Eight California Senators obstruct opportunity to reduce toxic chemical exposure

Email Print Twitter Facebook MySpace Stumble Digg More Destinations

Legislators side with Bromine Chemical Industry over California firefighters, physicians, and businesses

SACRAMENTO, Calif.,—On Monday, eight California State Senators voted against a measure that provides green business opportunities, improves fire safety for the state, and curbs global exposure to illness-causing chemicals.
 
Senate Business and Professions Committee Senators—Curren Price, D-Inglewood; Bill Emmerson, R-Hemet; Lou Correa, D-Santa Ana; Ed Hernandez, D-West Covina; Gloria Negrete McLeod, D-Chino; Juan Vargas, D-San Diego; Mimi Walters, R-Laguna Niguel; and Mark Wyland, R-Solana Beach—voted down SB 147, a bill that allows manufacturers to make fire-safe and chemical-free furniture and baby products intended for sale in California.
 
"Every single life is valuable, and no one should fall victim to fire injury or death. Firefighters can protect the lives of others and their own life better if this law is passed," says Tony Stefani, cancer survivor, founder of the San Francisco Firefighters Cancer Prevention Foundation, and retired Captain of the San Francisco Fire Department.
 
Denise Lamb of Black Women for Wellness works on health issues for the African American community, and testified: "We're constantly talking about the educational achievement gap in our kids, yet current law encourages the use of chemicals like flame retardants that are linked to lowered IQ and developmental disorders. We deserve the right to protect our families from fire and from toxic chemicals."
 
"Opposition to this bill was created by the same political operative who once worked at the Tobacco Institute," said Andrew McGuire, Executive Director of the Trauma Foundation at San Francisco General Hospital who was badly burned as a child and mounted a 15 year campaign for fire-safe cigarettes and fire safety. "Well-trained hired guns are running this chemical industry campaign, and our legislators need to do a better job of watching out for the interests of their real constituents."
 
"It is unconscionable that these legislators are ignoring the myriad of scientific studies linking flame retardants' chemicals to the rising rates of illnesses we are seeing today—learning disabilities and lowered IQ, reproductive effects—including undescended testicles, decreased sperm quality, infertility—and even cancer," says Martha Dina Arguello, Executive Director of Physicians for Social Responsibility-Los Angeles (PSR-LA). "These legislators have a responsibility to us, their constituents, not to chemical industry front groups."
 
For more information visit: http://www.psr-la.org/ca-senators-block-sb147

Related Articles

  • California Department of Education nominates schools for the National Blue Ribbon -

    LOS ANGELES, Calif.—Eight schools in Los Angeles County and four in Orange County were nominated by the California Department of Education to be national blue ribbon schools.

    The Los Angeles County nominees are:
    • California Academy of Mathematics and Science, Long Beach Unified School District;
    • Gertz-Ressler Academy High School, Los Angeles Unified School District;
    • Renaissance Arts Academy, Los Angeles Unified School District;
    • McGrath Elementary, Newhall School District;

  • Aspects of the Crenshaw rail line still hanging in the balance -

    The Crenshaw Subway Coalition is gearing up for a possible showdown over additional funding for the Crenshaw-to-LAX light rail line, including a Leimert Park Village Station, but may have to await a May 23 decision by the Metropolitan Transportation Authority Board on just how bruising—or necessary—a showdown will be.

  • Sea change for ‘City of Champions’ -

    Candidates running for Inglewood City Council seats bring a diverse collection of experiences to the contest to win a seat to govern in the “City of Champions.” On April 2, at the end of the day, they hope to be the ones left standing so they can deliver a pot of gold to residents in the form of paved streets, quieter airplanes, sewers free of tree branches, and a return to yesterday.

    District 1 candidates George Dotson, LeRoy N. Fisher, Felicia Ford and Daniel Tabor, are running against incumbent Mike Stevens.
     

  • Three injured in Inglewood apartment fire -

    INGLEWOOD, Calif.—Three people were injured today in a fire at an Inglewood apartment building, including one who suffered second-degree burns, authorities said.

    The fire at the two-story building at 109 N. Eastwood Ave. was reported at 1:16 a.m., said Los Angeles County Fire Department dispatch supervisor Andre Gougis.

    Firefighters were on scene by 1:20 a.m. and knocked down the blaze 17 minutes later, he said.

  • Mike Fronterotta named new Inglewood police chief -

    INGLEWOOD, Calif.—The Inglewood City Council appointed interim police Chief Mike Fronterotta as the permanent head of the department, it was announced today.

    Fronterotta had been serving as interim police chief since June of last year.

  • Support/Volunteer Opportunities

    The following numbers can be contacted for drug and alcohol assistance. 

    Alcoholics Anonymous (323) 936-4343 
    Cocaine Anonymous (310) 216-4444 
    Narcotics Anonymous (323) 933-5395 
     
    LA Treatment Facilities          
     
    AV Treatment Facilities