Insider Header
FocusOn Landscapers | FocusOn Equipment Rentals | FocusOn Mining, Aggregates & Construction | FocusOn Land Improvement Contractors
Spacer
STIHL
Trending Industry Stories
Spacer
JCB Dancing Diggers Make Debut With Team GB Ballroom Dancers
The STIHL Battery-Powered KombiMotor Built for Multiple Jobs
Biden Administration Releases $1 Billion In Funding For Urban Trees
Grass Vs. Turf: Doctor Speaks On Football Field Debate After Rodgers’ Season-Ending Injury
TRUST RYAN
Bobcat Introduces E40 Compact Excavator; New Model Numbers for 3-to-5-Ton Excavators
ECHO Inc. Launches 21 New Products at Media Summit
Rotary offers wide selection of heavy-duty aramid belts
RubbleCrusher Hosts Successful First North America Open House
Yanmar Compact Equipment North America to Highlight New Products at Equip Expo 2023
Command Your Fleet With Greenworks
Three New Hyundai Compact Excavator Models Now Available Throughout North America
Honda Introduces Its First V-8 ..and It's Not For A Car
How Machine Control Help Construction Professionals Regain Control
The Toro Company Named to Newsweek’s List of World’s Most Trustworthy Companies
Spacer

Spacer
Name*

Spacer
Email*

Spacer
City*

Spacer
State/Province*

Spacer

Spacer
California Assembly Advances Bill To Ban Toxic ‘Forever Chemicals’ In Artificial Turf

Original source: EWG

Artificial Grass.png

SACRAMENTO, Calif. – Today the California Assembly handily passed a bill that would ban the manufacturing and sale of artificial turf containing the toxic “forever chemicals” known as PFAS.


Assembly Bill 1423 was introduced by Assemblymember Pilar Schiavo(D-Santa Clarita) and is sponsored by the Environmental Working Group. The bill now heads to the Senate, and if approved, the ban will go into effect one year after being signed into law by Governor Gavin Newsom.


“We are encouraged that lawmakers in the Assembly took a step forward in preventing exposure to dangerous PFAS ‘forever chemicals’ in the artificial turf that youth and athletes play on every day,” said Bill Allayaud, EWG’s vice president of government affairs in California.


“As A.B. 1423 heads to the Senate, we hope that lawmakers will continue to take responsibility for eliminating PFAS from our communities,” he said.


Artificial turf has long been a source of concern for scientists, athletes and parents because of the many chemicals used in its production. Tests have shown essentially all turf contains PFAS, called “forever chemicals” because they do not break down in the environment and they build up in our blood and organs. They are among the most persistent toxic compounds in existence.


Although absorption of PFAS through skin is probably not a major route of exposure, inhalation of PFAS-laden dust is. Experts are also concerned about PFAS in turf after its disposal, when the PFAS may run off and enter groundwater or surface water, possibly polluting drinking water.


Some PFAS have been linked to a higher risk of harm to the immune system, reduced vaccine efficacy; harm to development and the reproductive system, such as reduced birth weight and impacts on fertility; increased risk of certain cancers, like breast cancer; and effects on metabolism, such as changes in cholesterol and weight gain.


California joins Connecticut, Massachusetts and Vermont in introducing bills to ban PFAS in turf. This bill would be a major step toward protecting the health of Californians, especially children who play on artificial turf.


A.B. 1423 follows a pattern of California enacting protective policies to limit public exposure to health-harming PFAS. These laws include the landmark A.B. 2771, which bans the sale in the state of cosmetics that contain PFAS. Newsom signed it into law last year.



... GO TO Ban Toxic ‘Forever Chemicals’ TO READ MORE



Spacer
The FocusOn Group

FocusOn Landscapers
FocusOn Equipment Rentals & Retailers
FocusOn Mining, Aggregates & Construction
FocusOn Land Improvement Contractors
About

The FocusOn Industry Insider, bringing you breaking news and information relevant to your industry.
Contact

We hope you enjoy this no charge service for FocusOn subscribers. Suggestions for making the Insider better? editor@thefocusongroup.com.

Would you like to advertise with us?
Advertising Inquiry
Forward Subscribe