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Documents finalized December 30, 1999
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The California Environmental Protection Agencys Office of
Environmental Health Hazard Assessment (OEHHA), as lead agency for
the implementation of the Safe Drinking Water and Toxic Enforcement
Act of 1986 (Proposition 65), maintains the Proposition 65 list
of chemicals that had been identified by the State to cause cancer,
birth defects or other reproductive harm. One of the mechanisms
by which a chemical can be added to the Proposition 65 list is when
the chemical has been identified as causing cancer by an organization
that has been designated as "authoritative" for purposes
of Proposition 65. The authoritative bodies for identifying agents
as causing cancer are: the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
(U.S. EPA), the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, the National
Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, the National Toxicology
Program, and the International Agency for Research on Cancer.
If the lead agency finds that a chemical is no longer identified
by the authoritative body as causing cancer or reproductive toxicity,
the listing under the Proposition can be reconsidered (Title 22,
California Code of Regulation, Section 12306). Chemicals listed
as causing cancer via the authoritative bodies mechanism and which
are under reconsideration are referred to the Carcinogen Identification
Committee (CIC), the States qualified experts for carcinogenicity
determinations under the Proposition. The CIC then makes a recommendation
as to whether the chemical should remain on the list.
In a public meeting of the CIC held September 25, 1997, OEHHA informed
the CIC of five candidate chemicals which may no longer be identified
by the authoritative body as causing cancer: allyl chloride, chlorodibromomethane,
1,1-dichloroethane, p-toluidine, and zineb.
Three of the five chemicals (allyl chloride, 1,1-dichloroethane,
and ptoluidine) were originally scheduled to be discussed
at the December 10, 1998, meeting of the CIC. A document summarizing
relevant information on allyl chloride, 1,1-dichloroethane, and
ptoluidine was released to the CIC and the public on October
30, 1998 (see California Regulatory Notice Register, Register 98,
No. 44-Z). The CIC, at their December 10, 1999 meeting, deferred
reconsideration of the listing of these chemicals as causing cancer
under Proposition 65 until the next CIC meeting.
The next meeting of the CIC is scheduled for October 7, 1999. The
meeting will begin at 10:00 a.m. in Training Room A, Elihu Harris
State Building, 1515 Clay Street, Oakland, California, and will
last until all business has been conducted or until 5:00 p.m. At
this meeting the CIC will consider the authoritative bodies
reviews and the carcinogenicity evidence for these five chemicals
and make a recommendation regarding whether allyl chloride, chlorodibromomethane,
1,1-dichloroethane, p-toluidine, and zineb should continue to be
included on the Proposition 65 list.
A document summarizing authoritative bodies reviews and carcinogenicity
evidence for all five chemicals have been developed. Copies of the
summary document are available from the Proposition 65 Implementation
Office and may be requested by calling (916) 445-6900. The documents
are also available through the Internet.
Comments on this document, or other issues related to the reconsideration
of the listing of these specific chemicals on the Proposition 65
list of chemicals known to the state to cause cancer should be directed
by September 27, 1999 to:
Cynthia Oshita
Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment,
Post Office Box 4010
Sacramento, CA 95812-4010.
Fax (916) 327-1097.
Click here to download
a copy of this notice as a PDF file.
Click here to download a copy of the
document summarizing authoritative bodies reviews and carcinogenicity
evidence for all five chemicals as a 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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