
PFAS in fertilizer puts wildlife, hunting and fishing areas at risk
The concentration of toxic PFAS chemicals in some wild habitats has gotten so high that Do Not Eat advisories have been applied to game and fish.
The chemicals used to grow our food and maintain our parks and playgrounds are putting our health at risk.
The food we buy should be safe to eat, and our parks and playgrounds shouldn’t be filled with chemicals that put our health at risk, especially when those risks include cancer and developmental disorders. Choosing to buy organic, gardening without pesticides, and avoiding chemical fertilizers are all important, but only collective action will stop the use of these dangerous chemicals.
The concentration of toxic PFAS chemicals in some wild habitats has gotten so high that Do Not Eat advisories have been applied to game and fish.
More than 40 states have taken measures to limit dangerous pesticides. The House Farm Bill could eliminate all those rules in one fell swoop.
New research show how dangerous pesticides could be to our health and why stronger precautions should be taken.
The EPA is poised to reduce restrictions on the toxic pesticide acephate, which could put your families health at risk.
Roundup's main ingredient is a probable human carcinogen, yet it continues to be the most widely used herbicide in the world. The EPA must ban it, unless and until independent research proves it safe.
Chlorpyrifos could be used on our food in the 2024 growing season — unless we convince the EPA to reinstate the ban.
Vice President and Senior Director of State Offices, The Public Interest Network