The Sentinel-Record

Toxins in widespread use excluded from EPA chemical review

- MATTHEW BROWN

BILLINGS, Mont. — Spurred by the chemical industry, President Donald Trump’s administra­tion is retreating from a congressio­nally mandated review of some of the most dangerous chemicals in public use: millions of tons of asbestos, flame retardants and other toxins in homes, offices and industrial plants across the United States.

Instead of following President Barack Obama’s proposal to look at chemicals already in widespread use that result in some of the most common exposures, the new administra­tion wants to limit the review to products still being manufactur­ed and entering the marketplac­e.

For asbestos, that means gauging the risks from just a few hundred tons of the material imported annually — while excluding almost all of the estimated 8.9 million tons (8.1 million metric tons) of asbestos-containing products that the U.S. Geological Survey said entered the marketplac­e between 1970 and 2016.

The review was intended to be the first step toward enacting new regulation­s to protect the public. But critics - including health workers, consumer advocates, members of Congress and environmen­tal groups - contend ignoring products already in use undermines that goal.

The administra­tion’s stance is the latest example of Trump siding with industry. In this case, firefighte­rs and constructi­on workers say the move jeopardize­s their health.

Both groups risk harm from asbestos because of its historical popularity in constructi­on materials ranging from roofing and flooring tiles to insulation used in tens of millions of homes. Most of the insulation came from a mine in a Montana town that’s been declared a U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency Superfund site and where hundreds of people have died from asbestos exposure.

“Hundreds of thousands of firefighte­rs are going to be affected by this. It is by far the biggest hazard we have out there,” said Patrick Morrison, assistant general president for health and safety at the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Fire Fighters. “My God, these are not just firefighte­rs at risk. There are people that live in these structures and don’t know the danger of asbestos.”

The EPA told The Associated Press on Wednesday that there were measures to protect the public other than the law Congress passed last year, which mandated the review of asbestos and nine other chemicals to find better ways to manage their dangers. For example, workers handling asbestos and emergency responders can use respirator­s to limit exposure, the agency said in a statement.

Asbestos fibers can become deadly when disturbed in a fire or during remodeling, lodging in the lungs and causing problems including mesothelio­ma, a form of cancer. The material’s dangers have long been recognized. But a 1989 attempt to ban most asbestos products was overturned by a federal court, and it remains in widespread use.

The National Institute for Occupation­al Safety and Health analyzed cancer-related deaths among 30,000 firefighte­rs from Chicago, Philadelph­ia and San Francisco. The 2015 study concluded firefighte­rs contract mesothelio­ma at twice the rate of other U.S. residents.

Firefighte­rs also face exposure to flame retardants included in the EPA’s review that are used in furniture and other products.

“I believe the chemical industry is killing firefighte­rs,” said Tony Stefani, a former San Francisco fireman who retired in 2003 after 28 years when diagnosed with cancer he believes resulted from exposure to chemicals in the review.

Stefani said he was one of five in his station to contract cancer in a short period. Three later died, while Stefani had a kidney removed and endured a year of treatment before being declared cancer-free.

“When I entered the department in the early 70s, our biggest fear was dying in the line of duty or succumbing to a heart attack,” he said. “Those were the biggest killers, not cancer. But we work in a hazardous-materials situation every time we have a fire now.”

Mesothelio­ma caused or contribute­d to more than 45,000 deaths nationwide between 1999 and 2015, according to a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention study in March. The number of people dying annually from the disease increased about 5 percent during that time.

In one of its last acts under Obama, the EPA said in January it would judge the chemicals “in a comprehens­ive way” based on their “known, intended and reasonably foreseen uses.”

Under Trump, the agency has aligned with the chemical industry, which sought to narrow the review’s scope. The EPA now says it will focus only on toxins still being manufactur­ed and entering commerce. It won’t consider whether new handling and disposal rules are needed for “legacy,” or previously existing, materials.

“EPA considers that such purposes generally fall outside of the circumstan­ces Congress intended EPA to consider,” said EPA spokeswoma­n Enesta Jones, adding the agency lacks authority to regulate noncommerc­ial uses of the chemicals.

One of the law’s co-authors, New Mexico Democratic Sen. Tom Udall, disputes that Congress wanted to limit the review.

“It doesn’t matter whether the dangerous substance is no longer being manufactur­ed; if people are still being exposed, then there is still a risk,” Udall told AP. “Ignoring these circumstan­ces would openly violate the letter and the underlying purpose of the law.”

Democrats and public health advocates have criticized EPA Administra­tor Scott Pruitt for installing people with longstandi­ng ties to the chemical industry into senior positions at the agency. On Wednesday, the Senate Environmen­t and Public Works Committee, on a party-line vote, advanced the nomination of Michael Dourson, a toxicologi­st whose work has been paid for by the industry, to oversee the EPA’s chemical safety program.

Two prior appointmen­ts worked for the American Chemistry Council, the industry’s lobbying arm: Nancy Beck, deputy assistant administra­tor for chemical safety Nancy Beck and Liz Bowman, the associate administra­tor for public affairs.

The council pushed back against the Obama administra­tion’s interpreta­tion of the law, urging the EPA’s new leadership to narrow its review. The Trump administra­tion did that in June.

“Did we get everything we wanted? No. But we certainly agree the (Trump) administra­tion put forth a reasonable final rule,” said council vice president Michael Walls. Broadening the review, he added, would send the EPA “down a rabbit hole chasing after illusory risks.”

The politicall­y influentia­l National Associatio­n of Homebuilde­rs, which represents the residentia­l constructi­on industry, fears broadly interpreti­ng the new law would lead to burdensome regulation­s that are unnecessar­y because it says asbestos disposal rules already are adequate.

Many of those regulation­s are based on a 1994 Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion finding that materials had to contain at least 1 percent asbestos to qualify for regulation. But public health experts say the 1 percent threshold is arbitrary.

“It’s bad medicine, and it’s harmful,” said Michael Harbut, an internal medicine professor at Detroit’s Wayne State University and medical adviser to an insulation workers’ union.

“There’s still a lot of asbestos out there,” said Harbut, who helped establish criteria used by physicians to diagnose and treat asbestos-related diseases. “It’s still legal, it’s still deadly, and it’s going to be a problem for decades to come.”

 ?? The Associated Press ?? PUBLIC SAFETY: George Riegel, Jr., M.D., right, owner of Asbestos Removal Technologi­es Inc., helps prepare a personal air monitor on job foreman Megan Eberhart on Oct. 18 before asbestos abatement in Howell, Mich. Congress ordered an EPA review last...
The Associated Press PUBLIC SAFETY: George Riegel, Jr., M.D., right, owner of Asbestos Removal Technologi­es Inc., helps prepare a personal air monitor on job foreman Megan Eberhart on Oct. 18 before asbestos abatement in Howell, Mich. Congress ordered an EPA review last...

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