Richard Denison, Ph.D., is a Lead Senior Scientist.
Next week, the Scientific Advisory Committee on Chemicals (SACC), established under the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA) to peer-review EPA’s draft chemical risk evaluations, will meet to review the latest of those drafts, for the likely human carcinogen carbon tetrachloride.
As with other recent draft risk evaluations, EPA has been scheduling the SACC meetings in the middle of rather than following the public comment period. This means the public has at best a few weeks to digest these huge documents and draft and submit comments in order to have them be part of the record that the SACC is allowed to take into consideration in its peer review.
However, we have learned that EPA is now further constraining the SACC’s schedule, requesting that the panel members come to the peer review meeting with their comments already drafted, and then delivering their final report within 60 days rather than the 90 days previously provided. These developments further jam both the public and the SACC in their efforts to ensure EPAs work is subject to a robust peer review.
Whatever the reasons for EPA making these changes, EDF decided to expedite our initial comments to seek to ensure they could be considered. We submitted comments last week, a full week before the February 19 deadline, to ensure the SACC received and had sufficient time to review them in advance of the peer review meeting.
We deemed this critical because of the glaring gaps and flaws in EPA’s draft that lead it yet again to drastically understate the risks of this chemical. These include the same problems that have plagued the draft risk evaluations for other chemicals, as well as new ones. Read More