Home | About Natural News | Contact Us | Write for Natural News
Search our 25,000 free articles and special reports
EPA

EPA may approve neurotoxic pesticide that harms children

Wednesday, October 04, 2006 by: Ben Kage
Key concepts: EPA, The EPA and Pesticides

Want stories like this e-mailed to you? Click here for free email alerts

New Report: How to Build Your Financial Safety Net, by Mike Adams
Twelve ways to achieve prosperity during (and after) the global financial crisisclick here to read

• The 7 types of income streams   • 15 online resources   • The 18 basic human drivers you need to know   • Why the global financial crisis may now threaten your paycheck   • How to earn a living from doing what you LOVE!
Email this article to a friend Printable Version
Replace your toxic laundry detergent with natural laundry soap that grows on trees!
How to halt type-2 diabetes with nutritional therapy - over 50% cure rate proven in studies
How to treat and cure over 100 health conditions using little-known health secrets
How to blend nutritious meals in minutes with Adams' Superfood smoothie recipes (Delicious!)

Browse more health books...
Shop our eco-friendly products...

NaturalNews does not control the content of the ad you see above. It is chosen by Google.
(NaturalNews) The EPA announced Aug. 3 that its 10-year review of U.S. pesticide safety had been completed, and administrator Stephen L. Johnson issued an optimistic statement that said, "By maintaining the highest ethical and scientific standards in its pesticide review, EPA and the Bush administration have planted the seeds to yield healthier lives for generations of American families."

Environmental activists were skeptical about the statement, but, surprisingly, so were some EPA scientists. In May, nine presidents of EPA scientist unions and risk managers wrote a letter to Johnson expressing concerns about the EPA considering approval of organophosphate (OP) and carbamate pesticides. These chemicals can be neurotoxic, especially in developing fetuses, infants and children.

"We think there's a lot of work that remains to be done in terms of getting (adequate) developmental neurotoxicity data," said William Hirzy, a senior scientist in the EPA's Office of Toxic Substances and vice president of the National Treasury Employees Union Chapter 280. He added that union leaders are concerned that the EPA is putting too much focus on "avoiding lawsuits from the regulated community," and may be making decisions tailored toward reduced restrictions rather than increased precautions.

The pesticide review was prompted by the 1996 Food Quality Protection act, which required the EPA to reassess the safety of tolerance levels for pesticides used in or on processed foods. The EPA looked at tens of thousands of studies conducted by EPA scientists, pesticide companies, and other governmental agencies, and new risk-assessment tools were developed to better identify chemicals that could harm human health or the environment. The agency also considered opinions from public health watchdog groups, interested industries, and their own advisory committees before announcing a decision on each pesticide's allowable tolerance, followed by a 60-day public comment period before finalizing the decisions.

Congress required the EPA to be finished by Aug. 3, at which point the EPA reported it had completed 99 percent of its review. In all, the EPA evaluated about 230 pesticide active ingredients and 870 inert pesticide ingredients with nearly 10,000 tolerances, according to Anne Lindsay, deputy director of the EPA Office of Pesticide Programs. On Aug. 3, the EPA announced they were banning carbofuran and lindane -- which is banned in 52 other countries -- although lindane is still allowed for use directly on children with scabies and lice, because the FDA regulates that particular use.

Carbofuran and lindane were not the only cancellations the agency made over the 10-year review period, as 17 OP pesticides had been banned during the process and the use of 15 more had been regulated, but both environmental groups and some scientists were hoping no OPs would be allowed to reregister.

"The OP decision, I think, is a bad one," said Margaret Reeves, a senior scientist with Pesticide Action Network North America, noting her organization supports the EPA scientists' letter to Johnson.

The letter says that too few studies have been done on food use and the developmental neurotoxicity of food-use OPs and carbamate pesticides, which usually means the EPA is required to use an additional 10-fold safety factor for assessing the risks of pesticide tolerances, as per the FQPA. The letter urged the EPA to use the 10-fold safety factor for the remaining OP and carbamate pesticides under consideration, but Reeves said that might still be inadequate, as some animals, people and age groups are better able to break down the chemicals in their bodies than others.

"The intraspecies variability is much greater than often considered and much greater than would be (covered by) the FQPA 10-fold factor," Reeves said.

In the wake of the criticisms from environmental activists and their own scientists, the EPA administrators supported the assessments made in the review, maintaining that approved pesticides pose no health risks.

"We think we have really set a very high bar for pesticide safety in this country," said Lindsay. "If you are eating food purchased in the U.S., it's really safe."

Many people disagree. Brenda Eskenazi, director of the NIEHS Center for Children's Environmental Health Research at the University of California, Berkeley, said that it was a well-known fact that acute, high-level exposure to OP and carbamate pesticides caused profound neurotoxicity, but added that some evidence suggests lower-level exposure could cause neurotoxicity in fetuses. A number of studies are now being conducted to measure potential health consequences in older children, Eskenazi said, but noted that, because most people are exposed to multiple pesticides simultaneously, it is hard to pinpoint a single agent as the cause of an observed health problem.

The union leaders within the EPA have said that the uncertainty surrounding many of the pesticides is grounds enough for their banning.

"Until EPA can state with scientific confidence that these pesticides will not hurt the neurological development of our nation's born and unborn children, there is no justification to continue the registration of the use of the remaining OP and carbamate pesticides," the letter states.

###
The Health Ranger recommends and personally uses Aquasana water filters:

NaturalNews Exclusive: FREE decanter with *any* purchase from Aquasansa. Click here to claim:


Related Articles:

EPA, American Chemistry Council Conspire to Remove Toxicologist Deborah Rice from Panel on Flame Retardant Safety

Vaccines and Medical Experiments on Children, Minorities, Woman and Inmates (1845 - 2007)

EPA uses nanotech regulation ploy to target colloidal silver while ignoring all other nanotech particles

Pentagon Is Fighting the EPA About Pollution Clean Up Efforts

Governor Schwarzenegger Backed Immoral Sex Pheromone Spraying Continues...

Take Action: Support NaturalNews.com

Email this article to a friend

Share this article on: NewsVine | digg | del.icio.us

Permalink to this article: http://www.NaturalNews.com/020633.html

Reprinting this article: Non-commercial OK, cite NaturalNews.com with clickable link.

Embed article link: (copy HTML code below):

Receive our Natural Health Newsletter for FREE

Subscribe now to receive a summary of each day's most important natural health stories, plus get full, free access to the entire archives of books on HealthBookSummaries.

You'll also get access to 20+ free downloadable reports and exclusive interviews here on NaturalNews.com. Join over 1.2 million monthly readers. Unsubscribe anytime. Your email privacy is protected. We absolutely do not sell or share email addresses with anyone!
  • Receive breaking news alerts on natural health solutions, renewable energy, the environment, global warming and more.
  • Get instant access to over 20 downloadable health reports and exclusive interviews.
  • Get full access to the entire archives of downloadable book summaries from HealthBookSummaries.com.
Your Email Address:
100% free of charge. Unsubscribe anytime.
Absolutely no spam. We respect your email privacy.

"I'm so impressed with the work that you're doing and the information you're disseminating, it's just vital for people to get this sort of information."

- Michael T. Murray, author of The Encyclopedia of Natural Medicine

"Mike Adams has one of the best websites on the Internet. His articles, podcasts and books will improve your life, and possibly save it."

- Suzy Cohen, R.Ph., author of The 24-Hour Pharmacist

Breaking News from across the 'net:

Dr. Thomas Lodi: Healing Cancer From the Inside Out (video)

Phone Calls of American Citizens, Journalists Routinely Intercepted by U.S. Military

New Special Report: How to Build Your Own Financial Safety Net

Invoice of AIG Executives' Lavish $400k Spa Visit, Just One Week After Government Bailout

            See all Breaking News...

Also Posted Today

New Special Report: How to Build Your Financial Safety Net

Study Suggests Vitamin D Improves Survival From Colorectal Cancer

Three Different Ways to Lower Your Risk of Heart Failure

Licorice Heals Ulcers, Inflammation, and Skin Conditions

Prescription Drugs Useless at Reducing Heart Disease Risk for the Obese

The Flavor Enhancer MSG Linked to Weight Gain, Obesity

Discover on NaturalNews NaturalPedia™

EPA
The EPA
Pesticides

Also on NaturalNews:

Streaming Health Ranger Videos
CounterThink Cartoons
FREE Special Reports
Podcasts

Free Health Reports!

Amazon Herb Company review
The pH Nutrition Guide to Acid / Alkaline Balance
Pet Food Ingredients Revealed! (shocking)
Medicine From Fish
The Water Cure
The Healing Power of Sunlight and Vitamin D

Related CounterThink Cartoons

Eco-Friendly Products


Pharmaceutical Terrorism


The Newborn Baby Fish


Featured Videos

Short clip on Aspartame
A short clip on aspartame from the documentary All Jacked Up.
Click here to view now...

Exclusive video on Aspartame
The dangers of aspartame! Exclusive interview footage from Cori Brackett of Sweet Remedy.
Click here to view now...

Exclusive Footage from All Jacked Up!
See interview footage featuring the Health Ranger in the upcoming junk food film, All Jacked Up.
Click here to view now...

Drug Ad Parody
See the Health Ranger's satire parody of Merck's cholesterol drug ad.
Click here to view now...

This site is part of the Natural News Network © 2008 All Rights Reserved. Privacy | Terms All content posted on this site is commentary or opinion and is protected under Free Speech. Truth Publishing International, LTD. is not responsible for content written by contributing authors. Truth Publishing sells no health or nutritional products and earns no money from health product manufacturers or promoters. The information on this site is provided for educational and entertainment purposes only. It is not intended as a substitute for professional advice of any kind. Truth Publishing assumes no responsibility for the use or misuse of this material. Your use of this website indicates your agreement to these terms and those published here. All trademarks, registered trademarks and servicemarks mentioned on this site are the property of their respective owners.