New ruling sought on carcinogen
The watchdog group Public Citizen is asking a court to throw out a rule concerning hexavalent chromium, a carcinogen. Abolishing the ruling would help a new administration issue a new one. Sam Eaton reports.
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TEXT OF STORY
Scott Jagow: Today, the watchdog group Public Citizen will ask a court to throw out a rule concerning hexavalent chromium. That's the carcinogen spotlighted in the movie Erin Brockovich:
Erin Brokovich's partner: Everything the Jensens have had -- is proven reaction to exposure to hexavalent chromium -- they have had:
Erin Brokovich: Breast cysts, uteran cancer, Hodgkins Disease, immune deficiencies, asthma, chronic nosebleeds . . .
Skeptic: A million things could have caused those problems.
As we know now, it wasn't a million different things. From the Marketplace Sustainability Desk, Sam Eaton reports.
Sam Eaton: The fight to reduce workplace exposures to hexavalent chromium goes back a decade and a half. It eventually led to a court-ordered rule change.
The problem, according to labor unions and Public Citizen, is that the new regulation is too lax. According to the government's own estimates, up to 5 percent of exposed workers will die of lung cancer.
Public Citizen attorney Scott Nelson says asking the courts to overturn the rule now makes it much easier for the next administration to issue a new one.
Scott Nelson: It takes much more to change a rule that's already in existence than it does to consider a rule when a court has already held that the existing rule is unlawful.
Without that court order, Nelson says changing the chromium regs could take as long as a year.
I'm Sam Eaton for Marketplace.






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