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New CPR White Paper: What FDA, EPA, and OSHA Should do about BPA

Today CPR releases Protecting the Public from BPA: An Action Plan for Federal Agencies (press release), outlining steps the FDA, EPA, and OSHA can take to use existing authorities to warn the public about the dangers of the chemical, and prepare longer-term regulatory controls. The paper was written by CPR Member Scholars Tom McGarity, Noah Sachs, and Rena Steinzor, and Senior Policy Analyst Matthew Shudtz and myself.

Bisphenol A (BPA) makes me want to cry.  Not in the sad or mournful way, but in the “I want to kick and scream on the floor and throw a tantrum like my toddler” kind of way.   I didn’t always feel this way.  These feelings concerning BPA (an endocrine-disrupting chemical added to plastics to increase clarity and durability, and used in myriad other sources such as can linings, kitchen appliances, and water bottles) began to arise when I started working with CPR Member Scholars and fellow staff on BPA policy. The more I learned about BPA, the more I felt like its presence in my life was like mosquitoes in D.C.—a summer BBQ killjoy.

Then I became a parent, and the frustration and concern escalated, because the more I found out about BPA, the more I recognized that the industries using it did not truly understand how it affected my health, but more importantly, the health of my child.  Even worse, the new approaches to testing its “safety” and potential adverse health effects were churning out new evidence of its dangers.  Evidence that did not fit the traditional “risk assessment” model used by health and safety regulators and thus spurred no change in protective standards.

Left to my own devices, I began buying “BPA-Free” containers and attempting to discern what in my kitchen and life might contain BPA.  The more I searched for some basic information about what kind of plastic a kitchen appliance used or whether a can contained a BPA lining, the more frustrated I became.  The information simply wasn’t there.  There was no “BPA” label on plastic or cans containing BPA linings.  Even worse, as time went on, more information was surfacing in the media and scientific communities about how “BPA-Free” didn’t really offer true health assurances, because many common substitutes for BPA are even less understood and potentially just as dangerous. 

It seemed the only option I had as a new mother was to attempt to ban plastic from my life, stop buying most canned goods, avoid store receipts, make coffee in an all-metal-and-glass french press and baby food in my glass blender, use glass baby bottles, store everything food-related in glass containers, and start hand-washing what plastic remained an unavoidable necessity.  Grocery store trips involved time-consuming scrutinizing of containers and ingredients, because without clear or reliable indications of what containers and foods potentially contained BPA, I was forced to use inaccurate powers of observation and guesswork.

It has been exhausting and often futile, because I still know that BPA lurks in unmarked items and even transfers onto things like money and skin. No matter how driven or research-savvy a parent may be (believe me, I have tested these boundaries and received many a strange looks at the grocery store as I inspect my food containers like historical artifacts), there simply isn’t enough time in the day or access to the right information for the normal mom or dad to be able to make the choice to protect their children from BPA. 

Nor should they have to.  They should be able to trust that toys will provide entertainment and education, food will provide nourishment and appease grumbling tummies, and water will satisfy thirst and help keep little faces and hands clean. True, a parent’s job also requires a certain amount of vetting and hazard prevention, but on the whole a parent needs to be able to make his or her safety decisions efficiently and trust the information on which she or he relies.  Parents need a support system in the government that is meant to protect the health and safety of all of those that depend on it. 

In Protecting the Public from BPA:  An Action Plan for Federal Agencies, we encourage the federal agencies best suited to tackle this problem to take a series of shorter and longer term steps to protect the public. They must fulfill the critical governmental role of supporting parents and all of the public in achieving a safe and healthy environment—one free of mothers’ BPA-induced meltdowns.

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Aimee Simpson | January 26, 2012

New CPR White Paper: What FDA, EPA, and OSHA Should do about BPA

Today CPR releases Protecting the Public from BPA: An Action Plan for Federal Agencies (press release), outlining steps the FDA, EPA, and OSHA can take to use existing authorities to warn the public about the dangers of the chemical, and prepare longer-term regulatory controls. The paper was written by CPR Member Scholars Tom McGarity, Noah […]

Rena Steinzor | January 25, 2012

The Age of Greed: Science Drowned by Politics

Last week, a reporter asked me, “How’s science doing these days?,” “Science” is an impossibly big category, of course, but the answer was easy: “Badly,” I said. Exhibit number one is climate change. The frightening truth is that no fewer than 84 percent of scientists in this country surveyed by Pew say that the earth […]

Catherine O'Neill | January 24, 2012

Three Chirps for Risk Reduction

A new study underscores the wisdom of reducing the risks of mercury and other pollutants rather than relying on risk avoidance measures such as fish consumption advisories.  Mercury’s adverse effects are not limited to human health; its harms are felt throughout our ecosystems.  According to this most recent study, released today by the Biodiversity Research […]

| January 20, 2012

Reclaiming Global Environmental Leadership

For more than a century, the United States took the lead in organizing responses to international environmental problems.  The long list of environmental agreements spearheaded by the United States extends from early treaties with Canada and Mexico on boundary waters and migratory birds to global agreements restricting trade in endangered species and protecting against ozone […]

Alice Kaswan | January 19, 2012

Waiting for the GHG New Source Performance Standards: A Good Start, But Will EPA’s Power Plant Controls Make a Difference?

The Clean Air Act’s potential to address the nation’s greenhouse gas emissions is slowly being unveiled.  EPA’s expected announcement of highly-anticipated new source performance standards for power plants by the end of January will reveal whether the agency has the political will to use its existing authority to re-shape the United States’ dependence upon high-carbon […]

Rena Steinzor | January 17, 2012

Jobs Council’s Shortsighted Report Calls for Gumming up Public Protections

A panel of business leaders comprising President Obama’s Council on Jobs and Competitiveness today published a “Road Map to Renewal,” including proposals for expanded oil and gas drilling, and, of particular interest, five pages of policy recommendations related to regulation. Among them were procedural proposals aimed at further hamstringing regulatory agencies in their effort to […]

Holly Doremus | January 14, 2012

Where Does NOAA Belong?

Cross-posted from Legal Planet. Clearly I need to slow down Rick’s internet connection to get him to stop scooping me. Rick reported earlier that the President has floated a proposal to reorganize the Commerce Department and related agencies which would apparently include moving NOAA (all of NOAA, according to OMB’s Jeffrey Zeints, not just its ESA […]

Holly Doremus | January 11, 2012

Can You Stand to Hear More About Sackett?

Cross-posted from Legal Planet. As usual, I’m behind Rick on commenting on the latest Supreme Court development. (In my defense, it is the first day of classes, although I know that’s not much of an excuse.) Unlike Rick, I didn’t attend the oral argument (see lame excuse above), but having read the transcript I agree […]

Matt Shudtz | January 10, 2012

GAO Releases New Report on IRIS

On Monday, GAO released its latest installment in what has become a somewhat regular series of reports on EPA’s Integrated Risk Information System (IRIS) program.  In 2008, GAO warned that “the IRIS database was at serious risk of becoming obsolete because the agency had not been able to keep its existing assessments current, decrease its […]