Minnesota legislators are on the verge of approving the nation's most restrictive use of flame-retardant chemicals in furniture and an array of household items such as textiles, mattresses and children's products.
State firefighters have been pushing for legislation that would phase out the use of 10 such chemicals, saying they are ineffective in slowing the spread of fire and contain toxins that are sickening responders. Monday's compromise, reached among the firefighters, the Minnesota Chamber of Commerce and chemical companies, would phase out the manufacture and sale of four commonly used flame retardants.
The deal comes a week to the day after firefighters filled hallways at the Capitol decrying what they called the "slow death" of the original bill, which had sailed through the Senate but had not gotten a hearing in the House Commerce committee.
Minnesota Professional Fire Fighters union President Chris Parsons expressed mixed emotions about Monday's compromise.
"We are leaving off the list six carcinogenic flame retardants, so in that regards I'm not pleased about it," said Parsons, a St. Paul fire captain. "But does it move the conversation further, does it get us closer to our goal? Yes. In the meantime will firefighters continue to be exposed? That I'm not happy about."
Susan Shaw, director and founder of the Marine & Environmental Research Institute, testified before a House Committee on Monday that "firefighters inhale, ingest, and absorb hundreds of toxic, carcinogenic chemicals during every phase of firefighting — suppression, knockdown/ventilation, and cleanup."
A professor at the State University of New York at Albany, Shaw told the panel that young firefighters are developing aggressive cancers at an earlier age than the general population. "Cancer is a looming personal catastrophe for each and every firefighter," she said.
The initial 10-chemical ban was opposed by the Chamber, the American Chemistry Council and the North American Flame Retardant Alliance, a coalition that said the proposed ban was too broad. Similar legislation to ban fire retardants has passed in Oregon, Maine and Vermont, but was narrower in scope.