Manataka
American Indian Council
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New Human Pesticide Testing Rule
Leaked EPA rule allows pesticide experiments on humans, including pregnant women, nursing mothers, and children. Three California legislators call on the EPA to withdraw the rule. TAKE ACTION!
EPA's Latest
Human Pesticide Testing Rule Called Illegal, Immoral
WASHINGTON, DC, January 25, 2006 (ENS) -
Three U.S. legislators are asking the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) to withdraw a planned rule to permit pesticide experimentation on
humans, including pregnant and nursing mothers and children.
The final draft rule is set to be officially released later this week, but a
copy was leaked to leaked to the legislators by a concerned administration
official who requested that the original copy of the plan not be duplicated
in its entirety and widely distributed out of concern for anonymity.
Monday, California legislators Senator Barbara Boxer, and Representatives
Henry Waxman and Hilda Solis released details of the rule and called on EPA
Administrator Stephen Johnson to withdraw the rule, calling it a "profound
moral and ethical breach."
“This rule has not been signed by EPA Administrator Stephen Johnson yet.
It’s within his power to fix this regulation, and we are calling on him to
do so,” said Senator Boxer.
In August 2005, Congress enacted a moratorium upon the EPA using human
pesticide experiments until strict ethical standards were established. Boxer
championed the moratorium in the U.S. Senate. Solis pushed the moratorium
through the U.S. House of Representatives.
The law creating the moratorium passed overwhelmingly in the House and
Senate with strong bipartisan support, which included conservative
Republicans, who questioned the ethics of testing toxic chemicals on humans.
But the leaked final draft rule would allow manufacturers to conduct testing
of pesticides upon pregnant women and children so long as there is no
“intent” at the outset of the study to submit the results to the EPA.
Additionally, the plan would allow pesticides to be tested upon pregnant
women and children in studies intended for submission to the EPA at exposure
levels up to the current legal limits – even though the National Academy of
Sciences found that in some cases this level of exposure could present acute
risks to children.
“The regulation is an open invitation to test pesticides on humans, which is
the exact opposite of what Congress intended,” said Waxman. “The
administration predicts that over 30 pesticide experiments will be submitted
to EPA each year under the new rule. That’s an enormous step in the wrong
direction.”
People with high levels of pesticides in their blood are far more likely to
develop genetic mutations linked with cancers, birth defects, and
neurological disorders peer-reviewed scientific studies across the world
have documented.
In its moratorium legislation, Congress required that the EPA establish a
Human Subjects Review Board (HSRB) as recommended by the National Academy of
Sciences. The Academy urged that this Board review research protocols prior
to consideration by an Independent Review Board (IRB).
The Academy expected that the HSRB would have ethical and pesticide
expertise that IRBs typically lack. This approach would allow an IRB to
block unethical research or require modifications suggested by the Human
Subjects Review Board prior to the initiation of a study.
But the final draft rule would establish a powerless Human Subjects Review
Board that would consider research protocols after an IRB and EPA staff had
already approved a study. Under the administration plan, the Human Subjects
Review Board would not have any authority to block or require modifications
to unethical research.
“The administration plan is inconsistent with the law passed by Congress
with bipartisan support," said Boxer. "The loopholes which allow continued
testing on pregnant women, infants and children are contrary to law and
widely accepted ethical guidelines, including the Nuremberg code. The fact
that EPA allows pesticide testing of any kind on the most vulnerable,
including abused and neglected children, is simply astonishing."
The EPA final draft rule introduces new loopholes that will allow for
ethical abuse, the legislators warn. While the plan would require
researchers to document their ethical compliance in the United States when
the plan applies to them, it waives overseas researchers from having to
prove a study was ethically conducted – even when the researcher intends to
submit the study to EPA.
The rule would subject EPA observational studies to the Common Rule, which
states general standards of ethical conduct for research. However,
observational studies conducted by the pesticide industry would be bound by
no specific ethical requirements. These loopholes were never suggested or
even contemplated by Congress, the three legislators say.
EPA Administrator Stephen Johnson defends pesticide dosing experiments as
necessary for information on which to base regulations. On April 8, 2005,
Administrator Johnson cancelled a controversial Children's Health
Environmental Exposure Research Study that would have allowed pesticide
dosing of children.
"The Children's Health Environmental Exposure Research Study was designed to
fill critical data gaps in our understanding of how children may be exposed
to pesticides (such as bug spray) and chemicals currently used in
households," Johnson said then." Information from the study was intended to
help EPA better protect children."
"As a scientist and a 24-year employee of the EPA, I have a deep passion for
the Agency's mission to protect human health and the environment," Johnson
said at the time. "Continual review and reassessment is a fundamental aspect
of scientific progress, and I am committed to ensuring that EPA's research
is based on sound science with the highest ethical standards."
Erik Olson, an attorney with the Natural Resources Defense Council says the
EPA's latest rule is not justified legally or ethically. “EPA is giving its
official blessing for pesticide companies to use pregnant women, infants and
children as lab rats in flagrant violation of a new federal law cracking
down on this repugnant practice. There is simply no legal or moral
justification for the agency to allow human testing of dangerous chemicals.
None.”
Attorney Jeff Ruch, executive director of Public Employees for Environmental
Responsibility (PEER) says his organization objects to the plan because it
allows dosing experiments involving infants and pregnant women using
non-pesticide chemicals. "Thus, companies will be free to test agents such
as perchlorate on nursing mothers. The proposal only forbids (with
loopholes) pesticide dosing studies using children and pregnant women."
"When I asked the EPA representative at the 'stakeholders' meeting about
this discrepancy, he admitted it and explained that the agency was only
trying to respond to the biggest source of public controversy, that being
pesticide experiments," Ruch told ENS in an email interview.
One very large omission in the proposed EPA rule is any prohibition or check
against paying poor people amounts that would induce them to sign informed
consent papers or falsely certify that they were already exposing themselves
to the chemical under study, Ruch said.
Ruch says the rule opens the doors to all pre-rule human studies. "The
proposal allows EPA to utilize for regulatory purposes any human dosing
study conducted before the effective date of the new rule on a case-by-case
basis, considering the ethical standards prevalent at the time. Since, prior
to the rule, EPA recognized no ethical standards at all, this means that all
prior human studies can come in through EPA's wide open door."
"This is yet another example of the Bush administration choosing to ignore
the letter of the law and going its own way," Solis said. "Congress passed
legislation to curb the practice of unethical pesticide testing on humans,
but with this rule the Bush administration is authorizing systematic testing
of pesticides on humans which not only fails to meet its congressional
mandate but which will increase the number of unethical studies."
Copyright Environment News Service (ENS)
2006. All Rights Reserved.
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TAKE ACTION! Demand that the planned rule to permit pesticide testing on humans, including pregnant women, nursing mothers, and children BE WITHDRAWN!
CALL the Office of EPA Administrator Stephen Johnson: 202-564-4700 -or- E-MAIL EPA Administrator Stephen Johnson: http://www.epa.gov/epahome/comments.htm
Click On "Comments or Questions"; Click On "Ask a Question" tab
After you key in your e-mail address, CLICK ON "pesticides" under "Topic"; CLICK ON "other pesticide sub-topic" in the space underneath. after you write your comments in the "question" space provided, the site will ask you to "Continue" and create an account before your comments can be submitted; basically you are given a code # to go along with your already submitted e-mail address. Please do not be intimidated! The EPA needs to know that the public opposes this horrific rule!
SAMPLE E-MAIL: Feel free to copy-and-paste, edit, or submit your own comment! |
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TO: EPA Administrator Stephen Johnson
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency planned rule to permit pesticide experimentation on humans, including pregnant and nursing mothers and children, must be withdrawn.
I understand that the final draft rule is set to be officially released later this week, and that the rule has not yet been signed by you, EPA Administrator Stephen Johnson.
In August 2005, Congress enacted a moratorium upon the EPA using human pesticide experiments until strict ethical standards were established. The law creating the moratorium passed overwhelmingly in the House and Senate with strong bipartisan support from legislators who questioned the ethics of testing toxic chemicals on humans.
But the EPA's proposed final draft rule would allow manufacturers to conduct testing of pesticides upon pregnant women and children so long as there is no “intent” at the outset of the study to submit the results to the EPA. Further, the proposed rule waives overseas researchers from having to prove a study was ethically conducted – even when the researcher intends to submit the study to EPA. These loopholes in the proposed rule are clearly the exact opposite of what Congress intended.
There is no legal or moral justification for the EPA to allow human testing of dangerous chemicals. The EPA must withdraw this profoundly immoral and unethical rule allowing for human testing of pesticides.
Sincerely,
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