New Hampshire House Members Split on Reducing Toxic Mercury Pollution
(Washington, D.C. – February 18, 2011)
The U.S. House of Representatives has voted to use a budget bill to block clean air protections.
The vote was on an amendment to the Continuing Resolution (HR 1). The amendment, which passed Thursday night, would block all funding for enforcement of limits on mercury and other toxic pollution from cement plants. Mercury pollution causes brain damage in children.
New Hampshire’s delegation split on the amendment. Rep. Frank Guinta (R-NH-1) voted for higher levels of mercury in our air and water. Rep. Charles Bass (R-NH-2) voted for cleaner air and safer, healthier kids.
“Some congressmen are voting for more toxic mercury in our air and water – and that puts our kids at risk,” said Steve Cochran of Environmental Defense Fund. “This will mean more mercury pollution from dirty plants around America will end up our air, water and food. Experts, not politicians, should be making decisions about air pollution.”
Mercury Contamination and the Dangers to New Hampshire Residents
The mercury we put into our air falls back to earth, contaminates our waters, and gets into our food supply; it’s dangerous enough that pregnant women are warned against eating tuna and other fish because of high mercury levels that could cause brain damage in their unborn babies.
Cement plants are the third largest source of manmade mercury emissions in the U.S. New Hampshire has no cement plants, but mercury pollution from the Midwest drifts up north to New Hampshire.
• One-seventieth of one teaspoon of mercury is enough to contaminate a 20-acre lake and make the fish in it unsuitable for consumption.
• Each year, cement plants emit an estimated 16,000 lbs of mercury into the environment.
• Each year, an estimated 400,000 American newborn babies are exposed to unsafe levels of mercury.
• Enforcing the limits on toxic pollution from cement kilns would lower the amount of mercury they spew into the air by 92 percent, and save up to 2,500 lives each year.
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With more than 3 million members, Environmental Defense Fund creates transformational solutions to the most serious environmental problems. To do so, EDF links science, economics, law, and innovative private-sector partnerships to turn solutions into action. edf.org
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