Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel does bang-up job on BPA

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Our hats are off to the top-notch reporters at the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel who have invested time, energy and considerable expertise to daylight important pieces of the puzzle that is bisphenol-A. We weren't surprised to hear that they won the John B. Oakes Environmental Journalism Prize from the Columbia Graduate School of Journalism for the important Chemical Fallout series.

We heartily agree with the judges for honoring Susanne Rust, Meg Kissinger, and Cary Spivak. As the judges said, these dedicated investigative reporters "worked tirelessly to analyze the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and its efforts to protect the public from dangerous chemicals found in common household items such as baby bottles and toy rubber ducks. The Journal proved that despite millions of taxpayer dollars spent by the government, the EPA failed to test products for hazards to the body's reproductive, developmental and behavioral systems, particularly impacting fetuses and women of child-bearing age."

As we have learned in our own work here at EWG, reviewing hundreds, sometimes thousands, of public documents to better understand an issue, a process, a failed regulation is an essential step connecting the public and our lawmakers with the information we all need to create effective public policy.

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