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Pressurized
Wood Is Under Fire
In October 2001, Laurette Janak proudly watched
her daughter, then 6, play alongside her dad
while he sanded the family's 18-year-old
pressure-treated wood deck.
Janak, who lives in Upstate New York, never
thought that during those two weeks Emily, who
has Down's syndrome, could be harming herself by
frequently putting her tongue and hands on the
deck. At a federal hearing this spring, Janak
testified that Emily ingested and inhaled a high
dose of arsenic during those weeks. Since then,
she said, her daughter has suffered from
neurological problems. The girl may have an
increased lifetime risk of lung and bladder
cancer, Janak said.
Back then, despite widespread media reports,
Janak was unaware of concerns that arsenic,
a known human carcinogen, can leach out of
pressure-treated wood. She just thought
that re-sanding the deck was more cost effective
than buying a new one.
"When you find this out, it's like, how come
I wasn't told? How come our children are at
risk?" she said.
Since the 1940s, chromated copper arsenate (CCA)
has been the most popular wood preservative, used
in more than 90 percent of pressure-treated wood.
It protects wood from rot, mold and pests.
In the past two years, however, CCA-treated wood,
commonly referred to as pressure-treated wood,
has come under increased attack by environmental
advocacy groups that say it poses a danger to
children.
The wood treatment industry voluntarily agreed to
phase out its manufacture for residential use by
Dec. 31, though retailers will still be allowed
to sell remaining supplies.
And the Environmental Protection Agency, which
will oversee the phaseout, is reassessing the
risks, especially to children, who are more
vulnerable to toxins than are adults. The EPA's
findings are scheduled to be released later this
year.
So far, the agency has not recommended that
existing wooden structures be removed but requires
warning labels on all CCA-treated lumber.
Some advocacy groups, led by the Environmental
Working Group and the Healthy Buildings Network,
are pressing for the government to ban
CCA-treated wood playground equipment.
From their research, these two District-based
groups conclude that population-wide the lifetime
cancer risk to children is 1 in 500 from routine
exposure (three times per week for an hour each
session) to pressure-treated wood in playground
equipment and decks. For heavily exposed
children, the risk could be as high as 1 in 100.
"This wood presents a serious health risk to
children in the majority of houses in the D.C.
area," said Jane Houlihan, the Environmental
Working Group's vice president for research.
The Wood Preservative Science Council,
representing the industry, disagrees. The group
said in a statement that there is "no
evidence of an increased risk of lung or bladder
cancer from exposure to treated wood."
Further, the industry argues that people are at
greater risk from arsenic in food and water than
from exposure to pressure-treated wood.
The industry argues against tearing out decks or
keeping children away from treated wood
playground equipment. "Overweight children
are a serious public health issue and the last
thing we want as a society is to prevent them
from playing outside on jungle gyms," said
Barbara Beck, an industry consultant and a
principal at Gradient Corp. in Cambridge, Mass.
The Consumer Product Safety Commission sponsored
the March hearing where Janak and others
testified. The commission's staff has released a
report that found children could face an
increased risk of lung or bladder cancer from
such playground equipment, but also recommended
that the commission defer any decision on a ban
until the EPA releases its reassessment.
So far, the EPA has stopped short of saying that
CCA-treated wood structures should be removed
from homes or that the public is at risk. The
agency began requiring consumer information
labels on all CCA -treated lumber last year.
Home Depot, the largest wood buyer in the world,
has red information tags prominently displayed
next to the pressure-treated wood in its stores.
The home improvement chain still sells that wood
but also offers cedar, redwood, composite decking
and plastic fencing as alternatives. Home Depot
plans to replace CCA with alkaline copper quat, a
wood preservative that does not contain arsenic,
by the end of 2003, according to Goldie Taylor,
the Atlanta-based chain's public relations
manager. The use of the alternative preservative
could cost 15 to 20 percent more than CCA
pressure-treated wood.
Jody Clarke, a Burke mother who testified at the
Consumer Product Safety Commission hearing, says
she resents the impending higher cost of CCA
alternatives. She worries more about her son
falling off his bike and getting hurt than about
possible health risks from exposure to
pressure-treated wood.
"The real victims are going to be the
families, or anyone, who pays more for decks made
out of an alternative -- and inferior --
product," Clarke said Some experts think
pressure-treated wood is neither superior nor
cheaper than other products. It is a
high-maintenance product because the wood
contracts and expands with water and lasts about
10 years, compared with steel, which can last 15
years longer, said John Lombardi, president of
All Recreation, the largest supplier of
commercial playground equipment in Northern
Virginia. The company makes picnic tables,
receptacles and benches with recycled plastic and
steel.
Experts advise consumers who own or use
pressure-treated wood structures to take
reasonable precautions.
Amy Konstant, a Chevy Chase mother who works at
an environmental organization, bought a house in
1997 that has a wood deck. In 2000 she bought a
pressure-treated wood swing set.
Last year she decided against planting a
vegetable garden below the deck because of
concerns that arsenic can leach down into the
soil below the wood structure. She started to
require her two young children to keep their
hands out of their mouths when playing on the
wood structures.
"We wash hands a lot in our house," she
said. |
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