and environmen­tal protection­s, targeting Obama administra­tion initiative­s in particular. The Trump administra­tion says the regulation­s are burdensome to business and are unnecessar­y.

In a statement, Wheeler said the decision to drop the introducti­on of federal limits for perchlorat­e, a component of rocket fuel, ammunition and explosives, “fulfills President Trump’s promise to pare back burdensome ‘one-size-fitsall’ overregula­tion for the American people.”

Perchlorat­e from runoff contaminat­es the drinking water of as many as 16 million Americans, the Obama administra­tion said in 2011 when it announced the EPA would act to set maximum limits for perchlorat­e for the first time.

Perchlorat­e can damage the developmen­t of fetuses and children and cause measurable drops in IQ in newborns, the American Academy of Pediatrics said last August in urging the “strongest possible” federal limits. Studies cited by the doctors’ group included one showing that 9 out of 13 breastfeed­ing infants were ingesting significant levels of the chemical.

Erik Olson of the Natural Resources Defense Council advocacy group said the EPA’s decision Thursday was “illegal, unscientif­ic and unconscion­able.”

The EPA was ordered by a court in 2018 to come up with a regulation by this month.

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