November/December 2005 Alternative Health
EPA Unions Call for Nationwide Moratorium on Fluoridation, Congressional Hearing on Adverse Effects, Youth Cancer Cover Up
Washington, DC, --/World-Wire/- Eleven EPA employee unions representing
over 7000 environmental and public health professionals of the Civil
Service have called for a moratorium on drinking water fluoridation
programs across the country, and have asked EPA management to recognize
fluoride as posing a serious risk of causing cancer in people. The unions
acted following revelations of an apparent cover-up of evidence from
Harvard School of Dental Medicine linking fluoridation with elevated
risk of a fatal bone cancer in young boys.
The unions sent letters to key Congressional committees asking Congress
to legislate a moratorium pending a review of all the science on the
risks and benefits of fluoridation. The letters cited the weight of
evidence supporting a classification of fluoride as a likely human carcinogen,
which includes other epidemiology results similar to those in the Harvard
study, animal studies, and biological reasons why fluoride can reasonably
be expected to cause the bone cancer - osteosarcoma - seen in young
boys and test animals.
The unions also pointed out recent work by Richard Maas of the Environmental
Quality Institute, University of North Carolina that links increases
in lead levels in drinking water systems to use of silicofluoride fluoridating
agents with chloramines disinfectant.
The letter to EPA Administrator Stephen Johnson asked him to issue
a public warning in the form of an advanced notice of proposed rulemaking
setting the health-based drinking water standard for fluoride at zero,
as it is for all known or probable human carcinogens, pending a recommendation
from a National Academy of Sciences' National Research Council committee.
That committee's work is not expected to be done before 2006.
The unions also asked Congress and EPA's enforcement office, or the
Department of Justice, to look into reasons why the Harvard study director,
Chester Douglass, failed to report the seven-fold increased risk seen
in the work he oversaw, and instead wrote to the National Institute
of Environmental Health Sciences, the federal agency that funded the
Harvard study, saying there was no link between fluoridation and osteosarcoma.
Douglass sent the same negative report to the National Research Council
committee studying possible changes in EPA's drinking water standards
for fluoride.
The unions who signed the letters represent EPA employees from across
the nation, including laboratory scientists in Ohio, Oklahoma and Michigan,
regulatory support scientists and other workers at EPA headquarters
in Washington, D.C. and science and regulatory workers in Boston, New
York, Philadelphia, Atlanta, and San Francisco.
They are affiliated with the National Treasury Employees Union, the
American Federation of Government Employees, Engineers and Scientists
of California/International Federation of Professional and Technical
Engineers, and the National Association of Government Employee/Service
Employees International Union.
The unions' letter is online at: nteu280.org/Issues/Fluoride/fluoridesummary.htm