Clean Water Action

Login | Register
Explore Your Community | Discover the Issues
  • Issues
    • Clean Water's Mission
    • Protecting America's Water
    • Global Warming and a New Energy Economy
    • Healthy, Safer Families and Communities
    • Making Democracy Work
  • States
    • California
    • Colorado
    • Connecticut
    • DC
    • Delaware
    • Florida
    • Maryland
    • Massachusetts
    • Michigan
    • Minnesota
    • New Hampshire
    • New Jersey
    • Pennsylvania
    • Rhode Island
    • Texas
    • Virginia
    • National
  • About Us
    • Finances & Effectiveness
    • Offices
    • Board & Officers
    • Clean Water People
    • Senior Staff
    • Privacy Policy
    • Contact Us
  • Canvass
  • Jobs
    • Jobs & Internships
    • Apply for a canvass job
  • Media Center
    • Press Releases
    • Media Contacts
  • Publications
    • 2011 Congressional Scorecard
    • Newsletters
    • Reports, Summaries
    • Factsheets
  • Supporter Center
    • 2012 National Member Poll
    • Subscription Maintenance
  • Take Action
    • National Actions
    • Actions by State
    • Join the Clean Water Movement
  • Join or Give
    • Donate Now
    • Make a Monthly Gift
    • Ways to Give
    • Why Your Support Matters
    • About Your Membership
    • Get the CleanWater Card
  • Blog
    • Subscribe
 

Four Decades

40 Years of Action for Clean Water

Chemical Policy Reform Moves Forward

California Currents|Online, Summer 2009

The Department of Toxic Substance Control (DTSC) is fast tracking implementation of two bills passed by the state Legislature in 2008 -- AB 1879 (Feuer) and SB 509 (Simitian) -- with the goal of establishing related regulations this year. Clean Water Action is taking a lead role, along with our allies in the CHANGE (Californians for a Healthy and Green Economy) coalition, in DTSC's public stakeholder process. Our goal is to ensure that the regulations will be developed and enforced in a way that truly protects the environment and human health and drives the development of "green" chemicals.

AB 1879 breaks new ground by providing the DTSC the authority to regulate chemicals in products, while SB 509 establishes a publicly accessible clearinghouse of information on chemicals used in the products.

Clean Water Action staff and our CHANGE allies developed a series of guidelines to ensure that DTSC gather necessary data on chemical use and hazard traits, identify chemicals of concern, develop appropriate regulations, and prioritize which regulatory actions must happen first. The guidelines require DTSC and other state agencies to:

  • Assess chemicals and their alternatives based on their relative hazards
    Ensure that environmental and health impacts information is not given trade secret protection, but instead is made available to the public
  • Require a mandatory set of reliable, publicly available data for all chemicals in commerce
    Reverse the burden of proof so that companies demonstrate their products are safe instead of the government and the public having to prove harm after chemicals enter the marketplace
  • Avoid "paralysis by analysis." A lack of complete information must not be used as a justification for further delay when sufficient information exists for making decisions that protect the public and the environment  
  • Consider the impacts of chemical use on workers, who are exposed at higher levels and longer periods of time than the general public

Learn more about DTSC's development of implementation strategies.

 

In this issue of California Currents|Online:

Chemical Policy Reform Moves Forward
The Department of Toxic Substance Control (DTSC) is fast tracking implementation of two bills passed by the state Legislature in 2008 -- AB 1879 (Feuer) and SB 509 (Simitian) -- with the goal of establishing related regulations this year. Clean Water Action is taking a lead role, along with our allies in the CHANGE (Californians for a Healthy and Green Economy) coalition, in DTSC's public stakeholder process. Our goal is to ensure that the regulations will be developed and enforced in a way that truly protects the environment and human health and drives the development of "green" chemicals.

Reuse A Key To Solving California's Water Shortage
A rainy February and March have slightly reduced the severity of this year's water shortage, but a third straight below normal water year has still sparked calls for water conservation around the state.

Is this yet another sign of climate change, or is it just one of the dry spells to which our state is prone? Whichever is the correct response, it makes sense for all of us to begin thinking differently about the ways in which we use and misuse water.

Support Ban On Foam Take-Out Containers
Polystrene is the second most common type of beach debris in California and it comprises 15% of street litter. Styrene, a chemical in PS, is a known animal carcinogen, and a human neurotoxin. It migrates easily into food and beverages when foam containers are heated or come into contact with acids (like lemon juice) and fats or oils. A study of human fat tissue by the US EPA in 1982 found that all Americans have Styrene in their bodies.

Stimulus Money Wisely
The Federal Economic Recovery and Reinvestment Act was signed into law by President Obama on February 17 of this year, but Clean Water Action has been working with the Department of Public Health (DPH) and the State Water Board (Board) since last November to establish criteria under which more than $400 million of stimulus funding for water projects should be spent.

Want To Solve Marine Debris? Change the 3Rs to the 3Ps
Clean Water Action is working to resolve the growing problem of marine debris by preventing litter at the source. Thanks to the plethora of waste from our "throw away" society, there is a garbage patch in the Northwest Gyre of the Pacific Ocean estimated to be twice the size of Texas.

Getting the Lead Out
Clean Water Action is supporting an important bill to protect our waterways from lead contamination. SB 757 (Pavley) will ban the manufacture, use, and distribution of lead wheel weights in cars.

For California Woman, Protecting A River Can Cost You A Job
Heather Wylie traded her job for a river. And, given the choice, she'd do it again.

During the summer of 2008, Wylie joined a handful of protestors for a canoe and kayak trip down the LA River, earning the wrath of her employers and the attention of a nation. Why? At the time, Wylie was a biologist with the US Army Corps of Engineers. The agency had just declared the LA River as not navigable--a designation that put the watershed at risk and would have set a.dangerous precedent. Wylie and her compatriots were making their voyage to prove the Army Corps wrong. If their fleet could make the journey, they reasoned, then the LA River must be in-fact navigable, a critical first step in retaining Clean Water Act safeguards for the LA River system.

Restoring the Clean Water Act Must Top Congress' Agenda
Restoring the ability of the Clean Water Act to protect water resources must top Congress' water agenda. Supreme Court and agency decisions put at risk Clean Water Act protections for headwater, intermittent and ephemeral streams that supply drinking water systems that serve more than 110 million Americans. In total, 59 percent of the nation's waterways and millions of acres of wetlands are currently at risk.

What You Won't See In Those 'Clean Coal' Ads: Dirty Air, A Wall of Sludge, Poisoned Rivers
Surely you've seen the ads. They are scattered around the internet and splashed across our newspapers and magazines. Their commercials interrupt our favorite television shows and invade our local radio station's airspace. Yes, the ads are everywhere. But that doesn't make them true.

No PR campaign, no matter how well executed, can make coal clean. It's simply not possible.

Advocates for "clean" coal argue that technology exists-almost-that will allow coal-fired power plants to capture their carbon emissions and store the climate-changing gas deep under ground. Technically, this is true. Realistically, this would be extremely expensive, and wouldn't even begin to address most of the impacts felt by water. From mines to power plants, the process of wresting energy from coal is dirty and unhealthy for our waters, our communities and ourselves.

How Safe is Your Bath Tub?
Children's bubble baths should be clean, safe and fun. But No More Toxic Tub, a report published in March 2009 by the Campaign for Safe Cosmetics in partnership with Clean Water Action and other organizations, found contaminants and other hazardous ingredients in numerous popular shampoos, soaps and body care products marketed to babies and children.

PDF iconGet this issue of California Clean Water Currents as a PDF (pdf, 622 kb)

Get Adobe Reader badge You will need to have the Adobe Acrobat Reader properly installed to view PDF documents. You can get it free from Adobe.

Publication Date: 
04/03/2009
  • Login or register to post comments
  • Printer-friendly version
Tags:
  • California
  • environmental health
  • Sustainer Letter
  • toxics
  • water
Issues | States | About Us | Canvass | Jobs | Media Center | Publications | Supporter Center | Take Action | Join or Give | Search