What feasible steps can I take to help with BPA?
Get the latest Flash player
What is BPA?
What are the most common household products that contain BPA?
Can BPA leach out when it is not heated?
What feasible steps can I take to help with BPA?
What is BPA?
Where in your home are harmful chemicals found?
What plastics should I avoid buying?
What is PVC?
How To Make Better Bad Food Choices
Understand The 3 Areas Of Fitness
Use Fitness & Nutrition Apps To Get In Shape
Sit Down Fitness Tips
Tips For Exercising Outdoors In Winter
Go From Fitness Rookie To Fitness Pro
Gym Etiquette For New Members
Getting Into Winter Workout Mode
How To Make Sustainable Fitness Goals
Setting Goals For A Healthier New Year
Managing Food Allergies In School
Emotional Wellness For Food Allergic Kids
Michael Schade
PVC Campaign Coordinator, The Center for Health, Environment & Justice
212-964-3680
mike@besafenet.org
The Center for Health, Environment and Justice (CHEJ) is the only national environmental organization that was founded and is led by a grassroots leader. Lois Gibbs founded CHEJ after winning the nation’s first community relocation of 900 families due to a leaking toxic waste dump in Love Canal, New York. Through this effort she also woke up the nation to recognize the link between people’s exposures to dangerous chemicals in the community setting and serious public health impacts.
CHEJ was instrumental in establishing some of the first national policies critical to protecting community health like the Superfund Program, Right-to-Know and others. By pioneering the effort nationwide to protect communities from exposures to dangerous environmental chemicals, in the air, water and soil, CHEJ has become the preeminent national leader among grassroots groups reducing the burden of toxic substances on our environment.
CHEJ is different from other environmental organizations. It was created out of a commitment and passion to work with communities at risk, to empower local families to take steps to protect their neighborhoods and families from unnecessary chemical threats. Through skill training, strategic analysis and scientific research, CHEJ has worked with over ten thousand groups since our founding.
CHEJ’s overarching goal has consistently been to prevent harm—particularly among vulnerable populations such as children. If a safer process, material or product exists it should be used. We believe that everyone, regardless of income, race, religion, or occupation, has a right to live, work, learn, play and pray in a healthy community.
CHEJ is a leader in advocating responsible corporate behavior (located in communities and selling products to families) in replacing outdated chemicals with safe, affordable alternatives to build long-term, safe economic opportunities and community benefits. Our twenty years of experience in this arena extends from moving McDonalds away from Styrofoam in 1986 to moving Microsoft away from PVC plastic in 2006.
CHEJ works as a convener bringing together organizations from different walks of life like teachers, doctors, nurses, blue-collar workers and faith-based leaders. Through building strategic partnerships we create a more powerful and diverse collaborative effort for advocating healthy communities everywhere.
What feasible steps can I take to help with BPA?
Michael Schade, PVC Campaign Coordinator with the Center for Health, Environment and Justice discusses what feasible steps you can take to help with BPA.
Transcripts
Host: What feasible steps can I take to help with BPA?
Michael Schade: Well, parents can take simple steps to protect their children's health. The good news is that there are safer products that are out there and for the most part, for the products that we are most concerned about it's easy for parents to identify whether or not a product contains Bisphenol A. Most plastics have a recycling symbol on the side of it or underneath of it. The number that you find inside the recycling symbol indicates what type of plastic that this is. Plastics that contain Bisphenol A have the number 7 inside the recycling symbol and sometimes it will also say the letters PC underneath the recycling symbol.
So to identify products that contain Bisphenol A, parents want to avoid plastics that have the number 7 inside the recycling symbol and the letters PC underneath the recycling symbol. There are safer baby bottles that are out there that don't contain this harmful chemical. So for instance, you can buy a baby bottle that's made out of glass which is much safer for our health and environment. There is also safer plastics that are out there, that also don't contain this harmful chemical. For instance, baby bottles can be made out of Polyethylene Plastic or Polypropylene plastic which are the numbers 1, 2 or 5 plastics.
So parents can look for plastics that are marked number 1, 2 or 5 for baby bottles to ensure that they are not exposing their children to this unnecessary harmful chemical.
Are safer plastics more expensive?
Baby Registry - Bottles
Healthy School Lunches - Making Lunch Eco-Friendly
Healthy School Lunches - Anatomy of the Lunch Box
Fishing - Soft Plastic Lures
Painting - How to Do a Plastic Finish Subtractive Method
Painting - How to Do a Plastic Finish Applying Method
What happens to plastic when I put it in the microwave?
What does the recycling symbol on the bottom of a plastic object mean?
(Add Comment)