Almost 100 shampoos
and personal-care products sold in California carry cancer-causing chemicals,
an environmental group charges.
The Center for Environmental Health, based in
Oakland, Calif., bought products online and at Bay Area retailers, and found 98
products tested positive for the chemical and had no warning labels.
By: Curtis Rush News
reporter
Almost 100 shampoos and
personal-care products sold in California carry a cancer-causing chemical,
according to an environmental group that has filed a lawsuit against four
companies.
The Center For Environmental Health, based in
Oakland, Calif., named four defendants in papers filed Tuesday in the Superior
Court of the State of California.
The lawsuit claims
that 98
products, including brand-name items such as Prell and Colgate Palmolive,
do not carry labels warning consumers that they are being exposed to cocamide
DEA, an ingredient made from coconut oil.ational Park
Those products are carried by such
stores as Walmart, Kmart and Target.
Cocamide DEA is a toxic chemical
that is used as a thickening or foaming agent in products such as shampoos,
liquid soaps, body wash and bubble bath.
“Most people believe that products
sold in major stores are tested for safety, but consumers need to know that
they could be doused with a cancer-causing chemical every time they.
CEH, which is non-profit
environmental advocacy group, says it bought the shampoos and other products at
Bay Area locations of major retailers and from online retailers before getting
an independent lab to conduct tests.
The voter-approved initiative,
otherwise known as Safe Drinking Water and Toxic Enforcement Act of 1986,
requires “businesses to notify Californians about significant amounts of
chemicals in the products they purchase, in their homes or workplaces, or that
are released into the environment.”
The four companies named in the
lawsuit, filed in the Superior Court of the State of California, are Walgreen
Co; Lake Consumer Product Inc; Todd Christopher International Inc; and Ultimark
Products LLC.
The lawsuit seeks $2,500 in
penalties per day for each violation from each defendant, along with a
permanent injunction against selling the products in California without “clear
and reasonable warnings.”
Meanwhile, in Canada, there are some
restrictions on the use of cocamide DEA in cosmetics, but only
when it is used with other agents that can cause the formation of
nitrosamines.
This restriction is similar to regulations in the European
Union.
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