April 3, 2008

 

 

 

 

Assembly Member Jared Huffman

Chair, Assembly Committee on Environmental Safety and Toxic Materials

Legislative Office Building, Suite 171

Sacramento, CA 95814

 

RE: AB 1879 (Feuer), Toxic Products – Strong Support

 

Dear Assemblymember Huffman:

 

Sierra Club California strongly supports AB 1879, which would fill a major gap in California law by providing the Department of Toxic Substances Control (DTSC) with the authority to control toxic substances in the consumer products that we come into contact with on a daily basis. Californians have been alarmed to discover that many of the products sold in our stores include harmful substances, from lead-tainted toys to linens with toxic flame retardants; currently no state agency has the authority to take toxic products off the shelves or spur the development of safer alternatives, except in some limited areas.

 

AB 1879 would authorize DTSC to regulate certain chemicals of concern -- lead, mercury, cadmium, arsenic, polybrominated diphenylethers (PBDEs), phthalates, and hexavalent chromium  -- in all consumer products.  DTSC would be given the authority to require manufacturers to design approaches to extract the chemical of concern from the chain of commerce or other settings, to restrict the use of chemicals of concern in order to avoid exposure to sensitive populations, such as children or pregnant women, or to prohibit use of the chemical, if warranted. DTSC would also have authority to require manufacturers to establish take-back programs for recycling or responsible disposal of their products. As the Integrated Waste Management Board has recognized, manufacturers – rather than governments – should primarily bear the costs of end-of-life disposition of their products.

 

AB 1879 would require DTSC, in considering products for regulation, to prioritize products that are used or designed for sensitive populations (children, pregnant women, etc.), and those most likely to cause exposure of chemicals of concern to individuals or the environment. Additionally, under the provisions of AB 1879, DTSC may require that products containing one of the identified six chemicals of concern be labeled in an understandable fashion that they contain such chemicals and list the associated harmful health effects.

 

 

Sincerely,

 

 

Bill Magavern

Director

 

Cc:       Committee Members

Assemblymember Mike Feuer