Safe Drinking Water & Toxic Enforcement Act of 1986 (Proposition 65), California Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment, San Francisco, CA

1999 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 149-150 ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
William A. Horn ◽  
Joshua D. Beard

The Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy (“EGLE”), formerly the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality, is in the process of seeking primary enforcement responsibility from the United States Environmental Protection Agency (“EPA”) for its Underground Injection Control (“UIC”) program for Class II wells pursuant to Part C of the Safe Drinking Water Act (“SDWA”).


PEDIATRICS ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 113 (Supplement_3) ◽  
pp. 1146-1157
Author(s):  
Lynn Goldman ◽  
Henry Falk ◽  
Philip J. Landrigan ◽  
Sophie J. Balk ◽  
J. Routt Reigart ◽  
...  

Recent public recognition that children are different from adults in their exposures and susceptibilities to environmental contaminants has its roots in work that began >46 years ago, when the American Academy of Pediatrics (APA) established a standing committee to focus on children’s radiation exposures. We summarize the history of that important committee, now the AAP Committee on Environmental Health, including its statements and the 1999 publication of the AAP Handbook of Pediatric Environmental Health, and describe the recent emergence of federal and state legislative and executive actions to evaluate explicitly environmental health risks to children. As a result in large part of these efforts, numerous knowledge gaps about children’s health and the environment are currently being addressed. Government efforts began in the 1970s to reduce childhood lead poisoning and to monitor birth defects and cancer. In the 1990s, federal efforts accelerated with the Food Quality Protection Act, an executive order on children’s environmental health, the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry/Environmental Protection Agency Pediatric Environmental Health Specialty Units, and National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences/Environmental Protection Agency Centers of Excellence in Research in Children’s Environmental Health. In this decade, the Children’s Environmental Health Act authorized the National Children’s Study, which has the potential to address a number of critical questions about children’s exposure and health. The federal government has expanded efforts in control and prevention of childhood asthma and in tracking of asthma, birth defects, and other diseases that are linked to the environment. Efforts continue on familiar problems such as the eradication of lead poisoning, but new issues, such as prevention of childhood exposure to carcinogens and neurotoxins other than lead, and emerging issues, such as endocrine disruptors and pediatric drug evaluations, are in the forefront. More recently, these issues have been taken up by states and in the international arena.


Author(s):  
VERA L. FERRACINI ◽  
MARIA C. Y. P. PESSOA ◽  
ADERALDO S. SILVA ◽  
CLÁUDIO A. SPADOTTO

Analisou-se o potencial de contaminação das águas subterrâneas e superficiais do Submédio do Rio São Francisco por pesticidas aplicados nas culturas de manga e uva, mediante critérios da Environmental Protection Agency, do índice de GUS e critérios propostos por GOSS. Todos os critérios utilizados levam em consideração as propriedades dos produtos aplicados, não demandando custos elevados nem muito tempo para o levantamento das informações e para a avaliação do potencial de contaminação. Os resultados obtidos reforçam a importância de disponibilizar informações sobre as propriedades físico-químicas dos pesticidas, principalmente o coeficiente de adsorção, cujo valor permite a previsão da mobilidade do composto no solo. Este fator, integrado ao conhecimento do tempo de degradação do produto até a metade de sua concentração inicial (meia-vida) no solo, fornece informações sobre a sua influência no potencial de contaminação das águas. Os resultados deste trabalho propiciam o conhecimento dos pesticidas com maior potencial de contaminação dos recursos hídricos, os quais devem ser priorizados no monitoramento ambiental “in loco”. GROUND AND SURFACE WATER OF THE REGIONS PETROLINA (PE) AND JUAZEIRO (BA) Abstract The contamination potential of ground water and surface water in the sub-middle portion of San Francisco river basin was analyzed for pesticides applied in mango and grape cultivation by following the criteria of Environmental Protection Agency and to the index of GUS and criteria proposed by GOSS. All the criteria used take into consideration the applied products properties, by not demanding high costs nor a long time for rising information and evaluating contamination potential. The results obtained reinforce the importance of information publication on the physicochemical properties of pesticides, especially data on adsorption coefficient, whose values allow to predict the pesticide mobility in soils. This factor combined with the pesticide degradation time to the half of its initial concentration (half life) in the soil, provides information on pesticide water contamination potential. The results of this work allow the identification of the pesticides with higher contamination potential to water resources, which should be prioritized in environmental monitoring “in loco”.


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