Stories in this issue:
California Clean Water Currents, Summer 2010 (pdf, 2.2 MB)
At its October hearing the State Water Board will consider approving a San Francisco Bay Regional Water Quality Control Board plan to address polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) in the Bay. These chemicals, which were banned in the 1970s, are linked to cancer, developmental impairment, and other serious health impacts. They accumulate in the fat of living organisms, including fish and the people who eat them.
Prop 65 Listing of Two Plastic Additives Under Attack
The chemical industry, represented by the American Chemistry Council, spends millions of dollars each year in California protecting the industry's profits and blocking efforts to protect the environment and the public from harmful chemicals. The most recent battle has been over adding the plastic additives bisphenol A (BPA) and styrene to California's Proposition 65 list.
California Currents|Online, Summer 2009 - Update
By Jennifer Clary
On August 4, Democratic leaders in the Senate and Assembly released legislation to address the problems of the Delta, where a precipitous decline in local species that prompted a court-ordered reduction in pumping has sparked serious discussions about how to restore the region's ecosystem. Key leaders met behind closed doors for several months to craft this legislation.
The five bills promote a new concept of "co-equal goals" - that is, simultaneously protecting Delta species while ensuring a reliable water supply for agricultural and urban Delta water users. A framework for constructing a Peripheral Canal is also part of the package.
California Currents|Online, Summer 2009 - Update
In February 2009, Clean Water Action welcomed Virginia Madueño to our California team as we expand our outreach to communities in the northern Central Valley who do not have access to clean water. We are delighted to have Virginia working with us and wanted you to hear, in her own words, about the work she is doing.
California Currents|Online, Summer 2009 - Update
By Yi Wang
The chemical industry, represented by the American Chemistry Council, spends millions of dollars each year in California protecting the industry's profits and blocking efforts to protect the environment and the public from harmful chemicals. The most recent battle has been over adding the plastic additives bisphenol A (BPA) and styrene to California's Proposition 65 list.
California Currents|Online, Summer 2009 - Update
By Andria Ventura
PCBs in San Francisco Bay? We don't think so.
Take action now!
At its October hearing the State Water Board will consider approving a San Francisco Bay Regional Water Quality Control Board plan to address polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) in the Bay. These chemicals, which were banned in the 1970s, are linked to cancer, developmental impairment, and other serious health impacts. They accumulate in the fat of living organisms, including fish and the people who eat them.
Clean Water Action opposes the Regional Board plan because of its weak clean up goals and implementation requirements. More specific and proactive steps must be included to keep PCBs from washing into the Bay from contaminated land sites. Big companies, like General Electric, are trying to evade their responsibility for cleaning up contaminated sites.
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.
Summer 2009, Volume 37, No. 2
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. The report lists 38 products that were shown to be contaminated with the carcinogenic chemicals formaldehyde, 1,4-dioxane or both, although neither contaminant appears on product labels.
For decades, the Clean Water Act protected the Nation's surface water bodies from unregulated pollution and rescued them from the crisis status they were in during the late 1960s and early 1970s. Now these vital protections are being lost. This report details the threat to our Nation's waters by examining dozens of case studies, and highlights the urgent need for Congress to restore full Clean Water Act protections to our waters.
Chesapeake Currents|online, Summer 2010
Last year, with the help of Clean Water Action members, the District set up a new fund supported by a fee on plastic and paper bags to help restore the Anacostia River and other District waterways. However, within a few months, this fund was threatened by proposals to raid the money to support other programs. One of the many positive aspects of the legislation that imposed a fee on bags was that it would generate money for river clean-up efforts, and thus provide funding during challenging fiscal times.
Chesapeake Currents|online, Summer 2010
The Wilmington News Journal recently published a stellar expose on groundwater pollution in Delaware, and the region served by the Potomac Aquifer, the groundwater supply for significant portions of New Jersey, Delaware and Maryland. Reporter Jeff Montgomery has covered the environment for years, and his devastating series of articles details serious threats to groundwater resources that support drinking water for many residents of Delaware and its neighbors.
The series reports:
Chesapeake Currents|online, Summer 2010
Last fall and winter, Clean Water Fund worked with local allies in Prince William and Loudoun Counties to hold workshops on 21st Century approaches to managing our water resources. This fall, we will be organizing follow-up workshops that explore ways in which reducing water waste, including water re-use and other money-saving techniques, will help communities to develop sustainable water management practices.