Oregon among states challenging EPA mercury rule ‘loopholes’
Oregon Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum said Monday she’s led a coalition of 10 state attorneys general in filing an amicus, or “friend of the court” brief in support of Vermont’s petition challenging loopholes in the Environmental Protection Agency’s recently adopted Mercury Rule.
A copy of the filing with the Second Circuit Court of Appeals can be found here.
The ‘Lautenberg Act’ amendments to the Toxic Substances Control Act, passed in 2016, required the EPA to develop a comprehensive inventory of mercury use in the United States, and required importers and manufacturers of mercury-added products to report if their products contain mercury.
Congress instructed the EPA to write rules implementing the Act. But the EPA’s rule creates loopholes that violate both the letter and the spirit of the amendments, the state attorneys general said.
“Mercury is a highly dangerous pollutant, and it can have devastating effects on pregnant women, children and others,” Rosenblum said. “But under the new rule, if someone imports a product with a mercury-added component, manufacturers are not required to share that information. And if a manufacturer incorporates a supplier’s mercury-added component into a product, the manufacturer doesn’t have to report that the final product contains mercury.
“As an example of the effect of these exemptions from the rule, our brief notes that ‘…a business that imports mercury containing batteries by themselves may be required to report, but a business that imports a toy containing the very same batteries would not be required to report.’ These loopholes are unlawful and will make it harder for states to identify sources of mercury and to develop policies to prevent mercury poisoning,” the attorney general said.
Rosenblum thanked Vermont Attorney General T. J. Donovan for leading on this issue, and noted that Oregon and Vermont are long-standing partners in environmental protection, including being the first two states to pass ‘bottle bills’ in the early 1970’s.
Oregon was joined on the brief by Connecticut, Hawaii, Massachusetts, Maine, Maryland, Minnesota by and through its Minnesota Pollution Control Agency, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and Washington.