Thursday, August 11, 2005

NRDC: Natural Resources Defense Council - Media Center

NRDC: Natural Resources Defense Council - Media Center: "COURT FINDS EPA RULES FAIL TO PROTECT CHILDREN FROM RAT POISONS

Tens of Thousands of Children -- Mostly Latino and African-American -- Are Poisoned Annually


NEW YORK (August 8, 2005) -- A federal judge today found that the Environmental Protection Agency has failed to protect children from exposure to rat poisons, and directed the agency to require chemical manufacturers to strengthen safeguards.
The decision was the result of a November 2004 lawsuit filed in New York City's federal district court by West Harlem Environmental Action and the Natural Resources Defense Council. The groups challenged EPA's regulations under the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act and the Administrative Procedure Act.
The EPA issued safety regulations in 1998 that would have protected children from the poisons, but it revoked them in 2001 after coming to a 'mutual agreement' with chemical manufacturers. Judge Jed Rakoff today rejected the agency's reversal, finding that its justification for dropping a key safety measure 'lacked even the proverbial 'scintilla' of evidence.'"

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Judge Rebukes EPA on Rat Poison Reversal

Judge Rebukes EPA on Rat Poison Reversal: "Judge Rebukes EPA on Rat Poison Reversal

By Juliet Eilperin
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, August 9, 2005; A02

The Environmental Protection Agency has failed to protect children from rat poison exposure, a federal judge ruled yesterday, suggesting chemical manufacturers should add a bittering agent to keep children from ingesting their products.
Ruling in favor of two advocacy groups -- West Harlem Environmental Action and the Natural Resources Defense Council -- U.S. District Judge Jed Rakoff wrote that the agency failed to justify its 2001 agreement with pest control companies, which dropped two provisions from a 1998 rule requiring them to include a bittering agent and an indicator dye."
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Although some manufacturers are using a bittering agent in their products, there are still a number of them that don't.

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