Earthjustice Sues the EPA after a Former Industry Official Rewrites the Rules on Toxic Chemicals

The former chemical industry official in the EPA weakened regulations of harmful chemicals used in consumer products and building materials.

Workers wear protective gear as they remove asbestos, one of the substances regulated under the Toxic Substances Control Act.
Workers wear protective gear as they remove asbestos, one of the substances regulated under the Toxic Substances Control Act. (BartCo / Getty Images)

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“The fox guarding the hen house” aptly describes the inner workings of the Trump administration’s Environmental Protection Agency.

A major case in point: The EPA official tasked to head up the Chemical Safety and Pollution Prevention office, Nancy Beck, came to the job after working as a former high-level official for a chemical industry association. She was charged with updating the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA), which addresses the production, use and disposal of such chemicals as polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), asbestos, radon and lead-based paint.

Not surprisingly, Beck’s updated TSCA regulations significantly weaken government regulations over these chemicals in consumer products and building materials by removing the provision for regulating all uses of chemicals.

In response, Earthjustice filed two lawsuits against the EPA late last week for weakening these regulations. The suits were filed on behalf of organizations representing populations that are most at risk from weakened chemical regulations—low-income communities, parents and teachers of children with learning disabilities, workers and indigenous populations.  

The lawsuits challenge two EPA regulations that set ground rules for how the EPA will prioritize chemicals for safety review and then evaluate the risks of those chemicals under TSCA.

“The EPA’s newly adopted rules will leave children, communities and workers vulnerable to dangerous chemicals,” said Earthjustice attorney Eve Gartner. “This lawsuit is about one thing: holding the Trump EPA to the letter of the law and ensuring it fulfills its mandate to protect the public.”

“The EPA’s newly adopted rules will leave children, communities and workers vulnerable to dangerous chemicals.”

Under the Obama administration, Congress strengthened the TSCA, requiring the EPA to conduct comprehensive risk evaluations of chemicals. These evaluations devoted special attention to all of the risks posed to vulnerable populations and to consider all the ways a chemical may be used to account for all possible sources of exposure, otherwise known as the “conditions of use” provision.

The Trump administration’s revision of TSCA is an entirely different matter. “The most significant change is whether the EPA must consider all ‘conditions of use’ as part of the risk evaluation process,” explains attorney Eve Gartner. “If the EPA can pick and choose which uses of a chemical it will consider, it could ignore some sources of exposure. And that could lead the agency to underestimate the risk the chemical poses to public health.”

“Enforcement of chemical laws to keep our communities healthy should be a top priority for the EPA.”

For more than six years, Earthjustice has fought for TSCA reform to ensure the EPA adequately protects the public and environment from harmful chemicals.  

Earthjustice filed Friday’s complaints in federal court in San Francisco on behalf of WE ACT for Environmental Justice, Learning Disabilities Association of America, United Steelworkers, Alaska Community Action on Toxics, the Union of Concerned Scientists, Environmental Health Strategy Center, the Environmental Working Group and the Sierra Club.

Dr. Adrienne Hollis, Director of Federal Policy at WE ACT for Environmental Justice, said: “What Mr. Trump may not realize is that many residents, especially tenants living in poor or substandard housing, disproportionately suffer from respiratory problems such as asthma. We need to know the risks of chemicals used in our communities because exposure often exacerbates health disparities and outcomes. Enforcement of chemical laws to keep our communities healthy should be a top priority for the EPA.”

Regarding the harm of toxic chemicals to children, Patricia Lillie, President of the Learning Disabilities Association of America, said: “These rules…give the EPA authority to choose to ignore chemical uses that could result in prenatal and children’s exposures to chemicals that are linked to learning and developmental disabilities.”

Earthjustice also joined the Safer Chemicals Healthy Families in sending a strong letter to EPA director Scott Pruitt, expressing concern about Nancy Beck’s conflict of interest in overseeing chemical regulations. Beck’s weakening of TSCA is a toxic case in point. 

Gail was the interim Associate Editor during the summer of 2017. She is happy to use the power of the keyboard in the fight for environmental justice, and has been a writer and editor for a number of environmental and activist organizations, including the Sierra Club.

Earthjustice’s Toxic Exposure & Health Program uses the power of the law to ensure that all people have safe workplaces, neighborhoods, and schools; have access to safe drinking water and food; and live in homes that are free of hazardous chemicals.