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She Lobbied for a Carcinogen. Now She’s at the E.P.A., Approving New Chemicals.

cigaretteman

HB King
May 29, 2001
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Formaldehyde, the chemical of choice for undertakers and embalmers, is also used in products like furniture and clothes. But it can also cause cancer and severe respiratory problems. So, in 2021, the Environmental Protection Agency began a new effort to regulate it.
The chemicals industry fought back with an intensity that astonished even seasoned agency officials. Its campaign was led by Lynn Dekleva, then a lobbyist at the American Chemistry Council, an industry group that spends millions of dollars on government lobbying.
Dr. Dekleva is now at the E.P.A. in a crucial job: She runs an office that has the authority to approve new chemicals for use. Earlier she spent 32 years at Dupont, the chemical maker, before joining the E.P.A. in the first Trump administration.
Her most recent employer, the chemicals lobbying group, has made reversing the Environmental Protection Agency’s course on formaldehyde a priority and is pushing to abolish a program under which the agency assess the risks of chemicals to human health. In recent weeks it has urged the agency to discard its work on formaldehyde entirely and start from scratch in assessing the risks.

 
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Put everyone on the ACC in a room with formaldehyde for several hours each day for a few years. It is obviously 100% safe so there should be no objection.
 
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In other unbelievable news, many former prosecutors are now defense attorneys.

Not that unusual for people to work on both sides of their expertise over their career.
 
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