EPA denies lead ban

  • cat-stevens
    Rochester,MN
    Posts: 449
    #1269456

    Good news!

    EPA denies petition to ban lead in fishing tackle

    (AP) – 23 hours ago

    WASHINGTON (AP) — The Environmental Protection Agency denied on Thursday a petition by several environmental groups to ban lead in fishing tackle, two months after rejecting the groups’ attempt to ban it in hunting ammunition.

    The EPA said that the petition did not demonstrate that a ban on lead in fishing tackle was necessary to protect against unreasonable risk of injury to health or the environment, as required by the Toxic Substances Control Act.

    In a letter to the American Bird Conservancy, one of the groups that filed the petition, EPA Assistant Administrator Stephen A. Owens said that a number of steps are being taken to address the concerns of lead in fishing tackle. Among them: limitations of lead in fishing gear on some federal lands; bans or restrictions on the state level; and federal and state outreach and education efforts.

    “The emergence of these programs and activities over the past decade calls into question whether the broad rulemaking requested in your petition would be the least burdensome, adequately protective approach,” Owens wrote to the conservancy’s director of conservation advocacy, Michael Fry.

    In their petition, the groups had argued that lead from spent hunting ammunition and lost lead fishing gear causes the deaths of 10 million to 20 million birds and other animals a year by lead poisoning.

    Fry assailed the EPA’s decision. “The EPA has apparently completely abdicated its responsibility for regulating toxic lead in circumstances where wildlife are being poisoned,” he said.

    Fry suggested the reason for the decision was politics: “The political appointees have acted in this administration not like heads of agencies, but like they’re running for office.”

    The EPA did not respond to requests for comment.

    The petition, filed three months ago, stoked alarm among outdoorsmen, and members of the House and Senate introduced legislation aimed at preventing the EPA from regulating ammunition or fishing tackle.

    The American Sportfishing Association praised the EPA announcement.

    “It represents a solid review of the biological facts, as well as the economic and social impacts that would have resulted from such a sweeping federal action,” said group vice president Gordon Robertson. “It is a commonsense decision.” He argued that a lead ban would increase costs and price out many anglers, which in turn would decrease tax and license revenue for fisheries conservation.

    In 1994, under President Bill Clinton and EPA administrator Carol Browner, now White House energy adviser, the EPA actually proposed banning lead and zinc in certain smaller-size fishing sinkers. The agency said in a statement at the time: “The ingestion of even one small fishing sinker containing lead or zinc can result in the death of a water bird.”

    The proposal sparked a backslash in Congress. Sen. Tom Harkin, D-Iowa, introduced the “Common Sense in Fishing Regulations Act” in 1995 that would have blocked the EPA from implementing it. The agency eventually abandoned the proposal.

    The American Bird Conservancy filed the petition in August along with the Center for Biological Diversity, the Association of Avian Veterinarians, Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility and a hunters group called Project Gutpile, seeking a ban on lead in both hunting ammunition and fishing tackle.

    The petition cited nearly 500 peer-reviewed scientific articles that the groups said document the toxic effects of lead on wildlife. These studies “conclude that the lead components of bullets, shotgun pellets, fishing weights and lures pose an unreasonable risk of injury to human and wildlife health and the environment,” the Aug. 3 petition argued.

    The EPA earlier rejected the ammunition part of the petition, saying it didn’t have authority under the Toxic Substances Control Act, but that it would make a decision on the part pertaining to fishing tackle. In September, 60 groups wrote to EPA administrator Lisa Jackson asking her to grant the petition for both ammunition and tackle.

    http://www.epa.gov/oppt/chemtest/pubs/TSCA-21_LeadSinkers-FRN_prepublication_2010-11-04.pdf

    Brian Klawitter
    Keymaster
    Minnesota/Wisconsin Mississippi River
    Posts: 59992
    #908148

    Great News!

    Thanks Steve!

    Knocked my black market lead business out of the water.

    fishbizbob
    Posts: 198
    #908224

    That’s GREAT news!!! Thanks for posting this.

    Brian Klawitter
    Keymaster
    Minnesota/Wisconsin Mississippi River
    Posts: 59992
    #908229

    We still need to keep a watch out for the enemy…

    I received an email this morning (and accidentally deleted it from my phone with only skimming it) that was concerned about celebrating too much.

    Quote:


    limitations of lead in fishing gear on some federal lands; bans or restrictions on the state level;


    I still haven’t figured out how our Regulation Manual can have anti lead advertisements in it.

    Brian Klawitter
    Keymaster
    Minnesota/Wisconsin Mississippi River
    Posts: 59992
    #908231

    …and for all of you wheel weight melters out there…

    Lead Wheel Weights

    The Sierra Club, the Ecology Center and others filed the petition on May 29, 2009.

    On August 26, 2009, EPA announced that it will grant a petition to initiate regulatory action to address lead hazards associated with the manufacture, processing, and distribution in commerce of lead wheel balancing weights (“wheel weights”).

    Read EPA’s response to the petitioners (PDF) (1 pg, 297 kb). Read the petition (PDF) (4 pp, 278 kb). The petition incorporates by reference a similar 2005 petition by the Ecology Center, which was denied.

    Link to EPA Page<<

    <sigh> I like change as long as it doesn’t effect me.

    trumar
    Rochester, Mn
    Posts: 5967
    #908247

    Good news indeed, Because I just purchased 250lbs of the best lead I have had in years

Viewing 6 posts - 1 through 6 (of 6 total)

You must be logged in to reply to this topic.