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Big Win for Children’s Health in Second Circuit Risk Assessment Decision

In toxics regulation, environmental lawyers face an uphill battle when they challenge a risk assessment performed by a protector agency.  Courts review the agency’s risk assessment under a deferential “arbitrary and capricious” standard, and courts are reluctant to second-guess an agency’s calculation of the risks of a pesticide or other chemicals.

So it was a victory for both children’s health and sound science earlier this month when the Natural Resources Defense Council prevailed in its challenge of EPA’s flawed risk assessment for a commonly-used pesticide called dichlorvos. (NRDC v. EPA, 08-3771-ag, 2nd Cir. September 16, 2011).  The unanimous decision by the 3-judge panel is here.

The Second Circuit vacated a 2006 EPA order denying NRDC’s request to pull dichlorvos off the market.  The court held that EPA acted arbitrarily and capriciously in denying the request and that EPA had failed to carry out Congress’s clear mandate, in the 1996 Food Quality Protection Act (FQPA), to protect children’s health.  Now EPA must reconsider NRDC’s petition using better science and the correct statutory standard. 

Dichlorvos is an organophosphate pesticide that has been in use since 1948 in homes, restaurants, and commercial buildings.  It is a vapor-based pesticide, commonly used in pet collars and also sold on strips to attract aphids, mites, and other insects.  Vapor-based pesticides pose particular risks to children through inhalation exposure.  In the 1980s, EPA had considered pulling dichlorvos off the market because there was evidence that it was a carcinogen, but in 2000, the agency approved continued use.  That decision was based primarily on a single study involving only nine adult volunteers – and the study was paid for by the pesticide’s manufacturer.

In addition to the ridiculously small sample size, another problem with EPA’s risk assessment from a decade ago was that EPA never applied the 10-fold safety factor that Congress mandated in the FQPA for setting maximum pesticide “tolerances.”  Concerned about the special vulnerability of children to pesticide exposure, Congress had mandated that EPA implement this 10-fold safety factor “to take into account potential pre-and post-natal toxicity and completeness of data with respect to exposure and toxicity to infants and children.” 

In an opinion by Judge Rosemary Pooler, the Second Circuit found that EPA had ignored the 10-fold safety factor in relying on the study with adult volunteers, and therefore the allowable exposure levels were set too high.  The court also concluded that EPA had never provided an adequate reason for failing to implement the Congressional mandate.  EPA now must go back to the drawing board to assess the risks of dichlorvos again, and if it implements the 10-fold safety factor, the allowable uses of the pesticide could be substantially reduced.  EPA may also decide the pesticide poses unreasonable risk and pull it off the market.

This case is a big win for the public health, and it stands out because the court looked behind agency assurances of safety to engage in a close examination of the science (the scientific discussion spanned about 15 pages in the opinion).  This close scrutiny of agency safety claims is unusual in toxics regulation, and we should welcome courts holding EPA to its statutory mandates.  Most people don’t realize that when EPA regulates pesticides and chemicals, it relies overwhelmingly on manufacturer-supplied data.  The opportunities for bias and skewing results are obvious.   If we’re going to rely on this system (and there’s little choice under current statutes), both the EPA and the courts need to remain skeptical of manufacturer claims of safety.

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| September 26, 2011

Big Win for Children’s Health in Second Circuit Risk Assessment Decision

In toxics regulation, environmental lawyers face an uphill battle when they challenge a risk assessment performed by a protector agency.  Courts review the agency’s risk assessment under a deferential “arbitrary and capricious” standard, and courts are reluctant to second-guess an agency’s calculation of the risks of a pesticide or other chemicals. So it was a […]

Sidney A. Shapiro | September 23, 2011

The Regulatory Accountability Act: Putting the Screws to Health, Safety and Environmental Regulation

Rep. John Dingell (D-Michigan) once remarked, “I’ll let you write the substance … you let me write the procedure, and I’ll screw you every time.” Legislation introduced yesterday in the Senate by Sens. Rob Portman (R-Ohio), Mark Pryor (D-Ark.), and Susan Collins (R-Maine) and in the House by Reps. Lamar Smith (R-Texas) and Collin Peterson (D-Minnesota) […]

Ben Somberg | September 22, 2011

The TRAIN Act: A Radical Deregulatory Plan, Even Before the Amendments

Today the House is taking up debate on the “TRAIN Act”, a sweeping anti-regulatory bill that would serve to gum up the works at agencies that work to protect our health and the environment. The bill was bad to start with; then it became a true circus, with all sorts of regulation-blocking amendments being tacked […]

Rena Steinzor | September 21, 2011

Landry Calls Civil Servants the ‘Gestapo.’ Who Should Apologize?

In a dispiriting reminder that the more things change, the more they remain the same, Rep. Jeff Landry (R-La.) plucked a page from former Rep. Tom Delay’s playbook, denouncing federal civil servants as “the Gestapo” because when he popped into a local office unannounced and without an appointment last week, staff kept him waiting for […]

Ben Somberg | September 21, 2011

David Driesen Op-ed in Post-Standard Discusses Ozone Politics

CPR Member Scholar David Driesen has an op-ed in this morning’s Syracuse Post-Standard discussing the Administration’s punt on the smog standard, arguing it’s “unfortunate that President Obama has decided to embrace the Republican narrative about regulatory burdens instead of explaining the true causes of our economic woes.” Remembering the role of financial deregulation in our […]

Robert Verchick | September 21, 2011

Plan EJ 2014: Building a Foundation for Federal Environmental Justice Policy

Let’s stipulate: EPA’s withdrawal of a stronger ozone rule was the low point. And for many, a betrayal, a sedition, the nation’s biggest sell-out since Dylan went electric (or played China, take your pick). Still, Jackson’s EPA has accomplished a great deal. Last week the EPA showcased new policy devoted to one issue with which Jackson […]

Peter T. Jenkins | September 20, 2011

Sneak Attack Against Regulation of Dangerous Snakes Countered in House of Representatives

Guest blogger Peter T. Jenkins is a lawyer and consultant working with the National Environmental Coalition on Invasive Species (NECIS), committed to preventing further harm from invasive, non-native plants and animals. He is Executive Director of the Center for Invasive Species Prevention (CISP). If the federal government cannot regulate huge constrictor snakes that have already […]

Rena Steinzor | September 19, 2011

CPR Seeks Executive Director

I regret to report that CPR is losing its outstanding executive director, Shana Jones.  Shana’s tenure has produced a true CPR success story, when the organization stabilized on the funding front and its staff began steady growth.  When Shana joined us, CPR staff was half its current size.  In great measure because of her steady […]

David Driesen | September 14, 2011

The Ozone Standard as Presidential Policy: Some Concerns

Cross-posted from RegBlog. As Stuart Shapiro recently pointed out in a RegBlog post, President Obama himself made the decision a week ago to withdraw the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA’s) ozone National Ambient Air Quality Standard (NAAQS). Presidents have occasionally acted to resolve disputes between the White House Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) and […]