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The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (U.S. EPA), is an authoritative
body for purposes of Proposition 65 (Title 22, California Code of
Regulations, section 12306 (22 CCR §12306)). U.S. EPA identifies
chemicals as causing developmental or reproductive toxicity in implementing
its Toxic Release Inventory (TRI) program (i.e., section 313 of
the Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act of 1986 (EPCRA)).
On this basis, the U.S. EPA, in 1994, added a number of chemicals
to the TRI list and published its findings in the Federal Register
(59:1788-1859, 1994 and 59:61432-61485, 1994). The Office of Environmental
Health Hazard Assessment (OEHHA) has reviewed the basis for these
TRI chemical additions in the context of the regulatory criteria
governing Proposition 65 listing via the authoritative bodies mechanism
(22 CCR § 12306).
OEHHA determined for numerous TRI chemicals that the 22 CCR §
12306 regulatory criteria were met and added those chemicals to
the Proposition 65 list on this basis and is in the process of placing
other TRI chemicals on the Proposition 65 list of chemicals known
to cause reproductive toxicity. Imazalil (CAS No. 35554-44-0), is
one of the TRI chemicals. There was significant confusion in the
original April 23, 1999
Notice of Intent to List citations such that the Notice was
retracted.
Imazalil (CAS No. 35554-44-0)
In the "Justification
Document" prepared in conjunction with the Notice
of April 23, 1999, OEHHA's findings regarding the three references
cited by the U.S. EPA under its TRI of 1994 that identified imazalil
as causing developmental toxicity were: (1) the U.S. EPA Integrated
Risk Information System (IRIS) database entry supported the Notice
(the IRIS database description cited a Chevron, 1975 study that
apparently was submitted to U.S. EPA for pesticide registration);
(2) the Thienpont rat article was not suitable for use by OEHHA
because the brief study description suggested excessive maternal
mortality; and (3) the reporting of methods and results in the Thienpont
rabbit study was so incomplete as to limit the usefulness of this
study for hazard/risk assessment.
After the Notice of Intent to List was published last April, documentation
was provided that the Chevron, 1975 study was not available for
review. While direct review of all underlying studies by OEHHA is
not specifically required by 22 CCR § 12306, it was brought
to our attention that U.S. EPA no longer had the Chevron, 1975 study.
Therefore, there had been no meaningful opportunity for interested
parties to directly review the Chevron, 1975 study. OEHHA tried
to retrieve the Chevron, 1975 study using the Master Record Identification
Document number (MRID #) given in the IRIS database and cross checking
this MRID # in another database, the National Pesticide Informational
Retrieval System. The MRID # corresponds with a study denominated
as Janssen 598, not Chevron, 1975, the primary study relied upon
by OEHHA in its original Notice. Janssen 598 does not correspond
to the study parameters in the IRIS database for Chevron, 1975.
On February 1, 2000, U.S. EPA verified that the Chevron, 1975 study
was also known as Janssen 597. Janssen 597 also served as the underlying
study reported in the Thienpont article concerning rats. This fact
was not known to OEHHA at the time of publication of the Notice
of Intent to List.
Given the confusion over the identity of the Chevron, 1975/Janssen
597 study and its relationship to the Thienpont article concerning
rats, OEHHA is retracting the April
23, 1999 Notice and will reevaluate the potential basis for
the listing.
Follow this link to download
a copy of this notice as an Adobe Acrobat PDF file.
You will need the free program Adobe Acrobat Reader to view or
print PDF files 
For questions regarding Proposition 65, please contact the Cynthia
Oshita in the Proposition 65 Implementation Program
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