Coalition
of U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Unions
Letter
to U.S. Congress on Fluoride Regulation
The
following letter was sent to the Chairmen and the Ranking
Members of these Committees and Subcommittees of the U.S.
Senate and House of Representatives, addressed to the
Committee/Subcommittee offices. The remaining Members of
these Committees/Subcommittees will then each receive a copy
of the letter, transmitted by the respective
Committee/Subcommittee majority and minority staffs. The
letter was sent separately to Speaker of the House Hastert
and to Rep. Henry Waxman. The names of
chairmen and ranking members are listed below for each
committee.
Senate Committees:
Environment and Public Works (Inhofe and
Jeffords)
Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (Enzi
and Kennedy)
Commerce, Science and Transportation (Stevens
and Inouye)
Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry (Chambliss
and Harkin)
House Committees/Subcommittees
Energy and Commerce (Barton and Dingell)
Subcommittee on Environment snd Hazardous Materials (Gillmor
and Solis)
Subcommittee on Health (Deal and Brown)
Science (Boehlert and Gordon
August
5, 2005
RE: Bone Cancer-Fluoridation Cover-Up
Hon. Daniel Inouye, Ranking Member
Committee on Science and Transportation
560 Dirksen Senate Office Building
Washington, D.C. 20510-6125
Dear Senator Inouye:
Our unions
represent a substantial portion of the nation-wide workforce
at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, and we are
writing to ask for a moratorium on the national program of
the U.S. Public Health Service to fluoridate all of
America’s public water supplies.
One of us
(Dr. Hirzy, of NTEU Chapter 280) testified before the
Subcommittee on Wildlife, Fisheries and Water of the Senate
on June 29, 2000 on this subject on behalf of his
headquarters union. At that time the union called for a
moratorium based on science indicating a number of adverse
health effects and out-of-control, excessive exposures to
fluoride.
We now join
NTEU Chapter 280 in renewing the call for a moratorium,
based on startling and disturbing new information that
confirms the worst fears expressed in the earlier testimony.
Work done at
Harvard College’s School of Dental Medicine by Dr. Elise
Bassin, which has been hidden since 2001, shows that
pre-adolescent boys who drink fluoridated water are at a
seven-fold increased risk of osteosarcoma, an often fatal
bone cancer. We ask that the moratorium take effect
immediately and remain in place until a full hearing by the
Congress on the wisdom of continuing the practice is
concluded. The last such hearing was in 1978.
Dr.
Bassin’s work, done as her doctoral thesis, was completed
and accepted by Harvard in partial fulfillment of the
requirements for her Ph.D. in 2001. It is a landmark
investigation of age-specific exposure of young people in a
case-control epidemiology study of the incidence of
osteosarcoma. The thesis remained sequestered until 2004,
when her research adviser, Chester Douglass, inexplicably
reported to the funding agency, the National Institute of
Environmental Health Sciences, that no
connection was found between fluoride and osteosarcoma. This
discrepancy between Chester Douglass’ written report and
the actual findings of the funded study is under
investigation by several entities, and we believe should be
looked into by the Congress as well. It appears to be yet
another instance of federally funded science gone awry to
protect special interests. Chester Douglass edits Colgate
Company’s Oral Health Report.
Chapter
three of Dr. Bassin’s work (enclosed) cites the impressive
weight of convergent evidence for the carcinogenicity of
fluoride in young boys (but not girls): fluoride is a
mitogen, increasing the rate of cell division; it has been
shown to be mutagenic, damaging chromosomal structure; it
accumulates primarily in bone, site of the cancer; several
previous epidemiology studies have found heretofore
unexplained increases in osteosarcoma in young men (but not
young women); a National Toxicology Program animal study
found statistically significant increases in osteosarcomas
in male (but not female) rats. And she discusses why several
other epidemiology studies found no association between
fluoridation and osteosarcoma; principally, those studies
did not consider age-specific exposures and development of
the cancer.
It is simply
unconscionable that her federally funded work was hidden for
four years while millions of young boys continued to be
exposed to increased risk of this disease, whose best
outcome involves amputation. Several federal statutes
express Congressional intent regarding timely warning about
such risks. These include, for example, the Toxic Substances
Control Act, section 8(e) and the Federal Insecticide,
Fungicide and Rodenticide Act section 6(a)(2). We believe
another area for Congressional investigation is: who
knew about the results of Dr. Bassin’s work besides
herself and Chester Douglass? and was any federal
statute violated by keeping those results hidden for four
years?
Another
reason for a Congressional review of fluoridation is the
recent work of Dr. Richard Maas of the Environmental Quality
Institute, University of North Carolina-Ashville, which
shows that use of chloramine disinfectant and silicofluoride
fluoridating agents with excess ammonia increases lead
concentrations in public water supplies. This may explain at
least some of the increased lead levels seen in the District
of Columbia’s water supplies and in the blood of children
drinking water fluoridated with silicofluorides. The Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention says that ninety four
percent of fluoridated water systems use silicofluorides.
Dr. Hirzy is
available to meet with your staff to pursue this matter, and
we hope that you will find it of sufficient concern to
initiate a full investigation of fluoridation, which we
believe is long overdue.
Sincerely,
Dwight A. Welch, President
J. William Hirzy, Vice-President
NTEU Chapter 280
NTEU
280
EPA Headquarters
EPA
Headquarters
/s/Steve Shapiro, President
/s/Paul Sacker, President
AFGE local 3331
AFGE Local 3911
EPA Headquarters
Region 2 Office, New York
/s/Larry Penley. President
/s/Nancy
Barron, President
NTEU Chapter 279
NAGE Local R5-55
EPA Cincinnati Laboratory
Region 4 Office, Atlanta
/s/Wendell Smith, President
/s/Patrick Chan, President
ESC/IFPTE Local 20
NTEU Chapter 295
Region 9 Office, San Francisco
Region 9 Office, San Francisco
/s/Henry Burrell, President
/s/Alan Hollis, President
AFGE Local 3428
AFGE Local 3611
Region 1 Office, Boston
Region
3 Office, Philadelphia
/s/Frank Beck, President
/s/Mark Coryell, President
AFGE Local 2900
AFGE Local 3907
Ada Laboratory
Ann Arbor laboratory
cc: Hon.
Stephen L. Johnson, Administrator
U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency