
The nonprofit publication Capital & Essential produced this text. It’s co-published with permission.
For the previous 4 years, Jackie Medcalf has been testing the groundwater in northwest Houston the place, a long time in the past, a dry cleansing facility had, over time, dumped hazardous chemical substances used within the dry cleansing course of into the stormwater drain, ditches and alleyways. The chemical substances ultimately seeped into the groundwater and migrated west to the group of Cyprus, the place Medcalf and her staff on the Texas Well being and Setting Alliance are nonetheless discovering contamination.
The Environmental Safety Company positioned the realm, often called the Jones Street Floor Water Plume, on its Superfund Nationwide Priorities Listing in 2003 for cleanup.
“These chemical substances are undetectable to the resident who lives above it. They’re strongly related to totally different ailments, and the contamination can come up by means of the bottom as a vapor,” Medcalf stated. “And we’re nonetheless discovering it within the water.”
This groundwater contamination was prime of thoughts when Medcalf heard a couple of new draft invoice crafted by the Home of Representatives in January. The invoice would amend giant parts of the 1976 Poisonous Substances Management Act — a sequence of EPA rules meant to police the manufacturing, processing and use of chemical substances, together with such contaminants as these discovered at Jones Street.
In 2016, Congress reformed the act, generally known as TSCA, with bipartisan assist to offer extra authority to the EPA to assessment and regulate chemical substances.
Now, a decade later, Home conservatives are proposing to stroll again most of the 2016 reforms, citing points in effectivity, predictability and competitiveness, whereas promising that the modifications will modernize the Poisonous Substances Management Act. Well being and environmental consultants, advocates and residents like Medcalf have expressed alarm on the proposed modifications, pointing to the implications the invoice would have for native Texas communities and petrochemical employees because of the weakening of EPA’s authority to manage present and new hazardous chemical substances.
The draft invoice is simply one of many many rollbacks in regulating chemical substances since President Donald Trump launched his second time period in workplace final January. For the reason that 2016 reforms, the EPA has reevaluated and revealed extra stringent rulings on extremely hazardous chemical substances, however up to now 12 months, the federal company has modified path and is reconsidering many of those rulings amid authorized strain from the chemical trade. The chemical substances embrace such substances as perchloroethylene, trichloroethylene and carbon tetrachloride — all of that are recognized well being hazards and utilized in chemical manufacturing at Texas services.
For environmental advocates like Medcalf, studying concerning the proposed EPA modifications and reconsiderations got here to her like whiplash. She grew up close to the petrochemical trade and understands the implications of unregulated chemical substances.
“In 2024, we felt like issues have been transferring in the fitting path with respect to a few of these chemical substances,” Medcalf stated. “And , now we’re most definitely involved that issues are transferring within the path unfavorable for human publicity.”
Controlling poisonous substances
When Congress handed the Poisonous Substances Management Act in 1976, the EPA administrator likened it to “preventive drugs” — meant to offer public well being way more weight over which chemical substances are commercially produced and marketed. On the time it marked a significant shift for the nation’s chemical trade, which beforehand had been largely unregulated.
Regardless of the change, the EPA nonetheless had much less management over the regulation of chemical substances than initially meant, stated Suhani Chitalia, an lawyer and the senior supervisor of federal affairs for the Environmental Protection Fund.
“The way in which the legislation was written again within the ’70s wasn’t tremendous efficient,” Chitalia stated. “I feel it was good in principle, however the precise follow and authority that the Environmental Safety Company needed to implement the legislation wasn’t as sturdy appropriately, and a part of that was the EPA couldn’t actually take a look at new chemical substances coming into the market earlier than they entered the market.”
Hazardous chemical substances, corresponding to methylene chloride, trichloroethylene, formaldehyde and asbestos, amongst others, have been authorized and not using a full assessment, stated Chitalia. In response, Congress, in a bipartisan vote, handed the Frank Lautenberg Chemical Security modification in 2016, and the EPA was granted the authority to prioritize and assess sure present hazardous chemical substances in the marketplace.
A decade later, the chemical trade now argues that that modification has slowed the method down, citing EPA assessments for a brand new chemical lasting longer than the allotted 90-day interval and impeding innovation within the nation’s market. In response, the Home Power and Commerce Committee, led by Home Republicans, launched an altered model of the Poisonous Substances Management Act in mid-January.
The American Chemical Council, a number one proponent in these modifications, stated in an announcement to Capital & Essential that the draft dialogue laws focuses on sturdy, sensible fixes, enhancing timeliness, predictability and scientific rigor.
The council additionally asserted that, because it stands, the Poisonous Substances Management Act is “speculative and opaque” and “over sixty % of recent chemical evaluations stay pending for greater than a 12 months” — a significant concern for chemical corporations that say pending evaluations can result in processing delays.
Katherine Culbert, a senior course of security engineer in Houston’s petrochemical trade, stated she will perceive the priority over delays however burdened that evaluations have to take nonetheless lengthy they should take. The EPA must be assured a couple of chemical earlier than approving it, particularly for the sake of employee security, she stated.
“Very complicated points are going to take longer than not very complicated points, particularly with the federal authorities gutting consultants in all of the companies, together with the EPA, during the last 12 months,” Culbert stated. “And an enormous a part of it anyway is that the trade doesn’t at all times give all the knowledge wanted straight away.”
After a chemical is submitted for assessment, Culbert stated a hasty approval for an organization might hinge on the EPA overlooking lacking data within the paperwork. The corporate would possibly initially submit solely knowledge on the chemical that may cross assessment and miss any data that will hurt the probabilities of approval.
This may result in a prolonged forwards and backwards between the EPA and the corporate.
Moreover, the Trump administration minimize the EPA’s finances by 4% in comparison with fiscal 2025. Initially, the administration proposed reducing the company by greater than 50%.
She additionally identified that with these modifications, the EPA might report just some elements of a sure new chemical to services, which is worrisome to Culbert. Facility employees, she stated, ought to be made conscious of the presence of even hint quantities of a substance earlier than dealing with it.
Chitalia, the Environmental Protection Fund lawyer, agrees the 90-day course of is a moot level, and emphasised that because the Poisonous Substances Management Act capabilities, the EPA is required to show a chemical doesn’t pose an unreasonable threat. Now, as an alternative, the EPA should show {that a} chemical would doubtless pose an unreasonable threat.
“And an enormous situation within the draft is that it sort of flips the protection customary on its head,” Chitalia stated. “The invoice now invitations trade knowledge and trade enter of their knowledge assessment processes, so it’s not an unbiased assessment coming from the company. There are vested pursuits that may now take part within the course of.”
Different chemical rollbacks
The current Home draft invoice will not be the primary problem to the Poisonous Substances Management Act.
After the Poisonous Substances Management Act modification handed in 2016, the EPA started reevaluating the chance of chemical substances that fell by means of the cracks when the 1976 model of the laws was in impact. This included chemical substances corresponding to perchloroethylene, trichloroethylene and carbon tetrachloride — all of which have been discovered within the groundwater on the Jones Street Superfund web site.
These chemical substances have traditionally been utilized in solvent mixtures for dry cleansing operations and sure chemical services. The chemical substances are hazardous to human well being — trichloroethylene is a recognized carcinogen linked to a number of varieties of most cancers, together with kidney most cancers and non-Hodgkin lymphoma.
The EPA had issued a remaining rule banning the manufacturing, processing and distribution of trichloroethylene in commerce for all makes use of with extra stringent employee protections whereas the chemical is phased out. The company additionally banned some makes use of of perchloroethylene and carbon tetrachloride.
Trade teams responded with over two dozen lawsuits, which have largely been profitable. The teams included the American Chemistry Council, Texas Chemistry Council and Olin Company, a worldwide producer and distributor of chemical merchandise. Olin operates a chemical facility about 60 miles west of Houston in Freeport that makes use of all three chemical substances, in accordance with knowledge collected from the Environmental Protection Fund. The petitioners argued that the rulings have been an overreach by the EPA.
For Medcalf, the pushback from trade is upsetting, however not stunning. The up to date rules for the three chemical substances had been a superb begin for her and different environmental advocates. She had been following the Poisonous Substances Management Act modifications and rollbacks for years, particularly the chemical substances linked to the Jones Street groundwater plume. The chemical substances are additionally discovered at chemical services within the Houston space.
“So long as these compounds are being manufactured and being circulated in our nation, in our communities, there’s going to be a threat for publicity,” Medcalf stated.
The trichloroethylene rule was initially meant to take impact in January of this 12 months however, because of authorized strain from chemical corporations and trade teams, the EPA has pushed the efficient date for a few of these restrictions till mid-Could. Moreover, the EPA has signaled its plans to rethink elements of the rule.
The EPA can be reconsidering its remaining threat analysis to additional regulate perchloroethylene. The brand new rule will not be anticipated to be launched till 2027 and, within the meantime, trade will observe present pre-amendment, nonupdated rules for the chemical. The EPA is reconsidering its preliminary rule on carbon tetrachloride as nicely, with no anticipated deadline but in place but.
In an announcement to Capital & Essential, the American Chemistry Council stated that the brand new rules for the three chemical substances “mandate infeasible necessities, create unwarranted compliance burdens, or threat provide chain disruption with out commensurate public well being profit.”
Olin Company didn’t reply to requests for remark.
The Environmental Protection Fund lately filed feedback on EPA’s current reconsideration of formaldehyde, a gasoline and chemical compound with varied well being dangers, after the company revealed a remaining extra stringent analysis in 2024 — one other reversal by the EPA.
Chitalia is anticipating extra reversals might be on the best way.
“These precedence chemical substances are the explanation why these 2016 amendments occurred,” Chitalia stated. “They’re so necessary they usually’re so crucial as a result of it actually exhibits what will get by means of the cracks of a legislation when it doesn’t work.”
Disclosure: The Environmental Protection Fund has been a monetary supporter of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan information group that’s funded partly by donations from members, foundations and company sponsors. Monetary supporters play no function within the Tribune’s journalism. Discover a full checklist of them right here.
This text first appeared on The Texas Tribune.
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