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July 4, 2011 - Volume 89, Number 27
- p. 19
Government & Policy Concentrates
More Government & Policy Concentrates
- Styrene Group Challenges Cancer Listing
- An industry group representing manufacturers of styrene, an industrial chemical used to make polystyrene and polyester resins found in...
- High Court Sides With Drugmakers
- The Supreme Court has ruled that generic drug manufacturers, which account for nearly 75% of all drugs dispensed in the U.S., cannot be sued...
- EPA Sets Timeline For Boiler Rule
- EPA says it plans to propose revised regulations to limit toxic air emissions from industrial boilers in October and will then issue final...
- Senate Committee Clears Pesticide Bill
- The Senate Agriculture, Nutrition & Forestry Committee has approved a bill that would eliminate a 2009 court-ordered requirement that...
- Report Details Costs Of Federal Rules
- Major federal regulations issued over the past decade cost the U.S. economy between $44 billion and $62 billion each year...
Topics Covered
More Government Stories
October 24, 2011
Academic Lab Safety Under Exam
(October 24, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 43 | pp. 25-27)Chemical safety board report probes academic research practices, identifies role for ACS.
Critical Materials Problem Continues (Member Content)
(October 24, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 43 | pp. 28-31)Debate over use of and substitutions for rare-earth elements points out a need for much more research.
Alleged Science Manipulation (Member Content)
(October 24, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 43 | pp. 32-33)Republicans say EPA chemical assessments are slanted toward tougher regulation.
EPA Clean Air Rules Challenged (Member Content)
(October 24, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 43 | pp. 34-35)Republicans, Democrats clash over the costs and benefits of agency's actions.
Prioritizing Science Funding
(October 24, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 43 | p. 6)Budget: House committee members outline science funding they think the nation can do without.
Reconsidering Safe Lead Levels
(October 24, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 43 | p. 7)Preliminary analysis links low blood lead levels with adverse health effects.
House Bills Would Undermine EPA
(October 24, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 43 | p. 8)Pollution: Congressional Republicans seek to derail rules on boilers, coal ash.
Government & Policy Concentrates (Member Content)
(October 24, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 43 | p. 24)
October 17, 2011
Modernizing Drug Safety Laws (Member Content)
(October 17, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 42 | pp. 44-46)Import concerns, drug shortages enter into debate on reauthorization of user fees.
Unfriendly Skies (Member Content)
(October 17, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 42 | pp. 48-50)U.S. carriers challenge EU law controlling airlines' greenhouse gas emissions.
A Flood Of Energy Awards (Member Content)
(October 17, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 42 | pp. 51-52)Energy Department marks end of fiscal 2011 with key clean energy loan guarantees, grants.
Congress Passes Trade Agreements
(October 17, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 42 | p. 10)Exports: Pacts will help open markets and create manufacturing jobs, advocates say.
DOE Demands Solar Patents
(October 17, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 42 | p. 12)Intellectual Property: Bankrupt solar firm developed its manufacturing technology with government grant.
Trade Group's About-Face On BPA
(October 17, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 42 | p. 13)American Chemistry Council asks FDA to ban bisphenol A in baby bottles and sippy cups.
Government & Policy Concentrates (Member Content)
(October 17, 2011 | Vol. 89 Issue 42 | p. 42)
The Senate Agriculture, Nutrition & Forestry Committee has approved a bill that would eliminate a 2009 court-ordered requirement that pesticide applicators obtain a permit under the Clean Water Act (CWA) when spraying in or near U.S. waters. The same bill, the Reducing Regulatory Burdens Act of 2011 (H.R. 872), passed the House in March (C&EN, March 14, page 30). The legislation would eliminate the need for such permits, which will be required beginning on Oct. 31 unless lawmakers act swiftly. The court decision has been controversial since it was made. Industry groups and EPA claim that CWA permits for pesticides are duplicative because aquatic effects are already considered under the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide & Rodenticide Act. Environmental groups and some Democrats in Congress, however, argue that EPA’s standard for assessing aquatic effects of pesticides under FIFRA is insufficient to protect wildlife and possibly humans from harm. The bill is now on hold because Sen. Ben Cardin (D-Md.), a member of the Senate Environment & Public Works Committee, has used a procedural motion to prevent it from reaching the Senate floor for a vote until further deliberations occur.
- Chemical & Engineering News
- ISSN 0009-2347
- Copyright © 2011 American Chemical Society
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