Stay green when you dry clean
NATURAL PERSPECTIVES
On Nov. 1, the South Coast Air Quality Management District will
consider a ban on a widely used dry cleaning fluid called Perc. If
the ban passes, our area will be the first in the nation to prohibit
use of this toxic chemical for dry cleaning.
Perc is the cute, harmless-sounding nickname for
perchloroethylene, a highly volatile organic solvent. How could the
nasty old air quality district want to ban such a cute-sounding
chemical? Sure, the air stinks inside dry cleaning establishments,
and workers in the industry get headaches, dizziness, sore throats
and coughs, but is that reason enough to ban use of Perc?
No, the reason is that dry cleaning workers also have higher rates
than the general public of cancers of the lung, cervix, esophagus,
intestine, pancreas and bladder. Perc has also been blamed for liver
and kidney toxicity. Officials from the air quality district say that
dry cleaning establishments pose a greater risk of cancer to workers
and nearby residents than oil refineries and power plants. In fact,
the risk of cancer is two to 14 times higher in people living near
dry cleaning businesses than in people who live near an oil refinery
or power plant.
In 2000, the Air Quality Management District identified Perc as
one of six key toxic air contaminants. But the California Cleaners
Assn., an organization of cleaning establishment owners, says that
Perc isn’t that bad. The association claims that the health risk
studies are flawed.
We wanted to sift through the hype and fear-mongering from one
side and the self-interested denial from the other side. We wanted
the truth. It wasn’t easy to find.
The Environmental Protection Agency Web site, one of our
first-line sources of environmental information, was filled with
arcane facts and hard-to-understand tables. We quickly gave up on
that. We resorted to searching the National Library of Medicine
online to read the original medical studies for ourselves. This is
what we learned:
It is clear that Perc causes cancer in animals. But of course,
researchers can’t test chemicals on humans. They have to look at
people who are exposed during the course of work and see what happens
after years of exposure.
What epidemiologists found is that dry cleaning workers have much
higher rates of cancer of the esophagus and bladder than other
people. Exposed workers also have an elevated risk for cancer of the
tongue, intestine and lung, as well as for pneumonia and diseases of
the stomach. The longer people work in the dry cleaning industry, the
more likely they are to develop cancer. However, workers did not have
significantly higher rates of liver or kidney cancer, or leukemia.
A total ban of Perc would eliminate the 850 tons of it that are
spewed into the atmosphere each year by the 2,200 dry cleaning
establishments in the South Coast Air Quality District. Perc also
contaminates public drinking water wells in the state. At present,
contamination is found in one out of 10 wells, and will cost the
state $3 billion to clean up.
The proposed measure would require dry cleaners to phase out Perc
gradually and switch to one of several non-toxic alternatives over
the next 17 years. You would think that 17 years is plenty of time
for cleaners to comply, but the California Cleaners Assn. is opposing
the ban, calling it “overzealous.” They claim that the cost of
switching to a new system would put small dry cleaners out of
business.
There is another consideration. The type of dry cleaning machine
that is used affects the amount of Perc that enters the air. There
are two types of machine. One is a dry-to-dry machine that washes and
dries the clothes in one machine. It poses less hazard to workers
from Perc exposure than the other type of machine, which is called a
transfer machine. In the latter system, clothes are transferred by
hand from the washer, where Perc is used, to the dryer. It is during
this transfer process that workers are most exposed to Perc.
The EPA requires that all new machines be dry-to-dry. This would
reduce emissions and protect workers without an outright ban on Perc.
The refrigerated condensers and carbon filters now available for dry
cleaning machines reduce emissions even more, up to 80%. Many
cleaners who have invested in these newer systems protest that it
isn’t fair that they will be required to switch to yet another
process. They have a point, but the older transfer machines still
need to be eliminated, and the sooner, the better.
The so-called green cleaning processes include “wet cleaning,” a
process offered by Sparkle Cleaners, a Huntington Beach dry cleaner
on Adams Avenue.
Other forms of environmentally friendly dry cleaning are
hydrocarbon- and silicone-based solvent cleaning and carbon dioxide
cleaning.
Ask whether your dry cleaner uses dry-to-dry or transfer machines
and whether they use refrigerated condensers and carbon filters to
reduce Perc emissions. Boycott cleaners who use the older transfer
machines. You could also buy clothes that don’t need dry cleaning.
* VIC LEIPZIG and LOU MURRAY are Huntington Beach residents and
environmentalists. They can be reached at vicleipzig@aol.com.
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