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"No Child left Behind" - President Extends Executive Order for Task Force on Environmental Risks to Children

Release Date: 04/21/2003
Contact Information:


JOINT PRESS RELEASE FROM EPA/HHS

EPA Contact: Wanda Loving 202-564-7822/[email protected]
HHS Contact: Press Office 202-690-6343

(04/21/03) The White House announced last Friday that by Executive Order it is extending President Bush’s Task Force on Environmental Health and Safety Risks to Children as part of his efforts to increase federal coordination on a wide range of children’s health issues. The Task Force, co-chaired by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has identified these priority areas for immediate attention including: asthma, unintentional injuries, developmental disorders, including lead poisoning, and cancer.

“Children represent 25 percent of our population, but 100 percent of our future,” said EPA Administrator Christie Whitman. “EPA is committed to working with all of our federal partners to ensure that our kids’ water is safe to drink, they have clean air to breathe and the land that they play on is free of pollution.” “We have no higher priority than the health and well-being of our children,” said HHS Secretary Thompson. “Working together, the President and his administration are putting prevention first in our efforts to strengthen the environment for our children so they won’t suffer from asthma, painful injuries or other preventable diseases. We want to provide an environment that encourages our children to be physically active, thus assuring their healthy growth and development.”

The Task Force activities address environmental and safety risks to children including developing and implementing strategies to address childhood asthma and eliminate lead poisoning. An estimated 6.3 million children under 18 years of age suffered from asthma in 2001 and it was the fourth ranking cause of hospitalization among children less than 15 years of age. Asthma disproportionately affects children from lower-income families and children from different racial and ethnic groups. In addition, nearly 430,000 American children between the ages of one to five had elevated blood lead levels that can cause irreversible disabilities such as lower IQ and neurological damage. Today, children’s exposure to lead is mostly due to the ingestion of contaminated dust, paint, and soil.

The National Children’s Study undertaken by this Task Force, will follow about 100,000 children before birth, through childhood, up to adulthood to look at the connections between environmental exposures and potential health effects. And for the first time, in October 2002, federal efforts highlighted the importance of protecting children during Children’s Health Month and planning for the October 2003 events are underway. A strategy is currently being developed to address environmental conditions in schools that can adversely affect children’s health.

The Task Force, established in April 1997 by Executive Order, directed each Federal Agency to make it a high priority to identify, assess, and address children’s environmental health and safety risks. This effort will also provide an opportunity for Federal Departments and Agencies to work together to improve the environmental health and safety of America’s children. Fourteen other cabinet departments and White House agencies also participate in the Task Force.

The work of the Task Force has highlighted the Bush Administration’s strong commitment to protecting children from environmental health and safety risks and has raised public awareness of the issues. It also supports the President’s theme - “No Child Left Behind.”


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