Res. No. 1773
Title
Resolution calling upon the Department of Health, the United States Consumer Product Safety Commission, the Federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration and/or any other appropriate agency to investigate the unlawful retail sale of elemental mercury to consumers within the City of New York, and to take any and all appropriate actions allowed by law to prevent the same, and calling upon the appropriate committee of the Council of the City of New York to hold a public hearing on the impact of residential use of elemental mercury on the health and safety of the residents of the City of New York.
Body
By Council Members Linares, Eisland, Freed and Marshall; also Council Members Carrion, Harrison, Koslowitz, Lopez, Michels and Povman
Whereas, Elemental mercury has been recognized as poison for almost two thousand years, and if ingested or inhaled in high levels or over a long period of time, mercury can cause severe headaches, learning disabilities, emotional disturbances, serious and permanent nerve, brain, and kidney damage, and even death; and
Whereas, The Federal Hazardous Substances Labeling Act requires mercury to be labeled with an appropriate warning alerting consumers to the dangers associated with it's use, and the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission has issued a safety alert on the hazards of mercury vapor; and
Whereas, Mercury is being sold in the City without federally mandated labels, and many consumers are therefore unaware of the dangers they, and others, are facing when mercury is used in the home; and
Whereas, Mercury is currently being used by many New York City residents for personal, religious, and spiritual reasons in ways that pose a serious threat to the health, safety, and well- being of those residents; and
Whereas, Young children, whose brains and nervous systems are still developing, are particularly at risk for mercury poisoning (Acrodynie) because they often sleep, crawl, and play on floors where mercury is sprinkled, and which is also where the highest concentrations of mercury vapor are found; and
Whereas, Fetuses and infants are also particularly at risk to contract Acrodynie from mothers who have been exposed to mercury vapor, which passes easily through both the placenta and blood brain barriers, and is also secreted in breast milk; and
Whereas, The general public may be unknowingly exposed to mercury vapor by means of second hand exposure; for example, when a tenant scatters mercury on the floor and later vacates the apartment only to leave the mercury trapped in cracks in the floor or in the carpet, where it can later evaporate into poisonous mercury vapor; now, therefore, be it
Resolved, That the Council of the City of New York calls upon the Department of Health, the United States Consumer Product Safety Commission, the Federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration and/or any other appropriate agency to investigate the unlawful retail sale of elemental mercury to consumers within the city of New York, and to take any and all appropriate actions allowed by law to prevent the same, and calls upon the appropriate committee of the Council of the City of New York to hold a public hearing on the impact of the residential use of elemental mercury on the health and safety of the residents of the City of New York.