Protect children from hazardous chemicals
The federal Food and Drug Administration is rethinking its approval of the chemical bisphenol A, known as BPA. The Washington Legislature should pass legislation to phase out use of the chemical in baby bottles, drinking cups and plastic tableware used by children under age 3.
Washington
lawmakers in 2008 acted to keep toys with toxic chemicals out of the
hands of children. Apply the same good instincts to hazardous baby
bottles, drinking cups and plastic tableware used by children.
Two amended bills have moved quickly through the Legislature. House
Bill 1180 is up for a floor vote, and Senate Bill 6248 passed out of
the Senate Committee on Health and Long-Term Care. The legislation
focuses on children under age 3.
Enough serious doubts have
been raised about the health effects of the chemical bisphenol A, known
as BPA, to support phasing those products out of the marketplace. They
could not be manufactured, sold or distributed after July 2011 in
Washington.
Concerns about BPA received a jolt of electricity
last week when the federal Food and Drug Administration announced it
was rethinking its earlier approval of BPA. The agency said that new
information from the National Toxicology Program at the National
Institutes of Health has stirred "concern about the potential effects
of BPA on the brain, behavior, and prostate gland in fetuses, infants
and young children."
The FDA will support industry actions to
stop producing BPA-containing baby bottles and infant-feeding cups in
the United States. As it expressed serious concerns, the agency also
acknowledged its own 40-year-old regulatory rules complicate swift
review and action. The FDA also will support development of
alternatives to BPA for the linings of infant formula cans, and to
replace or minimize its use in other food-can linings.
Scattered jurisdictions have acted to declare BPA a hazardous substance
or outright ban its use. Washington legislators are taking a careful,
measured step to phase out BPA in baby bottles, drinking cups and
plastic tableware used by children.
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