If confirmed by the Senate, Robert Califf needs to put the “F” back in “FDA” by using its regulatory power to ensure food safety.
Iris Myers and Scott Faber for Environmental Health News
Troubling news about toxics in our food grows daily, with chemicals and metals of concern contaminating popular products from Skittles to Pop Tarts.
That’s
why President Joe Biden’s nominee to lead the Food and Drug Administration
should prioritize tackling those risks.
Biden last week nominated former FDA Commissioner Robert Califf to return to that position, which he held for the last year of the Obama administration.
If confirmed by the Senate, Califf needs
to put the “F” back in “FDA” by using its regulatory power to ensure food
safety, such as banning the toxic “forever chemicals” known
as PFAS from product packaging.
Consumers
says toxic chemicals in food is one of their top concerns, especially those in
food marketed to children. But the FDA, which is charged with protecting the
food supply from toxins, has largely let food and chemical companies decide
whether chemicals and contaminants linked to everything from cancer to lower IQ
should be in our food.
The need to act is urgent, as shown by the discovery of toxic heavy metals in baby food. Many parents were shocked when congressional investigators revealed trusted baby food brands contain high levels of metals like arsenic and lead that could harm their baby’s developing brains.
Yet
FDA officials have long known that baby food could be contaminated with high levels
of arsenic or lead – and have largely failed to set limits that baby food
companies must meet. It was not until this year that the agency even told
producers of their duty to reduce toxics in their food.
Or
consider the risks of food laced with PFAS, which are linked to cancer, reproductive harm and immune system harms that
weaken the effectiveness of vaccines.
For
decades, FDA has allowed PFAS
in food packaging, despite
knowing these toxic chemicals, which build up in our blood, could migrate into
the food we eat. In recent years, seven states have moved the ban PFAS from
packaging as the health risks – long hidden from the public – became common
knowledge.
But
rather than ban PFAS from food packaging, FDA has downplayed these risks.
And
some harmful chemicals are even intentionally added to food, including
substances like BHA, TBHQ and titanium dioxide. Some
of these chemicals were approved by FDA for use in food more than 50 years ago
to make processed food taste better or last longer. Many are added to products
marketed to kids, including Skittles and Starburst.
Other
countries have methodically reviewed – and even banned – some of these
additives, but the FDA has largely declined to ask, in light of new science,
whether these chemicals remain safe.
Most food chemicals evade FDA review and enter the marketplace through a waiver in federal food safety law known as the Generally Recognized as Safe, or GRAS, loophole, intended for ingredients that were obviously safe to bypass review. Instead, with FDA’s complicity, novel chemicals previously unknown to science are being added to food, thanks to the loophole.
So
it’s good news the FDA may soon have a new commissioner with Califf, an
experienced regulator with a track record of tackling the risks of toxic
substances.
If
confirmed to lead the agency again, Califf should immediately ban PFAS from
food packaging. A toxic forever chemical has no place in our food. Safer
alternatives are available.
He
should also accelerate FDA’s timelines to set mandatory standards for toxic
metals in baby food. Every day, 10,000 babies will start eating solid food.
Parents cannot wait until 2024 or later for FDA to set standards for baby food
companies. Califf should immediately require baby food companies to test for
metals and post the results.
And
he should move quickly to close loopholes that let the chemical companies – not
the FDA – decide whether food chemicals are safe. He should also insist that
chemicals that have not been subject to meaningful review for decades get a
second look for safety concerns.
In
his previous term as FDA commissioner, Califf demonstrated he understands that
repeat exposure to toxic chemicals in our food and in personal care products
like sunscreen pose serious health risks.
Given
another chance to serve, he should seize the opportunity to protect consumers –
especially babies and children – from needless exposures to dangerous toxics.
Iris
Myers is a communications associate with the Environmental Working Group. Scott
Faber is a senior vice president of government affairs for EWG. Their views do
not necessarily represent those of Environmental Health News, The Daily
Climate, or publisher Environmental Health Sciences.