News Brief

Voluntary EPA Program Fails to Protect Children from Chemicals

By Evan Dick

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 Services
The inspector general for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Arthur Elkins, Jr., has issued a report finding that the agency’s Voluntary Children’s Chemical Evaluation Program did not protect children from exposure to harmful chemicals. The program, initiated under the Clinton administration and slowly dismantled in recent years, relied on voluntary reporting by industry.

Elkins 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

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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