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The Story
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) released their second report on America’s Children and the Environment on February 24, 2003. Where we have taken decisive action, kids’ health is getting better. Where we have not, it is getting worse. The good news? Thanks to legislation and public health efforts, exposures to lead and to second hand tobacco smoke are plummeting. The bad news? Asthma in children has more than doubled since 1980, something the report connects to air pollution. Mercury exposure is another air pollution related problem. The main source of mercury emissions is the burning of coal, mostly at electric power plants. These plants continue to spew mercury into the air everyday. This mercury gets into our water, our fish, and our children. According to the EPA report, about 8 percent of pregnant women have enough mercury in their bodies to significantly increase the risk of attention problems, fine motor problems, poor language, poor memory, and poor visual-spatial skills in their children. As little as one part per billion of methylmercury has been shown to cause harm. About half of today’s young women have this amount or more in their bodies – and transfer it to their babies. It’s time to take action now to limit mercury emissions for our children’s sakes. It’s also time to take action on toxic pesticides. The EPA would like to see pesticides with poor safety profiles phased out by 2008. Our children are young now. And the effects of pesticides can linger for years.
Current federal government regulations on pesticides may not adequately protect children. A report released in April 2000 by Congress' investigative arm raised the concern that the current EPA standards do not account for children being more vulnerable than adults at the same level of pesticide exposure. Both their smaller size and their maturing organ systems put children at significantly higher risk. Levels set just by studying effects on adults are not adequate. Children deserve better. In this 2003 report the EPA begins to address this :
They also say:
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