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         Toxins Environment:     more books (41)
  1. Comparative gene expression of PSP-toxin producing and non-toxic [An article from: Environment International] by F. Pomati, R. Kellmann, et all 2006-08-01
  2. Polychlorinated Biphenyls (PCBs): Mammalian and Environmental Toxicology (Environmental Toxin Series)
  3. Cadmium: 3rd IUPAC Cadmium Workshop, Juelich, FRG, August 1985 (Environmental Toxin Series)
  4. Toxic Cyanobacteria in Water: A Guide to their Public Health Consequences, Monitoring and Management
  5. Health effects of recreational exposure to Moreton Bay, Australia waters during a Lyngbya majuscula bloom [An article from: Environment International] by N.J. Osborne, G.R. Shaw, et all 2007-04-01
  6. Detection Methods for Cyanobacterial Toxins by G. A. Codd, T. M. Jefferies, et all 1994-12-31
  7. The Vulnerable Brain and Environmental Risks. Volume 3: Toxins in Air and Water
  8. Influence of insecticidal toxins from Bacillus thuringiensis subsp. kurstaki on the degradation of glyphosate and glufosinate-ammonium in soil samples ... Agriculture, Ecosystems and Environment] by C. Accinelli, C. Screpanti, et all 2004-08-01
  9. Invisible Killers: The Truth About Environmental Genocide by Rik J. Deitsch and Stewart Lonky, M.D., 2007-06-08
  10. LifeSpan Plus - 900 Natural Techniques To Live Longer
  11. Poisonous Plants: An entry from Macmillan Reference USA's <i>Macmillan Reference USA Science Library: Plant Sciences</i> by Nancy J. Turner, Sarah E. Turner, 2001
  12. Investigation of Toxins Produced by Cyanobacteria: Final Report by A.C. Petersen, 1999-07
  13. Investigation of Toxins Produced by Cyanobacteria: Literature Review of the Hazards and Risks Posed by Freshwater Cyanobacteria to Human and Animal Health by P.R. Hunter, 1999-07
  14. A Consumer's Dictionary of Household, Yard and Office Chemicals by Ruth Winter MS, 2010-09-29

21. Summit On Labor, Toxins, And The Environment
Summit on Labor, toxins, and the environment. Tony Mazzocchi of the Oil,Chemical and Atomic Workers Union will meet with environmental leaders.
http://www.ee.upenn.edu/~hunt/LabToxEnv.html
Go to TOES '90 Program Go to TOES '97 Home Page
Summit on Labor, Toxins, and the Environment
Tony Mazzocchi of the Oil, Chemical and Atomic Workers Union will meet with environmental leaders. Among the topics to be discussed will be his proposed Superfund for Workers designed to protect displaced workers as well as the environment. Areas of common ground include worker safety, the workplace environment, and larger environmental issues associated with jobs and job retention. Toxic and hazardous waste, both nationally and internationally, will be a particular focus of this summit. Organizers:
  • Michael Picker , National Toxics Campaign.
  • Rick Abraham , Director, Texans United, Houston, TX.
Speakers:
  • Tony Mazzocchi
  • Keith Mestrich , Special Assistant to Bob Harbrant, President of the Food and Allied Services Trade Union.
  • Pat Bryant , Gulf Coast Tenants Union.
  • Bill Carter , National Recycling Coalition.
  • Robert Bullard , Dept. of Sociology, University of California at Riverside, Riverside, CA.
  • Mary Kelly , Texas Center for Policy Studies, 1800 Guadeloupe, Suite B, Austin, TX 78701.
  • Mark Ritchie
  • Jeanine Perrune
  • Karyl Danson , Texas Committee on Occupational Safety and Health.

22. "Family Matters: Confront Social Toxins In Your Child's Environment"
FAMILY MATTERS. Confront Social toxins in Your Child's environment.By Steve Duncan MSU Extension Service. 07/27/01 BOZEMAN - In
http://www.montana.edu/wwwpb/home/12898fam.html
Campus Business Sports Nature/Resources ... Students Montana State University Communications Services FAMILY MATTERS Confront Social Toxins
in Your Child's Environment By Steve Duncan
MSU Extension Service
BOZEMAN - - In her book Silent Spring , author Rachael Carson brought the problem of environmental pollution to our attention. Her work spawned public policies designed to help us be better stewards of the land, air and water. But there are pollutants of a different sort that deserve serious concern. In his recent work titled Raising Children in a Socially Toxic Environment , Dr. James Garbarino, director of the Family Life Development Center at Cornell University, cites numerous studies that show evidence of toxic influences in our children s social world. Garbarino, who has spent 30 years studying the effects of violence and abuse on the young, joins many other researchers in asserting that A the social world of children has become poisonous to their development. " " The level of social and cultural poison is higher "

23. Recommended Steps To Protect Yourself From Toxins In The Environment
Information on protecting yourself from toxins in the environmentand natural health products for a healthier YOU! Sign
http://www.healingdaily.com/detoxification-diet/protecting-yourself-from-toxins-
Sign Up for Free healingdaily.com Newsletter colon/kidney detoxification conditions exercise juicing for health ... home
Search healingdaily.com Search WWW
Recommended steps to protect yourself from toxins in the environment:
* A quality multiple vitamin with extra antioxidants to decrease the potential of free-radical toxicity. * Eat organic foods as much as possible. * Extra vitamin A for immune support and tissue protection. Beta carotene to reduce the carcinogenicity of chemicals. Vitamin C to protect cells and tissues against the effects of water -soluble chemicals such as carbon monoxide, metals such as cadmium, and metabolic by-products such as carcinogenic nitrosamines made from nitrites. Vitamin E and selenium (200 to 300 mcg) work together to protect cells from pollutants including ozone, nitrogen dioxide, nitrites and metals such as lead, mercury, silver and cadmium. * Minerals, especially

24. Network Nuggets: Toxins And The Environment: Network Nuggets
toxins and the environment Network Nuggets. Network Nuggets (ewellbur Nuggets . toxins and the environment * . The Alberta
http://www.etc.bc.ca/~gateway/nuggets/96-97/0173.html
Toxins and the Environment: Network Nuggets
Network Nuggets ewellbur@cln.etc.bc.ca
Tue, 13 May 1997 11:54:22 -0700 (PDT)
[[[[[[[ * Toxins and the Environment * ]]]]]]
The Alberta Environmental Protection and the Canadian Network of
Toxicology Centres have collaborated to create an online study
unit on the basic principles utilized in the science of Toxicology.
Intended for Secondary Schools and Communities, there are seven
lessons, suggested research topics, a reading list and other
material to assist in the study of toxins.
From any location in a Lynx menu, simply type "g"
(without the quotations) for "go" then type in
(or copy and paste) the following URL: http://www.uoguelph.ca/cntc/study.html Note: the URL above can be accessed by other browsers. Lynx instructions are provided to help our subscribers who use Lynx.

25. Index Of /dept/union/pugwash/InfoFiles/Environment/Toxins
Parent Directory 14Oct-1997 1446 -......Index of /dept/union/pugwash/InfoFiles/environment/toxins. Name Lastmodified Size
http://www.rpi.edu/dept/union/pugwash/InfoFiles/Environment/Toxins/
Index of /dept/union/pugwash/InfoFiles/Environment/Toxins
Name Last modified Size Description ... Parent Directory 14-Oct-1997 14:46 - Apache/1.3.27 Server at www.rpi.edu Port 80

26. Index Of /dept/union/pugwash/yesterday/InfoFiles/Environment/Toxins
Parent Directory 14Oct-1997 1446 -......Index of /dept/union/pugwash/yesterday/InfoFiles/environment/toxins. NameLast modified Size
http://www.rpi.edu/dept/union/pugwash/yesterday/InfoFiles/Environment/Toxins/
Index of /dept/union/pugwash/yesterday/InfoFiles/Environment/Toxins
Name Last modified Size Description ... Parent Directory 14-Oct-1997 14:46 - Apache/1.3.27 Server at www.rpi.edu Port 80

27. Toxins & Environmental Effects On Breast Cancer By Carol Sutton
Breast Cancer and the environment. Three possible explanations are 1) Dietary changes,2) Increased exposure to environmental toxins, and 3) Increased exposure
http://www.carolsutton.net/toxins_and_breast_cancer.html
www.carolsutton.net Please bookmark DNA Many believe toxins play a role in breast cancer
Toxins and Environmental Effects
on Breast Cancer
The W ar on Breast Cancer ( washingtonpost.com) innovative screening and treatment strategies and more diligently investigate the potential underlying causes o f breast cancer , such as environmental toxins http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/health/A56228-2001May21.html
" Toxic lunch served to entice political action"-Discovery Canada By: Steven Hunt, April 4, 1997 [current on web as of July 2001-cls] Looks great and smells wonderful but chemical toxins dance in the food.what your taste buds cannot tell "Coq au vincorn and potato pancakes with tomato relishbraised pork with sauerkrautand even the Inuit delicacy of muktuk. Hungry? You probably wouldn't be if you knew the number of toxins contained in the delectable entrées. A smorgasbord of pesticides, paint strippers, wood preservatives, and even urinal deodorizers, however, are showing up in the food we eat everyday." THIS LINK HAS BEEN RECENTLY http://www.exn.net/Stories/1997/04/02/04.asp

28. Environmental Considerations
toxic natural substances one begins to understand just how dangerous our natural environment can be. Many of these and other natural toxins and mycotoxins
http://www.vitaletherapeutics.org/vtlenvrn.htm
ENVIRONMENTAL FACTORS
IN DISEASE
Since the vitaletheine modulators are phenomenally potent immune stimulants (as little as attograms/ml or femtograms/kg have biological activity), they probably occur naturally at only minute concentrations. This means that they are particularly vulnerable to nutritional deficiencies , to metabolic imbalance, and to inactivation by environmental toxins. Because of their potential impact upon our immune systems, chemical compounds that resemble certain nutritional substances may be among the most dangerous of the environmental pollutants; these analogues should be avoided until their safety has been firmly established. (Diesel fuel doesn't work well in gasoline cars, even though the two substances resemble each other somewhat, both physically and chemically.) Another way to think of chemical analogues of important natural compounds is as "keys" that will bind in the "lock" (or biological receptor), but not work in the "lock". It is of no small consequence that a presence in the lock (analogue) prevents the right "key" (or natural substance) from functioning. An example of this is the use of omega-methylpantothenic acid to block the utilization of pantothenic acid in man. This analogue, or a pantothenic acid deficiency (a lost key), prevents the usual antibody response to tetanus antigen, i.e., vaccination. Some analogues even can go one step further and bind chemically with the receptor, just as the wrong key can break off in the lock and prevent the "right key" from working until the "lock" is rebuilt or replaced.

29. Toxins Pose Threat To Arctic Health, Environment: Report
BACK . Canada / environment / Pollution Arctic toxins pose threatto Arctic health, environment report. 2002-10-02, Source CBC.
http://www.creativeresistance.ca/canada/2002-oct02-toxins-pose-threat-to-arctic-
Creative Resistance Search Home British Columbia Canada US World Finding Strength Taking Action ... BACK
Canada / Environment / Pollution - Arctic Toxins pose threat to Arctic health, environment: report
Source: CBC
http://cbc.ca/storyview/CBC/2002/10/01/arctic_pcb021001

HELSINKI - The health of indigenous peoples and wildlife in the Arctic is at risk from synthetic toxins, a new report showed Tuesday.
Pollutants travel to the fragile Arctic environment from distant regions of the world on air and water currents. The effects are being felt by those at the top of the food chain, such as humans and polar bears, the Norway-based Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme found.
Polar bear fat accumulates toxins
Toxins such as polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) build up in the food chain, especially in fatty tissue such as blubber. The fat is a key part of the diet for Inuit in Greenland and Canada, who have among the world's highest exposures to the toxins.
Marine mammals and fish are nutritious but also contaminated. The report was presented at an Arctic environmental conference in the Finish town of Rovaniemi.
U.S., Russia should ratify convention banning industrial pollutants: WWF

30. Tec: Toxin Technical Information Sheet: Index
Toxin Technical Information Index. All toxins viewed by Topic Caution. AgricultureCommunitySpaces environment Household Schools Workplace Agriculture.
http://www.nccnsw.org.au/member/tec/projects/tcye/tox/bytopic_index.html
Toxin Technical Information Index
All Toxins viewed by Topic Agriculture
CommunitySpaces

Environment

Household
...
Workplace
Agriculture
CommunitySpaces
Environment
Household
Schools
Workplace

Proudly designed and programmed by:
Social Change Online
Last Modified: Monday, 15-May-2000 16:25:23 EST Toxic Chemicals in Your Environment
- a community based program of the Total Environment Centre Web Editor: Jo Immig, email toencen@magna.com.au

31. Environmental Toxins And Reproductive Health Dioxins PCBs
Information and internet links related to the reproductive effects of dioxins and other environmental Category Science environment Endocrine Disruptors...... Birth defects in newborns may be linked to the mother's environment during pregnancy;our children face an enormous risk from environmental toxins; and men's
http://womenshealth.about.com/library/weekly/aa061599.htm
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Environmental Toxins and Reproductive Health
Fifty years after the introduction of toxic chemicals into our environmentchemicals originally intended to enhance our lifestyles we must wonder if our lives are truly enhanced. Today more than 70,000 synthetic chemicals are in commercial use with an estimated 1000 new chemicals being introduced each year. Only a handful of these chemicals have ever been adequately tested to determine their effect on humans and other forms of life (full basic data exists for only about 7% of these chemicals). Environmental Health Effects What is the result of these so called life-enhancing chemicals in our environment? Most of us have heard about dioxins. But did you know that dioxins include a

32. Environment: Smokestack Emits Toxins
The Cincinnati Enquirer; Chiquita SECRETS Revealed; May 3, 1998 EnvironmentSmokestack emits toxins; We cry for our children .
http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/Lobby/6305/chiquita/050398-4-4.html
The Cincinnati Enquirer ; Chiquita SECRETS Revealed; May 3, 1998
Environment: Smokestack emits toxins; "We cry for our children"
"At first we had thought it could be the solvent that people were smelling, but approximately 16 to 17 samples were taken outside of the plant for chlorpyrifos and 15 of them turned up positive in fairly high quantities." - Roger Theodoredis, Chiquita executive assigned to investigate the Polymer Plastipak problems By Mike Gallagher and Cameron McWhirter A Chiquita subsidiary is exposing more than 500 men, women and children of Barrio Paris to a toxic chemical that the company knows is spewing from a San Jose factory smokestack in high quantities, internal company records reveal. Chiquita officials in Cincinnati have been aware of the problem for several months, but their efforts to solve it have been unsuccessful, according to company sources and internal voice-mail messages provided the Enquirer by a high-level company source. The plant manufactures plastic bags impregnated with a pesticide called chlorpyrifos. The bags are used to cover bananas ripening on plants to protect them from insects. Community leaders and neighbors in Barrio Paris have complained to the national health ministry that fumes have caused residents - including children and pregnant women - to suffer chronic respiratory problems, blistered skin and other serious ailments. The U.S. EPA classifies chlorpyrifos as a highly-toxic pesticide that is dangerous to humans if inhaled or if it comes into contact with skin for a protracted period of time. According to the EPA, universities and chemical manufacturers, chlorpyrifos can cause delayed nerve damage, multiple sclerosis, loss of use of limbs, lung congestion, paralysis, convulsions, dizziness, mental disorders, blurred vision, chest pain, loss of reflexes and death.

33. Environment: Smokestack Emits Toxins
The Cincinnati Enquirer; Chiquita SECRETS Revealed; May 3, 1998 Somepesticides highly toxic. The one thing that (the Enquirer) asked
http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/Lobby/6305/chiquita/050398-5-5.html
The Cincinnati Enquirer ; Chiquita SECRETS Revealed; May 3, 1998
Some pesticides highly toxic
"The one thing that (the Enquirer ) asked me that I hedged on was how much did Chiquita pay you, CI (Conservation International), to do this study. I said I'll have to check, even though I actually know... I don't feel that it's really any of his (the reporter's) business." James Nations, Conservation International By Mike Gallagher and Cameron McWhirter Chiquita uses products with low EPA toxicity classification for mammalian and aquatic life," the company stated to the Enquirer through its attorneys. However, the Enquirer found numerous examples on Chiquita's own list of approved pesticides of products that have been designated by U.S. government agencies as possibly cancerous to humans, or toxic to animals or fish. Those pesticides, all used by Chiquita and its subsidiaries in aerial spraying in Latin America, include: Propiconazole, sold as Tilt: Propiconazole has been classified by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) as a "possible human carcinogen." According to published documents by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, the pesticide "can cause skin irritation and substantial, but temporary, eye irritation. The petroleum solvent in some formulations can cause a chemical pneumonitis (lung complications) if breathed into the lungs. Prolonged inhalation of vapors may irritate throat and nasal passages and cause central nervous system effects, which can include headache, dizziness, confusion, and nausea. If swallowed, abdominal pain, nausea, gastritis, breathing difficulty, or diarrhea can occur."

34. Trespassing Toxins
Trespassing toxins. Your environment The latest from columnist Francesca LymanAnd on Wednesday, a Consumers Union-led study of government-collected data
http://www.msnbc.com/news/749081.asp
MSN Home My MSN Hotmail Search ... Money Advertisement
Trespassing toxins Does pesticide drift pose
risks for home gardens?
By Francesca Lyman
MSNBC CONTRIBUTOR
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And on Wednesday, a Consumers Union-led study of government-collected data found pesticide residue on 23 percent of organic fruits and vegetables, most likely due to spray drift from adjacent fields, or soil or irrigation-water contamination. Study: Organic produce contains pesticides Spray drift is a particularly acute threat in residential areas near farm operations. SUBURBAN THREAT But many suburban and urban areas can be just as endangered because lawn care has grown so much in recent years. According to EPA figures, each year we pour approximately 136 million pounds of pesticides on our homes, lawns and gardens, which amounts to three times more per acre than the average farmer applies. The National Audubon Society notes, remarkably, that most of the wildlife pesticide poisonings reported to EPA result from home use. NO FEDERAL ACTION But when it comes to controlling spray drift on a national scale, the federal EPA has yet to act. The agency, which manages some 20,000 chemicals registered for use as pesticides, proposed changed

35. Land Of The Rising Toxins Japan Struggles With Environment
Land of the rising toxins Japan struggles with environment Wednesday, March 10,1999 By Maggie Suzuki and Rick Davis Species such as the Japanese macaque are
http://www.portaec.net/local/pagp/land_of_the_rising_toxins.html
Alberni Environmental Coalition Local Issues Section *- Local Issues Menu -* Alberni Valley Culverts Alberni Valley Fall Fair Aluminum Smelter for Port Alberni? Ash River BC Forests Beaufort Mountain Range Cathedral Grove Elsie Dam Hidden cost to fish farms Hog Fuel Dump Little Qualicum River Local Government Log Train Trail Natural Step Port Alberni Generation Project Profiteering Targets Education Raw Log Exports Recycling Port Alberni's Garbage Search Local Issues Tire Burning Table of Contents *- Other A.E.C. Areas -*: A.E.C. Members Pages About A.E.C. Alberni Valley Trail Guide Calendar of Events Childrens Area Environmental Horror Stories Green Island Grid Access (GIGA) On-line Environmental Library Opening Page Sustainable Living Through Organic Gardening Video's that we Host *- Sites we host -*: Port Alberni Council of Canadians Port Alberni Emergency Preparedness Space Photos of Earth Gallery Land of the rising toxins:
Japan struggles with environment
Wednesday, March 10, 1999
By Maggie Suzuki and Rick Davis
Species such as the Japanese macaque are routinely killed as "pests," despite their regionally endangered status in Japan.
Japan has long been criticized for lagging behind other nations in its commitment to environmental issues. These days, the environment is getting more attention than ever in the Land of the Rising Sun.

36. Element Detail: Environment/Occupat. Exposure To Pulmo Toxins
Details of Element environment/Occupat. Exposure to Pulmo ToxinsComponent of Pulmonary Disease Questionnaire Unique Name eetpt
http://blswww.grc.nia.nih.gov/i113/c01/e1130105.htm
Details of Element: Environment/Occupat. Exposure to Pulmo Toxins
Component of Pulmonary Disease Questionnaire
Unique Name: eetpt
Contained in the Common BLSA Data Set ? No
Data Points (as of 09/06/98) Males Females Total Number of Data Points Number of Distinct Participants Year First Collected Year Last Collected
Type of Variable: Absolute Measure
Encoding: Discrete
    Value Meaning No or patient unsure Yes
Precision: #.
Anticipated Range: 0. thru 1.
Masterfile Index: 113-01-05
Related Data Elements: none
Specific to this Data Element:
    Inclusion/Exclusion Rules: n/a Descriptive History: (none)
Details for this Data Type JM - Revised 09/18/98 Send comments to our Web Master

37. Children's Unique Vulnerability To Environmental Toxins
Two additional characteristics of children further magnify their exposures to toxinsin the environment 1) their handto-mouth behavior, which increases their
http://www.childenvironment.org/factsheets/childrens_vulnerability.htm
Children's Unique Vulnerability to Environmental Toxins
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Children are uniquely vulnerable to environmental toxins. This heightened susceptibility stems from several sources.
Children have greater exposures to environmental toxins than adults.
Children's metabolic pathways are immature compared with those of adults.
As a consequence of this biological immaturity, children's ability to detoxify and excrete certain toxins is different from that of adults. In some instances, children are actually better able than adults to deal with environmental toxins. More commonly, however, they are less able than adults to deal with toxic chemicals and thus they are more vulnerable to them.
Children are undergoing rapid growth and development, and their developmental processes are easily disrupted. Many organ systems in young children-the nervous system, the reproductive organs, the immune system-undergo very rapid growth and development in the first months and years of life. During this period, structures are developed and vital connections are established. Indeed, development of the nervous system continues all through childhood, as is evidenced by the fact that children continue to acquire new skills progressively as they grow and develop-crawling, walking, talking, reading, and writing. The nervous system is not well able to repair any structural damage that is caused by environmental toxins. Thus, if cells in the developing brain are destroyed by chemicals such as lead, mercury, or solvents, or if vital connections between nerve cells fail to form, there is high risk that the resulting neurobehavioral dysfunction will be permanent and irreversible. The consequences can be loss of intelligence and alteration of normal behavior.

38. May 2nd, 2000: Pediatricians, Scientists And Senior Government Health Officials
Human Development WHEN Tuesday, May 2, 1PM WHERE Rayburn House Office Building,Room 2358 Children are especially susceptible to toxins in the environment.
http://www.childenvironment.org/press/2000-05-02.htm
MEDIA ADVISORY for Tuesday, May 2, 2000
CONTACT:
Fenton Communications
Jennifer Houlihan, (212) 584-5007
Pediatricians, Scientists and Senior Government Health Officials to Testify at Bipartisan Congressional Hearing on the Environmental Threats to Children's Health
Some Cases of Childhood Asthma, Cancer and Developmental Disorders Appear Linked to Environmental Toxins, But More Research Needed, Experts Say
Leading Authority Dr. Philip Landrigan to Call for National Longitudinal Study on Children's Environmental Health - Background Briefings Available
In response to increasing recognition of the impact of environmental factors on the health of children, Congressman John Porter (R-IL) and Congresswoman Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) will convene a bipartisan hearing on Children's Environmental Health. Prominent pediatricians, scientists and government officials are expected to emphasize the need for expanded research on the relationship between chemicals in the environment and risks to children's health. They are expected to call for a new, large, multi-year longitudinal study that will systematically examine the impact of early environmental exposures on children's health, among other things.
WHAT : Congressional Appropriations Hearing on Children's Environmental Health
WHO : Speakers include: Dr. Philip Landrigan, Director of the Center for Children's Health and the Environment at Mount Sinai, a project funded by The Pew Charitable Trusts; Dr. Richard Jackson, Director, National Center for Environmental Health at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; Dr. Kenneth Olden, Director of the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences; and Dr. Duane Alexander, Director, National Institute of Child Health and Human Development

39. CUA- Campus Legal Information Clearinghouse
Welcome to the environment section of our webpage. and Human Services Interim FinalRule on Possession, Use, and Transfer of Select Agents and toxins, 67 Fed.
http://counsel.cua.edu/environment/
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Department of Health and Human Services Interim Final Rule 67 Fed. Reg. 76885 , Dec. 13, 2002. This document establishes requirements regarding possession and use in the United States, receipt from outside the United States, and transfer within the United States, of select agents and toxins.
This includes requirements concerning registration, security risk assessments, safety plans, security plans, emergency response plans, training, transfers, record keeping, inspections, and notifications.
This document also contains delegations of authority to the Office of Inspector General concerning civil money penalties. The interim final rule implements provisions of the Public Health Security and
67 Fed. Reg. 76907
Further Resources: CDC FAQ for New Select Agent Regulations . (42 CFR 73) List of HHS agents and toxins, USDA list, plant agents and overlap list

40. 2003 Persistent Bioaccumulative Toxins (PBTs) Legislative Objectives
toxins (PBTs) include compounds which are thought to accumulate in plant and animaltissue, and breakdown slowly. Some occur naturally in the environment,
http://www.awb.org/policy/2003lo/pbt.html
Contact your legislator! - Select - House Senate Governor By District AWB Site Search Search Help? Need to find a link? Click here for a special KEYWORD Search Want to reprint an AWB article? Click here for Reprint Policies and Guidelines. AWB
PO Box 658
1414 Cherry St. SE
Olympia, WA 98507
Persistent Bioaccumulative Toxins (PBTs)

The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is currently developing a national strategy to address PBT releases into the environment. The two strategies have similar prevention and control proposals.
AWB Positions Any state PBT strategy or regulation must meet the following conditions PBT strategy implementation must have legislative oversight, be consistent with regulatory reform and include opportunities for stakeholder input. Clear scientific justification is provided for any differences from federal regulations resulting from EPA's National Strategy. The state strategy addressing PBTs shall be based on sound science-based risk assessment, not on the precautionary principle.

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