The Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA) is the only thing standing between us and harmful chemicals found in everyday items like cleaning products, electronics, furniture, construction materials, and plastic products–and the factories where these toxic substances are made.
Trump’s EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin is gutting the Toxic Substances Control Act, rolling back TSCA’s risk evaluation process for existing chemicals, ignoring the real-life ways people are exposed, and weakening protections that prevent exposure. Under his proposed rule, the EPA would require far less data from companies about chemicals under review, increasing the chances of chemicals being declared “safe” with inadequate information.
TAKE ACTION BY NOVEMBER 7: Save the Toxic Substances Control Act!
It’s the Environmental Protection Agency’s job to enforce TSCA, but with the government shutdown, the EPA is at 11 percent capacity, with only 1,734 employees deemed “essential” to protect life, property, or national security at work. If Trump has his way, the 89 percent of EPA employees currently out of work won’t have much reason to come back.
The attack on TSCA comes as the Senate is poised to confirm Douglas Troutman as director of the EPA’s office of chemicals safety and pollution prevention. Until August 28, Troutman was the chief lobbyist for the American Cleaning Institute, a trade group representing BASF, Dow, and Procter & Gamble. Troutman will join former American Chemistry Council lobbyist Nancy Beck, the EPA deputy administrator who’s leading the charge to deregulate PFAS “forever chemicals”, former DuPont executive Lynn Ann Dekleva, the deputy assistant administrator in the chemical safety office who’s been playing politics with the science and altering EPA reports, and former pesticide industry lobbyist Kyle Kunkler who’s the new deputy assistant administrator for the pesticides program.
In the 2016 rewrite of the Toxic Substances Control Act that largely strengthened the law, Douglas Troutman was among the industry lobbyists who successfully worked in loopholes that chemical makers exploit today.
We can’t let BASF, Dow, and Procter & Gamble take over the EPA and gut the Toxic Substances Control Act.
TAKE ACTION BY NOVEMBER 7: Save the Toxic Substances Control Act!