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Message on legislative efforts to update TB 117 and eliminate flame retardant chemicals:


News from Sacramento: After more than a year of vacancy, the California agency in charge of updating TB 117 finally has a new director -- Tonya Blood has been appointed Chief of the Bureau of Home Furnishings and Thermal Insulation (BHFTI).

We have a unique opportunity to inform her of the need for improved fire safety without the use of flame retardant chemicals in furniture and baby products. The legislation introduced earlier in the year to update TB 117 (AB 2197 - Mitchell) is no longer active this session, but will be pursued next year. Our strong coalition of fire fighters, furniture manufacturers and retailers, health, social and environmental  justice, and environmental groups will continue to raise awareness of the issue through media, community education, and mobilization efforts.  

 

 

 

CONTACT: Stephenie Hendricks, Alliance for Toxic Free Fire Safety, stephdh@earthlink.net , 415 258-9151, Andrew McGuire, Green Science Policy Institute, 415 215-8980, Ana Mascareñas, Physicians for Social Responsibility – Los Angeles, 323 743-3241,  Carroll Wills, California Professional Firefighters,  916 921- 9111, Tiffany Traynum, NRDC, ttraynum@nrdc.org , 415 875-6106

February 24, 2012

How Toxic is Your Couch?

New California Legislation Will Address Chemicals in Flame Retardants Found in Furniture

Improves Fire Safety for Firefighters, Businesses, Consumers and Children


AB 2197  Modernizes Ineffective California Furniture Standard TB 117

(Sacramento, CA.) A bill to modernize Technical Bulletin 117 or TB 117, an ineffective California flame retardant standard that has led to the use of chemicals in foam for furniture and other products throughout the country known to be harmful to human health, was introduced today in the California Legislature.

Authored by Assemblywoman Holly Mitchell (D-Los Angeles), Assembly Bill 2197, is strongly supported by a large coalition of firefighters, scientists, businesses, consumers, and public health advocates. AB 2197 will modernize TB 117 based on current fire safety science and years of research by the federal government. The new standard will provide increased fire safety without the use of toxic and untested chemicals.

TB 117 was developed in 1975 and has led furniture manufacturers to use toxic and untested chemicals in their products in order to meet the standard. Studies show that toxic fire retardant chemicals are now found in the bodies of nearly all North Americans, with Californians and children having the highest levels.

Following are statements from leaders of public health, consumer, environmental, firefighter, and business groups:


“Toxic flame retardants used in our furniture to meet TB 117 do not reduce fire deaths and are a major threat to the public's health,” according to Dr. Wendel Brunner, Director of Public Health for Contra Costa County “Children and infants are most vulnerable to their harmful effects, and there is no excuse for requiring them in furniture and baby products.”

“Numerous studies have been published demonstrating that firefighters have significantly elevated rates of cancer, including multiple myeloma, non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, prostate, testicular cancer, malignant melanoma and brain cancer,” said Lou Paulson, president of California Professional Firefighters. “It is our firm belief that there is a direct link between these risks and firefighter exposures to complex mixtures at fire emergencies, including the combustion by-products of fires involving fire retardants.”

Sarah Janssen, MD, PhD, MPH, with Natural Resources Defense Council and University of California, School of Medicine says, “Research links many of these flame retardant chemicals to lower IQs and hyperactivity in children, and also to reproductive problems and endocrine disruption. The entire world is watching California to see if we will act to prevent continuing global contamination from chemicals used to meet TB 117.”

“TB 117 does not protect young children, pregnant women, or other vulnerable populations from fires but it does expose them to toxic chemicals in their homes all day every day,” says Judy Levin from the Center for Environmental Health “We need to stop the outdated regulation that has created such a health hazard now.”

“Because of our furniture standard, Californians carry in their bodies some of the highest levels of chemical fire retardants in the world. This inundation into our bodies of these toxic chemicals strongly linked to neurological harm serves no purpose.   There are other much more effective ways of preventing fires, ways that will not compromise how children think and how they learn,” comments Sharyle Patton, Director, Commonweal Biomonitoring Resource Center.

“A broad coalition of groups are working to update the obsolete California furniture fire regulation that de facto forces these toxic chemicals into products made with foam,” explains Andrew McGuire, Policy Director with the Green Science Policy Institute. “This legislation is long overdue, and is urgently needed to remedy a dangerous and complex situation. The chemical industry has spent millions fighting changes to the law, and has been deploying techniques attacking science used when the tobacco industry tried to convince the public that smoking was safe.”

David Levine, CEO, American Sustainable Business Council, says, “Our recent polling indicates that most business owners want to see regulations that level the playing field by enabling all businesses to be able to provide the safest products possible for their customers. ‘Made for California’ should mean ‘Safe and Healthy’ because that’s what our customers want.”

“The chemical industry has targeted individuals from the medical profession, communities of color, and firefighter communities, misrepresenting the science,” says Ana Mascareñas from Physicians for Social Responsibility – Los Angeles. “Just this past week, a UC Davis study was the newest among many that link fire retardant chemical exposure to autism spectrum disorders, learning disabilities, decreased fertility, and other serious health conditions.”

“Consumers shouldn’t have to worry about toxic ingredients in the products they buy, and manufacturers shouldn’t be forced to use toxic supplies to make their products meet regulatory guidelines,” states Richard Holober from the Consumer Federation of California. “Corporate attacks on the science that shows a hazard to our health must not get in the way of our legislature doing the right thing to protect the public.”

Rachel Sarnoff from Healthy Child, Healthy World echoes, “Moms and dads shouldn’t feel they have to be biochemists to shop for safe products for their children. By changing California's fire regulation, we'll begin to detoxify our economy and protect kids all over the country."
 
Resources:

AB 2197  http://ct3k1.capitoltrack.com/Bills/11Bills/asm/ab_2151-2200/ab_197_bill_20120223_introduced.pdf 

Alliance for Toxic Free Fire Safety www.toxicfreefiresafety.org

Green Science Policy Institute www.greensciencepolicy.org

San Antonio Statement on Flame Retardant Chemicals http://ehp03.niehs.nih.gov/article/info:doi/10.1289/ehp.1003089

Californians for a Healthy & Green Economy (CHANGE), http://changecalifornia.org/

Center for Environmental Health, www.ceh.org

Clean Water Action www.cleanwateraction.org

Commonweal Biomonitoring Resource Center www.commonweal.org

Consumer Federation of California www.consumercal.org

Healthy Child, Healthy World http://healthychild.org/

NRDC health expert Sarah Janssen’s blogs on flame retardants http://switchboard.nrdc.org/blogs/sjanssen/

Ocean Futures Society http://www.oceanfutures.org/action/toxic-flame-retardants

Physicians for Social Responsibility – Los Angeles www.psr-la.org