Friday, January 31, 2020

Road salt blamed for New England wells contamination

Road salt blamed for New England wells contamination

 

EPA vs Fluoride’s Neurotoxicity going to Trial in April 2020


EPA vs Fluoride’s Neurotoxicity going to Trial in April 2020

Fluoride Action Network | Bulletin | January 17, 2020 

We are going to trial in April. This will be the first time that any citizen group will go to trial under Section 21 of the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA -pronounced like the opera Tosca!). TSCA was passed in 1976 by the U.S. Congress and is administered by the Environmental Protection agency (EPA).

The official name of the lawsuit is: Food and Water Watch et al v. EPA. As most of you know,  Michael Connett, JD, is the lead attorney who has directed this incredible effort from the beginning. He works with the law firm Waters Kraus & Paul in Los Angeles.

On December 30, the Court released an Order Denying Motions for Summary Judgment. This means that our case will go forward. Trial is scheduled to begin on April 20 and will run for two weeks. Read this good article for a broader perspective: Judge Again Rejects EPA’s Motion To End Landmark TSCA Citizen Suit by Maria Hegstad of Inside EPA.

The Background:

PLAINTIFFS: On November 22, 2016, a coalition of non-profit groups (Fluoride Action Network, Food & Water Watch, Moms Against Fluoridation, and others including individuals) submitted a Citizens’ Petition under Section 21 of TSCA to the EPA, requesting a ban on the addition of fluoridation chemicals to water in order “to protect the public and susceptible subpopulations from the neurotoxic risks of fluoride.”

DEFENDANTS: On February 27, 2017, the Environmental Protection Agency denied the petition “primarily because EPA concluded that the petition has not set forth a scientifically defensible basis to conclude that any persons have suffered neurotoxic harm as a result of exposure to fluoride in the U.S. through the purposeful addition of fluoridation chemicals to drinking water or otherwise from fluoride exposure in the U.S.”

THE LAWSUIT: After EPA denied the Petition, the plaintiffs filed this lawsuit seeking judicial review of EPA’s determination with the United States District Court for the Northern District of California in San Francisco. On December 17, 2017, the court issued an Order denying EPA’s Motion to Dismiss. The court noted,

“The purpose of citizen petitions is to ensure the EPA does not overlook unreasonable risks to health or the environment.” It cited a 1990 case, Env. Def. Fund v. Reilly, “Citizen participation is broadly permitted [under the TSCA] to ensure that bureaucratic lethargy does not prevent the appropriate administration of this vital authority.”

The Court stated,
The EPA’s interpretation [to dismiss the case] would undermine the purpose of Section 21 by permitting it to deny even a petition that successfully identifies an unreasonable risk of harm to health or to the environment … That a known unreasonable risk could be ignored by the EPA is contrary to the TSCA’s very purpose as well as the statute’s express command that the EPA “shall” promulgate regulations when “an” unreasonable risk is found.

The Court cited Rollins Env. Servs. (FS), Inc. v. St. James Parish, 775 F.2d 627, 632 (5th Cir. 1985):
The overall purpose of the Toxic Substances Control Act was to set in place a comprehensive, national scheme to protect humans and the environment from the dangers of toxic substances.

There have been over one hundred hours of depositions from experts for both sides, and multiple motions by the Defendants, Plaintiffs, and the Court – see the timeline. Approximately $400,000 has been raised to fund this lawsuit from the supporters of the Fluoride Action Network. All in all, it has been an incredible effort on all fronts, with everyone helping as much as they could.

Thursday, January 30, 2020

BREAKING: FDA Sued as CDC Recommends Untested, Unlicensed Flu Vaccine for Pregnant Women

BREAKING: FDA Sued as CDC Recommends Untested, Unlicensed Flu Vaccine for Pregnant Women

 

07-17-Pregnant-woman-getting-_Featured_Image

Health Impact News Editor Comment:
We are publishing this press release at the request of Children’s Health Defense, headed by Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., because major press release news wires in the U.S. are refusing to publish this as a Press Release.

FDA Admits That Government Is Recommending Untested, Unlicensed Vaccines for Pregnant Women

Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. says, “As a nation, we can no longer pretend our trusted agencies are protecting our children. It is time to hold federal agencies accountable.”

by Children’s Health Defense

WASHINGTON, D.C., Feb. 11, 2019—In response to a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit, the FDA has admitted, for the first time, that government agencies, including the CDC, are recommending vaccines for pregnant women that have neither been licensed for pregnant mothers by the FDA nor tested for safety in clinical trials.

The lawsuit, filed by Children’s Health Defense (CHD) attorney, Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. on behalf of Informed Consent Action Network (ICAN), a vaccine safety advocacy group, sought all clinical trial data used by FDA to approve influenza vaccines for pregnant women.

The FDA’s terse reply: “We have no records responsive to your requests.”

The manufacturers of flu and Tdap vaccines warn against their use for pregnant mothers since their safety has never been established. Package inserts state that it is “not known” whether the vaccines “will harm an unborn baby” and there are “insufficient data” on use in pregnant women to inform vaccine-associated risks.

FDA regulations strictly prohibit pharmaceutical companies from marketing products for “off-license” uses. Noncompliant companies are routinely prosecuted criminally and civilly, paying billions in lawsuits and settlements.

The CDC nevertheless has actively recommended influenza vaccination during any trimester of pregnancy since 2004 and has told pregnant women to get Tdap shots (for tetanus, diphtheria and pertussis) since 2011.

The FDA is responsible for vaccine safety and licensing, but, in the just-released court documents, it admits that it has no safety data to back up the pregnancy recommendations. FDA’s website states that it has never formally approved any vaccines “specifically for use during pregnancy to protect the infant.”

Tuesday, January 28, 2020

Templeton BOH meeting January 27, 2020


Templeton BOH meeting January 27, 2020




All in all, the Templeton Board of Health seemed receptive to the sludge regulation from Granby. Let's hope this process moves forward!

This regulation would prohibit a bio-mix like the one Casella Organics proposed from being used anywhere in the Town of Templeton. 

It would prohibit its use on private property as well.  

No one likes to place restrictions on the use of private property.
But the water table and aquifers do not respect property lines!
 

ARRSD -School district budget previewed for local officials

School district budget previewed for local officials 

For Athol Daily News
Published: 1/23/2020 10:22:25 PM
 
ATHOL – Athol Royalston Regional School District officials hosted an all-boards meeting to discuss budget planning for the fiscal year which gets underway July 1. In addition to members of the school committee, representatives of the selectboards and finance committees of Athol and Royalston were in attendance, as well as members of Athol’s Capital Programs Committee. 

Wednesday’s meeting was held in the hope it would assist both the district and the towns in developing their final budget proposals for FY21. 

Presenting a first draft of the district budget for FY21. Athol Royalston Regional School District Superintendent Darcy Fernandes said the package was built to meet goals that include securing all current positions in the district, meeting district needs as identified by the principals of all four schools through the use of Student Opportunity Act (SOA) funds – estimated at just over $283,000, and continuing to make physical improvements to the high school. 

The top priority, she said, is to make improvements at Athol Community Elementary School, which the state has characterized as “in need of assistance or targeted intervention.”


To meet the needs of the school, the superintendent said it’s her intention to add staff at Athol Community Elementary School. Those additions include the addition of a second-grade teacher, a special education facilitator, a member of the guidance staff, and an adjustment counselor. All but the second-grade teacher would be funded with Student Opportunity Act (SOA) monies.

Additional proposed staff additions throughout the district would include a full-time substitute teacher at Royalston Community School and a special education facilitator at Athol Royalston Middle School. Fernandes also proposes funding two teacher leaders at Royalston Community School at minor expense.

Monday, January 27, 2020

Meetings the Week of January 27, 2020

Meetings the Week of January 27, 2020

Monday    1/27/20

Cable TV                         Boynton PL                            5:00 pm       BOH                                PCS Town Hall*                    7:00 pm 
Sludge Regulation


 
Tuesday   1/28/20

MT Neg.                          Fitchburg                            6:00 pm
MT Policy                        Fitchburg                            6:00 pm
Planning                           PCS Town Hall*                 6:30 pm
 
GAVIN RD - TEMPLETON LLC 
 
Stormwater Plan
 
 
Wednesday 1/29/20

Cap. Planning                PCS Town Hall*                      4:30 pm
BOS                               PCS Town Hall*                      6:30 pm  


   

* Pauly Cosentino Sr. Town Hall  


Friday, January 24, 2020

Budget Time! Will School Choice be discussed at Narragansett?

Budget Time! 

Will School Choice be discussed at Narragansett?

Bringing School Choice issue into focus in Ashburnham-Westminster Regional School District

 

**************************************
In Other Budget News - Cherry Sheets are in:

Narragansett:


 Templeton:


 
Keep giving out those raises!

Could it be something in the water?

State’s highest court reinstates lawsuit over corrosive water in Gardner

GARDNER — The state’s highest court has reinstated a class action lawsuit that alleges the city of Gardner failed to fix a water quality problem that left homes and businesses with damaged copper heating coils, water heaters and boilers.

The decision sends the case back to Superior Court, which is a win for resident Janice Magliacane, who filed the suit against the city and the companies hired to manage its water supply, namely Suez Water Environmental Services and AECOM Technical Services.

Magliacane has said documents from 2012 indicate 400 coil failures, and the average replacement cost for each coil is $500 to $600.

The suit filed in Worcester Superior Court alleges the water supply was “unreasonably corrosive” and “unreasonably damaged” the hot water heating systems of Gardner residents. Alleging negligence, the suit contends the city “failed to implement its own corrosion control plan and failed to take other actions which the City knew would mitigate coil corrosion.”

Magliacane alleges that the coil corrosion problem could have been avoided if the city added orthophosphate to its water treatment system to inhibit corrosion of the distribution system piping and plumbing, as required by state law.

The city won dismissal of the lawsuit in Superior Court, and Magliacane appealed. The city argued that Maglicane had filed the suit too long after the problem, and that the city was allowed discretion on whether to add orthophosphate to the water.

Massachusetts Health Care Workers Refusing Free Flu Shots

Massachusetts Health Care Workers Refusing Free Flu Shots

The 7 Mother-Child Fluoride Studies

The Mother-Offspring Studies

The 7 Mother-Child Fluoride Studies

The Mother-Child studies reveal that the fetus is the most vulnerable to fluoride’s neurotoxicity. Six of the seven studies measured pregnant women’s urinary levels for fluoride and these levels were compared to the IQ of their offspring. Certain levels of fluoride in the pregnant women’s urine were found to significantly impact the IQ, or cognitive function, of the offspring at various ages (up to 12 years of age).  The most recent study by Till et al. (Nov 2019) investigated the effects on IQ from infants fed formula made in fluoridated communities vs infants in non-fluoridated areas. The loss of IQ occurred in the fluoridated communities. The largest study listed below by Green et al. (2019) is important as it was the first to include mother-child pairs in fluoridated and non-fluoridated cities in Canada. Children were tested between the ages of 3 and 4. Of note is that the U.S. fluoridates the drinking water at the same level as Canada (0.7 mg/L fluoride). The Bashash et al. (2017) study is the longest mother-offspring study, having tested the children at 4 years of age and again between 6-12 years. Three other studies (Thomas et al., 2017; Valdez Jiménez et al., 2017; Li et al., 2004) also correlated the urinary fluoride levels with reduced IQ in the offspring. The singular importance of the Till (2019), Green (2019), Bashash (2017) and Thomas (2017) studies is that the fluoride levels in the urine of the pregnant women are similar to what is found in adults living in fluoridated communities in the U.S. The first study to look at this correlation was the study by Li et al. (2004) in China.

The studies by Li et al (2004) and Chang et al., (2017), both from China, compared newborns (1 to 3 days old) and infants (at 3, 6, 9, and 12 months of age) from women living in high-fluoride areas to those living outside these areas. The study by Valdez Jiménez et al. (2017) was confined to women and their offspring in high fluoride areas.

1. Till et al. (2019) reported lower IQ at between 3 and 4 years of age.

This newest study, released on November 18, is titled Fluoride exposure from infant formula and child IQ in a Canadian birth cohort. This study was funded by the U.S. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS) and published in Environment International. The authors “examined whether feeding status (breast-fed versus formula-fed) modified the impact of water fluoride and if fluoride exposure during fetal development attenuated this effect.” The mothers urinary fluoride (MUF) levels were used as a proxy of fetal fluoride exposure. A second model estimated the association between fluoride intake from formula and child IQ. According to the authors:
  • Consumption of formula reconstituted with fluoridated water can lead to excessive fluoride intake.
  • Breastfed infants receive very low intake of fluoride.
  • We compared IQ scores in 398 children who were formula-fed versus breastfed during infancy.
  • IQ scores were lower with higher levels of fluoride in tap water.
  • The effect was more pronounced among formula-fed children, especially for nonverbal skills

2. Green et al. (2019) reported lower IQ at between 3 and 4 years of age.

Titled Association Between Maternal Fluoride ExposureDuring Pregnancy and IQ Scores in Offspring in Canada, and published in JAMA Pediatrics, this study took place in 6 Canadian cities with 512 mother-child pairs. Women living in areas with fluoridated tap water compared with nonfluoridated water had significantly higher mean urinary fluoride concentrations. A 1-mg/L increase in urinary fluoride levels was associated with a 4.49-point lower IQ score in boys, but there was no statistically significant association with IQ scores in girls. A 1-mg higher daily intake of fluoride among pregnant women was associated with a 3.66 lower IQ score in boys and girls. According to the authors, the urinary fluoride levels observed in this study are “typically found in white North American women.” This study was also funded by the U.S. NIEHS.

3. Bashash et al. (2017) reported lower IQ at 4 years of age and between 6 to 12 years of age.

This study by Bashash et al., titled Prenatal Fluoride Exposure and Cognitive Outcomes in Children at 4 and 6–12 Years of Age in Mexico, was published in September 2017 in the prestigious journal Environmental Health Perspectives

The researchers followed up to 299 women-offspring pairs in Mexico during a 12-year period and reported that the fluoride levels in the urine of the pregnant women was the factor for a loss of 5 to 6 IQ points in the offspring at ages 4 and 6-12 years of age. The fluoride levels in the urine of the pregnant women are similar to what is found in adults in fluoridated communities in the U.S. This study, as well as the following one by Thomas et al., was funded by the U.S. National Institutes of Health, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, and the U.S. NIEHS.

4. Thomas et al. (2018) reported lower IQ in children between 1 to 3 years of age.

This study by Thomas et al., titled, OPV – 2 Prenatal fluoride exposure and neurobehavior among children 1–3 years of age in Mexico, was presented at a conference on epidemiology in Germany in March 2018. Only the abstract of the study has been published in the journal Occupational & Environmental Medicine. This abstract reports pregnant women’s fluoride exposure is linked to lower IQ in their children at one- to three-years-old at levels commonly found in U.S. women. The authors of this study said that their findings “suggest higher in utero exposure to fluoride has an adverse impact on offspring cognitive development that can be detected earlier, in the first three years of life.”

5. Valdez Jiménez et al. (2017) reported lower IQ between the ages of 3 to 15 months.

This was the first mother-infant pair study performed by a team from three universities in Mexico. The study is titled In utero exposure to fluoride and cognitive development delay in infants by Valdez Jiménez et al. and was published in the journal Neurotoxicology on March 1, 2017. This study differs from the other two studies discussed above inasmuch as the pregnant women in the study lived in areas of high naturally occurring fluoride in the drinking water. The authors noted that “cognitive alterations in children born from exposed mothers to F could start in early prenatal stages of life.”
• this study had 65 mother-baby pairs
• the IQ testing took place between the ages of 3 to 15 months
• this study took place in an area with high naturally occurring levels of fluoride in the drinking water (called endemic hydrofluorosis areas).
• Over 81.5% of the samples of tap water were above 1.5 mg/l with the highest value of 12.5 mg/.
• 33.8% of the births were pre-term. The authors stated, “We found higher levels of F in urine across trimester in premature compared with full term.”
• The authors state, “In this study near to 60% of the children consumed contaminated water and the prevalence of children with IQ below 90 points was 25% in the control group (F urine 1.5 mg/g creatinine) in comparison with the 58% of children in the exposed group (F urine >5 mg/g creatinine)… Our data suggests that cognitive alterations in children born from exposed mothers to F could start in early prenatal stages of life.”

6. Li et al. (2004) reported significant differences in the behavioral neurological assessment score in 1 to 3 day-old offspring

This Chinese study, Effects of high fluoride level on neonatal neurobehavioral development, was first published in 2004, translated into English and re-published in 2008 in the journal Fluoride 41(2):165–170.
  • Ninety-one full-term, normal neonates were randomly selected for observation, 46 were male and 45 female.
  • A urine sample was collected after the pregnant women were hospitalized but before labor began
  • The standard neonatal behavioral neurological assessment (NBNA) method was used for measurements, which were carried out by professionals (pediatric department physicians working in neonatal section trained in national NBNA training program)
  • In the high fluoride group the urinary fluoride level averaged 3.58±1.47 mg/L, significantly higher than the normal range of 0.18–2.6 mg/L and was significantly different from the fluoride level in urine samples from the control group. When compared with the fluoride result in urine samples from the control group (1.74±0.96 mg/L), the difference is statistically very significant (p<0 .01="" li="">
  • The two study groups are located in the same area with similar climate, living habits, economic and nutritional conditions, and cultural backgrounds. There is no industrial fluoride contamination in the endemic fluoride or the non-endemic control area. As can be seen in Table 1, there was no statistically significant difference in the delivery mode, birth weight, infant length, and sex.
  • As seen in Table 2, neonatal neurobehavioural assessment of the neonates from the high fluoride group and the control group indicated that the neurobehavioural capability and agonistic muscle tension from the high fluoride group were impaired, resulting in a statistically significant lower overall (total) assessment score than in the control group (p<0 .05="" li="">
  • Table 3 shows that the various neurobehavioral capabilities, such as non-biological visual, biological visual, and auditory directional reactions of the neonates from the high fluoride group lagged behind those of the control group with differences that are statistically significant (p<0 .05="" li="">

7. Chang et al. (2017) reported significant differences in the mental development index and psychomotor development index of the offspring at 3, 6, 9, and 12 months of age.

This study,  Analysis on the Effect of Coal-Burning Fluorosis on the Physical Development and Intelligence Development of Newborns Delivered by Pregnant Women with Coal-Burning Fluorosis, was conducted in China and published in the  Chinese Journal of Control of Endemic Diseases 32(8):872-873.
  • • 118 newbors in this study: The Observation Group: 68 newborns from coal-burning high-fluoride areas (called endemic fluorosis areas). The Control Group: 50 full-term newborns delivered by healthy pregnant women.
  • The type of test used: Mental development index (MDI) and psychomotor development index (PDI) (assessed using the Standardized Scale for the Intelligence Development of Children formulated by the Children Development Center of China [CDCC]).
  • The body weight, body length, head circumference, chest circumference, upper arm circumference and top arm length of newborns in the observation group were all significantly lower than those in the control group, and their differences were statistically significant (P < 0.05).
  • At 3, 6, 9 and 12 months after birth, the grades of body weight development and body-length development of infants in the control group were significantly higher than those in the observation group (P < 0.05);
  • Both the Mental development index and the psychomotor development index of infants in the observation group were significantly lower than those in the control group (P < 0.05).
  • The socioeconomic status of all the three villages were the same in both endemic and control areas.
  • The results suggest that maternal exposure to high levels of fluoride have a significant impact on the intelligence development of newborns.

What were the fluoride levels that caused the harm?

Urine tests are a better indicator of daily total fluoride intake than is the concentration of fluoride in the drinking water. Testing urine for fluoride provides one of the best indicators for all exposures to fluoride whether its through ingestion of water and food or through inhalation.
The Bashash et al. (2017) study found a very large effect. An increase in urine fluoride of 1 mg/L was associated with a drop in IQ of 5 to 6 points. To put this into perspective with the fluoride levels ingested by the Mexican mothers and the levels ingested in fluoridated parts of the U.S., the average fluoride intake in the Mexican mothers was about the same as that in women in the U.S. It was not substantially higher. The range of fluoride levels in Mexico also corresponded closely to the range found in most of the U.S. The higher levels were similar to what is found in areas in the U.S. with fluoridated water, and the lower levels were similar to what is found in most unfluoridated parts of the U.S.

Most of the Mexican women had urine fluoride between 0.5 and 1.5 mg/L. Studies have found that adults in the U.S. have between about 0.6 and 1.5 mg/L, almost exactly the same range. From the low end of that range to the high end is a difference of 1 mg/L which is what caused the 5 to 6 IQ point difference in the children of the study.

In the latest Green et al. (2019) study, an increase in urine fluoride of 1 mg/L was associated with a drop in IQ of 4.49 points in boys. The authors noted that women living in areas with fluoridated tap water compared with nonfluoridated water had significantly higher mean urinary fluoride levels.

A 2018 national survey of urinary fluoride levels in pregnant women in Canada

This study by Till et al., published on October 11, 2018, found that pregnant women in “optimally” fluoridated Canada have significantly higher levels of fluoride in their urine than women living in non-fluoridated communities. This study also showed that pregnant Canadians had fluoride urinary levels similar to those that reduced IQ in offspring in the study by Bashash et al. (2017). The U.S. NIH-funded Bashash study reported a lowering of 5 to 6 IQ points in the offspring. These findings suggest that the results from Bashash’s Mexico City study may be appliicable to Canada and the U.S. as both countries use 0.7 mg/L fluoride in their fluoridation schemes.

The study: Till C, Green R, Grundy JG, Hornung R, Neufeld R, Martinez-Mier A, Ayotte P, Muckle G, Lanphear. 2018. Community Water Fluoridation and Urinary Fluoride Concentrations in a National Sample of Pregnant Women in Canada, Environmental Health Perspectives.

See also

Animal Offspring studies reporting neurodevelopmental effects
Fluoride’s Effect on Fetal Brain
64 Human IQ Studies that report an association with fluoride exposure and a lowering of IQ in children

See short EPA paper

Building a Database of Developmental Neurotoxicants: Evidence from Human and Animal Studies, by Mundy et al. Note: Fluoride is listed among “Chemicals with Substantial Evidence of Developmental Neurotoxicity (n=100)”

See editorial in the journal Fluoride

• Spittle B. 2017: Prevention of Fluoride Ion-Induced IQ Loss in Children. Fluoride 50(4):385-392.

Thursday, January 23, 2020

U.S. drinking water widely contaminated with 'forever chemicals': environment watchdog

U.S. drinking water widely contaminated with 'forever chemicals': environment watchdog

By Timothy Gardner












WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The contamination of U.S. drinking water with man-made "forever chemicals" is far worse than previously estimated with some of the highest levels found in Miami, Philadelphia and New Orleans, said a report on Wednesday by an environmental watchdog group.
The chemicals, resistant to breaking down in the environment, are known as perfluoroalkyl substances, or PFAS. Some have been linked to cancers, liver damage, low birth weight and other health problems.

The findings https://www.ewg.org/research/national-pfas-testing by the Environmental Working Group (EWG) show the group's previous estimate in 2018, based on unpublished U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) data, that 110 million Americans may be contaminated with PFAS, could be far too low.

"It's nearly impossible to avoid contaminated drinking water from these chemicals," said David Andrews, a senior scientist at EWG and co-author of the report.

The chemicals were used in products like Teflon and Scotchguard and in firefighting foam. Some are used in a variety of other products and industrial processes, and their replacements also pose risks.

Of tap water samples taken by EWG from 44 sites in 31 states and Washington D.C., only one location, Meridian, Mississippi, which relies on 700 foot (215 m) deep wells, had no detectable PFAS. Only Seattle and Tuscaloosa, Alabama had levels below 1 part per trillion (PPT), the limit EWG recommends.

In addition, EWG found that on average six to seven PFAS compounds were found at the tested sites, and the effects on health of the mixtures are little understood. "Everyone's really exposed to a toxic soup of these PFAS chemicals," Andrews said.

Tuesday, January 21, 2020

Regulation for the Land Application and Storage of Sludge and Septage

Regulation for the Land Application and Storage of Sludge and Septage

January 27 , 2020

7 pm
 
Templeton Board of Health

I have asked to be placed on agenda of the Templeton Board of Health to discuss the possibility of the Templeton Board of Health adopting a similar regulation as the Town of Granby:





 Click HERE for a link to the .pdf of this document.

Hope to see you on the 27th!