Report on Toxic Effects of 1.5 Billion Pounds of Pollutants

Date: March 22, 2007

Source: News Room

New Report Links Toxic Pollution and Health Hazards as EPA Acts to Restrict Pollution Data

In 2004 alone, U.S. industrial facilities released 1.5 billion pounds of toxic pollutants linked to serious health effects, threatening hundreds of communities across the country, according to a new report released today by the U.S. Public Interest Research Group.

The report, "Toxic Pollution and Health," uses information from the federal Toxic Release Inventory (TRI) to analyze toxic pollution linked to serious health problems such as cancer, birth defects or neurological damage. Due to a recent EPA action restricting the public's right-to-know, this report may provide one of the last complete pictures of toxic pollution.

In one year these facilities released more than 70 million pounds of known carcinogens and 826 million pounds of neurotoxins to the air and water. The report analyzes these dangerous releases by state, country and zip code to provide a detailed toxic pollution picture.

"This report confirms that the health of many communities across the country is routinely put at risk by toxic pollution," said U.S. PIRG staff attorney Alex Fidis. "Unfortunately, EPA's attack on the public's right-to-know means that many communities will be left in the dark about this risk. EPA's rollbacks take communities from the information age back to the stone age."

The federal Toxic Release Inventory is a public right-to-know program that requires industrial facilities to publicly disclose their toxic releases. In 2004, EPA reported that the TRI has helped to reduce toxic pollution by 57% nationwide since its inception in 1988. Despite this success, the EPA recently weakened the program by authorizing industrial facilities to withhold previously reported pollution information.

"To address the potential health threats from toxic pollution, we need complete information about what toxics are being released, where, and in what amounts," said Fidis. "These toxics are the worst of the worst and pose tangible threats to public health that must be addressed."

Representatives Frank Pallone (D-NJ) and Hilda L. Solis (D-CA), and Senators Lautenberg (D-NJ) and Boxer (D-CA), recently challenged EPA's rollbacks by introducing the Toxic Right-to-Know Protection Act (H.R. 1055 and S. 595). This legislation would reverse the rollbacks to restore the lost data and to ensure that communities have the full and complete toxic pollution information they deserve.

For more information, contact:
John Rumpler, 617-747-4306
Alex Fidis, 202-546-9707 x329 (Washington, D.C.)

www.uspirg.org.

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