News Brief
Voluntary EPA Program Fails to Protect Children from Chemicals

The recently scuttled Voluntary Children’s Chemical Evaluation Program failed in part because it did not cast a wide enough net for hazardous chemicals. The program did not attempt to evaluate chemicals such as bisphenol-A, an endocrine disruptor common in a myriad of consumer products including canned food liners, certain plastic bottles, and many childrens products.
Photo: National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences/ National Institutes of Health / Department of Health and Human ServicesElkins points out that even if industry had cooperated in reporting chemicals present in consumer goods that could harm children, some well-known chemicals of concern such as bisphenol-A (BPA) have been left out of the piloting phase of the programs development, further weakening it.
“EPA has not demonstrated that it can achieve children’s health goals with a voluntary program,” he wrote, adding that EPA still “lacks an active children-specific chemical management program or framework.” The report outlines a significant failure on the part of EPA to protect children from harmful chemicals in consumer products, and calls for more aggressive, non-voluntary regulatory measures.
Published August 30, 2011 Permalink Citation
Dick, E. (2011, August 30). Voluntary EPA Program Fails to Protect Children from Chemicals. Retrieved from https://www.buildinggreen.com/newsbrief/voluntary-epa-program-fails-protect-children-chemicals
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