Vermont Senate backs expanded ban on ‘forever chemicals'
Montpelier, VT – The Vermont Senate is set to advance a House bill that would phase out and eventually ban ban toxic perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances, known as PFAS, in more consumer products, including dental floss and cleaning products.
The Senate expanded the bill, H.238, by adding a ban on PFAS in firefighting gear beginning in 2029.
PFAS are a group of some 15,000 chemicals that have been around for decades and have now spread into the nation's air, water and soil. PFAS accumulates in the body, and health experts say low doses of the chemicals can build up in the body over time, so even small amounts are a problem.
According to the Vermont Department of Health, exposure to PFAS can lead to reproductive and developmental disorders, certain types of cancer and other serious health problems.
A year ago, Vermont lawmakers approved a ban on PFAS in a slew of consumer products, including cribs, cosmetics, cookware and products aimed at children under 12, including electronic games. That law will take effect in July 2026.
'Reducing and eliminating PFAS in consumer goods and the environment protects personal and public health,' said Senator Virginia Lyons, chair of the Senate Health and Welfare Committee. 'Removing PFAS from products including dental floss, cleaning products, firefighting equipment, and textiles limits exposures that could lead to cancer, lower antibody response to vaccines, or negative child development outcomes.'
Last week, the Environmental Protection Agency announced plans to weaken limits on some 'forever chemicals' in drinking water that were finalized last year, while maintaining standards for two common ones.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Yahoo
28 minutes ago
- Yahoo
City of Spokane releases its 2024 report on drinking water quality
Jun. 10—The city of Spokane met all state and federal drinking water standards last year, according to its required 2024 report on drinking water quality measuring levels of contaminants and "forever" chemicals in its source wells. PFAS, also known as polyfluoroalkyl substances, refers to a group of human-made chemicals that has been used in consumer products since the 1950s. Think nonstick cookware, water-resistant fabrics, certain cleaning products or fire-fighting foam. Exposure to high levels of these chemicals has been linked to detrimental health effects, including decreased fertility, developmental delays and a higher risk of some type of cancers, such as kidney and prostate cancer. The components of these substances usually take hundreds or thousands of years to break down, and their widespread use has resulted in their prevalence everywhere — including in our drinking water. Washington established state action levels in 2022 to address PFAS, providing thresholds for the amount of contamination drinking water can contain before specific state actions must take place. In April 2024, the EPA announced a new federal standard: a maximum containment level of 4 parts per trillion of PFAS. Although the EPA requires water purveyors to meet this federal regulatory standard by 2027, the city has already updated its testing and monitoring procedures to account for the contaminants. "We're all kind of learning together," public works communications manager Kirstin Davis said. "Some of the prior standards didn't have as complicated and as detailed of testing as what's available now." The city of Spokane detected low levels of PFAs in three well locations: Havana Well, Nevada Well and Ray Street Well. During a test in February, the Ray Street Well measured slightly above the federal standard at 6.1 parts per trillion of PFOS, a specific type of PFA. EPA rules, however, measure compliances based on a four-quarter rolling average of test results. Further testing of that well in June and October resulted in lower levels of PFAs detected, making the average just below the federal limit. The report also analyzed other levels of inorganic chemicals and found traces of arsenic, barium, lead, copper, nitrate and radionuclides in the source wells, all below the federal limit. This year's Spokane City Water Quality report is accessible on the City's water quality webpage.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Lawmakers gather input on behavioral health initiative in Agawam schools
AGAWAM, Mass. (WWLP) – State lawmakers are getting feedback Tuesday evening on a new behavioral health initiative launched in Agawam Public Schools. State lawmakers led a discussion in Agawam Tuesday evening, in the fight to improve student mental health. Holyoke Community College to offer free course in AI essentials There, they solicited feedback on the state's new behavioral health initiative called 'MC-PAP' for schools, which launched a year ago within the Agawam public school system. 'It's hard being a kid these days,' says Senate President Karen E. Spilka. 'And we need as adults to make it easier to provide mental health services as early as possible.' It is meant to connect available resources for each student's individual needs through a systemic approach, improving behavioral health support, using data points from nurse visits to attendance as well as social-emotional screenings to identify students who might otherwise fly under the radar. Senator John Velis adds, 'Wow, this is sad. A lot is going on with the kids, but also they are raising their hands and talking about it, I don't know if that would have been the case 6,7 years ago.' The program also assesses district-wide mental health strategies and how families are being reached. 'We've made a lot of great gains this year, increasing student access to community providers,' says MCPAP Consultant Jen Brennan. 'Our main goal is to think about a sustainable process that school districts can follow.' The key takeaway as the first year of the initiative comes to a close. Real progress is possible if schools, families, and the community work together to meet the student where they are. 'It's really about increasing access and increasing it more quickly for kids that need it,' adds Sara Whitcomb, Associate Director of Research and Evaluation for the Boston Children's Neighborhood Partnerships Program. In addition to this program, Senate President Karen Spilka says they are working on legislation to address cellphone use in the classroom, telling 22News it only adds to the mental health crisis. WWLP-22News, an NBC affiliate, began broadcasting in March 1953 to provide local news, network, syndicated, and local programming to western Massachusetts. Watch the 22News Digital Edition weekdays at 4 p.m. on Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Yahoo
4 hours ago
- Yahoo
Advocates, legislators still trying to expand expired compensation program for radiation exposure
Jun. 10—One year ago, Congress let a federal program end that compensated people who grew sick from mining uranium for nuclear weapons or from living downwind of nuclear weapons tests. In those 12 months, Tina Cordova's cousin died after years of living with a rare brain cancer. Under a proposed expansion of the program, 61-year-old Danny Cordova likely would have qualified for the $100,000 compensation offered to people with specific cancers who lived in specific areas downwind of aboveground nuclear weapons' tests. "Instead, he and his mom lived literally paycheck to paycheck trying to pay for all of the medications he needed," Cordova said. Since the Radiation Exposure Compensation Act (RECA) program was created in 1990, New Mexican downwinders have been left out, as have uranium mine workers from after 1971. Sen. Ben Ray Luján, D-N.M., has led an effort in the Upper Chamber alongside Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., to expand the program so it includes later uranium mine workers, and people harmed by aboveground nuclear tests in more states — including New Mexico. In January, they reintroduced a bill to extend and expand RECA. "Letting RECA expire is a disgrace to these families and victims," Luján said. "It's an insult to the victims and their families who still struggle to this very day to get help, get the medicine they need, get the treatments for the conditions caused by the negligence of the federal government. For the victims, this story is long from being over. Generational trauma and poor health conditions continue to plague entire families." Although Hawley and Luján's bill passed the Senate twice in the last session of Congress, and was supported by the entire New Mexico delegation, House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., never allowed a vote on the companion House bill, sponsored by Rep. Teresa Leger Fernández, D-N.M. The expansion would have included an increased pricetag of $50 billion to $60 billion over 10 years, according to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office — a cost estimate Luján has disagreed with. Since its inception, RECA has paid out approximately $2.6 billion. There is no accurate estimate of how many New Mexicans would be included if RECA is expanded, according to Luján's office. "We know we have the votes to get this passed now," said Leger Fernández, who plans to reintroduce the bill in the House. "They keep raising issues with regards to the cost... These are people's lives, and so we need to keep bringing it back to that issue. And in many ways, I think that we are doing this in a bicameral manner, and that the pressure that is being brought from the Senate will help us in the House." 'No apology' Cordova's cousin was diagnosed in his 20s, and had five brain surgeries to address his cancer. "He was left with horrendous and devastating consequences of that (first) surgery," Cordova said. "He lost the eyesight in one eye, he lost the part of his brain that controlled all of his hormonal functions, and he lost the part of his brain that also controlled his ability to adapt his body temperature." Five generations of Cordova's family tree include many cases of cancer. She herself survived thyroid cancer, and as a co-founder of the Tularosa Basin Downwinders Consortium, she's long advocated for expanding RECA. Cordova's kitchen counter is covered in the stories of family trees that mirror her own. For 18 years, she's been collecting health surveys from people who grew up in areas downwind of aboveground nuclear weapon tests, documenting a history of cancer and death for families from Tularosa, Alamogordo and beyond. Loretta Anderson, a patient advocate and co-founder of the Southwest Uranium Miners Coalition Post-71, works with over 1,000 former uranium miners and their families throughout the Laguna and Acoma pueblos. She knows 10 post-1971 uranium miners, those who would be compensated under a RECA expansion, who have died in the past 12 months. "They died with no compensation, no apology from the government," Anderson said. Despite the difficulty in getting RECA extended and expanded, Cordova has faith it will eventually pass through Congress. "This is not a partisan issue," Cordova said. "Exposure to radiation has affected the young, the old, the male, the female, the Black, the white, the Republican and Democrat alike."