MARCH 10, 2015
WASHINGTON, D.C.
A bipartisan pair of senators introduced legislation on
Tuesday that would overhaul U.S. chemical regulations.
The bill, from Sens. David Vitter (R-La.) and Tom Udall
(D-N.M.), is called the Frank R. Lautenberg Chemical Safety for the 21st
Century Act -- named after the late New Jersey senator who had long championed
efforts to reform chemical safety laws. It is meant to update the current law
governing chemicals, the 39-year-old Toxic Substances Control Act.
The senators have been working on the legislation for two
years. Lautenberg and Vitter introduced their own reform legislation in May 2013, and after Lautenberg's
death a month later, Udall took
up the issue. The bill has 16 co-sponsors -- eight Democrats and eight
Republicans.
The old law has been criticized for years for its failures, which include
allowing companies to use thousands of chemicals in products without first
demonstrating safety. In many cases, current law doesn't require companies to
reveal what's in their products.
The new bill would update that law, requiring safety testing
for new chemicals, allowing the Environmental Protection Agency more purview in
reviewing the health and safety of chemicals, requiring chemicals to meet
tougher standards to protect vulnerable populations such as children and pregnant
women, and directing EPA to designate high-priority chemicals for evaluation.
Vitter argued in a statement that the bill would
"protect our future generations while promoting innovation and growth
within our economy." He added: "Our legislation is a solid, balanced,
bipartisan compromise that will provide the necessary reforms to our nation’s
most important chemical safety law."
Udall, in a statement, called the bill "the best
opportunity to strengthen safeguards against dangerous chemicals and dramatically
improve existing law, while allowing innovation in the industry."
The bill was praised by some in the environmental community,
including the Environmental Defense Fund, whose president, Fred Krupp, called
the bill "the best chance in a generation for us to move past an obsolete
and badly broken law to provide strong protections for all Americans."
But others criticized the bill as not going far enough. Sen.
Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.), the ranking Democrat on the Environment and Public
Works Committee, argued that the new legislation is too weak, and would
undermine states that have set tougher laws than the federal rules. While the
law would grandfather in existing, tougher state laws, the federal law would
take precedent once the measure takes effect.
"Legal experts who have
examined the Udall-Vitter-Inhofe toxics bill at my request tell me this bill is
worse than current law," said Boxer in a statement. "This means there
will be fewer protections from the most dangerous chemicals for communities and
families."
Andy Igrejas, director of the Safer Chemicals, Healthy
Families coalition, said the bill has improved from previous versions, but
still doesn't go far enough. "In its current form it would not make a big
dent in the problem of toxic chemical exposure and would even do some harm by
restraining state governments," said Igrejas. "While Senators Vitter
and Udall have made some positive changes, the bill is not up to the important
task of protecting public health. We plan to work with senators from both
parties to make the needed improvements.”
The Senate Environment and Public Works Committee plans a
hearing on the legislation March 18.
Source: huffingtonpost.com