Tuesday, July 12, 2011
Sen. Hearing On Unregulated Drinking Water Contaminants Program
Jul 12: The Senate Environment and Pubic Works (EPW) Committee,  Chaired by Senator Barbara Boxer (D-CA) , with Ranking Member James Inhofe  (R-OK) held a hearing entitled, "Oversight Hearing on the Environmental  Protection Agency's Implementation of the Safe Drinking Water Act's Unregulated  Drinking Water Contaminants Program." Witnesses testifying at the hearing included the: Government  Accountability Office; U.S. EPA; American Public Health Association; West Valley  Water District; Joseph Cotruvo & Associates, LLC; George Washington  University Cancer Institute; and Department of Public Health and Community  Medicine Tufts University.                 
    Chairman Boxer indicated in an  opening statement, "In order to ensure that enough is being done to protect our  nation from emerging contaminants, I, along with Representatives Waxman and  Markey, asked the Government Accountability Office (GAO) to investigate the  unregulated contaminant program. This report is being released today. . . the  GAO report shows the development of new standards for unregulated drinking water  contaminants, such as perchlorate, were derailed in a process that failed to use  the best available science and was driven by factors other than the protection  of public health. Scientific information has shown that certain emerging  contaminants in our drinking water, such as perchlorate and chromium-6, could be  harmful to children and families across the nation. . . EPA needs to have a  process that vigorously addresses these contaminants to help ensure the safety  of the nation's drinking water. . ."
     Ranking Member Inhofe said, "At  the cornerstone of the Safe Drinking Water Act is the idea that we should be  controlling those substances that pose risks to public health. Unfortunately,  the system that EPA uses to determine health risks, the Integrated Risk  Information System (IRIS), has a decade's long issues in crafting risk  assessments. The National Academy of Sciences (NAS) has recently pointed out  that IRIS assessments have suffered from a lack of transparency, inconsistency,  and problems with evaluating studies and the weight of evidence. . . As  analytical techniques continue to improve, we are able to detect constituents at  increasingly lower levels. This ever increasing ability to detect will allow the  numbers of chemicals in our water to increase infinitely. However, it is  important that we do not associate any detection with risk. In nearly every  case, the extremely low levels we are detecting are well below the dosage that  would affect public health. To be perfectly clear, exposure does not mean there  is risk. . ."
     GAO submitted 26-pages of  testimony and a 146-page report entitled, Safe Drinking Water Act: EPA  Should Improve Implementation of Requirements on Whether to Regulate Additional  Contaminants (GAO-11-254, May 27, 2011). GAO  was asked to: (1) evaluate the extent to which EPA's implementation of the 1996  amendments has helped assure the public of safe drinking water; and, (2) review  the process and scientific analyses used to develop the 2008 preliminary  regulatory determination on perchlorate. GAO analyzed relevant statutory  provisions and regulatory determination documents and interviewed EPA  officials.
     GAO found that, "Systemic  limitations in EPA's implementation of requirements for determining whether  additional drinking water contaminants warrant regulation have impeded the  agency's progress in assuring the public of safe drinking water. EPA's selection  of contaminants for regulatory determination in 2003 and 2008 was driven by data  availability -- not consideration of public health concern. EPA does not have  criteria for identifying contaminants of greatest public health concern and  based most of its final determinations to not regulate 20 contaminants on the  rationale of little or no occurrence of the contaminants in public water  systems. Moreover, EPA's testing program for unregulated contaminants--which can  provide key data to inform regulatory determinations--has fallen short in both  the number of contaminants tested and the utility of the data provided because  of management decisions and program delays. . ."
     GAO's 17 recommendations include  that the EPA Administrator require: (1) development of criteria to identify  contaminants that pose the greatest health risk; (2) improvements in its  unregulated contaminants testing program; and, (3) development of policies or  guidance to interpret the broad statutory criteria. According to GAO, EPA agreed  with 2 recommendations but took the position that developing guidance and taking  the other recommended actions are not needed. GAO believes EPA needs to adopt  all of the recommendations to better assure the public of safe drinking  water.
     EPA testified that,  "Strong science and  the law are the foundation of our decision-making at EPA. Under the Safe  Drinking Water Act (SDWA), EPA identifies priority contaminants that are known  or anticipated to occur in public water systems and then evaluates whether new  drinking water standards are warranted for these contaminants. . . GAO's report  expresses concern that EPA's past decisions have been driven not by considering  the greatest health concern but by considering available data. EPA agrees that  we can improve our process to better focus on contaminants that may be of public  health concern. The improved approach in the most recent CCL [Contaminant Candidate List] was a substantial step forward in achieving this by using a rigorous scientific process to  better ensure that the contaminants on the list are the  ones that should be of highest priority for public health protection. . .
     "In response to the GAO recommendations,  EPA will also consult with an independent panel of  scientists on the regulatory determinations, specifically on the evaluation of the contaminants against the first and second criteria  defined by SDWA, the use of best available science to  develop the determination, and whether the determination focuses on the greatest public health risk. We will post the  regulatory determination process publicly and review the  process every five years as we conduct the regulatory determination cycle. . ."
     Access  the hearing website with links to all testimony, a webcast and Chairman  Boxer's statement (click  here). Access the statement from Sen. Inhofe (click  here). Access the complete GAO report (click here).  [*Drink]
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1 comment:
This is nothing but politics as usual for both democrats and the republicans. Everyone knows GAO reports are nothing but government sponsored advertisements for certain politicians. The reports are sloppy and slanted. Politicians should stop playing politics. No wonder the American people are disgusted with Congress.
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