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TSCA: As Outdated as a Polyester Leisure Suit

Dr. Alan Green, pediatrician and author of Raising Baby Greene, appears in a video for the Million Baby Crawl campaign, saying the Toxic Substances Control Act of 1976 (TSCA) is as outdated and ridiculous as a polyester leisure suit. While I cannot say I agree that TSCA is as ridiculous as a polyester leisure suit, I agree that it needs to be modernized.

I am pleased, however, that Congress is taking an important step in examining TSCA and what needs to be done to modernize this statute. Today, The U.S. House of Representatives Subcommittee on Commerce, Trade and Consumer Protection held its first hearing on the important issue of how the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, which has regulatory jurisdiction over TSCA, can go about prioritizing chemicals in commerce for review and assessment.

Our organization testified at the hearing and presented a model that EPA could use as an efficient means to prioritize chemicals. It is a risk-based model that takes into consideration both a chemical’s hazards and potential exposure. Chemicals identified as high priorities should be those substances with both the highest hazards and the highest potential exposures.

Basing prioritization on a single factor—hazard OR exposure—will result in all chemicals deemed priorities. If everything is a priority, then nothing is a priority.

Chris Cathcart, CSPA President

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