SUFFOLK CLOSEUP
by Karl Grossman
Our recent efforts have been recorded
by an accomplished environmental journalist, Karl Grossman
who’s well known for his reporting on tough environmental
issues. We are most pleased to share following column
appeared in this weeks Southampton Press:
“In this day and age
of prevention, we owe it to our youngsters to minimize
their exposure to potentially harmful products, especially
when there are safe, toxin-free alternatives available,”
said Suffolk County Executive Steve Levy last week in
signing a first-in-the-nation law banning the sale of
plastic baby bottles and cups for toddlers containing
the BPA.
Mr. Levy’s was right on target: BPA,
an acronym for Bisphenol-A, is a toxic agent, especially
for youngsters, and there’s absolutely no need for
it. Indeed, as evidence has mounted about the health impacts
of BPA, companies including Gerber, Evenflow and Playtex
Products have stopped selling baby bottles made with BPA.
Major retailers including Walmarts and Babies R Us have
switched to—and are emphasizing—“BPA-free”
products.
U.S. Senator Charles Schumer was at Mr.
Levy’s side in Hauppauge Thursday for the signing
of the county measure and announced that he is introducing
a BPA-Free Kids Act—a federal counterpart of the
Suffolk law. Already, Senator Schumer is a prime sponsor
of broader proposed U.S. law—the Ban Poisonous Additives
Act of 2009—that would ban BPA in not only bottles
and cups for young children but in all food and beverage
containers.
A key figure at the signing ceremony was
Karen Joy Miller, founder of Prevention Is The Cure, an
initiative of the Huntington Breast Cancer Action Coalition
which has grown to be a national phenomenon. It was Ms.
Miller, a breast cancer survivor, who with information
about BPA went to Legislator Steven Stern of Dix Hills
that spurred him to introduce the Suffolk County BPA law.
“This ban opens the door to policy-makers
at the state and federal level,” commented Ms. Miller
last week. She praised Suffolk County for being “so
brave to open up the door to what I think will be more
expansive legislation.”
As its website (www.preventionisthecure.org)
explains: “Prevention Is The Cure is an anti-disease,
environmental group that brings fresh perspective to the
causes of disease rather than ways of coping once diagnosed.
We are convinced that disease is not caused by genes alone
but by the interaction of environmental triggers and genetic
predispositions.” Prevention Is The Cure is rooted
in the landmark work of Rachel Carson and her book Silent
Spring that documented how chemical toxins—particularly
pesticides—were causing an epidemic of cancer. But,
notes its website, in boldface type on top of its home
page, “40 years have passed and the wake-up call
put forth by Rachel Carson and other activists have been
BLOCKED by powerful interests that profit from pollution.”
Strong words, and true.
A scientist central in exposing BPA for
being the source of illness and death, including cancer,
is University of Missouri Professor of Biological Sciences
Frederick vom Saal who in a recent interview said: “It’s
not just what you eat, it’s what you eat out of.”
BPA, he said, “poses a threat” and stands
to “shorten lives.” Of the chemical industry,
it’s “going to end up like the tobacco companies,
sued into the Stone Age.”
BPA is widely used to harden plastics and
also as a coating inside cans of beverages and food. Three
million metric tons of the stuff are manufactured annually.
With BPA production such a big business, the chemical
industry totally denies—including at hearings on
the bill in Suffolk and in trying to block Congressional
action—any harmful impacts.
Representative Edward Markey of Massachusetts,
the House sponsor of the Ban Poisonous Additives Act of
2009, says “it is time for Congress to act quickly
to ban this toxin from all food and beverage containers.”
He cites research showing that one out of 10 cans tested
contained enough BPA to “expose a child or pregnant
woman to more than 200 times the government’s safe
level.” The BPA issue is clearly one that goes beyond
baby bottles and cups for toddlers. Mr. Markey also points
to a study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
that determined that measurable amounts of BPA are now
in 93 percent of the U.S. population.
Senator Dianne Feinstein of California,
a co-sponsor with Mr. Schumer of the measure in the Senate,
declares: “Americans should not be used as guinea
pigs by chemical companies.”
The Suffolk ban hopefully will, as Ms.
Miller believes, “open the door” to more “expansive
legislation”—laws to ban this terribly harmful
and unnecessary chemical.