Alan: Perhaps it would be wise to determine the health effects of industrial chemicals on human beings.
Unbelievable as it sounds, only a vanishingly small percentage of industrial chemicals have been tested for safety. This negligent recklessness is attributable to folks like Boehner, Cantor, McConnell, Bush, Romney, Ryan, Palin, Gingrich, Perry et al.
"Industrial Chemicals Are The Most Poorly Tested Chemicals In The World"
http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2014/01/industrial-chemicals-are-most-poorly.html
"As of 1998, EPA had requested tests for only 263 chemicals, or only about 0.4 percent of the (approximately) 70,000 "old" chemicals in commercial use in the United States (ED 1998). These are only single tests for one effect, such as cancer, or perhaps just an acute toxicity test. This does not mean that EPA has requested comprehensive testing for 263 chemicals... Only 7% of these so-called high production volume (HPV) chemicals have a complete set of screening level toxicity data.Screening level data, even if they indicate a problem, are not sufficient to restrict the use of a compound. On October 9, 1998 EPA's administrator Carol Browner sent letters to the CEO's of more than 900 chemical companies that manufacture HPV chemicals, inviting them to participate in EPA's voluntary testing initiative, the "HPV Challenge Program." As of February 2001, 28 months after these invitations were mailed,industry had submitted only 17 testing work plans to EPA - and EPA has not received the results of any new tests.
"Industrial Chemicals Are The Most Poorly Tested Chemicals In The World"
http://paxonbothhouses.blogspot.com/2014/01/industrial-chemicals-are-most-poorly.html
"As of 1998, EPA had requested tests for only 263 chemicals, or only about 0.4 percent of the (approximately) 70,000 "old" chemicals in commercial use in the United States (ED 1998). These are only single tests for one effect, such as cancer, or perhaps just an acute toxicity test. This does not mean that EPA has requested comprehensive testing for 263 chemicals... Only 7% of these so-called high production volume (HPV) chemicals have a complete set of screening level toxicity data.Screening level data, even if they indicate a problem, are not sufficient to restrict the use of a compound. On October 9, 1998 EPA's administrator Carol Browner sent letters to the CEO's of more than 900 chemical companies that manufacture HPV chemicals, inviting them to participate in EPA's voluntary testing initiative, the "HPV Challenge Program." As of February 2001, 28 months after these invitations were mailed,industry had submitted only 17 testing work plans to EPA - and EPA has not received the results of any new tests.
***
House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) on Tuesday blamed the Obama administration for a disastrous chemical spill in West Virginia.
He said at a news conference in D.C. that the country had enough environmental and health regulations, but they were not being properly enforced.
“The issue is this, we have enough regulations on the books,” Boehner remarked. “What the administration ought to be doing is actually doing their jobs. Why wasn’t this plant inspected since 1991?”
“I am entirely confident that there are ample regulations already on the books to protect the health and safety of the American people,” Boehner added. “Somebody ought to be held accountable here.”
“What we try to do is look at those regulations that we think are cumbersome, are over-the-top and are costing our economy jobs. That’s what our focus continues to be.”
About 300,000 residents in West Virginia were warned last week not to use tap water because it had become contaminated by the chemical spill. Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin declared a state of emergency as restaurants, shops, and schools were forced to shut down.
Methylcyclohexene methanol — a chemical used for coal washing and preparation — leaked from a storage tank at a site run by Freedom Industries into the nearby Elk River.
Chemical manufacturers are required to be inspected in West Virginia, but chemical storage facilities are not.
Randy Huffman, the state’s Secretary of the Department of Environmental Protection, hopes lawmakers will change that following the disastrous spill, according to Metro News.
“For this type of facility, the administrative processes, the records, the certifications, those types of processes are much more important for minimizing the risk of leaks and so forth because, with tanks, you can’t always see a leak,” he said.
Watch video, broadcast by C-SPAN on January 14, below.