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1 | HOUSE RESOLUTION
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2 | WHEREAS, Children and the developing fetus are uniquely | ||||||
3 | vulnerable to the health threats of toxic chemicals, and | ||||||
4 | early-life chemical exposures have been linked to chronic | ||||||
5 | disease later in life; and
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6 | WHEREAS, A growing body of peer-reviewed scientific | ||||||
7 | evidence links exposure to toxic chemicals to many diseases and | ||||||
8 | health conditions that are rising in incidence, including | ||||||
9 | childhood cancers, prostate cancer, breast cancer, learning | ||||||
10 | and developmental disabilities, infertility, and obesity; and
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11 | WHEREAS, The President's Cancer Panel report released in | ||||||
12 | May 2010 says "the true burden of environmentally induced | ||||||
13 | cancers has been grossly underestimated", and the panel advised | ||||||
14 | the President "to use the power of your office to remove the | ||||||
15 | carcinogens and other toxins from our food, water, and air that | ||||||
16 | needlessly increase health care costs, cripple our nation's | ||||||
17 | productivity, and devastate American lives"; and
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18 | WHEREAS, Workers in a range of industries are exposed to | ||||||
19 | toxic chemicals that pose threats to their health, increasing | ||||||
20 | worker absenteeism, worker compensation claims, and healthcare | ||||||
21 | costs that burden the economy; and
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1 | WHEREAS, A recent national poll found that 78% of likely | ||||||
2 | American voters were seriously concerned about the threat to | ||||||
3 | children's health from exposure to toxic chemicals in | ||||||
4 | day-to-day life; and
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5 | WHEREAS, States bear an undue burden from toxic chemicals, | ||||||
6 | including health care costs and environmental damages, | ||||||
7 | disadvantaging businesses that lack information on chemicals | ||||||
8 | in their supply chain and increasing demands for state | ||||||
9 | regulation; and
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10 | WHEREAS, The primary governing federal statute, the Toxic | ||||||
11 | Substances Control Act of 1976 (TSCA), was intended to | ||||||
12 | authorize the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to | ||||||
13 | protect public health and the environment from toxic chemicals; | ||||||
14 | and
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15 | WHEREAS, When the TSCA was passed, about 62,000 chemicals | ||||||
16 | in commerce were grandfathered in without any required testing | ||||||
17 | for health and safety hazards or any restrictions on usage; and
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18 | WHEREAS, In the 35 years since the TSCA passed, the EPA has | ||||||
19 | required chemical companies to test only about 200 of those | ||||||
20 | chemicals for health hazards and has issued partial | ||||||
21 | restrictions on only 5 chemicals; and
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1 | WHEREAS, The TSCA has been widely recognized as ineffective | ||||||
2 | and obsolete due to legal and procedural hurdles that prevent | ||||||
3 | the EPA from taking quick and effective regulatory action to | ||||||
4 | protect the public against well-known chemical threats; and
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5 | WHEREAS, In January 2009, the U.S. General Accounting | ||||||
6 | Office (GAO) added the EPA's regulatory program for assessing | ||||||
7 | and controlling toxic chemicals to its list of high risk | ||||||
8 | government programs that are not working as intended, finding | ||||||
9 | that: | ||||||
10 | (1) the EPA has been unable to complete assessments | ||||||
11 | even of chemicals of highest concern; | ||||||
12 | (2) the EPA requires additional authority to obtain | ||||||
13 | health and safety information from the chemical industry | ||||||
14 | and to shift more of the burden to chemical companies to | ||||||
15 | demonstrate the safety of their products; and | ||||||
16 | (3) the TSCA does not provide sufficient chemical | ||||||
17 | safety data for public use by consumers, businesses, and | ||||||
18 | workers and fails to create incentives to develop safer | ||||||
19 | alternatives; and
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20 | WHEREAS, The National Conference of State Legislatures | ||||||
21 | unanimously adopted a resolution in July 2009 that articulated | ||||||
22 | principles for TSCA reform and called on Congress to act to | ||||||
23 | update the law; and |
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1 | WHEREAS, In August 2010, the Environmental Council of | ||||||
2 | States, the national association of state environmental agency | ||||||
3 | directors, unanimously adopted a resolution entitled | ||||||
4 | "Reforming the Toxic Substances Control Act", which endorsed | ||||||
5 | specific policy reforms; and | ||||||
6 | WHEREAS, Ten states have come together to launch the | ||||||
7 | Interstate Chemicals Clearinghouse to coordinate state | ||||||
8 | chemical information management programs and a coalition of 13 | ||||||
9 | states issued guiding principles for TSCA reform; and
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10 | WHEREAS, Seventy-one state laws on chemical safety have | ||||||
11 | been enacted and signed into law in 18 states with broad | ||||||
12 | bipartisan support over the last 8 years; and | ||||||
13 | WHEREAS, State policy leadership on chemical management, | ||||||
14 | although outstanding, cannot substitute for Congressional | ||||||
15 | leadership to reform the TSCA, a reform which all parties agree | ||||||
16 | is urgently needed; and | ||||||
17 | WHEREAS, The TSCA is the only major federal environmental | ||||||
18 | statute that has never been updated or reauthorized; and | ||||||
19 | WHEREAS, Legislation to substantially reform the TSCA was | ||||||
20 | introduced during the 109th Congress in 2005, the 110th | ||||||
21 | Congress in 2008, and again in the 111th Congress in 2010; |
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1 | therefore, be it
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2 | RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE | ||||||
3 | NINETY-SEVENTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that | ||||||
4 | The House of Representatives of the State of Illinois | ||||||
5 | encourages the 112th United States Congress to enact federal | ||||||
6 | legislation to modernize the Toxic Substances Control Act of | ||||||
7 | 1976 to strengthen chemicals management through policy reforms | ||||||
8 | that:
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9 | (1) require chemical manufacturers to prove that all | ||||||
10 | existing and new chemicals are not harmful to human health | ||||||
11 | and provide essential health and safety information on | ||||||
12 | chemicals to inform the market, consumers, and the public; | ||||||
13 | (2) require immediate action to reduce or eliminate the | ||||||
14 | worst chemicals, including persistent, bioaccumulative, | ||||||
15 | and toxic chemicals (PBTs) and other priority toxics to | ||||||
16 | which there is already widespread exposure; | ||||||
17 | (3) preserve the authority of state and tribal | ||||||
18 | governments to operate chemicals management programs that | ||||||
19 | are more protective than the federal government's; | ||||||
20 | (4) establish health safety standards for chemicals | ||||||
21 | that rely on the best available science to protect the most | ||||||
22 | vulnerable among us, such as children and the developing | ||||||
23 | fetus; | ||||||
24 | (5) reward innovation by fast-tracking approval of | ||||||
25 | new, demonstrably safer chemicals and invest in green |
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1 | chemistry research and workforce development to boost | ||||||
2 | American business and spur jobs, making safer | ||||||
3 | alternatives; and | ||||||
4 | (6) promote environmental justice by developing action | ||||||
5 | plans to reduce disproportionate exposure to toxic | ||||||
6 | chemicals in hot spot communities; and be it further
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7 | RESOLVED, That suitable copies of this resolution be | ||||||
8 | presented to each member of the Illinois congressional | ||||||
9 | delegation.
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