91% of Small Businesses Want Chemical Industry Held
Responsible for Safe Chemicals in Marketplace
Washington, DC – American
small business owners want the chemical industry to be held responsible for
toxic chemicals in the marketplace, according to a new poll commissioned by the American
Sustainable Business Council (ASBC). Small
business owners nationwide show strong support for stricter regulation of toxic
chemicals. The October study examined the attitudes and opinions of 511 small
business owners around the country.
“Organizations like the American
Chemistry Council have made anti-regulation legislation in Congress and state
legislatures a top priority, pushing the myth that all regulations are a threat
to small business growth,” said David
Levine, Co-founder and CEO of ASBC. “But
the reality is that small-business owners see the value of sound regulations to
help guide the market to deliver innovation for safer chemicals and products,
which consumers are demanding. This data shows that no matter what your
political affiliation is, there is agreement that toxic chemicals need to be
regulated to prevent risk for business and the public.”
Pointing
out that an earlier poll of voters found very similar opinions on the need for
toxic chemical regulations, Frank Knapp Jr., Vice Chair of the ASBC Action Fund
and president/CEO of the S.C. Small Business Chamber of Commerce said,
“Small-business owners have always had a strong sense of community; they are
not just a major part of local economies. They are your neighbors whose
children go to local schools. Their families worship in local houses of faith
and attend community plays and sporting events. They have the same interests,
concerns and desires as the workers they employ and the customers they serve.”
“Failure of adequate chemical transparency and regulation in
the U.S. denies both manufacturers and consumers the ability to choose
alternative materials and products. Consumer choice is the basis of free
enterprise. More choices for consumers is better for everyone,” said
Ally Latourelle, VP of Government
Affairs for BioAmber, based in Plymouth, Minnesota.
"Consumer
confidence takes a dive when people learn that they are bringing dangerous
chemicals into their homes, because there is no regulation. That's bad for
business," said Andy Igrejas, Director of the Safer Chemicals, Healthy Families coalition. "This data shows
that, like most Americans from across the political spectrum, small business
owners believe that ensuring the health and safety of chemicals is good for our
health and good for the health of our economy too."
The
poll found:
--75%
support stricter regulations of chemicals used in everyday products.
--87%
support government regulations of chemicals used in growing food.
--73%
support government regulations to ensure the products companies buy and sell
are non-toxic.
--91%
support chemical manufacturers being held responsible for ensuring their
chemicals are safe.
--76%
support tax incentives for companies that innovate to provide safer chemicals.
--92%
support regulations to protect air and water from pollution by toxic chemicals.
--78%
support government regulations to reduce air pollutants linked to environmental
and health problems.
The only
significant chemicals legislation to pass the Environment and Public Works
Committee this year was the Safe Chemicals Act. It is pending in the US Senate,
though unlikely to receive a vote in the lame duck session. However, with
Democrats retaining the Senate, Senator Lautenberg is in a strong position to
move the legislation and plans to do so early in the new year. The bill has 27
co-sponsors, including most of the Senate leadership.
A
petition for business owners urging Congress to update the 34-year-old Toxic
Substances Control Act was started by ASBC. It can be found here:
http://org2.democracyinaction.org/o/6269/p/dia/action/public/?action_KEY=9082
The poll was commissioned by the
American Sustainable Business Council and conducted by Lake Research Partners
in partnership with Public Opinion Strategies.
The American Sustainable Business
Council and its member organizations represent more than 150,000 businesses
nationwide, and more than 300,000 entrepreneurs, executives, managers, and
investors. The non-partisan council includes chambers of commerce, trade
associations, and groups representing small business, investors,
microenterprise, social enterprise, green and sustainable business, local
living economy, and women and minority business leaders. ASBC informs and
engages policy makers and the public about the need and opportunities for
building a vibrant and sustainable economy. www.asbcouncil.org
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