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Naptime Nightmares? Toxic Flame Retardants Found in Day Care Nap Mat

Advocates call on New York State Legislators to Protect Children from Toxic Chemicals

Children’s nap mats from California, New York, Washington, Alaska, Massachusetts, Vermont and Connecticut contain harmful flame retardant chemicals, according to independent testing commissioned by the Center for Environmental Health (CEH). The flame retardant chemicals found in the nap mats, which are used in daycares nationwide, have been linked to cancer, genetic damage, impacts on fertility and reproductive health, allergies, hormone disruption, and other serious health problems.

A full copy of the report is available here: http://www.ceh.org/flame-retardants

Continue reading "Naptime Nightmares? Toxic Flame Retardants Found in Day Care Nap Mat" »

Posted at 01:40 PM in Action at the State House, Chemicals and Our Health, Featured, Media, Our Work | Permalink

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Cancer Causing Chemicals in our Couches?!

LisaTurnersdaughterAre you sitting down on a couch?  This news may make you want to stand up, instead.

A new peer-reviewed study published today in Environmental Science and Technology shows a carcinogen has been used to replace banned toxic flame retardants in many couches sampled in New York and across the United States.  The chemical, a chlorinated Tris known as TDCPP, was removed from children's pajamas in 1977 and has been found in many infant -care products.  The toxic flame retardant was the subject of a proposed legislative ban in children's products in New York in 2012, but failed to pass the Senate in the final hours of session.  All four couch samples submitted by New Yorkers contained flame retardants: three contained TDCPP, and one contained pentaBDE.

Continue reading "Cancer Causing Chemicals in our Couches?!" »

Posted at 02:57 PM in Chemicals and Our Health, Featured, Healthy Homes, Media | Permalink

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Women's Health and Environment Workshop

WEHworkshopbanner-after

View our photo album from the event.

Watch videos of our workshop presentations:

Continue reading "Women's Health and Environment Workshop" »

Posted at 01:09 PM in Chemicals and Our Health, Events, Featured | Permalink

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Assembly hearing on flame retardant chemicals in children’s products brings out many supporters for a ban, only one opponent- UPDATED with video

Kathy-curtisGuest blog by Kathy Curtis, CHNY Executive Director

Following last week’s implosion of the chemical industry front group “Citizens for Fire Safety,” the American Chemistry Council (ACC) made its public debut representing the only opposition to banning a cancer-causing chemical in children’s products. ACC’s Stephen Rosario and North American Flame Retardant Alliance’s Jackson Morrill were the first speakers at yesterday’s Assembly hearing on flame retardant chemicals in children’s products. Not only were they the only speakers present to fail to submit written testimony, they appeared to be profoundly unprepared.

They opened their statement by disavowing Citizens for Fire Safety (CFFS), even though the CEO of Albemarle (one of the three CFFS co-founding chemical makers) is on ACC’s board of directors. They also said they would not talk about the recent Chicago Tribune series that exposed CFFS as an industry front group that distorted science, gave misleading testimony, and exaggerated the effectiveness of their products.

Continue reading "Assembly hearing on flame retardant chemicals in children’s products brings out many supporters for a ban, only one opponent- UPDATED with video" »

Posted at 01:31 PM in Action at the State House, Chemicals and Our Health, Events, Featured, Media, Our Work | Permalink

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NYS Assembly Votes Unanimously to Ban Chlorinated Tris

2 kids 250In a bipartisan victory for children's health, the New York State Assembly passed A. 9045, which expands the Tris-free Children and Babies Act to include the form of tris (TDCPP) that was removed from children's sleepwear in 1979 because it can mutate DNA.  Studies have since shown that TDCPP can harm the developing brain,  disrupt hormones, and cause cancer.   The State of California’s Carcinogen Identification Council has determined it is a carcinogen.  The diverse collaboration of health-affected organizations, environmental justice groups, teachers, nurses, business leaders and environmental health organizations, known as the JustGreen Partnership, praised the bill's passage, and urged the New York Senate to follow suit.


“I am proud to have accomplished one of my legislative priorities with the strong bi-partisan passage of the expanded Tris-free Children and Babies Act,” said Assemblyman Robert Sweeney, Environmental Conservation Committee Chair and bill sponsor.  “New York must continue its leadership on this important issue and ensure babies and children no longer suffer continual exposure to TDCPP.”

Senator Mark Grisanti sponsors matching legislation in the Senate, after championing the Tris-free Children and Babies Act through its passage in that house last year.  New York is the first in the nation to address the problem of Tris chemicals being used in children's products. Several other states, including Washington, Maryland and Connecticut, are following suit this year with tris phaseout legislation.

“In 2011, I proudly sponsored the law that banned TCEP in children's products from being sold in New York,” said Senator Mark Grisanti, Environmental Conservation Committee Chair.  “As I said at that time, we need to do more in the area of protecting our children from harmful chemicals.  I am delighted to see bi-partisan support from my colleagues in the Assembly in the ban on TDCPP in products for infants and children.  I hope to see that same bipartisanship in the Senate with support for the passage of matching legislation I sponsor.  Removing TDCPP from baby products will help make babies' home environments healthier.”

“This is one step closer to NYS recognizing that we can support our business leaders’ ability to innovate and provide the safer and healthier products that consumers are demanding. This is a win for our businesses and our NYS economy,” said David Levine, CEO, American Sustainable Business Council, representing through its members over 100,000 businesses.

TDCPP is widely used in polyurethane foam used in children's products.  A study from Duke University found TDCPP in 36% of baby products.  A report released earlier this year by the Washington Toxics Coalition found TDCPP in 80% of the products tested.

TDCPP is added in order to meet an antiquated, and ultimately ineffectual, California-only regulation known as “Technical Bulletin 117.”  In fact, despite being marketed as a flame retardant, TDCPP as used in foam-containing infant and children's products provides no fire safety benefit – and when it burns, it releases chlorine gas, which quickly converts to lethal hydrochloric acid in the lungs.  It also releases more carbon monoxide and soot in fires than products that don't contain these chemicals.
 
“It’s hard to believe that the same chlorinated Tris flame retardant that our research helped remove from baby pajamas in 1977 is back in use in children's products.” said Arlene Blum, PhD, a Visiting Scholar at the University of California, Berkeley Chemistry Department and Executive Director of the Green Science Policy Institute. “These children's products do not pose a fire hazard and the Tris increases the toxicity of a fire if they were to burn.”

“Infant and children’s product makers’ insistence on complying everywhere to a useless, outdated California-only standard has put New York’s babies and children in a lose-lose situation: they lose by being exposed to a toxic chemical day in and day out, and they lose because they’re accruing no actual fire safety benefit.  By banning TDCPP in babies’ and children's products, the Assembly has taken an important step toward a much healthier, safer environment for our kids,” said Kathy Curtis, Executive Director of Clean and Healthy New York.

“The International Association of Fire Fighters supported the phase-out of pentaBDE because of the harm it posed to fire fighters and building occupants alike, with a call for less-toxic fire safety methods.  Now it appears companies simply switched from one dangerous chemical to another,” said Dennis Sweeney, Health and Safety Training Coordinator for the New York State Professional Fire Fighters Association. “Protecting fire fighters and building occupants from fire is critical, and we can and must do it without exposing babies and children to chemicals that harm their health.  Companies can and must make safe products without cancer-causing chemicals that release toxic gases when they burn.”

“Children of color and those in low-income communities are subjected to health threats from many environmental factors,” said Cecil Corbin-Mark, Deputy Director of WEACT for Environmental Justice, based in Harlem. “Adding the insult of daily indoor exposure to cancer-causing chemicals makes no sense.  Then factor in the increased difficulty of exiting a large building during a fire, when the smoke becomes more lethal, and the picture is clear: TDCPP has no place in products for our kids.  We thank the Assembly for their action, and urge the Senate to act with all due haste.”

"The dirty little secret is that toxic flame retardants like TRIS don't provide additional fire safety, increase environmental hazards for fire fighters and expose children to toxic chemicals.  The only beneficiaries appear to be the chemical manufacturers," said Russ Haven, Legislative Counsel for NYPIRG.  "The Assembly has done its job, now it's up to the Senate to protect New York's children from this toxic exposure."

Posted at 03:11 PM in Action at the State House, Chemicals and Our Health, Featured | Permalink

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Toxic Flame Retardants: A global public health concern

NEW Toxic Flame Retardants Event NYC on March 8

NEW Toxic Flame Retardants Event NYC on March 8-2

Posted at 02:17 PM in Chemicals and Our Health, Events | Permalink

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The Fight for Toxic-Free Fire Safety

Kathy Curtis spoke to the International Association of Fire Fighters at their Redmond Symposium in New York City in August, 2011. You can see her speaking here (thanks to IAFF) and view her powerpoint presentation below.

 

Click here for the power point presentation.

Posted at 03:53 PM in Chemicals and Our Health, Our Work, Resources, Safer Solutions | Permalink

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Hidden Hazards in the Nursery

Popular baby products, including nursing pillows and car seats, contain toxic chemicals linked to cancer, hormone disruption, and other health effects, according to a new report authored by the Washington Toxics Coalition and released today by Clean and Healthy New York. Children and families are exposed to these Tris chemicals when they escape from products and contaminate house dust and indoor air.

“Appallingly, this is just one study in a long line documenting toxic chemicals in the products families rely upon.  No parent would deliberately expose their baby in this way.  Product makers need to stop simply darting from one toxic chemical as it is banned to another,” said Bobbi Chase Wilding, contributor to the study and Deputy Director for Clean and Healthy New York. “Further state action is needed to end this toxic shell game. ”

Continue reading "Hidden Hazards in the Nursery" »

Posted at 12:00 PM in Chemicals and Our Health, Featured, Healthy Homes, Media | Permalink | Comments (0)

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The Mattress Matters: Toxic chemicals in crib mattresses

A report from Clean and Healthy New York finds a significant portion of the crib mattresses in the U.S. market contain one or more chemicals of concern. The report titled The Mattress Matters: Protecting Babies While They Sleep, also finds that a number of mattress makers have made significant strides in reducing chemicals of concern.

Specifically,  the report found:

52% of mattress models surveyed were made with conventional materials, including chemicals of concern. 

Continue reading "The Mattress Matters: Toxic chemicals in crib mattresses" »

Posted at 09:00 AM in Chemicals and Our Health, Featured, Federal Policy, Healthy Economy, Healthy Homes, Our Work, Resources | Permalink

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Chemicals and Our Health

 

Toxic chemicals in our environment, such as mercury, lead, and certain manmade chemicals, have been linked to numerous health problems including cancer, birth defects and brain impairments. Eliminating the load of these dangerous chemicals in the products we use, the air we breathe, the food we eat and the water we drink can reduce the human diseases and disorders of environmental origin.

Since petroleum-based chemicals have come into common use, overwhelming scientific evidence has emerged linking them to a host of diseases and disorders. Illnesses of environmental origin identified in the medical research include:

  • adult and child cancers,
  • numerous neurological disorders,
  • immune system weakening,
  • autoimmune disorders and allergies,
  • asthma,
  • infertility and miscarriage,
  • learning disabilities, mental retardation, attention deficit disorders
  • alteration of hormones essential for maintaining healthy bodily processes. 

Toxic chemicals are believed to cause these problems by a variety of routes, including:

  • impairing proper DNA (Gene) expression, weakening DNA Repair and accelerating gene loss,
  • degeneration of the body's detoxification defenses (liver and kidneys), and  
  • weakening of the brain's primary defense, the blood-brain barrier). 

A growing number of scientists are providing strong evidence pointing to the increase of children with learning and behavior disorders over the past 30 years.  Studies repeatedly conclude that exposure of the developing child to even small levels of chemicals in common everyday products can result in learning and behavioral problems that persist throughout a person’s life. Examples include lead, mercury, cadmium and other metals, as well as certain halogenated flame retardants.

The relatively new toxicology field of endocrine disruptor chemicals is of extreme importance. Many chemicals commonly found in the blood and urine of people and animals and in ordinary products we use every day are now being found to alter hormone levels in the blood that are responsible for controlling development and aging. Some chemicals are linked to alteration of critical hormones necessary for teenage neurological and behavioral development, including bisphenol A, phthalates, and certain halogenated flame retardants. 

 

Posted at 02:01 PM in Chemicals and Our Health | Permalink

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  • Seeking Enthusiastic Community Outreach Representatives
  • Naptime Nightmares? Toxic Flame Retardants Found in Day Care Nap Mat
  • Safeguarding Kids’ Health while Protecting the Great Lakes
  • Call for Non-Toxic Nation Comes to Times Square
  • 26 States to Consider Toxic Chemicals Legislation in 2013
  • Cancer Causing Chemicals in our Couches?!
  • Women's Health and Environment Workshop
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  • Assembly hearing on flame retardant chemicals in children’s products brings out many supporters for a ban, only one opponent- UPDATED with video
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