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Fighting Fire Retardants with FireAn interview with Mary Brune, founder of Making Our Milk Safe19 Sep 2007
Editor's note: Last year, Grist introduced readers to MOMS as the activist group was targeting Target's sales of PVC. In this interview, we catch up with co-founder Mary Brune to find out about the group's latest campaign.
OK, so David slew Goliath. He never had half the battle facing Mary Brune and her fellow mothers in their crusade against the $500 billion-plus chemical industry.
Concerned mothers and California Assemblyman Mark Leno rally support for their bill in May.
Photo: assembly.ca.gov
Toxic fire retardants, Brune knew, are the Frankensteins of the furniture world: rising up from countless foam-stuffed couches, chairs, and other products, they drift invisibly into household air and dust, making human exposure inevitable. Chlorinated fire retardants are so dangerous they were banned in children's sleepwear nearly 30 years ago, only to show up again in furniture. Polybrominated diphenyl ethers, or PBDEs, are equally odious -- and have been measured in North American women at levels higher than anywhere else in the world. Against this backdrop, San Francisco Assemblyman Mark Leno (D) introduced AB 706 in February. The bill was dubbed the Crystal Golden-Jefferson Furniture Safety and Fire Prevention Act, in honor of a Los Angeles-area firefighter who died of work-related non-Hodgkins lymphoma (it's a common cause of cancer in firefighters, owing to the poisonous smoke produced by fire-retardant-treated materials when they burn). Firefighters across the state supported the legislation. But all forward motion ceased this summer when a group called Californians for Fire Safety kicked off a multimillion-dollar anti-AB 706 campaign, bankrolled by world leaders in the flame retardant business: Virginia-based Albemarle Corp. (annual sales of $2.4 billion); Connecticut-based Chemtura Corp. (annual sales of $3.5 billion), and Israel-based ICL Industrial Products, considered the globe's top producer of bromine. On Sept. 12, the California Senate bowed to the wishes of the chemical-industry lobbyists hovering in the wings and put Leno's bill into deep freeze for 2007; it can be reintroduced in 2008. We caught up with Brune to find out why she got involved in this fight -- and how it feels to be potentially facing round two.
Introduction and index to the series
Slide show: Photos and advice from Grist readers and staff
A handy health checklist for pregnancy
A few of our favorite parenting and health links
Can a crusade against crap toys ever succeed?
Where to turn when you're sick of disposable doodads
An illustration and explanation of today's tainted toys
A chat about Congress' effort to restore environmental education funds
Ecologist Sandra Steingraber explores the eco-causes of early puberty
The road to disodium inosinate is paved with good intentions
Time to reinvest in the school-lunch program
This family is sticking with eco-alternatives
In Sweden, they have fantastic bio-monitoring data that goes back about 30 years. In the '90s the studies showed that levels of PBDEs in breast milk were doubling every five years. Because of that, companies in Sweden were asked to stop using these chemicals and, as a result, there was a decline of PBDE levels in Swedish mothers. Getting rid of the chemicals in commerce was proved to be an effective way to decrease levels in breast milk.
We also wanted to bring a human face to the campaign. We were nursing moms who were really doing this for our children, because kids are at risk. So far there isn't any study that shows that any of these chemicals are safe.
Mary Brune protests at Target in fall 2006.
Photo: Gregory Dicum
It's staggering when you consider that our aggregate exposure to all the synthetic substances in our environment could be the underlying cause of so many diseases and developmental problems -- just look at the increases in cancers, infertility, autism. What it boils down to is that companies should not be able to put things on the market without regard to what the end result will be. We need to make sure things are safe before we put them out there.
In The Same Vein
Mother Knows Best
Fed up with breast-milk contamination, mothers form a national activist group The idea that toxic chemicals have gotten into our breast milk -- that what should be the purest food on the planet has become poisoned -- that's something almost unthinkable.
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