|
REFORMATTING OF THE
LIST OF CHEMICALS
KNOWN TO THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
TO CAUSE REPRODUCTIVE TOXICITY
The Office of Environmental Health
Hazard Assessment (OEHHA) of the California
Environmental Protection Agency is the lead agency for
the implementation of Proposition 65. Proposition 65
requires publication, at least annually, of a list of
chemicals known to the state to cause cancer or
reproductive toxicity. OEHHA, as lead agency for
Proposition 65, administers the publication of the
list. While not required by statute, the endpoint or
endpoints serving as the basis for a finding that a
chemical is known to cause reproductive toxicity are
indicated on the Proposition 65 list. This is
currently done through the publication of three lists
of chemicals that cause: 1) developmental toxicity; 2)
female reproductive toxicity; and 3) male reproductive
toxicity. Formally placing a chemical on one or more
of these lists identifies the chemical as known to the
state to cause reproductive toxicity.
The original Proposition 65 list
was comprised of a list of carcinogens and a single
list of chemicals that cause reproductive toxicity.
The endpoint on which the reproductive toxicity
listing was based was not provided. To provide this
information, since October 1989 the list of chemicals
causing reproductive toxicity has been published as
the three lists of chemicals causing developmental,
male reproductive and female reproductive toxicity. To
provide a more streamlined list, OEHHA proposes
instead that the list of chemicals known to the state
to cause reproductive toxicity be reformatted to a
single list, ordered alphabetically by chemical, with
the basis for listing each chemical clearly noted. The
same information included in the current list can be
more easily obtained in a single list. While for some
time the public has been used to seeing the
Proposition 65 list published in the current format,
OEHHA can see no significant disadvantage to the
reformatting proposed. A more readily understood
format is in line with OEHHA's initiatives to clarify
procedures and provide clear and transparent
information to the public on Proposition 65 matters.
Reformatting of the list is an
administrative matter not subject to the
Administrative Procedure Act, and can be accomplished
through the submission of a "for publication only"
package to the Office of Administrative Law. However,
because of the great interest of the public in
Proposition 65, we invited public comment on this
proposal in a notice published on
June 27, 2001. In addition a public forum was held
on September 10, 2001.
Follow this link to
download a copy of the November 16, 2001 Proposition
65 List of Chemicals Known to Cause Reproductive
Toxicity in the new format as a pdf file.
Follow this link to
download the newly formatted list as an Excel
spreadsheet. |