Richard Denison, Ph.D., is a Lead Senior Scientist.
[UPDATED 1-8-18: See updates below]
We have been blogging about damaging changes being made to the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) new chemicals review program for some time. Despite the reforms made in 2016 under the Lautenberg Act that were intended to significantly strengthen new chemical reviews, Scott Pruitt’s EPA has been moving since August of last year to seriously weaken the program.
Late yesterday, EPA made a change to its new chemicals website that not only reverses changes made to implement the Lautenberg Act, but actually makes the site less transparent than it has been for decades.[pullquote]EPA’s intent is now quite clear: to prevent the public from knowing when EPA’s professional staff flagged any concern in their initial review of a new chemical.[/pullquote]
The change makes clear that the agency is now planning to cover its tracks as it weakens new chemical reviews: EPA will now hide from the public any information about whether its initial review of a new chemical raises any concerns or warrants a more extensive review. Is this what Scott Pruitt meant when he said he intended to bring increased “transparency” to the review program – a term he used no fewer than five times in his August news release previewing changes he was making? Read More