In this Section
Issues: Health
Get the Lead OutChildren across the nation face the risk of lead poisoning, but steps can be taken to protect them
Lead is a harmful toxin that causes brain, kidney and cardiovascular damage. In children, even small amounts of lead have been proven to lower IQ levels.
More than 16,000 industrial facilities across the country, including power plants, smelters and cement kilns, emit lead into the air, where it eventually settles into soil and dust. The lead remains there indefinitely, to be tracked into homes or ingested by children as they play outdoors and put their hands in their mouths.
Today, more than 300,000 children in the United States, particularly in urban areas, suffer from lead poisoning, and uncounted more have unhealthy levels of lead in their blood.
For 30 years, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency maintained an air-quality standard that allowed 1.5 micrograms of lead per cubic meter of air -- a standard put in place when scientists understood far less about lead and its risks than they do today. In fall 2008, EPA followed the strong urging of NRDC and other public health advocates and finally made a change. The new standard of 0.15 micrograms per cubic meter falls within the limit recommended by scientists and researchers.
This change represents a significant leap forward in the fight against lead poisoning, but enforcing the new standard remains problematic. Less than 200 air-lead monitors are deployed nationwide, making it impossible to measure the risk in many communities. NRDC urges the EPA to strengthen its monitoring system, especially downwind from known polluters, in order to ensure the effectiveness of this revised standard. It's the only way that children and their health can truly be protected.
last revised 10.16.08
Sign up for NRDC's online newsletter
Take Online Action Now!
Related NRDC Press Releases
Related Stories
- Simple Steps
- A healthier you. A healthier home. A healthier Earth.
- Is Organic Food Worth It?
- The short answer is yes -- get the lowdown from This Green Life.
- Pet Products May Harm Both Pets and Humans
- Poisons in many pet pesticide products are not safe for pets or humans.
- Dispatch from Toxic Town
- The people of Anniston, Alabama, talk about what it's like to live with the lead, PCBs, and chemical weapons that have made their small town terribly toxic.
Related Links
Find Your Favorite NRDC website
- News & Blogs:
- OnEarth/Greenlight
- Switchboard
- Nature's Voice
- Activism:
- BioGems
- Polar Bear SOS
- Ocean Protection:
- Your Oceans
- Global Warming & Energy:
- Beat the Heat
- Move America Beyond Oil
- Health & Green Living:
- Simple Steps
- This Green Life
- Green Paws
- For Business:
- Building Green
- Market Innovation
- Environmental Entrepreneurs (E2)
- NRDC Cool Sites:
- It's Your Nature
- GreenDay+NRDC
- For Kids:
- Green Squad



