The Udall-Vitter bill allows, allows the chemical industry pay extra money, pay extra money for EPA to classify a chemical as high priority.
I thank Senator Boxer for her partnership on this bill, and I look forward to working with all of my colleagues to advance TSCA reform that ...
The Massachusetts Attorney General, Maura Healy, recently sent me a letter describing the way State authority to set strong chemical safety ...
So the chemical industry could pick those chemicals that would not be in fact subject to jurisdiction by the States.
If it takes 12 years to finish work on the first 25 chemicals, do you agree that given the Udall-Vitter bill's pace and today's methods for ...
If a chemical is dangerous, we should be acting as quickly as we can to protect our people.
I am not looking for your political judgment. I need your technical judgment.
We have to be very careful what we do here to make sure that there is true enforcement.
We should not in any way downplay the role the States play here.
The laboratories of democracy, as Justice Brandeis called the States, have been out in front of Congress.
It essentially puts the States out of business of protecting their people from poison.