March 26, 2013
Toxic Flame Retardant Chemicals – Showdown with Chemical Industry, Health and  Fire Safety Advocates
Over 87,000 Support New California Furniture Flammability Rule for Better  Fire Safety Without Harmful Flame Retardant Chemicals 
Sacramento, CA – Today, California regulators held a public hearing to mark the  end of a comment period for updating their 38-year old furniture flammability  rule that has drawn the focus of scientists, firefighters, health advocates and  consumers worldwide.
Public health, environmental, social justice, labor, and firefighter  organizations gave testimony and submitted more than 87,000 signatures to  support the revision. These signatures represent people from every state, and  public interest organizations from 36 countries also sent letters, urging  California to quickly move forward for improved fire safety without relying on  toxic chemicals. 
The letters were submitted to the Bureau of Electronic and Appliance Repair,  Home Furnishings and Thermal Insulation (BEARHFTI), at today’s Hearing. Furniture  manufacturers also voiced support for a new standard that would break them away  from toxic chemicals used to meet the old TB 117.
Chemical industry representatives attended. One spokesperson continued to  promote the discredited message that an open flame standard is needed, which promotes  the use of toxic chemicals.
There was an unexpected  appearance from a staff member from theConsumer Product Safety Commission, who said he was not representing the  Commission's views.Robert Howellgave a technical critique of TB 117-2013. The CPSC  has failed to produce a national furniture flammability standard for over 25 years.
Public health groups worry that the American Chemistry Council, which represents  the toxic flame retardant chemicals manufacturers, is influencing the CPSC to  retain an open flame standard that promotes the use of toxic flame retardant  chemicals. 
“California is long overdue for an updated fire safety standard that reflects  what scientific studies have confirmed for years – that toxic, flame retardants  are not effective at preventing fires,” said Senator Mark Leno, D-San Francisco. “In fact, they do more harm than good by  exposing children, pregnant mothers, families, firefighters, pets and wildlife to  harmful synthetic toxins. I applaud Governor Jerry Brown’s Administration for proposing  modernized regulations that will help prevent fires without relying on dangerous  chemicals.”
“Firefighters are at a greater risk from these chemicals,” says Jim Doucette of the Firefighters Burn Institute Sacramento, who also gave testimony. “We now know  these chemical make fires more toxic, create more soot and smoke, which are the  major causes of injury and death in fires with fire victims and first responders.”
Don Lucas, PhD, a combustion scientist,  formerly with Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, notes, “Toxic chemical flame  retardants don’t actually prevent fires under the current regulation. Many years  of study have gone in to the determination that fire safety can be achieved without  the use of these chemicals in upholstered furniture.”
“There's no reason to delay improved fire safety without toxic chemicals,” comments Ana  Mascareñas, Physicians for Social  Responsibility – Los Angeles (PSR-LA), “As  health professionals, we see the rise in diseases associated with toxic chemical  exposure, and it is our responsibility to speak out and prevent these exposures  whenever possible.
CEH has tested a number of baby and children’s products, including nap mats  used in childcare centers nationwide, and found toxic flame retardants in many  of them. “TB 117-2013 will help stop the flow of toxic flame retardant  chemicals into our products, homes and bodies,” says Judy Levin from Center for Environmental Health. “Parents and families have the right to safer products without  harmful chemicals. We expect the process of adopting this new rule to proceed without  delay.”
“Given that Latino children in California have among the highest levels of  flame retardant chemicals in the world, as a Latina and mother of an 11-month-year  old crawling around and putting everything in her mouth, I’m worried about my daughter’s exposure and the effects  on her health and development. We need this new standard now so families can buy affordable, fire safe and toxic free  products and start putting an end to the disproportionate burden on low-income  communities of color. Our children’s health should not come second to chemical  industry profits,” said Kathryn Alcantar, who gave testimony today for Californians  for a Healthy & Green Economy, (CHANGE).
Cindy Russell, MD, treats women with  cancer in her medical practice. “The California Medical Association (CMA) supports the modernization of TB-117 with a resolution  that asks for fire safety without the use of toxic chemicals. Stopping exposure  to chlorinated tris, for example, is preventable, and can help prevent some  individuals from manifesting cancer.”
The International POPs Elimination Network (IPEN), a group working on the most dangerous chemicals in the  world with the United Nations, is relieved the new regulation will halt the  reason for possibly the largest flow of toxic flame retardant chemicals worldwide. Olga Speranskaya from Eco-Accord in  Russia and IPEN co-chair comments, “TB117 is the law that polluted the world  with substances now listed in the Stockholm Convention for global elimination.  The world needs an updated law and an official statement discouraging the  continued use of flame retardants in products.” 
“Rising concern about toxic flame retardants and their links to cancer and other  health impacts is undermining consumer confidence and hurting business. To keep  the US economy growing, we have to stop allowing toxic chemicals linked to health  hazards in the marketplace. That’s why we started a petition <http://asbcouncil.org/campaigns/tsca-reform>  to tell Congress to reform the 34-year-old Toxic Substances Control Act,”  says David Levine, CEO and co-founder  of the American Sustainable Business Council.
“We are relieved that Governor Brown and his team have come up with a common  sense approach to fire safety that protects us from toxic flame retardant  chemicals,” says Victoria Rome from the Natural Resources Defense Council. “With  so much support from public health, environmental, fire safety, and the furniture  retail and manufacturing community, there’s no reason this new rule should be delayed”
Arlene Blum, is a scientist and  Executive Director of the Green Science Policy Institute (GSP). “Such great news  that California is at last updating its 1975 flammability standard. The new  standard is a win-win for both fire safety and our health and environment.” 
“Biomonitoring studies clearly demonstrate that everyone on earth now carries toxic  or untested chemicals in their bodies that do not belong there," said Davis Baltz of Commonweal, a health and environmental research institute in Bolinas,  California. "The flame retardants found in California furniture are global  pollutants whose dispersion throughout the biosphere has been accelerated by the  outdated TB 117."
“States are watching to see if California will update it's outdated flame retardant  regulation which has resulted in unnecessary toxic retardant in communities across  the country. For example, chlorinated Tris, listed as a carcinogen on California’s  own Proposition 65 list, has been found in products from Washington to Maine.  We look to California Governor Jerry Brown to stick with his new standard  of fire safety that does not require the use of toxic chemicals,” comments Sarah  Doll, National Director of SAFER States.
	    Gretchen Lee Salter, Senior Program and  Policy Manager for Breast Cancer Fund, testified at today’s hearing: “Toxic flame retardants  cross the placental barrier and can alter normal breast development setting that  child on a path for increased breast cancer risk. We urge the state to swiftly adopt  this new standard so that California families are no longer exposed to these chemicals  in their homes.”
            
	      More information: http://www.toxicfreefiresafety.org/CaliforniansForToxicFreeFireSafety.php
          
          Available for Interviews  - for media assistance, contact:  Stephenie Hendricks 415.258.9161 stephdh@earthlink.net
          
          
          Kathryn Alcantar, Californians for a Healthy &  Green Economy, 415.694.9596 kathryn@ceh.org. Talks about disproportionate impacts on people  of color, why a smolder standard can be good for business and low income communities.
	    
            Davis Baltz, Precautionary Principle Project director of Commonweal 510.684.7594 cell 510.848.2714  office
            
              Arlene Blum PhD,, a chemist with Green Science Policy Institute, has been studying the harmful  effects of these chemicals since the 1970’s. 510.644.3164, Arlene@GreenSciencePolicy.org Dr. Blum is a study co-author whose research in the 1970’s led to the removal of  chlorinated Tris from children’s pajamas.
              
    Jose T. Bravo, Executive Director, Just Transition Alliance, San Diego, CA.  619.838.6694, jose@just-transition.org. Jose works with communities contaminated  with chemicals, which occurs mostly where people of color and low-income residents  live, Habla Espanol
    
    Sarah Doll, National Coordinator SAFER states, on how all the other  states are watching what happens tomorrow with California and with the outcome  of this process. (503) 522-6110 sarah@saferstates.org
    
    Jim Doucette, Executive Director, Firefighters Burn Institute, Retired Captain  Sacramento Fire Department 916.224.6553 www.ffburn.org <http://www.ffburn.org> .
        
	    Richard Holober, Executive Director, Consumer Federation of California. 916.498.9608 cell: 650.307.7033 Richard can  address how this regulation affects consumers - and CFC's battle (alongside a  coalition of firefighters, public health officers, environmental groups,  parents, scientists, and many others) to change a 37-year old state regulation  that saturated California homes with toxic flame retardant chemicals.
            
            Sarah Janssen, MD, PhD, MPH, senior scientist at the Natural Resources  Defense Council, also assistant professor at UCSF medical school, 415.875. 6126, sjanssen@nrdc.org.  Dr. Janssen can address health effects linked to flame retardant chemicals exposure.
            
              California State Senator Mark Leno, Ali Bay 916.651.4011, Ali.Bay@sen.ca.gov.  Senator Leno has authored four bills related to California’s flammability standard.  His 2011 legislation, SB 147, would have allowed consumers the choice of purchasing  furniture and baby products that are fire safe and do not contain toxic chemical  fire retardants.
  
  Judy Levin, MSW, Pollution Prevention Co-Director, Center for Environmental Health, judy@cehca.org; 510.655.3900  x316, cell: 510.697.3947. Judy can discuss environmental health impacts to children  and CEH’s product testing program for flame retardants in baby and children’s products  .
  
  David Levine, the American Sustainable Business Council, with over 100,000  members. David addresses why this regulation is bad for business and why the  new modernized regulation is good for retailers, manufacturers and the economy. http://asbcouncil.org/node/856 917.359.9623, dlevine@asbcouncil.org.
  
    Donald Lucas, Ph.D. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, d_lucas@lbl.gov
  510.316.6764. Dr. Lucas can address fire safety science.
  
  
  Andrew McGuire, Executive Director, Trauma Foundation, San Francisco General Hospital,  415.215.8980. Andrew can address how flame retardant corporations employ tactics  developed by the tobacco industry since a former Vice President of the Tobacco Institute  was employed to deflect regulation of the flame retardant industry. The two main  tactics have included attacking the science about the toxic hazards of fire retardant  chemicals and creating phony “AstroTurf” organizations to mislead the media, legislators  and the public about the toxic hazards of their products.
  
    Ana Mascareñas, Policy & Communications Director, Physicians for Social  Responsibility - Los Angeles (PSR-LA) 213.689.9170. amascarenas@psr-la.org. Ana  is also co-coordinator of Californians for Toxic free Fire Safety and can address  CA policy efforts to stop exposure to flame retardants, update flammability standard  TB 117, and efforts by the chemical industry to mislead communities of color on  the science and hazards of flame retardant chemicals.
  
  Gretchen Lee Salter, Senior Program and stePolicy Manager, Breast Cancer Fund. glee@breastcancerfund.org 415.34. 8223 x 33. Gretchen can discuss links to cancer from toxic flame  retardant chemicals.
	    Tony Stefani, cancer survivor,  retired San Francisco Firefighter Captain and founder of San Francisco Firefighters  Cancer Prevention Foundation. Contact Tony by email, stefanit@sbcglobal.net, 530.320.9765.  Tony can address high rates of cancer among firefighters and his support for removing  toxic flame retardants from furniture.
            
            Carroll Wills, California Professional Firefighters, 916.921.911,cwills@cpf.org.  Carroll can address toxic exposures firefighters face, and the need for fire safety  without the use of toxic chemicals.
            
              Ami Zota, PhD, Research Fellow, Program on Reproductive Health and the  Environment University of California, San Francisco cell 617.512.6045, ZotaAR@obgyn.ucsf.edu.  Dr. Zota can address reproductive health impacts and other scientific research.