New York
Times: EPA Recommends Raising Fluoride Limits
DIRECTORY: Health
/ EPA Standards
/ News
Articles / New York Times 1985
The New York Times
November 1, 1985
EPA Recommends Raising Fluoride Limits
By Philip Shabecoff
Special to the New York Times
(See photocopy of article)
WASHINGTON, Oct. 31 -- The Environmental Protection Agency today
proposed a new standard that would double the maximum permissible
level of fluoride in the nation's drinking water supplies.
The new maximum, four milligrams to a liter of water, is well above
levels that can cause dental
fluorosis, which results in discoloration, mottling and pitting
of teeth according to the environmental agency. The agency said,
however, that a report issued by the Surgeon General of the United
States in 1982 held that fluorosis was not an adverse health effect.
Fluoride is often added to drinking water supplies as a means of
combatting tooth decay. About half of all water systems in the country
are fluoridized.
Fluoride also occurs naturally in some water supplies. Under the
old maximum levels, a number of communities, including many in South
Carolina, were forced to spend considerable amounts of money to
reduce fluoride levels. South Carolina has sued the environmental
agency to change the standard.
Environmentalists protested the proposed new levels, saying they
could cause serious health problems.
Jacqueline M. Warren, senior attorney for the Natural
Resources Defense Council, an environmental group, called the
proposal ''outrageous.'' She said that the environmental agency
has evidence that the higher levels of fluoride has caused skeletal
fluorisis, a condition that makes bones hard and brittle.
Her organization intends to sue
to block the new standard she said.
Scientist Disputes Decision
Robert Carton, a scientist with the environmental agency's health
and environment office, said that the professional staff of the
agency had recommended keeping
a lower maximum level for fluoride and that the decision by
the agency raises ''terrific questions about the quality of the
support science that went into the decision.''
He also said that many psychologists have said that the disfiguring
of teeth by fluoride constitutes a potential health problem.
Mr. Carton was recently elected president of the National Federation
of Federal Employees local representing professional employees at
the agency. He said he was sending a letter protesting the decision
on the ground that it raised concerns about the professional reputation
of scientists in the agency.
A spokesman for the agency, Michael Reilly, said that there were
only two cases known in the United States where consumption of water
that containing fluoride at four milligrams per liter had caused
fluorosis. He said he did not not know that the decision had reversed
a recommendation of the professional staff.
''But it is a very controversial issue,'' he said.
The environmental agency has set hearings on the proposed new rule
for Dec. 18 and will accept comments on the proposal until the end
of the year.
Agency Suggests Best Levels
The agency statement today said that at levels of one to two milligrams
to a liter fluoride did protect teeth. In addition to proposing
the new maximum level, the agency also proposed a ''secondary maximum
contaminant level'' of two milligrams to a liter, which it said
''is intended to provide guidance to states and communities for
limiting the occurrence of dental fluorosis while still permitting
optimal fluoride levels for the reduction of cavities.''
The agency said that the secondary standard was not ''federally
enforcable.''
The agency also stated that at four milligrams to a liter and above,
fluoride ''can cause changes in bone density which cause no detectable
health effects.'' It added, ''At 10 milligrams per liter, long-term
exposures can cause sekletal disorders similar to arthritis.''
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