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| April 2008 |
Wishing You a |
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In This Issue
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Interest in our work spikes every year around this time. Government agencies, civic institutions, private citizens, and corporations all begin calling us to find out what they can, should, might, and in some unfortunate cases, must do to acknowledge Earth Day.
But along the way, we've recognized that these efforts were bound to miss many Center for Environmental Health supporters. So this Earth Day, we thought we'd call your attention to a new on-line resource we've created: "Protect Your Home and Family." This simple, easy-to-navigate website gives parents and families practical tips that will equip them to protect themselves and their children from many of the everyday health threats commonly found in our homes. Want to avoid chemicals linked with reproductive problems, genetic damage, eye injuries, respiratory and other serious illnesses? Please check it out: http://www.cehca.org/protect-your-home-and-family/ |
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Celebrating Earth Day? Support an Organization that Does the Work for the Other 364 Days of the Year As you prepare to deposit your $600 Economic Stimulus Check, here are two predictions you can take along with you to the bank.
No matter what uncertain turns the economy takes, the need for the Center for Environmental Health's far-reaching work will continue. Your tax-deductible donation will help ensure that our capacity to do it continues as well.
To make a secure, on-line donation, please visit: http://www.cehca.org/donate/
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Fish, Drugs, Hormones, and You: What We Know About Pharmaceuticals in Tap Water Fish in Lake Mead (near Las Vegas) currently exhibit what once were considered unusual hormonal problems: endangered sucker fish with low sperm counts; male carp that produce the proteins found in eggs; bass that develop cells to produce both eggs and sperm. The culprit? Scientists from the U.S. Geological Survey believe the fishes' abnormalities come from medications that end up in Las Vegas' sewer system and later in the lake's water. And this could be a problem for more than fish: Lake Mead supplies drinking water for millions of people.
Last month, the Associated Press asked 62 major drinking water providers for information about medications in drinking water. Only 35 of the water providers had tested for medications. Of these, 28 providers found at least one medication in their water. And most troubling: the majority of these water providers did not regularly give their customers information about what they found. Like the water providers, the federal government has also been slow to address the issue. True to form, a White House task force charged with considering the problem has missed its deadlines. Many of the Center for Environmental Health's pioneering victories for public health were built on people's right to know which chemicals they are exposed to. While it is too early to hit the panic button about pharmaceuticals in drinking water, we believe this is a concern that deserves further study. Information is the cornerstone of a functional democracy. What You Can Do
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Spotlight on a CEH Board Member: Katie Silberman, J.D.
Q. How did you start
working in the environmental health movement? A. I've always been interested in women's health, and my first job after college was in breast cancer advocacy. I was able to learn more about environmental causes of disease, and also social determinants of disease. So my interest in the environmental field has always been around environmental health (how pollution affects our bodies) and environmental justice, which asks why some communities bear an unfair burden of toxins. Q. How has motherhood changed your perspective on environmental health? A. Watching my son Lincoln's transformation from newborn to toddler these past 19 months, I feel like a witness to the miracle of life itself. Seeing him grow so quickly is a visual lesson: everything that goes into him -- food, breastmilk, air, water -- and everything around him -- toys, cleaning products, car exhaust, pesticides -- quite literally becomes part of him. As a mother, it's almost unbearable to me that a company's lead, mercury or phthalates could be a part of that. Q. We keep discovering toxic chemicals in consumer products. How would you advise new parents to protect their children? A. I think it's important for parents to realize that no one can do everything; the important thing is to educate yourself enough to make the best choices you can for your family. But at the same time, toxic chemicals are not an individual problem. Even if I wrapped my own baby in a bubble, we would still face the societal problem of exposure to toxic chemicals without our consent. So the first step is to educate yourself about the potential risks to our kids, and what to do about them. For example, I buy BPA-free baby bottles for my son and avoid PVC products in our house. There are several organizations like CEH doing great work to help parents find information. I recommend:
The second step is for parents to band together to demand change from our government, and from the companies whose products we buy. That's why it's so important for parents to join organizations like CEH -- when we gather and unite enough voices, industry and government will not be able to ignore us. Q. Which of CEH's achievements do you take particular pride in? A. I'm very proud that CEH helped write and pass the first precautionary principle ordinance in the country (in San Francisco in 2003). This has redirected hundreds of millions of dollars toward healthier products for the City. For example, just switching parking enforcers' flashlight batteries from disposable to rechargeable saved the City a tremendous amount of money. It also kept the toxic chemicals inside those batteries, which number in the tens of thousands, from winding up in landfills. The ordinance provides a real-life model for other city governments and large institutions that want to protect health. Q. What are you working on at the Science and Environmental Health Network? A. We're very interested in an idea we call Guardianship of Future Generations, which we developed collaboratively with the Indigenous Environmental Network based on their traditional concept of Seventh Generation Guardianship. That is: how would we make decisions now if we truly considered the interests of future generations? What if there was someone at the table today whose job was to advocate for future generations, like a child now has a guardian in court? What would you protect if you could be the guardian of anything or anyone on Earth? We consider this a meaningful way to put precaution into practice We are developing a new website at www.guardiansofthefuture.org for others to join us. Q. What do you think will be the key environmental struggle that we leave for your son Lincoln and the next generation of activists? A. I think the next generation will shatter the frame that these issues are "environmental." We need a massive shift in cultural understanding (and it's beginning to happen) that issues like toxics, global warming, and polluted air and water are not "environmental" issues -- they are the very basis of our life on Earth. This is not an optional movement that you get to choose whether to participate in, like the Boy Scouts. We are, each of us, already in it.
(Silberman Family Photo: Devon Hill) |
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Center for Environmental Health supporters tell us time and time again: they are inspired by our results. When they learn, for example, that we’ve used California’s Proposition 65 law to eliminate arsenic from playground equipment and lead from children’s medications, jewelry, and other products, they often ask us to take on similar projects on behalf of the still-disenfranchised pet community.
Since pet owners can’t count on the government to protect our pets, we decided to compile some information about a common source of exposure: dog toys. Many squeaky toys, especially those that are soft and easily chewed by puppies, are frequently made from vinyl – the Dirty Plastic. Vinyl is cheap to make, toxic from production to use to disposal, and all-too-frequently tainted with lead and other heavy metals. Vinyl products, whether they’re intended for our two-legged children or our hairier four-legged ones, can also be made with phthalates, which are often added to soften plastic and can cause reproductive harm in humans and animals. What can you do?
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