Environmental Health Network |
EHN P.O. Box 1155 Larkspur, California, 94977 - 1155 Support and Information Line (SAIL) 415.541.5075 |
We all are stakeholders when it comes to breathing.©
You have reached EHN's old site, created by Barb Wilkie and donated to EHN.
For the new site, please visit http://ehnca.org/www/.
Live the adage:
An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure!
This page is meant to provide you clues for meeting the accommodation requests of the already
chemically sensitized individual(s) . . . And for the astute, to learn better ways to provide
cleaner air, improved indoor environmental quality. -- barb
QuickClicks to Index of Topics Covered
Or slowly scroll through, reading and learning as you go.
To Employers and Employees. Everywhere . . . While my sympathy is admittedly for the worker being forced from employment by unnecessary pollutants such as fragrances and pesticides (which are also scented so folks don't complain about the odor of pesticides), astute management can learn much from the following information. Petrochemical-derived fragrances do not "freshen" the air, nor do they "clean." Fragrances pollute the air, bodies of users and nonusers, and the water downstream where fish and wildlife can then be affected. When your employee requests fragrance-free accommodation, please look into the pollution generated by modern, petrochemical-derived fragrances. IF you are trying to "go Green" they shouldn't be used in the first place.
"Further questioning of individuals with a hypersensitivity indicated that 13.5%
(1.8% of the entire sample) reported losing their jobs because of their hypersensitivity." Quote from: A review of a two-phase population study of multiple chemical sensitivities Environmental Health Perspectives, Sept, 2003 by Stanley M. Caress, Anne C. Steinemann I fervently hope the information on this page helps workers, students, patients and others who are still fighting for their right to breathe air unpolluted by perfumes and other synthetically scented products. And I hope it helps management learn that there is a better way than allowing pollutants to ruin the health of even one more individual employee or visitor to that particular workplace, be it a hospital, a school, an office, what-have-you. These unnecessary fragrance pollutants include the wide variety of personal care products for men, women and children, as well as products such as cleaners, pesticides, fabric softeners and air "fresheners." Petrochemical-derived fragrances are ubiquitous, but there are safer alternative products readily available. I hope the information below will serve Human Resources officers trying to learn more about fragrance sensitization and how to accommodate the person with it. While you feel you are accommodating only one individual now, you may well be sparing the health of untold others down the road . . . and saving your organization many dollars spent on staff's downtime as they take sickleave. Common reactions to fragrance chemicals include cold- or flu-like symptoms, asthma, sinusitis, headaches (including migraines), as well as lost thoughts and mobility problems, which adversely affect production. Who needs neurotoxins in the workplace? Also, by determining that your organization will be free of petrochemical-derived fragrances, you all will be doing something to not only improve your indoor air, but also to help lessen the effects upon global warming. Sound unreal? Read the article that appeared in the LA Times, Chemicals in Home a Big Smog Source by Gary Polakovic, March 9, 2003. In it, we read: "Cleansers, cosmetics and other products pump 100 tons of pollutants daily into the Southland's air, ranking second to tailpipe emissions, studies show. Ordinary household products such as cleansers, cosmetics and paints are now the Los Angeles region's second-leading source of air pollution, after auto tailpipe emissions, air quality officials say. ..." (http://www.mindfully.org/Air/2003/Home-Chemicals-Smog9mar03.htm) "Accommodation" without access is not accommodation. This is what happens when even one individual is allowed to use and wear air-polluting perfumed products in the workplace that includes already scent-sensitized individuals, for which "accommodations" are supposedly being made. For the scent-sensitized individual, accommodation is an empty word without fragrance-free access. And, in most workplaces, fragrances could be controlled under the dress policy and no-smoking policy that already exist. Fragrance chemicals leave the user to adversely affect the air for all, just as do the chemicals assoicated with tobacco smoke. And like tobacco and alcohol, it appears that fragrance chemicals affect the brain. See Potentiation of GABAA receptors expressed in Xenopus oocytes by perfume and phytoncid. by Aoshima H, Hamamoto K. at http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=PubMed&cmd=Retrieve&list_uids=10361687&dopt=Abstract Human Resources managers and other management staff, please keep in mind William Gladstone's quote, "Justice delayed is justice denied." Using delaying tactics and escalating the requests for accommodation to the point of unreasonableness serves no one, while denigrating your fragrance-sensitized harbinger. Fragrance-sensitization is not "catching." But, as individual thresholds lower at differing rates, it can affect a growing number of employees . . . and that is preventable. One never knows when one will encounter that exposure to perfume that proves to be one-too-many and puts one over the edge into extreme fragrance sensitization. People do not "build immunity" to toxins. Their toxin thresholds lower, their health and abilities decline, often leading to disability. Your company, school, healthcare facility or agency will lose a valuable employee. Yet by instituting a "Cleaner Indoor Environmental Policy" you could spare the health of that fragrance-sensitized individual and untold others whose environmentally caused illnesses are still too insidious for most mainstream medical doctors -- who are notoriously poorly trained in environmental health -- to diagnose accurately.
The stats are in a publication by a multiagency group, including EPA, that tells us: A 1994 survey of environmental medicine content in US medical schools found that: "doctors are likely to have attended the 75 percent of the medical schools that require only seven hours training during their medical schooling." Health Care & Pesticides (National Strategies for Health Care Providers: Pesticides Initiative -- report's documentation: Schenk M, Popp SM, Neale AV, et al. Environmental medicine content in medical school curricula. Acad. Med. 1996;71(5):27-29. http://www.epa.gov/oppfead1/safety/healthcare/healthcare.htm) Developing a "fragrance-free accommodation" may sound scary to the employer, but it need not be. LISTEN to your fragrance-sensitized employee. Most solutions for that individual's level of sensitivity are easily achieved IF you have encouraged a polite, responsive workforce in the first place. Of course, if you gain your knowledge from the chemical industry front organizations and apologists, geared to stultifying the already fragrance-sensitized indivdual, you may find yourself free of that otherwise valuable but fragrance-sensitized employee . . . plus a few more employees whose bodies will react adversely to the proliferation of nonessential products synthesized from hydrocarbons. Workplaces that strive to clear the air for all have noticed that their workforce is more productive and sickleave is used less often. True Indoor Environmental Quality makes economic sense. It makes health sense. IEQ makes access a part of accommodation. We ask that folks do not wear perfume, cologne, aftershave and other scented products including clothing laundreed with highly scented detergents and fabric softeners to work (healthcare facility, school, place of worship, office, etc.). We ask that our colleagues, fellow meeting attendees, etc., use the versions of personal care products and laundry products that do not contain petrochemical-derived fragrances. But that isn't asking for an unreasonable accommodation . . . not with the plethora of fragrance-free products now openly advertised on radio and television, and readily available in the market. We are not asking that our colleagues (managers, doctors and nurses, teachers, students, etc.) not use fragrances to their heart's content in their own homes. That is their prerogative. But if they choose to use these products, which are released to market without substantiation of safety, I strongly and sincerely suggest that they use them only among nonpregnant, consenting adults. We also may ask that those who use scents to wear clean clothes that have not been saturated with fabric softeners or their various fragrance products from previous wearings. Asking that others wear clean clothes -- How outlandish a request is that? Remember, even the fragrance industry admits that scent cannot clean*. The proliferation of petrochemically derived perfumed products pollutes the air. For all. Save the air for the already chemically injured and you will save the air for the not-yet injured. Chronic diseases such as asthma and other upper and lower respiratory diseases, cancers, migraine and other headaches, Parkinson's, rheumatoid arthritis, etc., are as much an ENVIRONMENTAL ILLNESS as is MCS. These diseases and many more can be caused, triggered or exacerbated by petrochemical-derived fragrance products. Go GREEN. True green means the product: "... Must not contain petrochemical-derived fragrances. ..." U.S. Dept. of the Interior at http://www.doi.gov/greening/sustain/trad.html *August 2004: The fragrance industry recognizes that perfumes "cannot clean the air." What you also have to be mindful of are the products that give the air "no smell at all" -- those, too, are petrochemically derived and are harmful to health. There's just no telltale odor. See RIFM RESPIRATORY SAFETY PROGRAM at http://www.rifm.org/WHITE%20PAPER%20IAQ%20DIsola%20v2%2004082004.htm We ALL are stakeholders when it comes to breathing.
Best wishes to all of you!
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- You should know and make known -
Fragrance-FREE environments! Excerpted from their policy (2000): "... While many questions are yet to be answered, the Board believes in doing what it can where it can. As a result, the Board has adopted a policy for its meetings and public gatherings that will help reduce exposure to personal fragrances. Under this policy, the Board requests that all participants refrain from wearing perfume, cologne and other fragrances, and use unscented personal care products in order to promote a fragrance-free environment. ..." http://www.access-board.gov/about/policies/fragrance.htm
shall discharge from any source whatsoever such quantities of air contaminants or other material which cause injury, detriment, nuisance, or annoyance to any considerable number of persons or to the public, or which endanger the comfort, repose, health, or safety of any such persons or the public, or which cause, or have a natural tendency to cause, injury or damage to business or property.
NOTE: 41705 deals with agricultural odors.
CALIFORNIA: RULE 402. NUISANCE
of air contaminants or other material which cause injury, detriment, nuisance, or annoyance to any considerable number of persons or to the public, or which endanger the comfort, repose, health or safety of any such persons or the public, or which cause, or have a natural tendency to cause, injury or damage to business or property. (Why does this rule not include fabric softeners that pollute entire neighborhoods?)
The provisions of this rule shall not apply to odors emanating from
Access Board [United States]
Canadian Centre for Occupational and Health Safety (CCOHS)
Centers for Disease Control and PREVENTION
Fragrances: a no-non-scents approach [ . . . in Canada]
Fragrances and Aromatic Substances should not be used indiscriminately indoors
Mirrored on EHN's site, by permission
GREEN: The Department of the Interior states under its
Health Care Without Harm's info on
Perfumes and Asthma - don't mix
EHN's version is a slightly different, tri-fold brochure, approved of by Dr. J.Anderson. -- barb
"Perfume is a major toxic that renders public spaces inaccessible for many. In my
Life Impact study, almost half of the participants were unable to access any public
areas in which perfume was likely to be encountered. ..."
NIEHS (National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences)
Recordability Of Asthma Attack Due To Perfume At Work
"REGULATORY REVIEW -- "Yes. An occupational illness is recordable when workplace conditions contribute to or aggravate a medical condition, even if the condition is a pre-existing condition. In general, each work-related asthmatic episode is recordable as a new case since it is triggered by a new exposure. ..." [emphasis added] http://tis.eh.doe.gov/rl/pres/docs/D9701009.HTM (July 2004) Still available through the Wayback Machine http://web.archive.org/web/20030225072107/http://tis.eh.doe.gov/rl/pres/docs/D9701009.HTM
Sierra Club's "98.12.01 Excessive Use of Fragrance Products in Public Places"
Toxic Fragrances
The United States Access Board has adopted a policy to promote
Fragrance-FREE environments!
Access Board and Indoor Air Quality (2001)
Access Board Meetings
Board Issues New Accessibility Guidelines for Recreation Facilities (2002)
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Access -- Suggestions Please take time to look at the information under the various topics. Information provided under hospitals, will also serve another workplace, a school, a place of worship, ... Use this information to help build your request for scent-free accommodation. Scent-free is not a question of personal preference, it is a question of health. Of life. And if none of the suggestions provided on this page work, there's always . . . Give-a-hint -Send a FREE anonymous e-postcard
http://www.give-a-hint.com/html/p-cologne.html Too much perfume . . . to women http://www.give-a-hint.com/html/p-perfume.html which by its very nature makes it a more direct approach. The problem with education, however, is someone has to be willing to exchange information and to learn. Sadly, in my former workplace, when I tried to explain about the chemicals used to make synthetic scents and pesticides, I was told by enough, "Oh, I don't want to hear that, it just makes me nervous." My counter that not wanting to learn could make you sick was not warmly greeted either. I'm sure there was a better method . . . I just never quite got it together -- hence, I'm here, not there. -- barb
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Access for People With EI/MCS
Action Letters
Disaster Planning
Fragrance-free policy statements -- See Cities, Hospitals, Universities, Meeting Notices, Schools, States, et al., on this page
The Word IS Out! |
Access/Accommodation (Common Courtesy)
Fragrance: When you encounter the word or the potion,
don't think flower petals and animal essences, think volatilizing petrochemicals and alcohol.
When you read the word "irritant" as in statements such as "avoid other irritants,"
think of irritant as defined by Oxford Dictionary: POISON. Fragrances are recognized
lung IRRITANTS and SENSITIZERS.To smell fragrances is to inhale violatile petrochemical toxins that have not been proved safe for
inhalation, for neurotoxity, for their hormonal disrupting capabilities, for their carcinogenic
capabilities, for their teratogenic capabilities (effects upon developing embryos and fetuses).
Fragrances are invisible chemical barriers to access for the already chemically injured.
And, those still thinking of themselves as not having any problems with fragrances, What will
your future hold? No one can remain too smug about toxic brews released to market
without substantiation of safety by any government oversight agency. You, the user, must take
the wearing and using of fragrance products on faith. Blind faith.
PREVENTION: An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. -- Ben Franklin
Why use toxic chemical concoctions known simply as"fragrance" on the label of products?
Check labels of personal care items, cosmetics, and cleaning and maintenance products.
Goodness, even products labeled fragrance-free are allowed to contain synthetic fragrances.
They are ubiquitous. There are safer alternative products available. Also, rely on products such
as your grandmother used like baking soda, vinegar, salt, and yes, good old sunshine. They are
effective and inexpensive. More can be learned from EHN's section on Clean at
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnlinx/c.htm#CleanHave you thought that by using synthetic scents you are not being GREEN as defined by
the US Department of the Interior? ( http://www.doi.gov/greening/sustain/trad.html)
Also, you are helping grow that burgeoning profit margin enjoyed by another facet of the
chemical industry, the pharmaceutical industry. One might see consumers as the goose that
have laid the golden eggs. (You know what happened to THAT goose.) -- barb
Acute toxic effects of fragrance products.
Author/s: Rosalind C. Anderson
http://www.zeal.com/exit.jhtml?cid=991790&wid=60362997&so=&xr=/website/profile.jhtml%3Fcid%3D991790%26wid%3D60362997OR, printer friendly: http://www.zeal.com/exit.jhtml?cid=991790&wid=60362997&so=&xr=/website/profile.jhtml%3Fcid%3D991790%26wid%3D60362997
For more information on the Andersons of Anderson Labs, see
http://www.andersonlaboratories.com/We also learn from the American Academy of Dermatology in their article,
"Allergies: The Culprit Could Be Hiding In Your Cosmetic Bag" --
http://www.newswise.com/articles/2000/3/ALLERGY.AAD.html
"Dermatologists recommend that people who experience allergic contact dermatitis adhere
Great advice as far as it goes. But, again, the subject of fragrances is being dealt with as if it is
to the following program to avoid some of the most probable offending agents, with specific
patch testing performed once the dermatitis is clear:
-- For clothing care, double rinse all detergents and avoid all fabric softeners.
-- Try to wear pure, untreated cotton in light colors. Avoid permanent press or
cotton blends. Silk and polyester are acceptable.-- Wash all new clothing items five times before wearing.
-- Use only fragrance-free soaps, body cleansers, shampoos and conditioners.
-- Avoid all perfumes, colognes, and after-shaves.
-- Do not use any fingernail care products or hair spray.
"The American Academy of Dermatology, founded in 1938, is the largest, most influential,
and most representative of all dermatologic associations. ..."
a problem unique to that one individual who is wearing fragrances and all that one individual
has to do is to AVOID USING scented products.It is the nature of this volatile petrochemical beast to become one with the air we all must breathe.
That "thorough" testing you read about regarding fragrances is for dermatological reactions
of the primary user. The industry and our federal government have not tested for effects to
brain and central nervous system of developing embryos and fetuses, to infants and children,
to adults ranging in age through the eldest among us; nor have they tested for carcinogenic effects;
they've not tested for long-term and systemic effects; nor have they even gone so far as to give
a mind to the dermatological effects suffered by non-users simply from being in the air that is
contaminated with polluting fragrance products. NEVER MEASURE. NEVER MANAGE!To spell out the obvious: Our modern fragrances are volatile organic compounds, therefore they
become the air we all must breathe. Synthetic scents are not tested for reactions to skin beyond
those of the primary user.When will our government agencies and health care societies begin to look at the fact that
fragrances contain volatile chemicals that are known or suspected hormone disrupters, irritants
(and here, please think of mucus production and inflamation, not just something that is
emotionally irritating like another person's booming music), sensitizers (causes adverse reactions
in normal tissue after repeated exposures), carcinogens (capable of causing cancer), tertatogens
(adversely affecting embryonic and fetal development) and neurotoxins (adversely affecting brain
and nervous systems)?Fragrances should be tested BEFORE marketing for their adverse effects upon users and
nonusers who suffer adverse events at secondary and tertiary levels of exposure. Fragrances
should be tested for their effects upon the reproductive systems of developing fetuses, as well
effects on males and females of all ages. Fragrances should be researched for their effects upon
the respiratory systems of users and non users; for their neurotoxic effects upon users and
non users; for their potential cancer- causing capabilities for users and non users.Come to think of it, if there is synthetic scent in the air, we all are users! Fragrances should be
tested for more than just dermatological adverse reactions to the primary user, and the public
should be informed. The public has a right to know. The public has a right to make their purchases
via informed consent.
See Raw Materials of Perfumery
http://www.perfumersworld.com/chems/material.htmSynthetic fragrances are in household and janitorial cleaning and
maintenance products, including air "fresheners," pesticides and disinfectants
(which are classified as pesticides by the EPA). And synthetic scents are in your
personal care products, which you put on your body and the bodies of your children.
Synthetically scented products are more than just your perfume, cologne and aftershave.Whether you personnaly use synthetic fragrances or breathe them in because others
use them, these chemicals CAN adversely affect your health. Often, the early stages
of chemical injury are too insidious for the untrained mainstream medical doctor to
recognize and diagnose. Remember: Doctors have failed to recognize and properly
diagnose many debilitating and disabling diseases, which have since become recognized.
For instance, asthma, pellagra, tuberculous. Regarding asthma, it was not that long ago
that the sages were stating that asthma was all psychosomatic.Often we who suffer adverse reactions to toxic chemicals, such as fragrances, are termed
"allergic." But that is a misnomer. We have really been poisoned by those chemicals --
which are, at the very least, irritants and sensitizers. At worse, fragrance compounds
contain known or suspected neurotoxins (adversely affecting brain and nervous systems),
carcinogens (capable of causing cancer), tergatogens (adversely affecting embryonic
and fetal development) and/or hormone disrupters, which can adversely affect developing
fetuses, children and adults . . . male and female.Our body's response really isn't that of allergy and therefore, a Human Resource
manager, or other member of management (speaking from personal experience!) who
"diagnose" our cases and "prescribe" allergy shots could cause great harm if the
chemically injured person were wrongly convinced to give that treatment a try.
Remember, mainstream medical doctors have not been trained to recognize the insidious
symptoms of chemical poisoning ... not even when the poisoning is from pesticides, and
their patients explain why and how they have been put in harm's way.Alas, most people don't realize when they've been poisoned by synthetic scents for they
believe that fragrances are safe or they'd not be marketed. The industry is unregulated
and there is no pre-market testing required by our Food and Drug Administration for
inhalation, neurotoxicity or long-term, systemic effects. The most industry testing done
has been for effects to the skin of the primary user . . . completely ignoring all of the people
with adverse skin events from secondary exposures. Not to mention all of the people suffering
adverse respiratory and neurotoxic events due to inhalation.Proof that synthetic fragrances are toxic chemical products, can be seen by visiting the
"FDA Petition."Click out to "Analyses" and "Product Label." Print out the information
and take IT to your leader.
FDA Petition - http://ehnca.org/www/FDApetition/bkgrinfo.htm
Once you learn of the chemicals used to concoct scents, it isn't so surprising to learnAnalyses - http://ehnca.org/www/FDApetition/bkgrinfo.htm#Analyses
Analysis Summary - Are you surprised at the number of chemicals
Product Label - http://ehnca.org/www/FDApetition/eterbkpg.htm
about which we know too little toxicological data, or that appear on the EPA's
Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA) Inventory and the Registry of Toxic Effects
of Chemical Substances (RTECS). See http://ehnca.org/www/FDApetition/analysis.htm
that synthetic scents in personal care and cleaning/maintenance products, and other
commonly used consumer products with high-emitting VOCs (volatile organic
compounds), can cause and/or exacerbate cold- and flu-like illnesses; dizziness, migraines
andother headaches; upper and lower respiratory diseases including asthma, sinusitis,
rhinitis and laryngitis; nausea; gastro-intestinal problems; incontinence; ...
Let's learn a little more by visiting the following sites.Selected Abstracts on the Health Effects of Perfume
Earth Angels Association/Health & Environment Resource Center
http://members.aol.com/chemxpose/abstracts.htmlAnd from the industry . . .
"COMMON SENSE ABOUT SCENTS." See
SPEIAC
http://www.scentedproducts.on.ca/hdnad.jpgLet's take a gander at the words of Scented Products Education and
Information Association of Canada (SPEIAC) in their ad published
following their press conference in Halifax, Nova Scotia, June 20, 2000 --
See EHN's page, Halifax at http://ehnca.org/www/ehnlinx/aaprbb.htmThe ad states in part: "The composition of perfumes hasn't changed much in
hundreds of years. They contain primarily water and alcohol -- of the same
type and purity we drink in beverages -- as well as essential fragrance oils." Do
notice that line about water and alcohol. Remember that when you read and
further investigate the information below. We do not drink denatured alcohol.
Do we really think the industry will pay the taxes to use "drinking alcohol"? -- barb
Perfume World - Raw Materials of Perfumery
This site respects one's right to know and for that I give them my heartfelt thanks. So with this
info available, check out that right-hand column! And remember, we are the guinea pigs . . .
even if we are not the primary user of synthetic scents. We "use" them on the secondary and
tertiary levels.-- barb
http://www.perfumersworld.com/chems/material.htmThe industry suggests layering and then has the effrontery to state that everyone has a
Fragrance Tips (submenu under Features)
" 'scent circle,' approximately an arm's length from the body." The industry makes these toxic
chemical preparations to be smelled at great distances -- the concoctions are formulated to
waft further and last longer, and THEN the industry states the user should observe the "scent
circle." LUDICROUS! But obviously, scented products customers will buy anything . . . even
the industry cleverly putting the blame for odorovecting on their customers.But, if users of scented products have an industry declared "scent circle" that they are not
supposed to exceed, then by George we have our own arm's length of distance that their
chemical outgassings should not penetrate. If you react to the toxic chemical scent concoctions
used or worn by folks further away than your arm's length, be sure to claim your legitimate space
of cleaner air. Of course, try to claim your arm's length while being examined by a doctor,
having blood drawn by a nurse, while in a crowded elevator or on a public transit conveyance.
http://www.fragrance.org/feature_tip_content.htmlAnd then, a little advice from Career Corner on GovExec.com:
"Avoid perfume or cologne. It may not help and may hurt."
By Kathryn Kraemer; June 29, 1999
http://www.govexec.com/dailyfed/0699/062999cc.htm
By the way, if links no longer work, you may have luck finding them if you use
The WayBack Machine at http://www.archive.org
Thanks to all who wrote to the US ACCESS Board
"The Access Board is an independent Federal agency devoted to accessibility for people
with disabilities." (From About the Board)
E-mail: info@access-board.gov
http://www.access-board.gov/
Because you cared enough ... Look at what your efforts wrought.
Applaud the Access Board and take a bow for yourself! -- barb
"[U.S. Access] Board Adopts Policy to Promote Fragrance-Free Environments"
http://www.access-board.gov/about/policies/fragrance.htmSee EHN's Action Letters to the Access Board
http://ehnca.org/www/actnletr/acletin.htm
See Press Release Index
http://ehnca.org/www/PressReleases/prsrelin.htm
The US Access Board's full name is U.S. Architectural and Transportation Barriers
Compliance Board. The Access Board was created in 1973. They state they have,
"... served the nation as the only independent federal agency whose primary mission
is accessibility for people with disabilities."
Do read letters written to the Access Board requesting they consider setting access
standards for the chemically/electromagnetically injured.
- The United States Access Board has adopted a policy to promote
Fragrance-FREE environments!
Excerpted from their policy (2000) this important message to be emulated by others:
"... While many questions are yet to be answered, the Board believes in doing
what it can where it can. ..."
http://www.access-board.gov/about/policies/fragrance.htm
- Access Board and Indoor Air Quality (2001)
http://www.access-board.gov/news/ieq.htm
- Board Issues New Accessibility Guidelines for Recreation Facilities (2002)
Summary: Multiple Chemical Sensitivities and Electromagnetic Sensitivities
http://www.access-board.gov/recreation/final.htm#General Issues
- GovExec.com
Access Board seeks to be more scent-sitive
By Tanya N. Ballard; November 28, 2000
http://www.govexec.com/dailyfed/1100/112800t1.htm
If you wish to read comments about perfume and how it affects access and health, you
may wish to visit Allergy to Perfume in the Air - and similar illness due to perfume
in the air we breathe
http://www.users.globalnet.co.uk/~aair/perfume_corr.htmAnd, you may wish to read: Understanding & Accommodating People with
Multiple Chemical Sensitivity in Independent Living -- an online book
by Pamela Reed Gibson, Ph.D., James Madison University
http://www.ilru.org/ilnet/files/bookshelf/mcs/mcsindex.htmlAlso, visit EHN's General Links, page A, Access
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnlinx/a.htm#Access
-- barb
Specific access suggestions, this page:
- Access Board
- CILs and ILRCs (Independent Living)
- Cities / States
- Cleaners, Disinfectants, Air "fresheners"
- Dance
- Fragrance
- EMF/EMR
- General - a broad coverage of the topic of access
- Hospitals, Healthcare Facilities, Health Issues
- Housing
- Law
- Lawns
- FDA Petition Support (Letters telling of adverse health effects
and subsequent need for scent-free accommodation)- Meeting Notices / Events
- Police
- Posters (opens new window)
- School (including Universities)
- States
- Transit
- Travel
- Theater
- Workplace
- Worship
If you are denied access regardless of the information you provide, the answer just
might lie in the damning and damaging Environmental Illness Briefing Paper
published by the Chemical Manufacturers Association in 1990.
http://ehnca.org/www/books/cmaeibri.htmGeneral Suggestons:
- [Access] "Board Adopts Policy to Promote Fragrance-Free Environments"(U.S.,2000)
http://www.access-board.gov/news/fragrance.htm
- Access Board Meetings
http://www.access-board.gov/about/boardmembers.htm
- Access Board and Indoor Air Quality (2001)
Solicitations closed 10/30/01, but the documentation is worth reading. -- barb
http://www.access-board.gov/news/indoorair-notice.htm
- Board Issues New Accessibility Guidelines for Recreation Facilities (2002)
Summary: Multiple Chemical Sensitivities and Electromagnetic Sensitivities
http://www.access-board.gov/recreation/final.htm#SUMMARY
- Access for People With EI/MCS and Other Related Conditions
Booklet by Sen. Milton Marks, Chair, and Joan Ripple
published by Calif. State Senate (in three parts)
http://ehnca.org/www/books/eimcsf1.htm
- Fragrance-free wording of Sen. Marks, provided by Joan Ripple
(Please bear with me, it is around here some place. I had it in my hands
and lost it to "The Borrowers" almost immediately. But my "borrowers"
always return items, unlike Mary Norton's creations. It is only a matter of time.)
- ACCOMMODATING THE ALLERGIC EMPLOYEE IN THE WORKPLACE
Employment and Disability, Cornell University
http://www.ilr.cornell.edu/ped/product_spec.html?prod_id=100&cat_id=1As a 4-page PDF file: http://www.ilr.cornell.edu/extension/files/download/Allergic_Employee.pdf
- Accommodating the Allergic Employee in the Workplace
NC Chemical Injury Network
http://www.NCchem.com/accommod.htm
- Accommodating Employees with Environmental Sensitivities
Debra Sine, Leslirae Rotor and Elizabeth Hare
A 51 page PDF file, definitely worth printing out. Includes section called "Guidelines for
Managers," Part 4 and "Employee Awareness Kit," Part 5. What caught my attention was
this line in Part 4: "Remember that the goal of accommodation is to enable the employee to
remain a productive member of the office team."When I was still gainfully employed, that is all that I was requesting! Alas, the management
team felt otherwise and in my opinion, their decision to continue business as usual may have
contributed to many staff suffering various diseases that are environmentally caused such as
rheumatoid arthritis, cancers, upper and lower respiratory problems, migraines, Parkinson's
. . . and, of course, ultimately, my developing MCS. This is my opinion. -- barb
http://www.healthyindoors.com/english/ resources/workplace1.pdf
- Arizona Technology Access Program: Multiple Chemical Sensitivity
http://www.nau.edu/~ihd/aztap/mcs.html
- How to Be Fragrance Free
By Peggy Munson
http://www.peggymunson.com/mcs/fragrancefree.html
- NEW MEANING FOR ACCESS?
By Toni Temple, CHAIR
OHIO NETWORK FOR THE CHEMICALLY INJURED
P.O. Box 29290
Parma, Ohio 44129
(440) 845-1888
http://www.ncchem.com/ONFCI/access.htm
- Business & Health
http://www.businessandhealth.com
- Allergens in the Workplace
Allergens can emerge in settings that appear clean, well maintained and
chemical free...at home and at work.
By Helen Lippman, Contributing Editor
"... The next time you encounter the guy down the hall who always seems to
have a runny nose and red, watery eyes, don't assume it's an intractable cold,
a bout of seasonal hay fever or a stubborn case of the flu. Office workers
may not be exposed to heavy chemicals in spray paints, enzymes in
detergents or the red cedar dust in lumber, but allergists now recognize that
office buildings can harbor a number of allergens or irritants. A sneezing,
sniffling employee could be reacting to copy machine toner, a colleague's
perfume, airborne spores from mold and fungi in the circulation system,
cockroaches or other indoor irritants or allergens. ...
"... The first indication that something's amiss usually comes when employees
report what they believe to be allergicãand job-relatedãsymptoms. But
just getting workers to the point where they're willing to come forward
requires deliberate action. 'Employers need to educate supervisors and other
employees,' Grammer emphasizes. 'They need to be told that if they
develop teary eyes, wheezing, sneezing or other related symptoms, they may
be allergic to something in the workplace and need to tell someone. And tell
them they don't have to worry about being fired,' she adds.
"Keeping workers quiet or dismissing tentative complaints is a highly
ineffective strategy that's likely to deflate employee morale. Delay also
significantly boosts health risks and subsequent costs. ...
http://www.businessandhealth.com/hostedfiles/features/allergiesatwork/physician/article04.htm
- Top 10 Tips for Addressing Allergic Rhinitis
Action Items for Employers
Corporate and clinical experts who participated in a Business & Health roundtable agreed
on 10 practical tactics for employers who recognize the impact of allergies on job performance.
"... 4. Establish a policy addressing strong odors from such sources as perfumes.
Even if such odors contain irritants rather than allergens per se, some employees
may have a low threshold for distress. ..."
I do believe they ought to know that "irritant" used to describe a chemical is not to be
confused with an irritant that is an emotional annoyance. When talking about perfume,
think of irritant as defined in your Oxford Dictionary: POISON. Although,
I must admit, I have found that management teams that prefer to poison the air with perfumed
products do cause distress, as used above. Distress as defined by American Heritage Dictionary
means: A STATE OF PHYSICAL OR MENTAL SUFFERING, PAIN, MISERY, HURT,
AGONY, ANGUISH,WOE, AFFLICTION. Chemical irritants -- poisons -- cause physical injury. -- barb
http://www.businessandhealth.com/hostedfiles/features/allergiesatwork/consumer/article01.htm
From Canada:
- Canada's Safety Council - Canada's Voice and Resource for Safety
Perfume in the Workplace
Hospitals and healthcare facilities are not only sources of patient care, but they are also
workplaces. In all cases, cleaner indoor air is a MUST! -- barb
"... Chemicals used in fragrances can cause health problems such as shortness of breath,
headaches and migraines, nausea, muscle pain, and cold-like symptoms. Asthma,
emphysema, bronchitis, and allergies can all be adversely affected by the chemicals found
in scented products. According to the Lung Association, one study found that
72 per cent of people with asthma had adverse reactions to perfumes. ...
"In the meantime, what can workplaces do to protect employees with chemical sensitivities?"First of all, when an employee raises concerns about his or her reaction to perfumes,
management should take the matter seriously. Assuming systems are in place to maintain
good indoor air quality, the next step is to identify the exact source of the problem
and assess its extent. If the source is one or two employees, management should let
those employees know the effect their perfume has on other staff and ask them to wear
a lighter scent. ..."
Lighter scents are petrochemically laden, as are so many products misleadingly labeled in the
USA as "fragrance-free" or "unscented." It is OK by our FDA to add scent as a masking odor. -- barb
http://www.safety-council.org/info/OSH/perfume.html
- Canadian Centre for Occupational and Health Safety ( CCOHS)
Indoor Air Quality: A Legitimate OSH Concern
"... The reason IAQ problems are difficult to determine is that building occupants are
exposed to not one but several adverse conditions. For example, you might not think
that the slight emissions from furniture, carpets, photocopiers, or the perfume worn by
your co-workers could be harmful, but in combination they can affect your health.
Again, these effects are impossible to trace accurately, but the condition does have a
name: Multiple Chemical Sensitivity (MCS). ..." http://www.ccohs.ca/headlines/text27.html
- Health & Safety Programs - Scent-Free Policy for the Workplace
http://www.ccohs.ca/oshanswers/hsprograms/scent_free.html
- Centers for Independent Living (CIL) and
Independent Living Resource Centers (ILRCs)
- Arizona Bridge to Independent Living
"NO FRAGRANCES PLEASE.Ý The ABIL office is a fragrance-free, tobacco-free
environment.Ý Please do not wear scented products or smoking when visiting
our center.Ý Thank you.
http://www.abil.org/nl/999BRIDG.htm
- The Association of Programs for Rural Independent Living
5903 Powdermill Rd.
Kent, OH 44240
http://www.april-rural.org/
- APRIL Fools and Follies
LET'S KEEP THIS CONFERENCE SMOKE AND FRAGRANCE FREE!!! Thank You!!
http://www.april-rural.org/docs/news01.html#Fools
- Berkeley CIL
What Do You Want?! Tell Us!
The Center for Independent Living Community Forums
"Please Do Not Wear Scented Products." [East Oakland/Fruitvale][En Espanol]
"Por Favor No Use Productos Con Perfumes AromatÌcos! "
http://www.cilberkeley.org//forums.htm
- Independent Living Resource Center of Contra Costa County [and Solano]
"... All of ILRCCC's services are FREE and available to consumers and their families who reside in Contra Costa and Solano Counties. All services are provided ragardless of race, religion, income, age, gender, or type of disability. Please call for an appointment to see a service specialist. They maintaing a scent free environment so please refrain from wearing fragrances when visiting their offices. ..." [Emphasis added.]
http://LILA.ucla.edu/Master.cfm?Content=Asset&SubContent=Asset_View.cfm&LILA_AssetID=1547&CFID=2101&CFTOKEN=64548637
- Independent Living Resource Center San Francisco's (ILRC)
"In order to allow ILRCSF to be fully accessible to all people with disabilities,do not wear
scented products to any meetings, groups, or workshops held at or by ILRCSF."
http://www.ilrcsf.org/
- EMERGENCY PREPAREDNESS FOR PEOPLE WITH DISABILITIES
Includes people who live with Multiple Chemical Sensitivities. -- barb
http://www.ilrcsf.org/Publications/prepared/index.htm
- Hosting teleconference by Mary Lamielle and Dr. Pamela Gibson:
Understanding & Accommodating Multiple Chemical Sensitivity
http://ehnca.org/www/events/mpmcstel.htm
- Paraquad, Inc. - Independence for people with disabilities
St. Louis, MO
There are a few good articles up on this website that may be of interest regarding chemical injury. -- barb
http://www.paraquad.org/map.html
- "THE PRICE OF ACCOMMODATION
"Many employers worry that accommodating disabled individuals is expensive. But
studies suggest that these costs are less than commonly assumed. Only about one in
ten employers reports that costs of accommodating employees with disabilities have
risen "a lot" as a result of the Americans with Disabilities Act, according to the 1995
Louis Harris/National Organization on Disability survey.
Accommodating the worker disabled by our modern synthetic fragrances improves the air
for everyone. What a bonus! Learn from your worker who lives with MCS.-- barb
http://www.paraquad.org/enable.htm
- Fragrance-Free Environments and No -Fragrance Spaces--
Not just a personal preference, but a Vital Matter of Health
(The author, Roberta K. Rigsby, Ph.D., has kindly given permission for you to reproduce this
without seeking reprint permission, but do check it closely for some typos. -- barb 02/02/02)
http://www.paraquad.org/nosmell.htm
- Frequently Asked Questions About Multiple Chemical Sensitivity
(Watch for a few typos ...) -- barb
http://www.paraquad.org/faqmcs.htm
- Multiple Chemical Sensitivity (MCS)
Pardon me, but is that your perfume I'm smelling?
By Jill Klein --
E-mail:
" ... No one would argue the fact that carbon monoxide, an odorless and colorless gas,
is highly poisonous. But change the subject to MCS, and many of those same people will
still affirm that 'if I can't see it, it doesn't exist.' ..."
http://www.paraquad.org/mcs.htm
- New Workplace Accommodation Challenges for the 21st Century
Presented by
Mandy J. Gamble, MS, CRC & Tracie D. Sabb, MS
Human Factors Consultants; Job Accommodation Network
A Service of U.S. DOL's Office of Disability Employment Policy
This is a great page of information, but for those of us living with the disabiling effects of
fragrance sensitization, use your Find Command to drop right to their section on
Fragrance Sensitivity. -- barb
http://www.google.com/search?q=cache:gm5j_kCCFjkJ:janweb.icdi.wvu.edu/symposium/Symposium_Handouts/Session3.doc+EEOC+and+fragrance+accommodation&hl=en&ie=UTF-8or http://janweb.icdi.wvu.edu/symposium/Symposium_Handouts/Session3.doc
or how I found it . . .
http://216.239.51.100/search?q=cache:gm5j_kCCFjkJ:janweb.icdi.wvu.edu/symposium/Symposium_Handouts/Session3.doc+EEOC+and+fragrance+accommodation&hl=en&ie=UTF-8
- Cities / States ... see below
- How to Be Fragrance Free
By Peggy Munson
http://www.peggymunson.com/mcs/fragrancefree.html
- Citizens for A Safe Learning Environment
Examples of North American Organizations Which Support Scent-Free Environments
http://www.chebucto.ns.ca/Education/CASLE/examples.html
- Disabilities Awareness Guide
San Francisco Police Department
Environmental Illness (Multiple Chemical Sensitivites, E.I.)
[from page 17]
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/mcssfpd.htm
- ECHO'S ADA ACCESS GUIDELINES FOR
CONFERENCES/WORKSHOPS AND MEETINGS
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnlinx/bkechogu.htm
- EEOC ADA Policy Guidance on Job Accommodations for
Individuals With Disabilities
http://www.eeoc.gov/press/3-1-99.html
- U.S. EEOC - Fragrance Illness Accommodation - Roberts v. U.S. DOT
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/eroberts.htm
- Executive PayWatch from AFL-CIO
http://www.aflcio.org/paywatch/index.htm
- Company/Corporation Info from Hoovers Online
http://www.hoovers.com/
- Fragrances and Aromatic Substances should not be used indiscriminately indoors
Berlin, Umweltbundesamt/Federal Environmental Agency, Germany
http://www.umweltbundesamt.de/uba-info-presse-e/pressemitteilungen-e/p1400e.htm
- Fragrances and Aromatic Substances ....
Mirrored on EHN's site with permission of
Umweltbundesamt/Federal Environmental Agency, Germany
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnlinx/ffberlin.htm
- How to Request Accommodation
http://www.eeoc.gov/docs/accommodation.html#contents3
- JAN (Job Accommodation Network) for Canada and the U.S.
"A free service of the Office of Disability Employment Policy of the U.S. Department of Labor"
http://janweb.icdi.wvu.edu/
- Jan's Site map
http://www.jan.wvu.edu/links/sitemap.html
- JAN's Web Site Portal for Employers
http://www.jan.wvu.edu/portals/private_er.htm
- JAN's Web Site Portal for Individuals
http://www.jan.wvu.edu/portals/individuals.htm
- Accommodating People with Fibromyalgia
Excerpted: "Respiratory Difficulties:
http://www.jan.wvu.edu/media/Fibro.html
- Provide adjustable ventilation
- Keep work environment free from dust, smoke, odor, and fumes
- Implement a "fragrance-free" workplace policy and
a "smoke free" building policy ... " [Emphasis added]
- New Workplace Accommodation Challenges for the 21st Century
Presented by
Mandy J. Gamble, MS, CRC & Tracie D. Sabb, MS
Human Factors Consultants; Job Accommodation Network
A Service of U.S. DOL's Office of Disability Employment Policy
This is a great page of information, but for those of us living with the disabiling effects of
fragrance sensitization, use your Find Command to drop right to their section on
Fragrance Sensitivity. These links will not open new pages. -- barb
http://www.google.com/search?q=cache:gm5j_kCCFjkJ:janweb.icdi.wvu.edu/symposium/Symposium_Handouts/Session3.doc+EEOC+and+fragrance+accommodation&hl=en&ie=UTF-8or http://janweb.icdi.wvu.edu/symposium/Symposium_Handouts/Session3.doc
or how I found it . . .
http://216.239.51.100/search?q=cache:gm5j_kCCFjkJ:janweb.icdi.wvu.edu/symposium/Symposium_Handouts/Session3.doc+EEOC+and+fragrance+accommodation&hl=en&ie=UTF-8
- Worksite Accommodation Ideas for Individuals
With Fragrance Sensitivity
This link opens a new page. -- barb
"... Over the past several years, JAN has provided information
regarding fragrance sensitivity and accommodations in the
workplace. There has been a steady increase in cases related to
chemical sensitivity, environmental illness, allergy and respiratory
impairments. JAN Consultants have found that fragrance sensitivity
is the most prevalent issue related to these cases. A JAN case
database search for the term fragrance resulted in a clear increase in cases
since 1992; 37 cases between 1992-1995, and 567 between 1996-2000." [emphasis added]
Translation: It costs money to not control the use of scented products in the workplace.
And for the chemically injured, the costs are beyond calculation! -- barb
"...An employer could choose to make a request that
employees voluntarily refrain from wearing fragrances
or the employer could go as far as creating a policy that
requires employees to refrain. An employer has the right to
decide how far is reasonable when implementing accommodations. ..."
http://www.jan.wvu.edu/media/fragrance.html
- Work-Site Accommodation Ideas for Individuals
Who Experience Limitations Due to Chemical Sensitivity
Environmental Illness (EI)
"Basic Accommodation Considerations:
http://www.jan.wvu.edu/media/MCS.html
- Provide air purification.
- Provide additional rest breaks for the individual to step out for fresh air.
- Create a smoke and fragrance-free work environment. ..." [Emphasis added]
- NEJAC's Resolution on Multiple Chemical Sensitivity
This link opens a new page. -- barb
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/thnejac1.htm
- Pro Se Lawsuit ...
- Ragged Edge
http://www.raggededgemagazine.com/
"File your own access lawsuit -- here's how"
"Thanks to the Pennsylvania Coalition of Citizens with Disabilities for
providing this information on how to file a Pro Se Lawsuit. . . ."
http://www.raggededgemagazine.com/archive/pro-se.htm
- San Francisco Vocational Services (SFVS)
"SFVS is a division of Rehabilitation Services of Northern California, Inc. (RSNC),
a private, non-profit 501(c)3 multi-service rehabilitation organization. SFVS provides
services to the vocationally disabled and industrially injured worker."
"Our facility has a fragrance-free policy for those with environmental sensitivities"
http://www.sfvocationalservices.org/welcome.htm
- Sierra Club's San Francisco Bay Conservation Committee's
"98.12.01 Excessive Use of Fragrance Products in Public Places"
Referenced in E-Magazine's Smelling Good But Feeling Bad. -- barb
http://tamalpais.sierraclub.org/chapters/sanfranciscobay/policy/december1998.htm
or on EHN's site:
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/sfbaccff.htm
What does perfume do to paint?
See a school classroom door that was maliciously sprayed with perfume. -- barb
The Fragrant Door
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/doorjudy.htm
Site-specific suggestions:
- Access Board
- [U.S. Access] "Board Adopts Policy to Promote Fragrance-Free Environments" (2000)
http://www.access-board.gov/news/fragrance.htm
- Meetings
"The Board's bylaws provide that Board meetings be held on the Wednesday following
the second Tuesday of every other month. The meeting dates for future committee and
Board meetings are listed below. The first day listed is a Monday in the event there is a
need for a three-day Board meeting. Under its fragrance-free policy, the Board requests
that all participants refrain from wearing perfume, cologne and other fragrances, and use
unscented personal care products in order to promote a fragrance-free environment at
its meetings and other public events.
http://www.access-board.gov/about/boardmembers.htm
- Access Board and Indoor Air Quality [Solicitations closed 10/30/01]
http://www.access-board.gov/news/indoorair-notice.htm
- Board Issues New Accessibility Guidelines for Recreation Facilities (2002)
Summary: Multiple Chemical Sensitivities and Electromagnetic Sensitivities
http://www.access-board.gov/recreation/final.htm#SUMMARY
- Centers for Independent Living (CIL)
- Cities / States
Also check Meeting Notices, below.The Coalition for a Healthy Ottawa Ontario Canada
"Debra Sine, Lawyer.
'People with environmental sensitivities have the right to be free from chemical assault.
Ontario Commissioner of Human Rights said municipalities have a legal duty to
protect the most vulnerable citizens from harm due to pesticide exposures.' "
Now available at http://www.flora.org/healthyottawa/fact%20sheets.htm
The Coalition for a Healthy Ottawahad been at
http://www.sankey.ws/choc.html
And, my belief is that all people have a right to be protected from the proliferation of perfume
poisons. That could begin with honest labeling and honest reporting of the "thorough" testing the
industry claims it does. Let us have truth in labeling. Let's see those industry tests for effects
upon users and nonusers from inhalation, for neurological effects, for systemic effects, for
effects upon fetuses, our elderly, our already ill, for effects upon all of us over time. IF our modern,
synthesized scents are as safe as industry claims, then let's see the chemicals used listed on
the labels and the results of truly thorough testing. Bump up the testing to include more than
just dermatological effects to the user. -- barb
"When No Scents Makes Sense
"Please remember to be aware of those people with asthma, allergies, and other lung
conditions, whose health is adversely affected when they are exposed to scented products.
You can help by not wearing such things as perfumes, colognes and aftershaves -
to places like church services, Christmas parties, or other public gatherings.
"If you would like to know more about scent-free or fragrance-free products available
on PEI, please call our office for our pamphlet, or check out our website (PEI Lung)
www.pei.lung.ca."
Be savy, for even on their scent-free page, they list a standard insect repellent and unscented,
standard fabric softeners. Always winnow all information . . . even what I provide! -- barb
http://www.pei.lung.ca/scentfree.html.]
- How to Be Fragrance Free
By Peggy Munson
http://www.peggymunson.com/mcs/fragrancefree.html
- Berkeley, California
Halifax, Nova Scotia
- Change can happen!
On Jan. 15, 2002, the Berkeley City Council voted unanimously
to change the wording adopted under pressure from the fragrance industry in 1996.
Mayor Shirley Dean wrote a friend on Jan. 15, 2002:"I am pleased to inform you that at the Council meeting of
January 15, 2002, the following language was moved
by Councilmember Betty Olds and approved unanimously
by the Council:
'The City Council requests that people refrain from
wearing scented products to the meetings.'
"This new language will start appearing immediately on all
notices of meetings held by the City."
- BYE-BYE obfuscating Fragrance-free meeting statement, developed under
fragrance industry pressure and adopted April 30, 1996.
" Attendees at public meetings are reminded that other attendees
may be sensitive to various odors, whether natural or manufactured,
in products and materials. Please help the City respect these needs."
http://ehnca.org/www/newreact/whocares.htm#Berkeley
- Berkeley's Commission on Disability
http://www.ci.berkeley.ca.us/commissions/disability/disabilitydocs/bcdisho.html
- Public Art Forum and Workshop for Bay Area Artists
This is the old Berkeley language:
" ... This is a smoke-free and fragrance-free meeting; attendees
http://www.ci.berkeley.ca.us/news/1999/99may/052799pubart.html
are reminded that other attendees may be sensitive to various odors,
whether natural or manufactured, in products and materials.
Please help us respect these needs. ..."
- Halifax, Nova Scotia
Halifax, Nova Scotia and its fragrance-free information
Citizens for A Safe Learning Environment
http://www.chebucto.ns.ca/Education/CASLE/examples.html
- Halifax Regional Municipality
"No-Scent Makes Good Sense
"Halifax Regional Municipality has had a "No-Scent" encouragement program in
effect for the past four years. It encourages people to be aware of others who may
suffer allergies or sensitivities to fragrances found in perfumes, hair sprays,
deodorants, creams and many other personal grooming products."There has been tremendous positive feedback from the public and visitors to this
policy. However, we must emphasize that this is a "public awareness" program
only. It is not a by-law or any other form of legislation; it is not an enforceable
issue, and there are no fines or penalties. ..."
http://www.region.halifax.ns.ca//mediaroom/scents.html
- Oakland, California
The city of Oakland has developed a policy which provides not only wording for
scent-free meetings, but also "[m]aintains and distributes a list of EI/MCS suitable
cleaning anad/or building maintenance products. The stated purpose of this policy is:
"To ensure accessibility to City and City-sponsored meetings, programs, activities and
services for people with EI/MCS. ..."
Policy 138 -- City Access Policy for People With Environmental Illness/Multiple
Chemical Sensitivity (EI/MCS)
Under Action, page 5, number 6.
"When publicizing meetings or other public activities, announce in all media
formats as follows: (a) meeting announcement; (b) graphics; (c) additional information;
(d) notice on auxiliary aids and services (see AI 123); and (e) EI/MCS notice, as follows:
'In consideration of people with chemical sensitivities, please refrain from wearing
perfumed personal care products to this event.' "Interestingly, when one clicks out to an agenda or minutes, one will read the following
statement, reflecting the industry's wish for limiting it to "strongly scented" products:
IN COMPLIANCE WITH OAKLAND'S POLICY FOR PEOPLE WITH
ENVIRONMENTAL ILLNESS/MULTIPLE CHEMICAL
SENSITIVITIES, PLEASE REFRAIN FROM WEARINGSTRONGLY
SCENTED PRODUCTS TO MEETINGS
PDF: http://www.oaklandnet.com/government/city_clerk/citycouncilguide.pdf
- San Francisco, California
"Chemical Sensitivity
"In order to assist the City's efforts to accommodate persons with severe allergies,
environmental illness, multiple chemical sensitivity or related disabilities, attendees at
public meetings are reminded that other attendees may be sensitive to various chemical
based products. Please help the City accommodate these individuals." For example,
see: Small Business Commission (Nov. 2004), near page bottom
http://sfgov.org/site/sbc_page.asp?id=28194Folks, if you don't know that perfumes are petrochemical-based products, you won't know
to leave your perfume and other scented products at home for your own enjoyment, amongst
consenting, non-preganat adults. See the toxic chenicals found in fragrances with your own eyes!-- barb
EHN's - FDA Petition - Docket Number 99P-1340 (with analyses, FDA contact information
and complementary information)
http://ehnca.org/www/FDApetition/bkgrinfo.htmBetty's FPIN (Fragranced Products Information Network)
http://www.fpinva.org/petition99P1340.htmGreenPeace UK has also made fragrance analyses available . . . see The Chemical Home
http://www.greenpeace.org.uk/Products/Toxics/chemicalhouse.cfm?producttypeid=5
- San Rafael, California
Keyed in from hard copy. -- barb
"To allow individuals with environmental illness or multiple chemical sensitivity to
attend the meeting or hearing, individuals are requested to refrain from wearing
scented products." For example see City of San Rafael Pickleweed Park
Advisory Board, near page bottom:
http://www.cityofsanrafael.org/pickleweed/
- Santa Clara, California)
Keyed in from hard copy. -- barb
"Individuals with severe allergies, environmental illness, multiple chemical sensitivity or
related disabilities should contact the City's ADA office at 408.261.5200 to discuss
meeting accessibility. In order to allow participation by such individuals, please do not
wear scented products to meetings at City facilities."
For example see near page bottom of an Agenda
(Note, telephone numbers for contacting the ADA office vary with agenda, but the number
listed above is one I was given on a copy of their meeting notice policy statement. -- barb)
http://cho.ci.santa-clara.ca.us/203.html
- Santa Cruz, California
" The City of Santa Cruz does not discriminate against persons with disabilities. Out of
consideration for people with chemical sensitivities, we ask that you attend fragrance
free. If you wish to attend this public meeting and will require assistance such as an
interpreter for American Sign Language, Spanish, or other special equipment, please call
the City Clerk¼s Department at 420-5030 at least three days in advance so that we can
arrange for such special assistance. The Cal-Relay system number: 1-800-735-2922. "
For example, see:http://www.ci.santa-cruz.ca.us/cc/archives/00/7-25a.html
- Shutesbury, Massachusetts
-- back to General Suggestions, above --
- David Ames writes: "What we have done in Shutesbury makes common sense,
and it is easy. Perhaps other towns may wish to implement the same thing. We are
doing this as an educational program and not an enforcement program. As you enter
the municipal buildings you will see a poster that I downloaded from the Nova Scotia
Nurses Union called 'No scents is good sense'."
Skunk poster:
http://www.yorku.ca/dohs/doc/Guidelines/ScentedProducts/skunk.htm.
I made some pouches out of envelopes and we have placed awareness
flyers in them.We purposely vary the official language somewhat. We have used the following:
This is a fragrance free zone.
David Ames wrote to me:This meeting is fragrance free.
This meeting is fragrance free for everyone's comfort.
Please remember that this is a fragrance free meeting.
Thank you for making this a fragrance free meeting.
I am more than glad to have you share our efforts. If anyone has any
other questions, feel free to e-mail David Ames
townadmin@shutesbury.org or call me at 413.259.1214.
- Shutesbury's Town Hall accessibility project underway.
What is Fragrance Free, anyway?
FAQ About Fragrances
Ziporah Hildebrandt, Chair, ADA Committee
http://www.shutesbury.org/ada_committee/project_underway.htm
- Shutesbury holds its nose over scents
By Associated Press, 4/27/2003; Boston Globe
http://www.boston.com/dailyglobe2/117/metro/Shutesbury_holds_its_nose_over_scents-.shtml
- Shutesbury goes 'fragrance-free'
By SCOTT MERZBACH, Staff Writer Daily Hampshire Gazette
http://www.gazettenet.com/09182001/news/6550.htmor
http://web.archive.org/web/20011213020523/http://www.gazettenet.com/09182001/news/6550.htm[Shutesbury] Non-toxic and Fragrance-Free Cleaning Supplies
Approved by Shutesbury ADA Com for use in town buildings
http://shutesbury.org/ada_committee/documents/cleaning.html[Shutesbury] Preferable Office Equipment and Furnishings
http://shutesbury.org/ada_committee/documents/equip.html[Shutesbury] Why we request fragrance free ä
http://shutesbury.org/ada_committee/documents/fragranceFree.html
STATES . . .
- Missouri: Office of Administration's Fragrance-Free Policy
My home state -- I'm proud of the work Jeanne has accomplished, and of my state for listening to
the information and documentation that she and her colleagues have brought to their attention.
My guiding principle has been Show Me! And, that's what I ask of the fragrance industry and
the government agencies charged with protecting public health: Show me, and all of us, that
the trade secret-protected petrochemically derived chemicals used in inadequately tested
combinations are truly safe. Right now we are certainly assured by industry that their products
are "safe and wholesome." (By whose definition of those words, I wonder!) That flies in the
face of reality: growing numbers of fragrance-sensitized individuals of all ages, races, genders.
And, we are led to believe these products are safe, without substantiation of safety, and with total
disregard of the effects upon non users, with total disregard of the long-term and systemic
effects upon users and nonusers and despite the fact that during the years of the unchecked
proliferation of perfume and perfumed products, chronic diseases and premature deaths have
skyrocked. -- barb
" ... The Governor's Council on Disability requests that all offices and spaces used by
Council staff and by their visitors remain free of chemical-based scented products. ...Ý"
http://www.gcd.oa.mo.gov/scentfree.shtml
-- back to Meeting Notices, below --
Remember, links drop but you should be able to find articles if important to you. -- barb
- Cleaners, Disinfectants & Air "fresheners"
You and others around you get your fragrance chemicals from cleaners, disinfectants and
air "fresheners" (WHAT A MISNOMER, THAT IS!) . . . as well as in perfumes and personal
care products. Just think, you don't have to be a primary fragrance user, you simply have
to breathe the air polluted by the multitude of perfumed products! -- barb
Fragrance-free Hospitals, Schools, Workplaces, etc. need fragrance-FREE cleaning
and maintenance products. The following info is provided in the spirit of helping
you find safer products -- "greener," which means healthier and more environmentally
friendly, products.EHN does not recommend any products. Some products listed here are only to give you
an idea of what is available. -- barb
GREEN defined:
The Department of the Interior states under its
"Guidance and Training on Greening Your Janitorial Business
CHAPTER 2: Traditional Versus "Green" Cleaning Products" -- subhead:
"A Sampling of Environmental Attributes for Cleaning Products"
"Must not contain petrochemical-derived fragrances."
http://www.doi.gov/greening/sustain/trad.htmlCheck your "green" products!
See pages C / Clean and G / Green and "Pest Mgt. Info on EHN's "General Links"
- C, Clean
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnlinx/c.htm#Clean
- G, Green
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnlinx/g.htm#Green
- "Pest" Mgt. & Pesticide Info
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnlinx/pestcide.htm
- The fragrance industry tells us that fragrances do not clean the air.
RIFM RESPIRATORY SAFETY PROGRAM - INDOOR AIR QUALITY
http://www.rifm.org/WHITE%20PAPER%20IAQ%20DIsola%20v2%2004082004.htm.
Suggestions for greening your cleaning, follows. This should mean fragrance-FREE to you,
if you begin studying the chemicals used to make our modern scents. During the past 30 years
or so, the fragrance industry has moved to ownership by big pharmaceuticals and from scents
made largely from plant and animal essences to those that are mostly synthesized from
petrochemical derivatives. (You may also wish to be mindful of the fact that modern pharmaceuticals
can also be synthesized from petrochemical derivatives.)Managers/ Administrators: Do you have health problems in the workplace? Think fragrances . . .
they are among the VOCs (volatile organic compounds) you often read about as being pollutants.
And don't forget, fragrances are added to personal care products as well as household and
janitorial cleaning and maintenance products. This includes detergents and fabric softeners
as well as disinfectants and pesticides. Imagine the air pollution capabilities from the plethora of
fragrance products in your workplace. Then get to work cleaning up. Go fragrance-FREE. A
little fragrance education for your employees, and they may get the idea to start ridding their
home environments of these unnecessary scent toxins also. And you should think in terms of
making purchases of green, fragrance-FREE products for use around the workplace. -- barb
- CleaningPro -- Great info available, but again, do your own research. -- barb
- Fragrance-free Cleaning Products
http://www.cleaningpro.com/products/a-z/f.htm#Fragrance-Free
- A TOXICITY REPORT ON CLEANING CHEMICALS!
ARE YOU AND YOUR CHILDREN SAFE?
http://www.cleaningpro.com/toxic.cfm
- Cleaning Products A to Z: A
Includes fragrance-FREE. -- barb
http://www.cleaningpro.com/products/a-z/a.htm
- Cleaning Products From A to Z: H
Includes fragrance-FREE. -- barb
http://www.cleaningpro.com/products/a-z/h.htm
- The Commonwealth of Massachusetts
Environmentally Preferable Products Procurement Program
Cleaning Products, Environmentally Preferable
http://www.state.ma.us/osd/enviro/products/cleaning.htm
- Health Care Without Harm's info on Fragrances, Cleaners, Disinfectants and Pesticides
http://www.noharm.org/pesticidesCleaners/issue
- Improved Productivity and Health from Better Indoor Environments
"Recently completed analyses suggest that improving buildings and indoor environments
could reduce health-care costs and sick leave and increase worker performance, resulting
in an estimated productivity gain of $30 to $150 billion annually. "
CBS Newsletter; Summer 1997; pg. 5
Now if this doesn't speak volumes on WHY you should start a truly clean cleaning policy,
I don't know what will. Available through The WayBack Machine. -- barb
http://web.archive.org/web/20020615073431/http://eetd.lbl.gov/cbs/newsletter/NL15/productivity.html
- Virox Disinfectants and Sanitizers
Alas, for the life of me I cannot remember how I came upon this information, but as in all cases,
do your own research. EHN nor I recommend . . . this is only a suggestion to show you what
is available. -- barb
http://www.viroxtech.com/industrial/but_disinfectant.asp-- end Clean information and suggestions --
For more info, go to EHN's specific sections on CLEAN, GREEN, PAINT, CARPETS, etc.
available off homepage . . . www.ehnca.org -- barb
- ECHO's How to
http://hometown.aol.com/ECHOMCSCT/index19.html
- EEOC - Fragrance Illness Accommodation - Roberts v. U.S. DOT
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/eroberts.htm
- Examples of Accommodation: When Fragrances Are Toxic
CCH Canadian
http://www.ca.cch.com/emonthly/sept/hr/index1.asp#self
- FedWorkersComp.net
helping injured workers since 1998 - formerly Fedupfeds.org
http://www.fedworkerscomp.net/
- MCS Guide - An introduction by Bonnye Matthews, MCS survivor
http://www.fedworkerscomp.net/mcsguide.htm
- Fragrance Foundation®, Inc.and the "Scent circle"
http://www.fragrance.org/feature_tip_content.html
Opinion: The industry's standard for escaping fragrance chemicals is "approximately an arm's length" but that is next to impossible to adhere to with the formulation of these modern synthetic, petrochemical-derived scents. Perfumes are volatile organic compounds, which leave the user to become one with the air we all breathe! Air is not stagnant. It moves, it flows, and it takes its chemical pollutants with it. Remember air currents? They don't just show up on weather maps. Add to that the fact that the industry also advises people to layer up starting with toilet water and also from feet to head ... and to reapply during the day. Not to mention, synthetic scents are now made to waft further and last longer and there are more scents added to a greater variety of products than ever before. And if that isn't enough to cause unwarranted air pollution, more people are wearing more scents more places than ever before.
Seems to me, that just as is discovered with drugs when a new one is rushed to market with relatively few people using it, the more people who use synthetic chemicals, the more likely the chance that there will be obvious negative effects. But in the case of scented products, adverse health events happen to user AND to the nonuser, who in reality is the secondhand user. Be it synthetic drugs or fragrances or pesticides, some adverse health effects come sooner to some people, than others. But over time, everyone is subject to the negative effects of superfluous toxins -- fragrance chemicals store in fatty tissue and target organs.And the more people who use these products, the more likely those adverse effects will come to light. While adverse health effects of drugs affect the users, fragrances in personal care and household and janitorial cleaning and maintenance prdoucts can adversely affect both first- and secondhand users -- including pregnant women. Let me spell this out: there is evidence that embryos and fetuses can be adversely affected by fragrance chemicals. See EHN's Pregnancy & Fragrance http://ehnca.org/www/ehnlinx/p.htm#Pregnancy
One's reaction to synthetic fragrances could be something so insidious as having recurring "colds" or "flu" or it could show up as"adult onset acne" or "adult onset asthma" due to airborne fragrance chemicals used by others. (This has happened to me, and one of my daughters has eczema flares). Or it could be that one goes into asthma or anaphylactic shock, sinusitis, migraines or other headaches ... or a dizzying array of other symptoms. All of which are believeable by the astute doctor who stops to realize that there may be over 5,000 (certainly at least 3,000) chemicals used to formulate fragrances, tens to hundreds of which are used to create a scent, and too little toxicological data is known about those chemicals used singly. But what is known is that the chemicals include VOCs, irritants, sensitiziers, and they are suspected or known neurotoxins, carcinogens and/or teratogens (adversely affecting embryonic or fetal development).
It is past time due that our government start protecting public health and that our medical industry start recognizing that synthetic chemical products can and do cause a wide variety of debilitating and disabling illnesses. Our soaring rates of asthma, cancers, various chronic illnesses, including MCS, is more than the stultifying image given of just a bunch of crybabies clammoring for attention. It is the mark of chemical poisoning. We are the harbingers. Listen to us! Fragrance sensitization demands the attention of our government officials and of our medical industry . . . sans pharmaceutical biases, and without the oft-published rants of industry apologists.
In the meantime: Caveat Emptor! -- barb
- Dance
It is good sense to leave your scents at home when dancing. Heat makes the chemicals in
synthetically scented products volatilize all the more, which quickly pollutes the air for all.
Plus, your increased respiration does a wonderfu job of bringing the chemicals into your body,
whether from your products or those worn by others. People have become disabled as a result of
secondary and tertiary levels of exposure. Me for one. In the workplace. Low-levels they say!Remember to check FDA Petition and Analyses for chemicals found in popular scents.
http://ehnca.org/www/FDApetition/bkgrinfo.htmChemical injury can happen to YOU. The industry is not regulated. Synthetic scents contain
chemicals that are known irritants and sensitizers and contain known or suspected carcinogens,
neurotoxins and teratogens (adversely affecting embryonic and fetal development.)
Scent-free is a health issue. Being disabled by the chemicals in scented products makes it an
access issue. Please use sense, not scents.
-- barb- How to Be Fragrance Free
By Peggy Munson
http://www.peggymunson.com/mcs/fragrancefree.html
- 22nd Annual Spring Ball in Ashland, April 6, 2002
Hosted by the Ashland Branch of the Heather and the Rose Country Dancers
Contact: Brooke Friendly, (541) 482-9586, friendsack@opendoor.com
" ... This event is fragrance-free - please help us make dance accessible to all by
not wearing scented products! For more information on safe products to use and the
harmful effects of fragrance see the Seattle Country Dancers fragrance-free web page. ..."
http://www.opendoor.com/heatherandrose/activities.html
- The Bay Area Country Dance Society Website
(San Francisco Bay Area) http://www.bacds.org/
BACDS 2003 Playford Ball
"An Entertainment in King Arthur's Court" March 29, 2003
Fragrance-FREE request with suggestions for products to use. -- barb
Excerpted: "Fragrance Free:
"Some dance attendees suffer from heightened sensitivity to solvents and petroleum
products including perfume and fragrance. These chemicals can act not only as
respiratory irritants, but also as cardiac stimulants (skyrocketing blood pressure,
palpitations) and neurotoxins (symptoms include tremors, mental confusion,
equilibrium loss, blurred vision). Exposure to products containing even small
amounts of these chemicals can cause these symptoms.
"Please understand that this is not just a preference issue - it can be a serious health
issue. Chemical sensitivity results from continued exposure to solvents and products
in doses thought to be safe: this could happen to any one of us. Because the dance halls
are enclosed spaces, even small amounts of fragrance or scented or toxic
products on a few people can add up quickly to intolerable amounts. Our fellow
dancers with chemical sensitivities may not be able to attend unless we all work
together to reduce the amount of toxic chemicals.
I'll vouch for the skyrocketing blood pressure . . . but some friends have precipitous drops.
Diversity shows up in Multiple Chemical Sensitivity, too. I'll also state that it is imperative
that everyone be fragrance-free. Modern fragrances are concocted so that if one person decides
s/he has the God-given right to wear man-made petroleum synthesized products, the already
chemically injured individual will be forced out, or could suffer dire health consequences. --barb
http://timelord01.home.sprynet.com/playford/fragrance.htmFragrance Free Camp
March 14 - 16, 2003
http://www.bacds.org/camps/sprwkend2003/fragrancefree/
- English Dance Week, July 2002
" ... A significant number of campers suffer from heightened sensitivity to solvents
and petroleum products, including perfume and fragrance. To deal with this serious
health issue we've instituted a fragrance-free policy, so that we can open the dance floor
to everyone. We provide fragrance-free soap, shampoo, conditioner, and hand lotion
for camper use at all the bathrooms and hand-wash stations. Further details appear in
your camper letter. ..."
http://www.bacds.org/camps/eweek2002/ew02site.html
- Information on Our Fragrance-Free Policy
http://www.bacds.org/camps/eweek2002/fragfree.html
- BACDS 2002 Playford Ball
Bay Area Country Dance (that is the San Francisco Bay Area)
"A Midsummer Night's Dream" March 23, 2002
"Fragrance Free:
" A significant number of dance attendees suffer from heightened sensitivity to solvents
and petroleum products including perfume and fragrance. These chemicals can act
not only as respiratory irritants, but also as cardiac stimulants (skyrocketing blood
pressure, palpitations) and neurotoxins (symptoms include tremors, mental confusion,
equilibrium loss, blurred vision). Exposure to products containing even small amounts
of thee chemicals can cause these symptoms."Please understand that this is not a preference issue - it is a serious health issue.
Chemical sensitivity results from continued exposure to solvents and products in doses
thought to be safe: this could happen to any one of us. Because the dance halls are
enclosed spaces, even small amounts of fragrance or scented or toxic products on a few
people can add up quickly to intolerable amounts. Our fellow dancers with chemical
sensitivities can attend only if we all work together to reduce the amount of toxic
chemicals. ..."
This page includes info on some fragrance-free products . . . but remember, we are all
different in what we can tolerate. -- barb
http://timelord01.home.sprynet.com/playford/fragrance.htm
- Citing health concerns, activists seek restrictions, scent-free areas
By Jenny Deam; Denver Post Staff Writer; June 25, 2000
http://www.denverpost.com/life/sniff0625.htm
- Dance-Scents-Less - a list to join
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/dance-scents-less/messages
- California Friends of Louisiana French Music (CFLFM)
Some of you may not be aware that CFLFM has begun supporting a fragrance-free
dance environment.
Out of consideration for those who are allergic to scented products (and thereðis more
than one person), we ask that you refrain from wearing them to the events we sponsor.
At most of our events we make no attempt to monitor fragrance use. Instead, we rely
on a spirit of cooperation, growing out of a recognition that we all share the air.
However, certain designated events, particularly those held in Petaluma, will be labelled
"Fragrance-Free". At these events, there will an expectation that people will be able
to attend without a risk to their health. Knowing that most people still need to get
used to this fragrance-free idea, and will sometimes forget, there will be no "cop at the
door". However, complaints from other attendees will be taken into consideration. We're
playing this by ear and want to keep everyone happy, but the eventual goal of the
fragrance-free events is for them to be just that, 100% fragrance-free.
To save any misuderstanding or inconvenience, please do not wear any scented products
to an event labeled Fragrance Free. There are unscented versions of any personal
hygiene product you might need, and some may be available at the event for your
convenience. Thank you for your cooperation.
-- Dwight Shackelford, tshack@silver-bayou.com
WHAT IS ENGLISH COUNTRY DANCING?- English Country Dancing - Washington State
"Seattle: 1st, 3d, 5th Fridays September-June at University Friends Center, Beginner's
Workshop 7:30, dance 8-10:30. ALL DANCES ARE FRAGRANCE-FREE.
http://www-ssrl.slac.stanford.edu/~winston/ecd/hotbeds.htmlx#Washington
- Seattle's English Country Ball
Dancing in Clean Air: Our Fragrance-free Policy
"The Seattle English country dances are advertised as "fragrance free". This is because
about 15% of the general population and about 20% of our English country dance
community have adverse health effects from perfume and solvents, and become ill
from even small amounts of fragrance products. Reported adverse health effects from
perfume range from migraine headaches and asthma attacks to cardiac and neurological
symptoms, including permanent brain damage. This is not a preference issue --
it is a serious health issue for a significant number of people. ..."
http://ball2001.editthispage.com/fragrance
- Seattle - The Third Occasional Cascadia English Country Dance Weekend
April 29-30, Year???; Lake City Community Center, 12531 - 28th Ave. NE, Seattle
(This fragrance free dance link no longer works.)
http://www.oz.net/~bestockp/cascadia.html)
- Seattle's English Country Ball - Fragrance-Free Policy
January 13, 2001
http://ball2001.editthispage.com/fragrance
- Garry Kaluzny's Cajun/Zydeco Page
Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA
"Note that the Cajun/Zydeco dances at the Pittsfield Grange Hall are:
http://acs.madonna.edu/~kaluzny/cajun/
- Smoke-free!
- Alcohol-free!
- Fragrance-free! We ask that patrons please refrain from wearing perfumes
or other scented products. This is so folks with Multiple Chemical Sensitivities
(and who can't be around chemical "fragrances") can come dancing, too!
- North Bay Country Dance Society (North San Francisco Bay Area) Fragrance-Free Dances
"Your thoughtfulness in refraining from applying fragrance before coming to a dance
helps our members who have chemical sensitivities."
http://www.nbcds.org/calendar/blurb.html
- Spring Dance Romance Registration Update (March 12, 1999 )
"We are also trying an experiment this year at SDR. There are members of the dance
community (and in fact the world), who have varying degrees of sensitivity to chemicals
used in perfumes, after shaves, hair products, and many personal care items. These
products can trigger asthma attacks, and other physical reactions. While we
understand that in no way can we provide a chemically/fragrance free environment,
we would like to try making the weekend enjoyable for all. We are asking participants
who choose to dance in the fragrance free/low fragrance dance line, to refrain from
wearing scented personal care products. We also recognize that this is an individual
matter and in no way want anyone to feel that they cannot make their own personal
choices. There will be sample packets of fragrance free/low fragrance products available
to dancers when they register at the dance.
http://tcd.sbc.edu/update.html
- EMF/EMR (Electromagnetic Field/Radiation) Injury
See EHN's informational resources
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnlinx/e.htm#EMFSusan Molloy, Consultant to the Chemically and Electrically Sensitive for Access
to schools, public buildings, etc.
"Susan Molloy" susanm@cybertrails.comAlso see, http://ehnca.org/www/ehnlinx/m.htm#Molloy
- Hospitals - Healthcare Facilities and Health Issues
Here is the GOOD NEWS (Bad News, below)
Also see General Suggestions for more ideas regarding access and accommodation.
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/takheart.htm#Access
With the rapidly rising rates of asthma cases, cancers, Parkinson's, ADD, ADHD, Alzheimers,
acne, eczema, rhinitis, sinusitis, etc. -- and including iatrogenic illnesses and deaths -- I
suggest that the medical industry start paying attention to the real experts: The persons already
living with chemical injury. It is past time due to stop paying attention to the chemical
industry front organizations with industry apologists, and it's quacking doctors. Healthcare
facilities with true concern for their patients' and staff's health and welfare have concern for
their air quality! Such healthcare facilities create and implement policies and programs
that restrict the use of fragrances and pesticides.
2004: FINALLY! The fragrance industry tells us that fragrances do not clean the air.
"RIFM RESPIRATORY SAFETY PROGRAM - INDOOR AIR QUALITY"
http://www.rifm.org/WHITE%20PAPER%20IAQ%20DIsola%20v2%2004082004.htm.-- barb
- ACCESS TO MEDICAL FACILITIES FOR THE DISABLED
By Kathleen Houghton Dir.
Alaska CFIDS/MCS Association; Date: Feb 16, 2000
Posted by blanket permission -- barb
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/hosacces.htm
- ieq - Indoor Environmental Quality
Multiple Chemical Sensitivity (MCS) Protocol
Southwest General Health Center (SWGHC)
Middleburg Heights, OH
From NIBS' website (National Institute of Building Sciences)
"Purpose: To outline the management and nursing responsibilities caring for a patient
experiencing Multiple Chemical Sensitivity (MCS)"
I hope that ALL healthcare facilities start recognizing the special needs of the ALREADY
chemically injured patient. In doing so, facilities may go far in preventing more cases of MCS. -- barb
http://ieq.nibs.org/rooms/app_c.php
RULE 402. NUISANCE (Adopted May 7, 1976)
402-3
100
GENERAL
101
PURPOSE: To protect the public's health and welfare from the emission of air
contaminants which constitute a nuisance.
102
EXEMPTIONS: The provisions of this rule shall not apply to odors emanating from
agricultural operations necessary for the growing of crops or the raising of fowl or
animals.
(California Health & Safety Code, Section 41705)
300
STANDARDS
301
NUISANCE: A person shall not discharge from any source whatsoever such quantities
of air contaminants or other materials which cause injury, detriment, nuisance or
annoyance to any considerable number of persons or the public, or which endanger the
comfort, repose, health or safety of any such persons or the public, or which cause
or have natural tendency to cause injury or damage to business or property.
(California Health & Safety Code, Section 41700)
(Knowing the damage caused by pesticides to people, plants and animals, including pollinator
species, I'd sure like to know why this rule does not apply to mega agricultural operations.
Further, I'd like to know just how it is that health care facilities and doctors' offices can continue
to pollute the air -- and people's bodies -- with fragrance products, including cleaners, air
"fresheners" perfumes, scented personal care and cleaning products. Why does this poisoning
continue??? Because doctors listen to the chemical industry and not to their patients???
-- barb wilkie, EHN president emerita)
To view as HTML:
http://72.14.253.104/search?q=cache:llunUEeb19kJ:www.airquality.org/rules/rule402.pdf+rule+402,+A+person+shall+not+discharge+from+any+source+whatsoever+such+quantities&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=1&gl=us&ie=UTF-8
To view as PDF:
http://www.airquality.org/rules/rule402.pdfHospitalization for the Chemically Sensitive Patient*
By Selene Anema, RN
"GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS
"All members of the medical team should be fragrance-free, especially in regard to
perfumes and colognes. "
And, if I had my way, ALL staff of any healthcare facility -- or individual doctor's office -- would
be fragrance free, for any one person's cologne, could easily poison the air for an already
chemically ill patient. And all workers have to enter and leave their work area from time to time to
pollute the air for all others. Plus, with modern HVAC systems, we are all breathing shared air.
So share the air free of toxins found in petrochemically derived products, whether they be
personal care type of products, or cleaning and maintenance products. Thanks.
barb wilkie, EHN president emerita
http://www.ctaz.com/~bhima/hospital.htm
- American Public Health Association
Chemical Sensitivity
"The APHA Annual Meeting is a smoke-free event. Smoking is not permitted in any of
the meeting rooms used for scientific sessions, business meetings or APHA sponsored
social events. In addition, the Washington Convention Center is a
smoke-free environment. Be aware however, that hotels do allow smoking in some
public areas. Specific requests will be made to the hotels that chemicals not be used on
the meeting room carpeting within 4 days of the commencement of our meeting and that
only unscented products be used in guest rooms. In addition, APHA requests
that its meeting attendees refrain from the use of perfumes, hairsprays and other
chemicals, for the comfort and health of all our registrants. ..." [Emphasis added.]
http://www.apha.org/meetings/access.htm#cs
- Draft Report on the Environment
"Researchers do not understand completely why children develop asthma or
why asthma prevalence has increased in the past two decades."
L@@K at the proliferation of fragranced products during those two decades.
The answer may be right there under your nose! Let's PREVENT asthma, rather
than load kids up with drugs to help them over asthmatic attacks. -- barb
http://www.epa.gov/indicators/roe/html/roeHealthSt2.htm
- Health Care Without Harm -- The Issue
Pesticides, Fragrances & Cleaners
http://www.noharm.org/pesticidesCleaners/issue
- Hospitalization for the Chemically Sensitive Patient*
Selene Anema, RN
http://www.ctaz.com/~bhima/hospital.htm
- How to Be Fragrance Free and Why
By Peggy Munson.© This article may be reprinted and distributed freely.
Suggestions . . . listen to your body or listen to the person who is seeking accommodation. -- barb
http://www.peggymunson.com/mcs/fragrancefree.html
Perfumes and Asthma - don¼t mix
- Buying Fragrance Free Products
By Peggy Munson.© This article may be reprinted and distributed freely.
Suggestions . . . listen to your body or listen to the person who is seeking accommodation. -- barb
http://www.peggymunson.com/mcs/products.html
Cited information with links from Anderson Laboratories. -- barb
http://www.andersonlaboratories.com/alweb30.htm
- Pesticides and fragrance products are recognized
air pollutants. NIEHS - http://www.niehs.nih.gov/external/faq/indoor.htm
From Canada:
- Canada's Safety Council - Canada's Voice and Resource for Safety
Perfume in the Workplace
Hospitals and healthcare facilities are not only sources of patient care, but they are also
workplaces. In all cases, cleaner indoor air is a MUST! -- barb
"... Chemicals used in fragrances can cause health problems such as shortness of breath,
headaches and migraines, nausea, muscle pain, and cold-like symptoms. Asthma,
emphysema, bronchitis, and allergies can all be adversely affected by the chemicals found
in scented products. According to the Lung Association, one study found that
72 per cent of people with asthma had adverse reactions to perfumes. ...
"In the meantime, what can workplaces do to protect employees with chemical sensitivities?"First of all, when an employee raises concerns about his or her reaction to perfumes,
management should take the matter seriously. Assuming systems are in place to maintain
good indoor air quality, the next step is to identify the exact source of the problem
and assess its extent. If the source is one or two employees, management should let
those employees know the effect their perfume has on other staff and ask them to wear
a lighter scent. ..."
Lighter scents are petrochemically laden, as are so many products misleadingly labeled in the
USA as "fragrance-free" or "unscented." It is OK by our FDA to add scent as a masking odor. -- barb
http://www.safety-council.org/info/OSH/perfume.html
- Canadian Centre for Occupational and Health Safety ( CCOHS)
Indoor Air Quality: A Legitimate OSH Concern
"... The reason IAQ problems are difficult to determine is that building occupants are
exposed to not one but several adverse conditions. For example, you might not think
that the slight emissions from furniture, carpets, photocopiers, or the perfume worn by
your co-workers could be harmful, but in combination they can affect your health.
Again, these effects are impossible to trace accurately, but the condition does have a
name: Multiple Chemical Sensitivity (MCS). ..." http://www.ccohs.ca/headlines/text27.html
- Health & Safety Programs - Scent-Free Policy for the Workplace
http://www.ccohs.ca/oshanswers/hsprograms/scent_free.html
- Canadian Society for Environmental Medicine
Guide for Hospital Staff in Caring for Persons with Allergies/Sensitiities
Discussion Draft; September, 1997
http://www.chebucto.ca/~cares/CSEMguide.htmlCitizens for A Safe Learning Environment
Many examples of fragrance-free environment, including for health centers and hospitals.
http://www.chebucto.ns.ca/Education/CASLE/examples.html
- Clark & Bennett Spa Salon
Toxic Fragrances
Examples of Accommodation: When Fragrances Are Toxic; September 2001
"... For all these reasons, no-scent policies or scent-free encouragement programs
make sense in many circumstances. Prevention is the best practice that any employer
can adopt in the workplace. No amount of human suffering is justifiable. In the
case of fragrance-associated health problems, prevention and avoidance are the only
cures. Health advisories and a well-informed workforce make for happier and more
productive employees. "
This is what they had had available . . . at
http://www.clarkeandbennett.com/articles/fragrance.html .
However, in 2003, I can no longer find that page, but their homepage does contain information
on fragrances, which you may find useful. -- barb
http://www.clarkeandbennett.com/
- Hotel Dieu Hospital, Kingston, ON
Hotel Dieu Hospital is a SCENT FREE Work Environment
http://www.hoteldieu.com/scentfree.html
- "When No Scents Makes Sense
"Please remember to be aware of those people with asthma, allergies, and other lung
conditions, whose health is adversely affected when they are exposed to scented products.
You can help by not wearing such things as perfumes, colognes and aftershaves -
to places like church services, Christmas parties, or other public gatherings.
"If you would like to know more about scent-free or fragrance-free products available
on PEI, please call our office for our pamphlet, or check out our website at www.pei.lung.ca."
Be savy, for even on their scent-free page, they list a standard insect repellent and unscented,
standard fabric softeners. Always winnow all information . . . even what I provide!
http://www.pei.lung.ca/scentfree.html.]Be sure to check out other sections on this page, for we all can learn from successful
fragrance-free programs. -- barb
- American Environmental Health Foundation
http://www.aehf.com
- Ceramic masks and tygon tubing
http://www.aehf.com/cgi-bin/web_store.cgi?product=meds&cart_id=5229086.212Note: AEHF suggests cleaning/outgassing the tubing in distilled water brought to a boil with
baking soda and then add tubing and turn off heat. I've done this (on my own, before reading
about it) for the regular cannula and tubing supplied with my tank. I don't have to use oxygen
for extended periods, but I must outgas new tubing. This works for me. -- barb
- Fragrance-FREE and pesticide-FREE
Hospitals, Doctors' Offices and Health Care Facilities
We each need to be our own advocate when trying to educate
our doctors and healthcare facilities. Sites like EHN and
Fragranced Products Information Network, as well as
those listed under EHN's MCS Links page can provide
you with well-researched and documented information.
Please understand that many of us are very busy advocating
for cleaner air and safer health care facilities as background work.
But when it comes right down to it, each of us is on our own in
our efforts to educate our own doctors. If they are recalcitrant,
your health demands that you look for a healthcare practioner
who is willing to learn.Please use the information you find on EHN's pages to best
help you convince your hospital administration that they really
owe it to their staff and their patients to develop and implement
fragrance- and pesticide-free policies. It is within their rights to
do so.As stated on the JAN site,
"...An employer could choose to make a request that
employees voluntarily refrain from wearing fragrances
or the employer could go as far as creating a policy that
requires employees to refrain. An employer has the right to
decide how far is reasonable when implementing accommodations. ..."
So folks, use the information found throughout this page and
EHN's site to best help you. And remember, prove that fragrances
contain toxic chemicals. Print out and use the analysis information
available through the FDA Petition Docket Number 99P - 1340
and do turn to the Not Too Pretty report at
http://www.NotTooPretty.org. As also shown in the FDA Petition,
phthalates are commonly found in fragrances. -- barb
- American Journal of Nursing - June, 2003 - Volume 103, Issue 6
Health & Safety
Scent of a Workplace
Fragrances are a major source of indoor air pollution.
By Peggy Wolff, MS, APRN, HNC
http://www.nursingworld.org/AJN/2003/june/health.htm
- Brigham and Women's Hospital
Fragrance-Controlled Workplace
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/bwhosp.htm
- Keeping BWH Fragrance Free
January 2002
"BWH has a Fragrance-Free Policy to help provide a healthier and more comfortable
environment for patients and staff. Everyone is reminded to refrain from using scented
products. These include products that are intended to produce an attractive smell
to others, in addition to the user. Some examples include colognes, perfumes,
after-shave products, soaps, lotions, powders, deodorants, hair products and other
personal care products. Individuals with concerns or symptoms due to fragrance
exposure or those interested in obtaining posters and brochures, should contact
Occupational Health Services at ext. 2-8501."
http://healthcare.partners.org/bwhintranet/nursing/viewnursing.cfm?NursingID=232
- Neonatology/NICU - NICU Environment Guidelines
"1. Please refrain from wearing any perfumes or colognes while visiting the NICU. Some
people are sensitive to perfumes and suffer serious symptoms when exposed to them.
We are concerned that there may be ill effects on the delicate lungs of the babies. ..."
http://www.brighamandwomens.org/newbornmedicine/guidelines/NICUenviron.asp
- Division of Pulmonary Rehabilitation - Department News
"Please be considerate of others when you attend rehab class or maintenance hours and
do not wear perfumes, colognes or aftershaves. Many pulmonary patients are
sensitive to these products and it affects their breathing.
http://www.brighamandwomens.org/pulmonaryrehab/news/news.asp
- The Dana Farber/Brigham and Women¼s Cancer Center Radiology Department
Hmmmmm, think what fragrance chemicals interfere with in your body. -- barb
"Mammography is a specialized form of x-ray that is used to detect and monitor changes
in the breast tissue. On the day that your exam in scheduled, you should avoid
using lotions, creams, powders, perfumes, and anti-perspirant/deodorant products near
your breasts (including the underarms), or plan to wash them off prior to the exam.
These items may contain ingredients that could interfere with the exam. No other
special preparation is necessary. When you arrive for your appointment, you will be
given a hospital gown and asked to remove all clothing form the waist up. You will also
be asked to remove any jewelry or metal that could interfere with the exam. "
http://www.brighamandwomens.org/bwhcancer/clinical/radiology/ourservices.asp
- Center for Occupational & Environmental Medicine
Suggested safe substitutions for personal products
Allan D. Lieberman, M.D. - Medical Director
The center is fragrance-FREE! -- barb
" The Center for Occupational and Environmental Medicine specializes in treating
patients with environmentally triggered health problems, including injuries sustained
as a result of exposure to chemicals in the environment. The Center, in operation
since 1978, is located off South Carolina Interstate 26 in North Charleston. Our 6,500
square foot Center consists of medical, laboratory, and testing facilities. It was
designed and is run to be as safe an environment for our patients as possible ‚ it is a
strictly smoke and scent free facility, utilizing specialized air filtration throughout the
building, water filtration systems, non-toxic cleaning products, and completely non-toxic
pest control. "
You MUST register as a patient to use this site. -- barb
http://www.coem.com/
- The Deirdre Imus Environmental Center for Pediatric Oncology
" Hackensack University Medical Center represents the first hospital-based
program whose specific mission is to identify, control, and ultimately prevent
environmental factors that cause adult, and especially, pediatric cancer. ..."... Deirdre Imus Center for Pediatric Oncology, Hackensack University Medical Center
has become the first in the nation to undertake a comprehensive „greening¾ program.
As examples, all of the institution¼s traditional toxic cleaning agents have been removed
and replaced by products that are virtually toxin free. The offices at The Deirdre Imus
Environmental Center for Pediatric Oncology are being upgraded with „environmentally
friendly¾ furnishings and supplies whose manufacturer eliminated toxic materials. And,
the center remains constantly on alert for other areas where environmental insults
can be eliminated. ..."
http://www.dienviro.com/index.asp?lobid=412&qstr=
- Disabilities Interest Group (D I G ) of UCSF
"[IAQ Policy] Rationale: The number of people with chemical sensitivities is
rapidly increasing in the context of increased manufacture and use of synthetic chemicals,
air-tight energy efficient buildings, synthetic building materials, pesticides, and the use of
fragrances in everything from toilet paper to clothing. ..."
http://www.ucsf.edu/dig/
Draft IAQ Policy
http://www.ucsf.edu/dig/Draft%20indoor%20air%202.docCan also be viewed in HTML via Google at
http://216.239.53.104/search?q=cache:ReUYq2jHyiUJ:www.ucsf.edu/dig/Draft%2520indoor%2520air%25202.doc+UCSF+indoor+air&hl=en&ie=UTF-8
- Honors from Disabilities Interest Group
First Appeared Monday, 15 December '03
" The School of Nursing, represented by dean Kathy Dracup, was appreciated for
longstanding efforts to educate faculty about disability issues, advocate for accessibility,
and particularly for its five-year-old voluntary fragrance-free policy."
[Emphasis added.]
http://pub.ucsf.edu/today/news.php?news_id=200312119
or print: http://pub.ucsf.edu/today/print.php?news_id=200312119
- Greening The Cleaning
"... The U.S. Department of Environmental Protection further states that a green chemical
should include the following standards:
- Must not contain carcinogens, mutagens or teratogens
- Must not contain any ozone depleting compounds, greenhouse gasses or
substances that contribute to smog
- Must not be corrosive or irritating to the skin or eyes
- Must not be delivered in aerosol cans
- Must not contain petrochemical-derived fragrances ..."
Naturally, if the product"Must not contain carcinogens, mutagens or teratogens," it simply
cannot contain "petrochemical-derived fragrances." Our modern synthetic scents, derived from
petrochemicals, contain chemicals that are known and suspected carcinogens, mutagens and
teratogens. There is more, much more info on DOI's page. Visit this site! -- barb
http://www.dienviro.com/Index1.asp?BD=6325
- Guide for Hospital Staff in Caring for Persons with Allergies/Sensitiities
Canadian Society for Environmental Medicine
Discussion Draft - September, 1997
Brought to you by Advocate -Online-
http://www.chebucto.ca/~cares/CSEMguide.html
- Halton Healthcare
http://www.haltonhealthcare.com
- Visiting Our Hospital
General Guidelines
" ...Patients, visitors and staff are asked to refrain from using perfume,
after-shave, cologne or other scented personal care products when in the
hospital, due to possible patient allergies. ... "
http://www.haltonhealthcare.com/mvisit.php#general
- "[HHS] has recently implemented a Fragrance Free Policy to safeguard the health of
its
patients, visitors, employees and volunteers. Everyone is requested to
refrain from
the use of scented products wherever and whenever possible. "
http://www.haltonhealthcare.com/downloads/pressbox_oakville_beaverpulse_1002.pdf
- Heal of Southern Arizona
MCS Hospital Access
http://www.healsoaz.org/hospital_access.htm
Susan Molloy writes: The Tucson support group (Southern AZ HEAL) has put
together a really good hospital access packet for the chemically sensitive.
Ariel B. writes: We charge $6 for members and $9 for nonmembers, which
doesn't do much more than cover costs... The request for a Hospital Packet and the
money should come to my address (which is also the official HEAL of So AZ address):
HEAL of Southern Arizona
Please specify one packet per customer. Folks can make extra copies if they want them.
PO Box 36688
Tucson AZ 85740
We have permission from all the various authors to reproduce their work. ...I am
waiting to see what Kristi M. comes up with in the way of simplifying the packet and
making it more user friendly. In the meantime, the present version is available for folks
who hear about it and want it.
- Health & Safety - American Journal of Nursing - June, 2003 - Volume 103, Issue 6
"Scent of a Workplace- Fragrances are a major source of indoor air pollution.
By Peggy Wolff, MS, APRN, HNC
"Q. One of my colleagues wears such strong perfume that it triggers my asthma. How
can I encourage my colleagues to avoid using fragrances in the health care workplace? ...
First you have to have a human resources manager that demonstrates perspicaciousness;
one willing to look beyond industry hype that its products and their ingredients are "safe and
wholesome." Then the HR manager establishes an educational program on cleaner air, which starts
with leaving the perfumed products at home for one's own enjoyment among consenting adults. -- barb
http://www.nursingworld.org/AJN/2003/june/health.htm
- Health Care Without Harm
http://www.noharm.org
- Pesticides, Fragrances & Cleaners
http://www.noharm.org/pesticidesCleaners/issue
- Cleaners and Disinfectants
http://www.noharm.org/pesticidesCleaners/CleanersDis
- Fragrances http://www.noharm.org/pesticidesCleaners/Fragrances
- Healthier Hospitals - booklet
By Toni Temple.
Available for sale, including through EHN's Books for $8.50, including shipping, but not tax.
http://ehnca.org/www/books/bookordr.htm
Toni's website is down. It would be good for all hospitals to have a copy of this booklet
and then to do their best to implement the suggestions . . . also enlarge the scope to
cover pesticides and EMF (electromagnetic field) concerns. -- barb
- Hospitalization for the Chemically Sensitive Patient
by Selene Anema, RN
Website: Those with Multiple Chemical Sensitivity or Environmental Illness
Build New Lives by Mary K
http://www.citlink.net/~bhima/hospital.htm
- How to Be Fragrance Free
By Peggy Munson
http://www.peggymunson.com/mcs/fragrancefree.html
- Jewish Hospital in Louisville, KY
http://unix.adept.net/~mcsinfo/support.htm
- Kaiser - Oakland
http://oakland.kaiser.org/
- Kaiser Permanente
Fragrance-free Workplace Policy
"To help promote a healthier and more enjoyable work place, the management team
and space committee have put together a department policy regarding the use of fragrant
products. ..."
STATEMENT OF POLICY
"We recognize that exposure to strong scents and fragrances in the environment can cause
discomfort, as well as directly impact the health of some individuals. Since we hope to
support a healthful environment for employees, physicians, and visitors, it is the intent
of Quality and Operations Support to strive for a fragrance-controlled workplace.
Therefore, for the comfort and health of all, use of scents and fragrant products by QOS
employees, other than minimally scented personal care products, is strongly
discouraged.
"APPLIES TO:
"All employees ..."
Well, this is a bit of a crock, based on my personal experiences, including Nov. 2004.
Believe me, I've tried to track this down and the number of Kaiser people who don't know about it is really something. The other response I've gotten time and again, is
"OH, we have a fragrance-free policy, we're not to wear more than a modicum of scent."
Let me assure you, I've assured the individuals in the Patient Services section that
there is no such thing as a fragrance-free policy in which a modicum of scent is
allowed. When one chooses to use mainstream industry's petrochemical-derived
fragrances, one pollutes not only their body, but the bodies of others because they pollute
the air for all.And, in update, I will definitely add my assault by perfume experience in nephrolgy/Pulmonary
department of the main Oakland Kaiser hospital on July 26, 2005.
3/2/2006: I've not been back to that killer department since. But, I highly praise my
internist and my GYN for doing everything in their power to accommodate my needs;
to give me access. -- barb
http://www.internalmemos.com/memos/memodetails.php?memo_id=2361
- Kaiser - Oakland's Allergy/Dermatology Department (Calif.)
Sign on door --
"Please use discretion and avoid wearing scented products,
[Fall 1998, barb]
perfume or smoking right before coming to the Allergy Department.
Many of our patients are very sensitive to scented products,
perfumes and smoke. Thank you for your cooperation."Note: December 5, 2001 . . . Just for curiosity's sake, I opened the door of Dermatology --
the very door with the above language on it -- and got hit by a mixture of scents. Who is kidding
whom? At what point do we start thinking dereliction of duty? Frankly, I'm passed that point!
What about others? IF you are a Kaiser patient, please join us in requesting fragrance-free air. -- barb
Kaiser Oakland Appointment Confirmation cards --for many of their departments --
carry wording such as:
"Please do not wear perfume or strong scents to your appointment."
That's a start . . . Now, if we could just get Kaiser to see the logic in having their staff
-- health and administrative -- to be scent-free. And while I'm dreaming, I may as well
throw in the concept of not using air "fresheners" and scented cleaning and maintenance
products, including moving toward non to least-toxic pest control practices. By the way,
did you know that disinfectants were classified as pesticides? They are! And no pesticide
ever kills all of the pests . . . but they do a wonderful job of creating more resistant pests,
which means the industry gets to create more pesticides. Talk about self-fulfilling! -- barb
- American 'Beauty'
A march through time with what was known when about fragrances
Compiled and written by Barb Wilkie, June 2004 (hopefully coming before my
prophesied "check out" as the nephrologist put it. He further asked if I knew what he meant. I responded with DROP DEAD!I figure that covers all the bases.
November 2004 . . . Coming sometime summer of 2005, if all goes well. -- . . .
And, as if I put a curse on myself with that hopeful thought, all didn't go well. I was
marked with time by a nephrologist who proclaimed I'd be on diaylysis or have a
kidney transplant -- NO! -- or "check out" in a year. I saw him on July 26, 2005 and I've
not been back. For starters, that entire section at Kaiser Oakland was heavily perfumed
and that is shared space with pulmonary! Secondly, the doctor offered no hope. I've
since learned of a Dr. Mackenzie Walser of Johns Hopkins, who has published a book
and has a website -- http://www.copingwithkidneydisease.com/ -- and he feels that
one can arrest the progression of kidney failure through diet and supplements. You
may follow my journey by visiting Kidney Disease on EHN's page K. 3/06 still working.
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnlinx/k.htm#Kidney
- Dr. Ann McCampbell writes:
- Recommended Approach to Care of Hospitalized Patients
With Multiple Chemical Sensitivities (MCS)
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/amcchosp.htm
- MCS Hospital Access
HEAL of Southern Arizona
http://www.healsoaz.org/hospital%20access.htm
- MERCY MEDICAL CENTER PROCESS STANDARDS
Multiple Chemical Sensitivity Protocol
http://www.lassentech.com/eimcspro.html
- Nursing Spectrum -- Career Fitness Online
" ... Go easy on the perfume and cologne. You will eventually come in contact
with patients and coworkers who are highly allergic or who have respiratory difficulties.
Don¼t be responsible for inducing an asthma attack because you¼ve overdone it on
the cologne. Some work environments prohibit the use of scented products due to the
increasing number of people who are scent-sensitive.
http://www.nursingspectrum.com/StudentsCorner/StudentFeatures/NewGrad_stk04.htm
- OHS Canada - Canada's Occupational Health and Safety Magazine
"No Scents Is Good Sense"
Queen Elizabeth II Health Sciences Centre (QEII HSC) in Halifax, N.S
From the January/February, 1998, issue of OHS Canada
By Brenda Marsh
This is a HOW - TO that is worth reading. -- barb
http://www.ohscanada.com/virtual-issue/artucle/health.html
- Perfumes and Asthma - don¼t mix
Cited information with links from Anderson Laboratories. Print out and share! -- barb
http://www.andersonlaboratories.com/alweb30.htm
Posters
- "No scents is good sense"
http://www.yorku.ca/dohs/doc/Guidelines/ScentedProducts/skunk.htmIn PDF - http://www.yorku.ca/dohs/doc/Guidelines/ScentedProducts/skunk.pdf
- "Wake up and smell the coffee"
http://www.yorku.ca/dohs/doc/Guidelines/ScentedProducts/coffee.htmIn PDF - http://www.yorku.ca/dohs/doc/Guidelines/ScentedProducts/coffee.pdf
- THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE
"Scent-Sensitive Nurse Sues LDS"
BY MICHAEL VIGH; Tuesday, October 15, 2002
"LDS Hospital nurse Susan Bell says she suffered for more than a year from daily
headaches, eye irritation, swelling of her face and lips and other symptoms because
her co-workers doused themselves in perfume or cologne.
"Bell, 57, says she became the office laughingstock for supervisors and colleagues,
some of whom continued to bathe in their perfumes even after she told them it made
her sick. She worked at the hospital for more than a decade before she took a disability
leave in March 2001.
"Last week, the Eagle Mountain woman filed a lawsuit against the hospital in U.S. District
Court, claiming supervisors failed to adequately accommodate her and enforce their
own policy prohibiting the wearing of heavy perfumes.
"I have allergic and severe reactions to fragrances and paints," Bell said in a statement to
the Utah Labor Commission's anti-discrimination division. "I complained to my
supervisors . . . and they promised to fix the problem, yet no action was taken and every
day I was sick at work.' ..." ... Annette Green, [former] executive director of the Fragrance Foundation in New York,
has said the restrictions are much ado about nothing, arguing perfume does not
pollute the air and does not contain carcinogens, as cigarettes do."
[Emphasis added as I wonder, who is kidding whom? Analyses prove Green WRONG! -- barb]
http://www.sltrib.com/2002/oct/10152002/utah/7273.htm
Therapy Dogs of Vermont
Winter 2004 newsletter -- a PDF file
"Just a ReminderãBe „Scent-Sensitive!"
By Diane Prokocimer
There are many people who experience unpleasant physical effects from scented products!
Symptoms such as headaches, dizziness, nausea, fatigue, shortness of breath, difficulty
with concentration and allergy-like symptoms have been reported after exposure to
perfumes and other chemical scents. A recent University of Texas Health Sciences
Center study indicates that 15% to 30% of the general population report some sensitivity
to chemicals, including fragrances!
Fragrances can enter the body through the nose by inhalation, the mouth by ingestion,
or the skin by absorption. Many fragrances consist of volatile organic compounds,
which are known to be respiratory irritants.
Out of consideration to our patients, fellow staff, and visitors, we encourage volunteers
to be fragrance-free. Please do not wear perfume or other fragrances while
volunteering. Let¼s all be "Scent Sensitive!"
Excellent advice . . . THANKS! The animals should also be free of scented products. -- barb
http://www.therapydogs.org/win_2004.pdf
- UCSF's Disabilities Interest Group (D I G
"[IAQ Policy] Rationale: The number of people with chemical sensitivities is
rapidly increasing in the context of increased manufacture and use of synthetic
chemicals, air-tight energy efficient buildings, synthetic building materials, pesticides,
and the use of fragrances in everything from toilet paper to clothing. ..."
http://www.ucsf.edu/dig/
Draft IAQ Policy
http://www.ucsf.edu/dig/Draft%20indoor%20air%202.docCan also be viewed in HTML via Google at
http://216.239.53.104/search?q=cache:ReUYq2jHyiUJ:www.ucsf.edu/dig/Draft%2520indoor%2520air%25202.doc+UCSF+indoor+air&hl=en&ie=UTF-8
- Honors from Disabilities Interest Group
First Appeared Monday, 15 December '03
" The School of Nursing, represented by dean Kathy Dracup, was appreciated for
longstanding efforts to educate faculty about disability issues, advocate for accessibility,
and particularly for its five-year-old voluntary fragrance-free policy."
[Emphasis added.]
http://pub.ucsf.edu/today/news.php?news_id=200312119
or print: http://pub.ucsf.edu/today/print.php?news_id=200312119
- THE BAD NEWS (GOOD NEWS, above):
October News - The End of Special Education? Private Schools at Public Expense
By Brent Staples; The Council for Disability Rights Newsletter
Scroll down for:
DOJ Policy Letters
This is BAD news for those already living with asthma and other respiratory
illnesses, migraines, cancers . . . and for the already chemically injured. I'd like to see
DOJ revisit this ruling, now that they know that fragrances aren't just flower petals
and alcohol (and even if they were, the alcohol presents problems too!). -- barb
Employee Use of Fragrances
Medical care facilities may be subject to either Title II or III or the ADA.
But does this mean that they must require employees to refrain from wearing fragrances
when they are providing services to persons with multiple chemical sensitivities?
Probably not, responded the Justice Department. Although Titles II and III require
covered entities to make reasonable modifications, the use of fragrances by employees
is usually a matter of personal choice by employees; and it would not be "reasonable,"
in most cases, to require an employer to regulate the use of fragrances
by employees. Woodatch, 8 NDLR ? 214 (DOJ 1995)
http://www.disabilityrights.org/1096.htm
Mr. Wodatch wrote in 1995:
(http://www.usdoj.gov:80/crt/foia/tal605.txt)
"In most circumstances, it would not be 'reasonable' to require an employer to
regulate such personal choices by its employees." And that was in response to a
person asking if the "ADA would require medical care providers to require
their employees to refrain from wearing fragrances when they are providing
services to a person who has multiple chemical sensitivities."Good grief. Common sense, or the Precautionary Principle, should dictate that fragrance
products have no place in a doctor's office or any other type of healthcare facility. I feel this
opinion is based on the stultifying informaton provided by the chemical industry and its apologists,
not upon any science. Science, which to be sure is in short supply, is nonetheless available . . .
IF one digs. (As evidenced by the information available on this site, EHN's, and that of
Betty Bridges, RN, http://www.fpinva.org. Check the FDA Petition analyses for a start!
EHN - http://ehnca.org/www/FDApetition/bkgrinfo.htm
or FPIN - http://www.fpinva.org/petition99P1340.htm.) -- barb
The volatilizing chemicals can cause a wide variety of reactions that can cause serious
and even life-threatening adverse events for patients. We should have a right to
be safe in a health care facility, for goodness sakes. I feel this ruling by the DOJ has
done more harm than they can imagine. Certainly, this ruling has done nothing to
quell the "unexplained" rising rates of asthma, cancers, ADD, ADHD, Alzheimer's,
Parkinson's, MCS, etc.Imagine the joy of any employer who doesn't want to deal with the often quite vocal
complaints from employees who want to wear and use their synthetically scented products in the
workplace. I saw the glee in the faces of my own workplace management staff -- government
agency -- when this very ruling was used against me in my request for fragrance-free
accommodation. Like so many others, I had to leave gainful employment and I job I had loved,
despite my years of trying to educate them on the subject of the polluting capabilities of modern
petrochemical-derived fragrances.Many people claim it is their cultural right to wear and use fragrance products -- without
realizing that their culture is targeted for sales by the unregulated fragrance industry. Alas,
members of these cultural groups wind up in category of high statistics of "unexplained"
cases of asthma, high blood pressure and breast cancers.Unfortunately, Mr. Wodatch's ruling puts the onus on the person trying to work in cleaner,
safer, fragrance-free air. We, the chemically injured, living with the disability that cannot say its
name aloud, become the UNreasonable one. And, we get fired, not hired, or we are forced to retire.
Knowing what we now know about synthetic fragrances, it seems to me -- I am not a lawyer -- that
it is VERY REASONABLE to require an employer to regulate such personal choices of its
employees. Employers already regulate attire, the hours one works, when one eats lunch, where
one works, how one works, etc. And, employers regulate smoking, which is a
personal choice activity where the toxins not only fill the lungs of the user, but also leaves the user- -
just as do synthetic chemnical scents -- to affect the air for all, regardless of underlying
health conditions, including pregnancy.Personally, I cannot imagine how modern synthetic chemical fragrances can be dismissed as a
"personal choice by employees." ESPECIALLY in a healthcare setting. These modern synthetic
scents in perfume, cosmetics and personal care products, as well as those gratuitously added to
cleaning and maintenance products, including pesticides (disinfectants are classified as pesticides),
and fragrance-emitting devices, are acknowledged by the National Institute of Environmental
Health Services as Common Indoor Air Pollutants.
http://www.niehs.nih.gov/external/faq/indoor.htmWhat place do these superfluous toxins have being used by anyone in a healthcare facility?
It is to healthcare facilities that one goes because one needs health care, which could include
pregnancy; respiratory distress such as asthma, sinusitis, rhynitis, laryngitis; cancers;
Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, headaches or other central nervous system disorders, or a proclivity
toward high ... or too low ... blood pressure (my blood pressure spikes in response to synthetic
fragrances, a friend's blood pressure drops precipitously and neither reaction is good) and
subsequent heart problems.It was not all that long ago that nurses' handbooks contained the information that they
should NOT wear scented products to work. Friends who were nurses, and one of my
daughters, a PT, have given me that information. When, Why, How did that bit of logic change?
My belief is that common sense about no fragrances in healthcare settings went out the
window when all the advertising and all the additional scented products came in.
If you all feel as strongly as I do, please take the time to write the DOJ about your lack of
accommodation, the harm this ruling has done to you in your healthcare setting, job or school.
Write! The DOJ and Mr. Wodatch have ignored me. Time for tons of letters, folks. WE have to
work together to make a change. To see the ruling by Mr. Wodatch, visit the Department of Justice
(DOJ) online. -- barb
http://www.usdoj.gov:80/crt/foia/tal605.txt
E-mails to the Department of Justice, including the Attorney General, may be sent to
AskDOJ@usdoj.gov.
- Nondiscrimination on the Basis of Disability in State and
Local Government Services
John L. Wodatch, Director,
Office on the Americans with Disabilities Act, Civil Rights Division
EFFECTIVE DATE: January 26, 1992
Excerpted by barb:
"... Many commenters asked that environmental illness (also known as multiple
chemical sensitivity) as well as allergy to cigarette smoke be recognized as disabilities.
The Department, however, declines to state categorically that these the determination
as to whether an impairment is a disability depends on whether, given the particular
circumstances at issue, the impairment substantially limits one or more major life
activities (or has a history of, or is regarded as having such an effect).
"Sometimes respiratory or neurological functioning is so severely affected that an
individual will satisfy the requirements to be considered disabled under the regulation.
Such an individual would be entitled to all of the protections afforded by the Act and this
part. In other cases, individuals may be sensitive to environmental elements or to
smoke but their sensitivity will not rise to the level needed to constitute a disability.
For example, their major life activity of breathing may be somewhat, but not substantially,
impaired. In such circumstances, the individuals are not disabled and arex not entitled
to the protections of the statute despite their sensitivity tox environmental agents.
"In sum, the determination as to whether allergies to cigarette smoke, or allergies or
sensitivities characterized by the commenters as environmental illness are disabilities
covered by the regulation must be made using the same case-by-case analysis that is
applied to all other physical or mental impairments. Moreover, the addition of specific
regulatory provisions relating to environmental illness in the final rule would be
inappropriate at this time pending future consideration of the issue by the Architectural
and Transportation Barriers Compliance Board, the Environmental Protection
Agency, and the Occupational Safety and Health Administration of the Department of Labor. ..."
http://www.usdoj.gov/crt/ada/reg2.htmlAnd another two bits' worth by barb: Case-by-case basis is a crock!
At least from my personal experience.For instance, pesticide poisoning often happens without knowledge. How many people are
aware of their workplaces pesticiding schedule? And, often, symptoms associated with exposure
to our modern unwittingly used consumer toxins are insidious. Mainstream medical doctors
have not been astute enough to recognize poisoning by pesticides, let alone, by synthetic
scent. And, often without some grossly obvious application of pesticide or fragrance, one doesn't
realize why one has a headache, one's asthma kicked in, one doesn't feel up to par.But there's another facet to chemical injury. Our reactions are often delayed, we may appear to
be able to handle a chemical assualt without too many apparently disabling effects -- although,
some of us have worked through the quiet ones like headache, sinus pain. (If I didn't go into my
heavy and dramatic coughing, folks thought I was fine.) It was hours later, after the advent of
swelling in the lungs and the production of mucous, that I'd go into an even more serious asthmatic
response. Folks, BREATHING IS A MAJOR LIFE ACTIVITY. We are
wonderfully out of sight of the individuals who wore the synthetic scents, sprayed the synthetic
scent at our doors, sprayed the synthetic scent around our desk, used pesticides instead of
least toxic means of controling pests, used air "fresheners," . . . And then our medical and
government experts can round up the usual suspects: cats, cockroaches, dust mites.Or . . . we suffer brain fog. Anyone trying to remain gainfully employed will also try desperately
to hide those symptoms. I've seen the same behavior pattern in early Alzheimers cases. I , for
one, know when I am suffering brain fog. I also have fairly well-honed coping skills, which
I've used. In my case, mercifully, when the brain hasn't kicked into gear with one task, I've
changed gears and it has seemingly worked with another type. For example, I cannot sort. That
means putting together pieces of a newsletter, alphabatizing or dealing with numbers. But I
think I can write, so I write.Secondly, my former workplace could play both sides of that "on a case-by-case basis" against the
middle ... and I, sure as all get out, was in the middle. I can't tell you the number of times I
heard the "Barb, you are the only one," played out to best suit their interest, not my
accommodation. For the most part, I accommodated my employer, which is how I stayed employed
as long as I did. I can well imagine that of million of others. We've liked our jobs, we've been
outstanding employees, we tried to prevent the decline of our health by seeking relatively
minor accommodations. But as we are seen as the UNreasonable one -- remember it's not
reasonable to ask employees to refrain from wearing scented products -- our health was ruined.Ruined by the synthetically scented products (including pesticides) used in the modern workplace
for personal care and cleaning and maintenance ... both household and janitorial. And for those
who wonder about household products, let me assure you that many clothes laundered
with highly-scented detergents and fabric softeners can outgas in the workplace, adding to the
other polluting VOCs (volatile organic compounds), which synthetic fragrances most definitely
are. And once our toxic thresholds have been lowered, we can be affected by
repeated painting, new carpets, new adhesives, newly oiled shelfing installed before outgassing,
whiteboard cleaners (that killed fish) etc.Clear the air. Clear the air of rulings such as that 1995 DO,J ruling and clear the air of synthetic
fragrance products in public venues . . . especially healthcare facilities!Millions of us in the U.S. -- and millions more worldwide -- are already suffering the effects of
chemical assualt. Our doctors do not recognize the symptoms of chemical poisoning and our
government agencies are complicit in the continued unregulated manufacture of these products.The public cannot base its purchasing decision on truth, for there is no real truth in industry
advertising and public relations campaigns. Heavens, even trying to buy a product labeled
"unscented" or "fragrance-free" is problematic, for products are allowed to carry that misleading
information while still carrying synthetic scents used to mask other chemical odors. See
FDA's: " * fragrance-free - products so labeled may still contain small amounts of
fragrances to mask the fatty odor of soap or other unpleasant odors"
http://vm.cfsan.fda.gov/~dms/cos-safe.htmlTo glimpse truth about the chemicals used to create synthetic scents, visit the
FDA Petition's Analyses http://ehnca.org/www/FDApetition/bkgrinfo.htm#Analyses
and Product label at http://ehnca.org/www/FDApetition/eterbkpg.htm -- barb
- Housing
Safe housing is absolutely critical for the already chemically injured. What I'd like to see is a
concerted effort by the building industry to use safer products from the ground up. One can
also plan the landscape to avoid using toxic chemicals in pesticides. There are lower-emitting
VOC (volatile organic compounds) products such as paint, carpets and adhesives. There are safer
ways to install wiring so one isn't as likely to be subjected to electromagnetic fields. I truly do
not understand why reputable contractors don't seek safer products with which to build
and/or rehabilitate homes. There are just far too many people now living with chemical injury to
continue business as usual. We can make changes that will be better for the already ill, as
well as to help prevent illness in untold others . . . including our pets and the fish and wildlife
downstream. NOW is the hour!-- barb
- How to Be Fragrance Free
By Peggy Munson
http://www.peggymunson.com/mcs/fragrancefree.html
- Ecology House, San Rafael, California
HUD -Access and accommodation
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnlinx/e.htm#HouseAlso see EHN's section on Housing
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnlinx/h.htm#Housing
- Law / Court cases / DOJ rulings
Also see EHN's General Links, page L / Law
I've a question, Why, when it comes to MCS, harassment seems only to be spelled sexualharassment?
Next a thought: American Heritage Dictionary defines NUISANCE as: "2. Law. A use
of property or course of conduct that interferes with the legal rights of others by
causing damage, annoyance, or inconvenience." Perfume and perfumed products,
certainly cause damage to health; are damned annoying to those not yet seriously
sensitized by those petrochemical pollutants but who simply do not enjoy the perfume
emenating from another; and, and I assure one and all that to suddenly experience
anaphylactic shock, an asthmatic attack, a migraine, ataxia, "brain fog," rhinitis,
sinusitis, ear ache, laryngitis, hives, rashes, acne, burning and itching skin, etc., or
several of the above, is deplorably inconvenient. -- barb
Also see EHN's section Assaulted by fragrance
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnlinx/a.htm#Assaulted
- How to Be Fragrance Free
By Peggy Munson
http://www.peggymunson.com/mcs/fragrancefree.html
- ADA Law
References through JAN (Job Accommodation Network)
http://www.jan.wvu.edu/links/adalinks.htm
- Alexander Law Firm
http://www.alexanderlaw.com/index.html
"The Consumer Law Page" is a trademark of
The Alexander Law Firm and Alexander, Hawes & Audet, LLP.
Chemically Induced Diseases: Synergistic Effects and Cumulative
Injuries caused by Toxic Chemicals -- Understanding the Gulf War
Syndrome and Multiple Chemical Sensitivity [MCS]
By Richard Alexander
http://consumerlawpage.com/article/gulfwar.shtml
- DIOXIN IN PENTACHLOROPHENOL:
A CASE STUDY OF CANCER DEATHS IN THE LUMBER INDUSTRY
By Richard Alexander
http://consumerlawpage.com/article/lumber.shtml
- Litigating Preemption Issues After Medtronic v. Lohr
By Brian Wolfman & Allison Zieve
Public Citizen Litigation Group
Copyright 1996, Public Citizen, Inc.
"... A. Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act
"... Second, like many MDA requirements, the requirements of FIFRA are general
and ongoing. For example, if a pesticide manufacturer knows or should know of
an environmental risk posed by its product, the manufacturer is required to
revise its labeling to reflect that risk. Thus, if a plaintiff claims that his or her land
was damaged by a pesticide and that the risk of damage should have been
disclosed on the product¼s label, the complaint should allege that the defendant
negligently failed under state law to comply with duties imposed under FIFRA.
In many cases, the common-law duties on which the plaintiff¼s allegations are
based will mimic the defendant¼s duties under FIFRA, which places the burden of
product testing, identification of product risks, and hazard labeling on the
manufacturer.
http://consumerlawpage.com/article/medtron.shtml#Products
- Book Review: Neuropsychological Toxicology
Review by Richard Alexander
"Neuropsychological Toxicology: Identification and Assessment of Numan Neurotoxic
Syndromes. Second Edition. 525 pp. by David E. Hartman. Published by Plenum Press,
New York, (212-620-8000) $59.50 ISBN 0-306-44922-6. Chapters: Introduction, Evaluation
of Neurotoxic Syndromes, Metals, Solvents, Alcohol,Drugs, Pesticides, Other Neurotoxins,
Psychosomatic Disorders, Forensic and Private Practice Issues, References, Index
In the area of toxic tort litigation, this is a significant reference tool and is strongly
recommended as a "must have" for your library. Written by a Chicago neuropsychologist
who is a nationally-known clinical expert on human toxic exposure effects,
Neuropsychological Toxicology is "the" comprehensive reference for attorneys,
neuropsychologists, physicians, toxicologists and advocates who need information
about diagnosing the effects of toxic brain injury.
If Dr. Hartman's groundbreaking book can be summarized in three points it is that (1)
many workplace chemicals and commonly prescribed pharmaceuticals cause brain injury
and nervous system damage (2) millions of adults and children are exposed to these
substances at work or at home and (3) the resulting "neurotoxic" damage is a special
clinical problem that requires a specialized approach in both diagnosis and litigation. ..."
http://consumerlawpage.com/article/neuro.shtml
From Rachel's -- Environment & Health Weekly, October 19, 1995
Search this site for a wealth of information, then support their efforts! -- barb
http://www.rachel.org
Brought to you by The Consumer Law Page
- Corporate Manipulation of Scientific Evidence Linking Chemical Exposures to
Human Disease: A Case in Point -- Cigarette Science at Johns Hopkins
I cannot emphasize this enough . . . READ THIS! -- barb
http://consumerlawpage.com/article/chemical.shtml
- Toxic Chemicals
A page of helpful links. -- barb
http://consumerlawpage.com/resource/toxicr.shtml
- Awarded Total Permanent Disability due to Multiple Chemical Sensitivity
http://askwaltstollmd.com/archives/mcs/26141.html
- Davis v. Utah State Tax Common Labor & Employment UPDATE - latest issues
Brobeck - Attorneys at Law
http://www.brobeck.com/laborupdate
- Employee with a Heightened Sensitivity to Strong Fragrances
May Be Disabled Under the ADA - August 2000
This link changes periodically. Found it under Issue Alerts Arichive, August 2000 -- barb
http://www.brobeck.com/publications/issues_individual.asp?newsItem=AIA2#3
- STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, FIRST CIRCUIT - NO. 99 CA 2115
* * * * * * * * * *
WILBERT BAZERT VERSUS STATE OF LOUISIANA, DEPARTMENT OF
PUBLIC SAFETY AND CORRECTIONS,
LOUISIANA STATE PENITENTIARY, STATE OF LOUISIANA
JUDGMENT RENDERED: September 22, 2000
The finder wrote: "It's a Louisiana Appeals CourtÝcase where an individual with asthma
and sensitivities to fragrances and chemicals was determined to be "substantially
limited in the major life activity of breathing and was a qualified individual withÝa
disability under the ADA." (TheÝSupreme Court of Louisiana denied the appeal to hear
the case,Ýaffirming the Appeals Court ruling!)ÝThis is significant because courts
haveÝoverwhelming determined that individuals with asthma and/or chemical
sensitivities are not substantially limitedÝ(or limited "enough" to be considered
disabled under the ADA)."
Folks, this is a PDF file. Download Adobe Acrobat to open it. -- barb
http://www.la-fcca.org/Opinions/Pub2000/Sept2000/99CA2115.SEPT.00.pdf
- DOJ
- Nondiscrimination on the Basis of Disability in State and Local Government Services
AGENCY: Department of Justice; EFFECTIVE DATE: January 26, 1992.
"...Sometimes respiratory or neurological functioning is so severely affected that an
individual will satisfy the requirements to be considered disabled under the regulation.
Such an individual would be entitled to all of the protections afforded by the Act and this
part. In other cases, individuals may be sensitive to environmental elements or to
smoke but their sensitivity will not rise to the level needed to constitute a disability.
For example, their major life activity of breathing may be somewhat, but not
substantially,
impaired. In such circumstances, the individuals are not disabled
and are not entitled to the protections of the statute despite their sensitivity to
environmental agents.
"In sum, the determination as to whether allergies to cigarette smoke, or allergies or
sensitivities characterized by the commenters as environmental illness are disabilities
covered by the regulation must be made using the same case-by-case analysis that is
applied to all other physical or mental impairments. Moreover, the addition of specific
regulatory provisions relating to environmental illness in the final rule would be
inappropriate at this time pending future consideration of the issue by the Architectural
and Transportation Barriers Compliance Board, the Environmental Protection Agency,
and the Occupational Safety and Health Administration of the Department of Labor. ..."
http://www.usdoj.gov/crt/ada/reg2.html
- FOIA - 01-03624 (FOIA - Freedom of Information Act)
Letter by John L. Wodatch, Chief, Public Access Section, regarding the use of
fragrances by healthcare staff, in which he states: "Use of fragrances is usually
a matter of personal choice by individual employees, rather than a business or
employment policy. In most circumstances, it would not be "reasonable" to
require an employer to regulate such personal choices by its employees.
THIS is the ruling used against me in my former workplace. One's "personal choice" to
wear and use synthetic petrochemical products -- FRAGRANCES -- pollutes the air for all
regardless of underlying health conditions, including pregnancy. How can the volatilizing
chemicals that are recognized "Common Indoor Air Pollutants" by NIEHS, be
considered an issue of 'PERSONAL CHOICE"? As soon as you pollute the air for everyone,
you've left the concept of PERSONAL in your toxic, noxious waste trail. In my opinion. -- barb
http://www.usdoj.gov:80/crt/foia/tal605.txtAlso at http://www.usdoj.gov:80/crt/foia/cltr159.txt
- EEOC - Fragrance Illness Accommodation - Roberts v. U.S. DOT
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/eroberts.htm
- New Workplace Accommodation Challenges for the 21st Century
Presented by
Mandy J. Gamble, MS, CRC & Tracie D. Sabb, MS
Human Factors Consultants; Job Accommodation Network
A Service of U.S. DOL's Office of Disability Employment Policy
This is a great page of information, but for those of us living with the disabiling effects of
fragrance sensitization, use your Find Command to drop right to their section on
Fragrance Sensitivity. -- barb
http://www.google.com/search?q=cache:gm5j_kCCFjkJ:janweb.icdi.wvu.edu/symposium/Symposium_Handouts/Session3.doc+EEOC+and+fragrance+accommodation&hl=en&ie=UTF-8or http://janweb.icdi.wvu.edu/symposium/Symposium_Handouts/Session3.doc
or how I found it . . .
http://216.239.51.100/search?q=cache:gm5j_kCCFjkJ:janweb.icdi.wvu.edu/symposium/Symposium_Handouts/Session3.doc+EEOC+and+fragrance+accommodation&hl=en&ie=UTF-8
- Scent Sensitive Nurse Sues LDS
By Michael Vigh; The Salt Lake Tribune
"LDS Hospital nurse Susan Bell says she suffered for more than a year from daily
headaches, eye irritation, swelling of her face and lips and other symptoms because
her co-workers doused themselves in perfume or cologne. Bell, 57, says she became
the office laughingstock for supervisors and colleagues, some of whom continued to
bathe in their perfumes even after she told them it made her sick. She worked at the
hospital for more than a decade before she took a disability leave in March 2001. ..."
http://www.sltrib.com/2002/oct/10152002/utah/7273.htm
- SNIFF - Safe Notification and Information for Fragrances Act
"107th CONGRESS - 1st Session - H. R. 1947
To amend the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act to require that fragrances
containing known toxic substances or allergens be labeled accordingly.
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
May 22, 2001 - Ms. SCHAKOWSKY (for herself, and Ms. BERKLEY) introduced the
following bill; which was referred to the Committee on Energy and Commerce
A BILL
To amend the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act to require that fragrances
containing known toxic substances or allergens be labeled accordingly.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the
United States of America in Congress assembled. ...
Go to Thomas, enter 'hr 1947' without quotes, and click search. -- barb
http://thomas.loc.gov/home/thomas.html
- Worker Sensitive to Perfume, Hand Lotion Can Proceed with
ADA Claim, Court Rules
From BNA Daily Labor Report
http://web.archive.org/web/20020607071609/http://www.shrm.org/hrnews/articles/default.asp?page=bna0517c.htm
- Lawns
- American PIE (Public Information on the Environment)
Safe to Play On signs
http://www.americanpie.org
- Are children at greater risk from pesticide poisoning than adults? (You decide)
http://www.safe2use.com/data/kids.htm
- Canaries - NO ACCEPTABLE RISK - Campaign
Linda McElvers
http://www.noacceptablerisk.com/
- EISC/SCSE -- Environmental Illness Society of Canada
La sociÈtÈ canadienne pour les sensibilitÈs environnementales
http://www.eisc.ca/books.htm#16
- Healthy Lawn Care for Healthy Communities
Vermont PIRG (Public Interest Research Group)
http://www.vpirg.org/campaigns/environmentalHealth/pesticideFreeLawn.html
- Marin Beyond Pesticides (MBP)
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/mbplabug.htm
- Pesticide Free Naturally - A campaign to reduce the cosmetic use of pesticides.
Green Communities
http://www.gca.ca/pesticides.htm
- Tips For Healthy Pesticide-Free Lawns'n'Gardens
CAPs (Canadians Against Pesticides)
http://www.caps.20m.com/tips.htm
MCS Proclamations
Oct. 2002 -- I cannot believe two years have flown by, since I last put effort into this
section, but they have. If you know of cities or states that I haven't listed, as well as those that have
their proclamations up on websites, please inform me of the links. Logs are also availabloe from:
North Carolina Chemical Injury Network
http://www.rtk.net/ncci/NCCIMCSAwareness.htm
Before going further with the proclamations, maybe it's a good idea for all to read:
Multiple Chemical Sensitivity: A 1999 Consensus
http://heldref.org/html/Consensus.html2004 -
Florida: May 7-13, 2004Missouri: May 9-15, 2004
I'll add to this list as I learn of states that recognize toxic injury/MCS. You can help by
keeping me informed. E-mail: Thanks. -- barb2003 - If you know of any MCS Awareness Week Proclamations for 2003,
please contact me at2000 -
MCS Awareness Proclamations 1998 - 2000
1999 and 1998 Proclamations by state: Health & Environment Rescource Center
Brought to you by theNational Coalition for the Chemically Injured (NCCI)
http://www.rtknet.org/ncci/NCCIMCSAwareness.htm
Connecticut
Florida
Illinois
Kentucky
Massachusetts
Michigan
Detroit (Mayor)
Ann Arbor (Mayor)
Livonia (Mayor)
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Nevada
New Hampshire
New Mexico
North Carolina
Vermont
Washington
http://www.herc.org/together/proclamations.htm#VT
Information by state, over time, as I've been able to collect . . . or upload. -- barb
-- end proclamations . . . Includes copies I've uploaded and links I have found --
- California
Note, the gaps in information regarding the proclamations does not reflect any lag of
interest, merely my yo-yo experiences with health (ups and downs depending upon
exposures. Fabric softeners are the bane of my existance as they are for so many who
live with the effects of chemical injury. Despite the fact that there are regulations
regarding nuisances, there is no control from the powers that be.
2000 - Silence from Gov. Davis about MCS Awareness Week
Fall 2002 - I did not pursue MCS Proclamation in 2002.
September 2002 - Gov. Davis signed an important bill, which was authored by
Assembly Pro Tem, Keeley. This is not only an acknowledgement of the need for cleaner
idoor air, but sets up a process by which we just might get it. -- barb
From The Capitol Report from the American Lung Association of CA
Date: 01 Oct 2002 22:51:35 -0000
Indoor Air Quality
You can join ALA's Advocacy Network by filling out the form on:
ALAC-sponsored AB 1173 (Keeley) requires the California Air Resources Board to
write a report to the Legislature that analyzes the most important sources of indoor air
pollution in schools, workplaces, homes and other locations and recommends
measures for reducing public exposures and negative health impacts.
http://lungaction.org/AM_LUNG_CA/join.html?r=LdzLM411jP-_E
- Connecticut --
- 1998 - 2002 - Includes Guidelines and Sample Proclamation
http://www.ECHOMCSCT.homestead.com/Proclamations.html
- Old link to Connecticut 2000 Proclamation
http://members.aol.com/ECHOMCSCT/GovPro.home11.html
- 1998 - Mirrored on EHN's site
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/proclamations/connproc.htm
- Florida
2002 - Multiple Chemical Sensitivity Week . . . signed by Governor Jeb Bush
http://www.NCchem.com/aware/fla2002.htm2000 - Governor Jeb Bush Declares May 7-14 MCS Awareness Week
http://www.ourlittleplace.com/proclamation.html
- Bradenton, Florida -- 1998
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/proclamations/bradfla.htm
- Hawaii
2001 -
Listed by ECHO; scroll downhttp://www.ECHOMCSCT.homestead.com/Proclamations.html
Listed by North Carolina Chemical Injury Network
http://www.NCchem.com//aware/2001_proclamations.htm2000 - Senate recognition
Reprinted by request on EHN's site
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/proclamations/hawaii1.htm
- Illinois
2001
http://www.NCchem.com/aware/illinois2001.htmListed on ECHO for year 2001 and 1999, also
http://www.ECHOMCSCT.homestead.com/Proclamations.html1999
1999: I must simply enter the information -- Fall 2002 . . . now I've got to find it again! -- barb
- Kansas
2002 - http://www.NCchem.com//mcskansas.htm
2002 - Listed by ECHO
http://www.ECHOMCSCT.homestead.com/Proclamations.html2001 - Listed by North Carolina Chemical Injury Network
http://www.NCchem.com//aware/2001_proclamations.htm
- Kentucky
- Massachusetts
2000 - Listed by ECHO; scroll down
http://www.ECHOMCSCT.homestead.com/Proclamations.html
1999 - http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/proclamations/massproc.htm
- Michigan
- Mississippi
2002 - http://www.NCchem.com//aware/miss2002.htm
2001 - http://www.NCchem.com//aware/miss2001.htm
2001 and 2002 Listed by ECHO; scroll down
http://www.ECHOMCSCT.homestead.com/Proclamations.html2000
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/proclamations/mississ1.htm
- Missouri
2002 - Listed by North Carolina Chemical Injury Network
http://www.NCchem.com//aware/2002_proclamations.htm2001 -Listed by North Carolina Chemical Injury Network
http://www.NCchem.com//aware/2001_proclamations.htm1998
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/proclamations/missouri.htmMissouri 1998, 1999 and 2001, listed by Echo
http://www.ECHOMCSCT.homestead.com/Proclamations.html
- Nevada
November 1999 -
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/proclamations/nevada1.htm
- New Hampshire
2000 - Listed on ECHO; scroll down
http://www.ECHOMCSCT.homestead.com/Proclamations.html
- New Mexico
1998 - http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/proclamations/newmex.htm
1998 and 1999 - Listed by ECHO; scroll down
http://www.ECHOMCSCT.homestead.com/Proclamations.html
- North Carolina
- 2002 - CFIDS - http://www.NCchem.com//aware/nccfids2002.htm
- 2002 - MCS - http://www.NCchem.com//aware/ncmcs2002.htm
- 2001 - http://www.NCchem.com//aware/ncmcs2001.htm
- 2000 - http://www.governor.state.nc.us/govoffice/citizen/Y2K/MAY/multchem.htm
- 1999 - http://www.governor.state.nc.us/govoffice/citizen/chemsens.htm
- 1998 - http://ncchem.com/mcs_awareness.htm
- Ohio
- Vermont -
Oct. 9, 1998 - Congressman Bernie Sanders read into the Congressional Record
http://www.herc.org/together/proclamations.htm#VT
- Washington
2002 - http://www.NCchem.com//Wash2002.htm1999 - 2002 Listed by ECHO; scroll down
http://www.ECHOMCSCT.homestead.com/Proclamations.html
- 2000 -
Available as PDF format
http://members.aol.com/wsmcsn/proclamation.html
Text mirrored by EHN:
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/proclamations/washst.htm
- 1998 - http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/proclamations/washproc.htm
- Meeting Notices
Also see:
Cities / States, above
Hospitals, above
Schools, below
Workplaces, below
Better yet, just scroll through this document. You may see something you like under places of
worship, states, dances, ... If you know of a meeting notice that you found to your liking, please
share it with the rest of us. This page is here to help everyone gain the accommodation that
was unavilable to me while I was still gainfully employed. -- barb
Five items to read, then on to the wording for fragrance-free meeting notices:Frankly, I'm personally more concerened with the man-made, petrochemically derived
COMBINATIONS of chemicals used to make modern fragrances (and their twin,
flavors) that have been added to an ever larger array of products and advertised
widely so more people use them 24/7, than I am with those made by Mother Nature.
But, admittedly, I do not suffer common allergies -- which is something I've stated all
along and had proved eventually by expensive tests. But, while these days, I can be
around some essential oils -- distilled, not solvent extracted! -- I NEVER use scented
anything, for who knows when I'll encounter someone allergic to even a scented oil?
But while there is such a hue and cry about supplements and essential oils and
government regulation, no one bothers to look at the flavors and fragrance industry,
who along with Big Pharma has been growing out their bottom lines on the backs of the
sickened public. Where are government standards for this poisoning industry?
With the flavors and fragrance industry, there is no accounting to the FDA or any other
government agency, their products are released to market without full substantiation
of safety, the industry that makes our commonly used mainstream flavors and
fragrances are favored by trade secret laws. That means that although other companyies
can learn of the chemicals used in the manufacture of a flavor or fragrance through
a process called reverse analysis, the general public, their doctors, our government
agencies charged with protecting public health CANNOT. Not without expensive
laboratory tests. And that, my friends, is what EHN's petition 99P-1340 is all about.
Please write to the FDA at fdadockets@oc.fda.gov
Tell the FDA about your adverse reactions to fragrances . . . either from products you
personally have used, OR, from just breathing in those used by others. -- barb
- Fragrance: Emerging Health and Environmental Concerns
Betty Bridges Flavour and Fragrance Journal
Volume 17, Issue 5, 2002; pages 361-371 Published Online: 16 Apr 2002 http://www.fpinva.org/FragranceReview.htm
- "Just a note, personally, if someone is pregnant, we would not use any
Fragrance, Essential Oil or Aromatherapy items. It makes no difference if products come
from mother nature (The greatest Perfumer of us all) or if they are synthetically
produced, you're dealing with chemicals."
The Good Scents Company
http://www.thegoodscentscompany.com/misc/safety.html
- How to Be Fragrance Free
By Peggy Munson
http://www.peggymunson.com/mcs/fragrancefree.html
- Perfumes and Asthma - don¼t mix
Cited information with links from Anderson Laboratories. Print it out and share! -- barb
http://www.andersonlaboratories.com/alweb30.htmOr, feel free to print and distribute Barb's version (with blessings from J. Anderson,MD, PhD
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnlinx/donmix.htm
- "When No Scents Makes Sense
"Please remember to be aware of those people with asthma, allergies, and other lung
conditions, whose health is adversely affected when they are exposed to scented products.
You can help by not wearing such things as perfumes, colognes and aftershaves -
to places like church services, Christmas parties, or other public gatherings.
"If you would like to know more about scent-free or fragrance-free products available
on PEI, please call our office for our pamphlet, or check out our website at www.pei.lung.ca."
Be savy, for even on their scent-free page, they list a standard insect repellent and unscented,
standard fabric softeners. Always winnow all information . . . even what I provide! -- barb
http://www.pei.lung.ca/scentfree.html.]-----
- Access Board Meetings
"The Board's bylaws provide that Board meetings be held on the Wednesday following
the second Tuesday of every other month. The meeting dates for future committee
and Board meetings are listed below. The first day listed is a Monday in the event
there is a need for a three-day Board meeting. Under its fragrance-free policy, the Board
requests that all participants refrain from wearing perfume, cologne and other
fragrances, and use unscented personal care products in order to promote a fragrance-
free environment at its meetings and other public events.
http://www.access-board.gov/about/boardmembers.htm
- ACCESS BOARD MEETING POLICY
http://www.access-board.gov/news/fragrance-policy.htm
On July 26, 2000, the Access Board adopted the following policy:
- Federal Register notices announcing Board meetings will include the statement
that: "Persons attending Board meetings are requested to refrain from using perfume,
cologne, and other fragrances for the comfort of other participants."
- A sign will be posted outside Board meeting rooms reminding persons attending
the meetings to refrain from using fragrances.
- Hotels and other facilities where Board meetings are held will be requested to
remove or disconnect any fragrance emitting devices from the meeting rooms and
adjoining restrooms, and not to schedule any remodeling activities (e.g., painting,
wallpapering) or shampoo carpets or apply pesticides prior to Board meetings.
- Board Adopts Policy to Promote Fragrance-Free Environments
http://www.access-board.gov/news/fragrance.htm
- The Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry
Public Health Service; U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Announces:
The International Congress on Hazardous Waste:
Impact on Human and Ecological Health
Atlanta Marriott Marquis Hotel; Atlanta, Georgia; June 5-8, 1995
" Fragrance Alert
"Congress attendees are requested to be mindful of
http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/cong95.html
attendees with fragrance allergies."
- Air & Waste Management Association
http://www.awma.org/
- Indoor Air Quality Problems and Engineering Solutions
July 21-23, 2003
Preliminary Program Agenda
TUESDAY, JULY 22 SESSION 3A: INDOOR POLLUTANT SOURCES Chair: Bruce A. Tichenor, Consultant ...
Preliminary Program
8:40 Scented Products: An Overlooked Source of Indoor Air Pollution
Betty Bridges, Fragranced Products Information Network9:00 Air Fresheners as Indoor Sources
Kenneth A. Krebs, U.S. EPA, ORD, NRMRL
http://www.awma.org/events/confs/IAQ2003/agenda.aspor PDF file, in which you can read, on page 7:
Advance Registration Form
"Please do not wear cologne or other scented products (including
http://www.awma.org/events/confs/IAQ2003/IAQPreliminary2003.pdf
scented hair spray, hand lotion, aftershave, etc.) while attending this
event. Many fragrance chemicals can cause severe distress to attendees
with respiratory sensitivity to such products. Thanks for helping
A&WMA to ensure the comfort of all attendees."
- American Chemical Society
"At an American Chemical Society meeting held in August 1998 in Boston, Massachusetts,
attendees were asked not to wear fragrances due to the number of chemically
sensitive people attending the meeting. "
Source, Scents & Sensitivity;Environmental Health Perspectives
Volume 106, December 12, 1998
http://ehpnet1.niehs.nih.gov/docs/1998/106-12/focus.html
- American Public Health Association (APHA)
131st Annual Meeting and Exposition
November 15-19, 2003; San Francisco, California
Chemical Sensitivity
http://www.apha.org/meetings/access.htm#cs"The APHA Annual Meeting is a smoke-free event. Smoking is not permitted in
any of the meeting rooms used for scientific sessions, business meetings or APHA
sponsored social events. In addition, the Moscone Center is a smoke-free
environment. Be aware however, that hotels do allow smoking in some public areas.
Specific requests will be made to the hotels that chemicals not be used on the
meeting room carpeting within 4 days of the commencement of our meeting and that
only unscented products be used in guest rooms. In addition, APHA requests
that its meeting attendees refrain from the use of perfumes, hair sprays and other
chemicals, for the comfort and health of all our registrants."Please note that Exhibit Hall carpeting will be laid out the night before the exhibits
open, and because this is new carpeting, it may present problems for people with
chemical sensitivities.
NOTE: I've attended functions in Moscone Center and the new carpeting laid out always
adversely affected my health. I should hope by now, safer products would be used.-- barb
- ATSDR -The Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry
Public Health Service, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Announces: The International Congress on Hazardous Waste:
Impact on Human and Ecological Health
Atlanta Marriott Marquis Hotel, Atlanta, Georgia; June 5-8, 1995
In searching ATSDR site for "fragrance," the following is the only item that came up. -- barb
" Fragrance Alert
"Congress attendees are requested to be mindful of attendees with
fragrance allergies."
Notice that date, folks. 1995 And you'd think this agency would be interested in
diseases caused by our modern scented products, but an exchange -- one of unsolicited snottines
by one of ATSDR staff -- put me straight on that score. I was told ATSDR practices SOUND
SCIENCE, not something like an analysis of several perfumes to see their chemical make-up
and then learn how much is known about individula chemicals, as in the FDA Petition, 99P-1340. -- barb
http://www.atsdr.cdc.gov/cong95.html
- 1999 joint meeting including ATSDR & CDC
The Health Impact of Chemical Exposures During the Gulf War:
A research Planning Conference
They say, "A picture is worth a thousand words."
I say, Thank you, Peggy D. March 1999Folks, that's the ATSDR, which is the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry AND the CDC -- the agency that always leaves out its most important initial, P -- CDC really stands for the Centers for Disease Control and PREVENTION. These are a couple of our government agencies who, in my personal opinion, have done their level best to really screw up the lives of those living with MCS . . . the disability that cannot say its name out loud. -- barb
- Bioneers 2002
Under, "Helpful Information," page 10:
"Fragrances: In deference to the sensitivity of those around you,
we ask that you please refrain from wearing perfumes, aftershaves, and
other strongly scented fragrances."
Alas, this helpful information doesn't appear on their website in 2004.
I'll look for it in my registration materials when they arrive. -- barb
http://www.bioneers.org
- Build it Green
Alameda and Contra Costa counties, California
http://www.builditgreen.org/
- Build It Green Home Tour -- June 4, 2006 "PERFUMES: "DO NOT wear fragrances and scented products for the health
and comfort for all tour participants."
Excellent advice for wherever you go, whatever you do! Thank you BUILD IT GREEN! -- barb
- California Department of Food & Agriculture
Pierce's Disease (Glassy-winged Sharpshooter) Control
Program Meeting Announcements
PUBLIC HEARING ON PROPOSED CHANGES IN THE
PIERCE'S DISEASE PROGRAM REGULATIONS
Date and Location:
Note:
January 21, 2003
Sacramento County
Department of Agriculture
4137 Branch Center Road
Sacramento, California
Time:
Prehearing regististration: 9 to 10 am
Hearing begins at 10 am
Hearing ends at 3:30 pm or when there are no persons present who wish to speak
(whichever is earlier)
Contact:
Stephen Brown
(916) 654-1017
In consideration of others, meeting attendees
are requested to refrain from wearing perfumes,
colognes, or other scented personal care products.
Thanks, Linda McElver, President Canaries Foundation, Inc. noacceptablerisk.com/.-- barb
http://www.cdfa.ca.gov/phpps/pdcp/gwTFMeet.htm
- Chicago Area's CFCCC Groups
Quoted from CFCCC 's Spring 2005 meeting announcement. -- barb"No scents makes sense!
":Many members are chemically sensitive and suffer when exposed to scented products.
As a precaution, please avoid wearing to meetings: perfume, hair spray, after-shave,
deodorant or other cosmetics, clothing with lingering tobacco [perfume! (bw)]
or laundry detergent/softener/bleach smells, recent dry-cleaning, new leather items
or other scented products. Even unscented detergents make sensitive people feel ill."The safest: unscented Twenty Mule Borax, unscented Arm & Hammer Super Washing
Soda (other Arm & Hammer products may contain fragrance), Allens Naturally or plain
baking soda."We are fortunate to have such a considerate group! Thank you! We look forward to
seeing you!"
- CleanMed
CleanMed 2002 will be held on 25 - 26 October 2002 at the Holiday Inn Chicago Mart Plaza
Fragrance-Free Event
"For the health and comfort of conference participants please refrain from wearing
perfume, cologne, aftershave, and scented skin or hair products.
http://www.cleanmed.org/2002/overview.html
- See Cities / States above
- gender BLUR
"So that everyone can be comfortable, please do not wear cologne, perfume,
or other scented products. " http://www.genderblur.org/about_no_scent.html
- Generic notices -- Examples of requests for fragrance-free public venues:
- So we may be fully accessible to all people with disabilities,
please do not use or wear scented products such as perfume, aftershave,
deodorant, lotion, scented hair care products, or clothing that was recently
dry-cleaned or laundered with fabric softeners. Et cetera. Our facilities
are wheelchair accessible. Materials in alternate formats and assistive
listening devices are available upon request.
- Please refrain from wearing scented products as there may be attendees
susceptible to environmental illnesses.
- To accommodate meeting participant(s) with severe reactions to fragrances,
we respectfully request that members of the public refrain from wearing
cologne/perfume, etc
- Please do not wear perfume or strong scents to your appointment.
- We request that all participants refrain from wearing perfume, cologne and
other fragrances, and use unscented personal care products in order to promote
a fragrance-free environment.
- This is a fragrance free zone.
- This meeting is fragrance free.
- This meeting is fragrance free for everyone's comfort.
- Please remember that this is a fragrance free meeting.
- Thank you for making this a fragrance free meeting.
- Please leave your scented products at home to use for your own enjoyment.
- Rosedale/Grandmont Baseball League of Detroit
Policy regarding smoking and wearing of fragrances
Fragrance And Chemical Sensitivity Support Group
"The policy notes that 'scented products contain numerous toxic chemicals' and,
because these 'can cause serious breathing and neurological reactions in
environmentally sensitive people,' it says 'wearing fragrances, like smoking
tobacco, is not just a personal preference -- it is a vital matter of public health'."
http://www.geocities.com/fragranceallergy/RosedaleGrandmontBaseballLeagueDetroit.html
- Sierra Club
"For the protection of health, we request that those attending Chapter meetings
do not wear fragrances."
http://sanfranciscobay.sierraclub.org/yodeler/html/1998/12/16.htm
and
http://sanfranciscobay.sierraclub.org/yodeler/html/1999/01/events.html
- Southeastern PA and Central & Southern NJ
"Bucks County Life and Health Management Self Help Group. ... Dress comfortably,
fragrance free meetings. "
http://www.wisdom-magazine.com/Calendar/panj.htm
- US Nuclear Regulatory Commission's Public Meeting Notice
"... Additionally, to accommodate meeting participant(s) with severe
allergies to fragrances, we respectfully request that members of the
public refrain from wearing cologne/perfume."
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/mcsmtno.htm
- State of Washington
Governor's Committee on Disability Issues and Employment
"Fragrance Free Group Settings - GCDE will include in the notification
of meetings and conferences, in the accessibility and accommodations
information section, that it is the policy of GCDE to hold fragrance free
meetings.Ý Notices will ask participants and attendees to limit their use of
colognes, perfumes, after shave, and scented lotions and hair sprays,
etc. in group settings."
http://www.wa.gov/esd/gcde/policy.htm
- Police
- Disabilities Awareness Guide
San Francisco Police Department
Environmental Illness (Multiple Chemical Sensitivites, E.I.)
[from page 17]
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/mcssfpd.htm
- Posters (opens a new window)
Posters
- San Francisco Vocational Services, San Francisco CA
"Our facility has a fragrance-free policy for those with environmental sensitivities"
http://www.sfvocationalservices.org/welcome.htm
- School (including Universities)
I think this is so important, I've scattered this info throughout this page . . . including here!
- Accommodating Employees with Environmental Sensitivities
Debra Sine, Leslirae Rotor and Elizabeth Hare
A 51 page PDF file, definitely worth printing out. Includes section called "Guidelines for
Managers," Part 4 and "Employee Awareness Kit," Part 5. What caught my attention was
this line in Part 4: "Remember that the goal of accommodation is to enable the employee to
remain a productive member of the office team."When I was still gainfully employed, that is all that I was requesting! Alas, the management
team felt otherwise and in my opinion, their decision to continue business as usual may have
contributed to many staff suffering various diseases that are environmentally caused such as
rheumatoid arthritis, cancers, upper and lower respiratory problems, migraines, Parkinson's
. . . and, of course, ultimately my developing MCS. This is my opinion. -- barb
http://www.healthyindoors.com/english/ resources/workplace1.pdf
- New Workplace Accommodation Challenges for the 21st Century
Presented by
Mandy J. Gamble, MS, CRC & Tracie D. Sabb, MS
Human Factors Consultants; Job Accommodation Network
A Service of U.S. DOL's Office of Disability Employment Policy
This is a great page of information, but for those of us living with the disabiling effects of
fragrance sensitization, use your Find Command to drop right to their section on
Fragrance Sensitivity. -- barb
http://www.google.com/search?q=cache:gm5j_kCCFjkJ:janweb.icdi.wvu.edu/symposium/Symposium_Handouts/Session3.doc+EEOC+and+fragrance+accommodation&hl=en&ie=UTF-8or http://janweb.icdi.wvu.edu/symposium/Symposium_Handouts/Session3.doc
or how I found it . . .
http://216.239.51.100/search?q=cache:gm5j_kCCFjkJ:janweb.icdi.wvu.edu/symposium/Symposium_Handouts/Session3.doc+EEOC+and+fragrance+accommodation&hl=en&ie=UTF-8
Also see section on Workplaces!
How to Be Fragrance Free
By Peggy Munson
http://www.peggymunson.com/mcs/fragrancefree.html
E-Magazine's Advice & Dissent
Letters by Susan Vaughn and Barb Wilkie regarding article, "Smelling Good But Feeling Bad"
http://www.emagazine.com/may-june_2000/0500advdis.htmlAlso see General Suggestions
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/takheart.htm#AccessFragrance-sensitized Teachers and Students need Fragrance-FREE schools.
People not yet recognizing symptoms of fragrance sensitization need scent-free too.-- barb
- American Lung Association's Virginia chapter
How Friendly is the Air Quality in Your Child¼s School?
Excerpted: "... Some common triggers are exposure to cigarette smoke;
strong odors such as paint, perfume, glue, scented candles, air fresheners, molds
and mildews, chalk dust and dust in old carpets or upholstered furniture. ..."
http://www.lungusa.org/virginia/friendly.html
- Bellingham Public Schools
Bellingham, Massachusetts
Dept of Ed. Office of Civil Rights Resolution Letter showing the
School's Policy of concerning teachers and students refraining from
wearing fragrances.
"OCR urges the District to continue to reissue and implement, annually,
http://www.ed.gov/offices/OCR/letters/bellinghamres.html
its voluntary policy concerning teachers and students refraining from
wearing fragrances that may cause the Student to have an allergic reaction."
- Canada
McGraw -Hill Ryerson - Educational Resources
Performance Task: Fragrance Free Environments
http://www.mcgrawhill.ca/school/booksites/chemistry+12/student+resources/toc/unit+1+organic+chemistry/performance+task+fragrance+free+environments/task.php- CCH Canada
Examples of Accommodation: When Fragrances Are Toxic
by Beata Nowakowska, Senior Editor, CCH Canadian Limited.
"...[N]o-scent policies or scent-free encouragement programs make sense in many
Well said, CCH Canada. Would it were my former workplace took such an intelligent position. -- barb
circumstances. Prevention is the best practice that any employer can adopt in the
workplace. No amount of human suffering is justifiable. In the case of fragrance-
associated health problems, prevention and avoidance are the only cures. Health
advisories and a well-informed workforce make for happier and more productive
employees. "
http://www.ca.cch.com/emonthly/sept/hr/index1.aspOr available through
http://www.ca.cch.com/emonthly/sept/hr/index1.asp#self
- CCOHS - Canadian Centre for Occupational and Health Safety
Indoor Air Quality: A Legitimate OSH Concern
"... The reason IAQ problems are difficult to determine is that building occupants are
exposed to not one but several adverse conditions. For example, you might not think
that the slight emissions from furniture, carpets, photocopiers, or the perfume worn by
your co-workers could be harmful, but in combination they can affect your health.
Again, these effects are impossible to trace accurately, but the condition does have a
name: Multiple Chemical Sensitivity (MCS). ..." http://www.ccohs.ca/headlines/text27.html
- Health & Safety Programs - Scent-Free Policy for the Workplace
http://www.ccohs.ca/oshanswers/hsprograms/scent_free.html
- Canadian Schools
For interesting background on fragrance-free policies in Canada, and their struggles
with the fragrance industry, see EHN's page
Halifax -- Another Perspective: Press Releases and Statements
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnlinx/aaprbb.htm
- Auburn Drive High School, Halifax
Environmental Illness: A Reality in Today's Schools
by John Sandy Chisholm; Nova Scotia Teachers Union
http://www.nstu.ns.ca/aviso/Fall98/enviro.html
- Brookfield Junior High School Brookfield, Nova Scotia Canada
" Scent Free" Policy: "Our school has adopted a "scent free" policy since 1996-97. This means that any
perfume or fragrance is not permitted in our school. This is followed by not only
the students, but the staff as well. There are a few students and staff that find
discomfort with odors and the policy was put in place for their protection. All the
staff and students have accepted the policy graciously."
http://www.ednet.ns.ca/educ/schoolpages/bjhs/History.html
- Citizens for A Safe Learning Environment
Halifax, Nova Scotia
http://www.chebucto.ns.ca/Education/CASLE/examples.html
- Scent-Free Healthy Schools September 1998
by K. Robinson
http://www.chebucto.ns.ca/Education/CASLE/scentfree.html
- Sick Schools Sandra Moser & Avis Degaust
http://www.nstu.ns.ca/aviso/winter01/sick.html
- Dalhousie University: Environmental Health & Safety Home Page
http://is.dal.ca/~ehs/index.htm
- A Scent-Free Campaign 2002-2003
Message from the President To Members of the University Community
"... There is a growing understanding that harm is caused to many people from exposure
to scented products.Ý Scented products make them sick.Ý The law is also moving
towards protection of people with environmental sensitivities.Ý For example, the Nova
Scotia Human Rights Commission will consider discrimination complaints by persons
with chemical sensitivities on the basis that they have a disability."Therefore, the University is launching We Share the Air 2002-2003, a scent-free campaign
that is a co-operative effort between the Environmental Health and Safety Office and
the Employment Equity Office. ..."
http://www.dal.ca/~scentfre/index.shtml
- DALHOUSIE ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH AND SAFETY POLICY
Issued: August 2, 1988; Issued by: President's Office
Reviewed by the Environmental Health and Safety Committee: April 2003
POLICY STATEMENT
" ... All Faculty, staff and students are expected to take individual responsibility for safe
working practices and procedures so as to safeguard their own individual health and
well being as well as that of all their colleagues."
http://www.dal.ca/%7Eehs/radiatio_1530.html
MYTHS
http://www.dal.ca/~scentfre/myths.shtml
- Q & A:
4. What is Multiple Chemical Sensitivity (MCS)?
"... There are many theories about the cause of this illness, and at present there is much
that we do not understand about the condition.Ý But while the research continues, the
only reliable way to avoid painful and dangerous reactions is for the MCS sufferer to
avoid as many triggers as possible.Ý While people with MCS are responsible for ensuring
that their home environments are as free as possible from chemical triggers, they
require the cooperation of others to make their classrooms, workplaces and recreational
sites safe. ..."
I've used that famous line from "Streetcar ..." about relying upon the kindness of strangers.
It is true. If perfume were loud sound, most people would not dream of being so rude as to take it
into public venues like classrooms, workplaces, healthcare facilities, transit conveyances,
places of worship. But, by George, they sure fight and often nastily at that, about their right to
wear strong scents, heavily applied in public places.
http://www.dal.ca/~scentfre/faq.shtml#mcs7. What happens if I don't adopt scent-free practices?
"You are taking the risk of possibly causing harm, perhaps even severe pain and
discomfort, to someone around you; harm that could easily be avoided.Ý...
http://www.dal.ca/~scentfre/faq.shtml#whathappens
- How to Handle 'Scent-Sensitive Situations'
Guidelines for Students, Staff, Faculty
"The following is designed to provide some guidelines for the handling of what is a
sensitive issue for many people.Ý How do you deal with complaints in the office, in the
classroom, and in public spaces at the university?
http://www.dal.ca/~scentfre/guide.shtml
- Statement on the Use of Scented Products A MUST READ!
http://is.dal.ca/~ehs/scent.htm
- Examples of Accommodation: When Fragrances Are Toxic
CCH Canadian
http://www.ca.cch.com/emonthly/sept/hr/index1.asp#self
- Ian Forsyth School, Dartmouth, N. S. "Scent Free" Policy
"Ian Forsyth School asks staff, students and visitors to refrain
from wearing scented products and/or bringing peanut
products into the school. We have members in our school
community who have serious allergies to these products."
http://ianforsyth.ednet.ns.ca/HealthSafety.htm
- Halifax West High School
The "sleeping giant" and other schools
by K. Robinson; UPdate Fall 1999
"...About 80% of Halifax Region schools have voluntary
scent-free, fragrance-free programs. ..."
http://www.environmentalhealth.ca/fall99sleepgiant.html
- Hillville Elementary School
Vernon, B.C. V1B 3A5
Scroll down a bit for their Fragrance Free Policy. -- barb
"Hillview School recognizes that the air is shared by all persons on premises and
those that visit the school. Suitable air quality is important in fostering a healthy
learning and working environment. Maintaining suitable air quality requires continual
attentiveness to eliminate unfavorable conditions. To this end, Hillview School is
designated a fragrance free zone. Staff, parents and volunteers are asked to refrain
from using scented personal products, especially perfume, cologne, hair spray that
has a fragrance detectable by another person."
http://www.sd22.bc.ca/hillview/bulletins/oct7-02.htm
- Montague Regional High School
Montague, Prince Edward Island, Canada
No Scents Makes Sense
Taking the Scents out of Sensitive
http://www.edu.pe.ca/montaguehigh/scents.htm
- The Shambhala School
Halifax, Nova Scotia
Look for No Scents. -- barb
http://www.shambhalaschool.org/Handbook/procedure4.htm
- Smokey Drive Elementary School Lower Sackville, N.S. B4C 3G1
Scroll down to Fragrance Free Environment in table. -- barb
http://www.sdes.ednet.ns.ca/departments/school_policies.htm
- University of Waterloo
- GUIDELINES ON WEARING SCENTED PRODUCTS
Health and Safety Program Manual
http://www.safetyoffice.uwaterloo.ca/hspm/hygiene/scent/scent_guidelines.htm
- PROCEDURES FOR REPORTING BUILDING AIR QUALITY PROBLEMS
http://www.safetyoffice.uwaterloo.ca/hspm/documents/hygiene/Air%20Quality%20Procedures.htm
- We Share The Air posters
"Disclaimer: This information is intended for use by the University of Waterloo's
campus community. While the material contained may be reproduced by other
individuals and organizations the University of Waterloo does not warrant its
application to other campuses or workplaces. Comments are welcomed and may be
directed to the Safety Office."
http://www.safetyoffice.uwaterloo.ca/hspm/documents/hygiene/Posters.htm
Bulletin, Monday, December 20, 1999: Aroma posters are sent out
http://www.bulletin.uwaterloo.ca/1999/dec/20mo.html
- When Fragrances Can Kill
New Westminster's newspaper, The Record
http://www.royalcityrecord.com/013102/community/013102co2.html
- Windsor Regional Middle School
It's all in your head, isn't it?
by Steven Van Zoost; Nova Scotia Teachers Union
http://www.nstu.ns.ca/aviso/Fall98/head.html-- end list of Canadian Schools --
- Cecil Community College
North East ,MD
"Fragrance-Free Statement
"Cecil Community College strives to maintain an environment comfortable for all.
As a courtesy to College employees who express sensitivity to fragrances, the College
requests students and staff to please refrain from wearing scented products on campus.
The College deeply appreciates student and staff cooperation and support."
http://www.cecil.cc.md.us/Student_Services/handbook.htm
- Challenge Charter School, Glendale, Arizona
Environmental Heath Policies This page contains extensive and pertinent information that could be used
as a guideline for any school, regarding pesticides, scented products and
science chemicals -- barb
http://www.challengecharterschool.net/enviromentalpolicy.htm
- Classical Charter School
McKinley Site, Appleton Wisconsin
Family Handbook "Perfume / Cologne / Scented Lotions
"Perfume, cologne and scented lotions may create an unhealthy situation
for staff and students with asthma or allergies to certain fragrances.
Therefore, it may be necessary for visitors to avoid certain areas of the
school. If you believe you may put others at risk due to the fragrance you
area wearing, please ask for additional information when you check in at
the office. Your cooperation is appreciated."
http://www.classicalcharter.com/AboutCCS/FamilyHandbookMcKSite2002-2003.html
- Columbia Basin College
Disability Resource Manual
http://www.cbc2.org/c_access/resourc5.html
- Multiple Chemical Sensitivity
"People with Multiple Chemical Sensitivity have become a driving force
for improved air quality and the adoption of less toxic housekeeping and
building maintenance practices."
Thank you! We who live with MCS have worked hard to improve air quality for ALL.
Missing, however, is any hint that fragrances are chemicals and cause pollution, which
in turn cause adverse health events and are therefore barriers to access. 10/31/02 -- barb
http://www.cbc2.org/c_access/resourc5.html#MULTIPLE_CHEMICAL_SENSITIVITY
- Crabby Kathy -- A MUST READ!
By KMAC Kids
http://www.niehs.nih.gov/kids/kathy/home.htm
- Culver City High School
A new policy -- released October 7, 2002 -- by Culver City High School in southern
California, in which they acknowledge that staff and students like fragrances, but they
are being asked not to wear, use, or bring them to school. They close their statement
with this line:
"Violation of this requirement shall be considered an attempt to cause physical injury,
and thus be subject to suspension."
http://www.ccusd.k12.ca.us/Schools/High/CulverHigh/culver_city_high_school__9-12_.html
- Decatur, Illinois Public Schools
- Students breathing easier
Spray products banned in some Decatur public schools
myinky; By The Associated Press; January 14, 2003
http://www.myinky.com/ecp/local_news/article/0,1626,ECP_745_1672242,00.html
- Decatur schools may bar certain scents
By VALERIE WELLS H&R [Herald & Review] Staff Writer; Thu Dec 26 00:26:14 CST 2002
http://www.herald-review.com/rednews/2002/12/26/build/Local_News/localnews3.phpor printer friendly: http://www.herald-review.com/utility/printeasy.php3
- Dragonfleye Charter School's ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH POLICY
Phoenix, AZ 85021
http://www.dragonfleye.org/envir.htm
- Environmental Protection Agency Document on Asthma in Schools
"... 2. Does the school maintain good indoor air quality? Does it reduce or eliminate
allergen sand irritants that can make asthma worse? Allergens and irritants include pets
with fur or feathers, mold, dust mites (for example, in carpets and upholstery),
cockroaches, and strong odors or fumes from such products as pesticides, paint,
perfumes, and cleaning chemicals. [emphasis added]
http://www.neahin.org/programs/environmental/asthmafriendly.htm
- Asthma in Schools
"Each day, one in five Americans occupies a school building and the majority
of these occupants are children. Environmental asthma triggers commonly
found in school buildings are cockroaches and other pests, mold
resulting from excess moisture in the building, and dander from animals
in the classroom. Secondhand smoke and dust mites are other known
environmental asthma triggers found in schools. In addition, some literature
suggests children with asthma may be affected by other pollutants found
in schools from such sources as un-vented stoves or heaters and
common products such as cleaning agents, perfumes, and sprays.
[emphasis added]" Effectively managing a child¼s asthma can best be accomplished through
a comprehensive plan that addresses both the medical management of the
disease and avoidance of environmental triggers. Since children spend most of
their time in schools, day care facilities, or at home, it is important to
reduce their exposure to environmental asthma triggers as much as possible
in each of these environments. This publication focuses on steps that
schools can take to help children breathe easier. ..."
http://www.epa.gov/iaq/schools/asthma/asthma_in_schools.htm
- Asthma and Indoor Environments
"... Irritants such as cold air, cigarette smoke, industrial chemicals,
perfume, and paint and gasoline fumes can trigger asthma. These irritants
probably trigger asthma symptoms by stimulating irritant receptors in the
respiratory tract. These receptors, in turn, cause the muscles surrounding the
airway to constrict, resulting in an asthma attack. ... " [emphasis added]
http://www.epa.gov/iaq/asthma/introduction.html
- Perfumes and Asthma - don¼t mix
(fragrances can trigger asthma attacks!)
Anderson Laboratories, et al.
a two page brochure to print and give to your doctors,
friends, school principals, and town administrators.
http://www.andersonlaboratories.com/alweb30.htm
- EHN's version:Perfumes and Asthma Don't Mix
Trifold brochure developed by barb, based on collaborative effort
led by Julius Anderson, MD,PhD
This version has been approved by Dr. Anderson. -- barb
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnlinx/donmix.htm
- Environmental Working Group
http://www.ewg.org/
- Safer Schools - June 2001
Portable classroom makers will switch to less-toxic materials to protect kids' health
How about less-toxic building materials for schools, hospitals, buildings for folks of all ages?
Before industry cries, "Too expensive!," THINK! The cost of ill health can be measured in dollars
by industry . . . but it is beyond measuring by those debilitated, disabled, or dead. -- barb
http://www.ewg.org/pressreleases/pr06212001.html
- The Evergreen State College (TESC) ...
"TESC supports the concept of a fragrance-, and pollutant-free environment on its
properties and in its programs. The college seeks to maintain the best possible air
quality attainable within fiscal, legal and regulatory constraints. In pursuit of that goal,
these procedures will be implemented.unity members are asked to refrain from using or
wearing scented products. ..."
http://www.evergreen.edu/policies/g-air.htm
- Faribault middle school bans perfumes, colognes from students
The Brainerd Daily Dispatch
http://www.brainerddispatch.com/stories/022602/edu_0226020003.shtmlOr:
- "Faribault school bans students' use of perfumes, colognes"
The Star Tribune http://www.startribune.com/stories/1556/1701620.html
- Fragrant door - BLISTERED!
Students, other than Ms. Sanderson's blasted her door with perfume. -- barb
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/doorjudy.htm
- Healthy Schools Network, Inc
http://www.healthyschools.org/- IAQ in School - Key Resources
http://www.aehf.com/IAQSch/IAQKeyRes.htm
- Jefferson City, Missouri, Public Schools Section 504 Accommodation Plan
"[A]n example of a progressive school that has implemented a comprehensive plan to
provide a student with severe asthma triggered by perfumes a fragrance free educational
environment including:
Fragrance Free school bus
http://immune.best.vwh.net/stephanie/504.html
Fragrance Free school
Fragrance Free Basketball team as well as all competing teams,
coaches and officials - the team was 10-0 last season!
Fragrance Free extracurricular activities (dances) including
chaperones and parent volunteers
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnlinx/s.htm#Stephanie's
- Maine School Administrative District No. 48
Newport, Maine - "Fragrance Policy"
"Fragrance
http://www.msad48.org/mainfrm.cfm?tpid=514
"The MSAD #48 Board of Directors has the goal of maximizing student
potential and educational achievements.Ý That goal cannot be realized by
students who have difficulty breathing or concentrating as the result of
the use or overuse of fragrant substances by other students.
"Administrators are authorized to take appropriate measures, including
sending students home, to curb excessive use of perfumes, after shaves,
and other fragrant substances."
- Maine School Administrative District No. 68Ý
Dover-Foxcroft, Maine
Student Dress Code and Fragrance Policy"
(broken link from: http://www.sad68.com/PolicyHandbook.htm to "JICA)
- North Seattle Community College (NSCC)
http://www.gonorth.org/
- Classroom Policy on Environmental Illness & Solvent Sensitivity
Posted by permission and with the review of Dr. Tom Kerns. -- barb
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/nsccclas.htm
- Fragrance Free Policy (on their site)
"North Seattle Community College recognizes that the air is shared by all members of
the college community and those who visit the campus; that suitable air quality is
important in fostering a healthy and creative learning and working environment. North
strongly advocates a pollutant-free environment. It also encourages a fragrance-free
environment on its campus and in its programs. The college seeks to maintain the
best possible air quality attainable within fiscal, legal, and regulatory constraints."
http://www.northseattle.edu/info/air.htm
- Indoor Air Quality Guidelines - Briefer version
Posted by permission and with the review of Dr. Tom Kerns. -- barb
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/nsccguli.htm
- Indoor Air Quality Policy
Posted by permission and with the review of Dr. Tom Kerns. -- barb
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/nsccpolc.htm-- end North Seattle --
- John F. Nuner Elementary School
2716 Pleasant Street South Bend, Indiana 46615
Phone: (574) 283-7850 Fax (574) 283-7853
" Perfume or Cologne
"Many students and adults are allergic to odors.
No perfume is allowed at school. Spraying
perfume at or on someone will result in a detention. "
http://www.sbcsc.k12.in.us/nuner/Discipline%20&%20Behavior.html#anchor1961215
- Safe Schools
Irene Ruth Wilkenfeld
"In Memorium... Irene Wilkenfeld - February 27, 1945 - February 29, 2004"
I miss my friend, but treasure having been a part of her life circle. -- barb
http://www.head-gear.com/SafeSchools/
- Open Letter: Perfumes Contaminate Our Classrooms
By Irene Wilkenfeld, Safe Schools
Dr. James Cone has moved to work in New York City, their great gain, our great loss. -- barb
http://www.head-gear.com/SafeSchools/perfclasslet.html
- WARNING ALL MOMS: TOXIC CHEMICALS FOUND IN DESIGNER FRAGRANCE
Environmental Health Group Petitions FDA to Have Fragrance 'Misbranded'
http://ehnca.org/www/PressReleases/fragmisb.htm
- HEALTHY KIDS: THE KEY TO BASICS
Ellie Goldberg, M.Ed.
http://www.information-engineer.com/kids/kidshp.htm
- Focus On Indoor Air Quality
http://www.information-engineer.com/kids/iaq.htm
- Green Decade Coalition
http://www.information-engineer.com/kids/grcoalhp.htm
- Suggestions for Accommodation at School
by Ellie Goldberg, MEd
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/mcsschac.htm- The Healthy School Network
http://www.hsnet.org
- HEATH Resource Center - American Council on Education
Students with Multiple Chemical Sensitivity/Environmental Illness:
An Accommodation Challenge
"... The Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA) defines a person with a
disability as anyone with a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits
one or more major life activities. If a student's functional ability is severely limited by
the symptoms of MCS/EI, he or she would be considered a person with a disability
under the ADA, and campus support staff must provide reasonable
accommodations so that there will be access to the program. ..."
http://www.acenet.edu/programs/heath/MCS.cfm
- NCEF Resource List: Indoor Air Quality
National Clearinghouse for Educational Facilities
"INDOOR AIR QUALITY
"NCEF's resource list of links, books, and journal articles addressing
indoor air quality issues in K-12 school buildings, including building
materials, maintenance practices, renovation procedures and
ventilation systems."
http://www.edfacilities.org/rl/iaq.cfm
- North Dakota State University
- Career Center Web Interviewing Skills
"... Refrain from wearing fragrances, as many people experience adverse reactions to
them. (chemical sensitivities). ..."
http://www.ndsu.nodak.edu/career_center/students/interview.at.shtml
- Classroom and Office Fragrance Policy
By Dr. Glinda Crawford
http://www.und.edu/instruct/gcrawfor/FRAGRANC.htm
- North Seattle Community College (NSCC)
http://www.gonorth.org/
- Classroom Policy on Environmental Illness & Solvent Sensitivity
Posted by permission and with the review of Dr. Tom Kerns. -- barb
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/nsccclas.htm
- Fragrance Free Policy (on their site)
"North Seattle Community College recognizes that the air is shared by all members of
the college community and those who visit the campus; that suitable air quality is
important in fostering a healthy and creative learning and working environment. North
strongly advocates a pollutant-free environment. It also encourages a fragrance-free
environment on its campus and in its programs. The college seeks to maintain the
best possible air quality attainable within fiscal, legal, and regulatory constraints."
http://www.northseattle.edu/info/air.htm
- Indoor Air Quality Guidelines - Briefer version
Posted by permission and with the review of Dr. Tom Kerns. -- barb
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/nsccguli.htm
- Indoor Air Quality Policy
Posted by permission and with the review of Dr. Tom Kerns. -- barb
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/nsccpolc.htm
- Pesticide Reduction in Schools
(As with most of EHN's links this section is also listed under Children and Pesticides)
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnlinx/s.htm#School
- Protect schoolchildren from poor indoor air quality
Julie McMaine Evans
Articles by Julie McMaine Evans - includes healthy schools
http://www.cloudnet.com/~julie/articles.htm
- Safe Schools, Irene Ruth Wilkenfeld
http://www.head-gear.com/SafeSchools/
- Bill Of Rights: Environmental Quality in Our Schools
http://www.head-gear.com/SafeSchools/rights.html
- Contact Information
http://http.tamu.edu:8000~wilk/~wilk/irene.html#contact
- Health Statistics
http://www.head-gear.com/SafeSchools/h_stats.html
- Open Letter: Perfumes Contaminate Our Classrooms
By Irene Wilkenfeld, Safe Schools
Dr. James Cone has moved to work in New York City, their great gain, our great loss. -- barb
http://www.head-gear.com/SafeSchools/perfclasslet.html
- Problem Classroom Contaminants
http://www.head-gear.com/SafeSchools/contaminants.html
- Symptoms of Sick School Syndrome
http://www.head-gear.com/SafeSchools/symptoms.html
- Stephanie's 504 Accomodation Plan (A student with MCS)
- JEFFERSON CITY [Missouri] PUBLIC SCHOOLS
Seventh Grade
http://www.immuneweb.org/steanie/504.html
- Thomas Jefferson Middle School
http://members.xoom.com/oneearth/IAQ2000/page3.html
- School administrators seek 'fragrance free' attendance at meeting
Jefferson City News Tribune; Monday, May 8, 2000
http://www.newstribune.com/stories/050800/loc_0508000004.asp
- Students with Multiple Chemical Sensitivity/Environmental Illness:
An Accommodation Challenge
"According to reports from campuses and recent conferences, disability support
service providers and institutional administrators have seen an increase in requests
foraccommodations for students with a diagnosis of Multiple Chemical
Sensitivity/Environmental Illness, or MCS/EI. ..."
http://www.acenet.edu/programs/heath/MCS.cfm
- Suggestions for Achieving Indoor Air Quality (IAQ)
By Mark Jackson, MSE, MBA
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/mcsiaq.htm
- University of California School of Nursing
Update The School of Nursing Newsletter, December 2001 issue
F.Y.I.
A Reminder about FRAGRANCES: The SON has more than a few students, faculty and
staff whose chemical sensitivities range from merely irritating to disabling. There are
many different symptoms from mild to severe and there is no real treatment except
AVOIDANCE. The faculty voted to make the School fragrance free several years ago
in an attempt to reduce some of the triggers that make people uncomfortable or
sick. Please cooperate with this policy to help improve the health of our work and
learning environment.
http://nurseweb.ucsf.edu/www/2001-12.htm
- University of Minnesota
MCS Accommodation Guidelines
http://ds.umn.edu/disabilities/MCSEIPolicy.html
University of North Dakota
"Classroom and Office Fragrance Policy
Ý "We recognize... Fragrances are chemicals.
They affect the health (living chemistry) of those in our midst
(and unknown ones who follow)... "
http://www.und.edu/instruct/gcrawfor/FRAGRANC.htm
- University of Waterloo
Vermont Public Schools H.192 AN ACT RELATING TO TOXIC MATERIALS AND
- GUIDELINES ON WEARING SCENTED PRODUCTS
Health and Safety Program Manual
http://www.safetyoffice.uwaterloo.ca/hspm/documents/hygiene/guidelines.htm
- PROCEDURES FOR REPORTING BUILDING AIR QUALITY PROBLEMS
http://www.safetyoffice.uwaterloo.ca/hspm/documents/hygiene/Air%20Quality%20Procedures.htm
- We Share The Air posters
"Disclaimer: This information is intended for use by the University of Waterloo's campus
community. While the material contained may be reproduced by other individuals
and organizations the University of Waterloo does not warrant its application to other
campuses or workplaces. Comments are welcomed and may be directed to the
Safety Office."
http://www.safetyoffice.uwaterloo.ca/hspm/documents/hygiene/Posters.htm
INDOOR AIR QUALITY IN VERMONT PUBLIC SCHOOLS
http://nontoxicschools.tripod.com/vermontssafeschoollaw.htmlYork University -
http://www.yorku.ca/yorkweb/index.htm
- Dept of Occupational Health & Safety, York University
Guidelines - Scented Products - Bulletin on the Use of Scented Products
Two posters available from bottom of this page in PDF or HTML format. -barb
http://www.yorku.ca/dohs/doc/Guidelines/ScentedProducts/scentedproducts.htm- Stats Lab -
"- Please refrain from wearing perfume or cologne or other strongly scented
products to the lab on Tuesdays. G, who will be staffing the lab on Tuesdays, suffers
from severe asthma. Your consideration will be much appreciated. If you forget and
arrive at the lab you are taking a chance. If G is breathing well, then she may be able to
accommodate you by setting you up in one of the cubicles in the lab. However, if it
is a day when she is not breathing well she may respectfully ask you to come back on
a different day. We thank you in advance for your cooperation. If you have any
concerns regarding this request please speak to me. Further information about
respiratory disorders is given later in this newsletter."
"Respiratory disorders
"Respiratory disorders are often invisible. It is not easy to pick from a crowd someone
who suffers from severe asthma. As we have read in the papers lately asthma can be a life
threatening disorder. The risks to a person with asthma are also hidden: dust, cigarette
smoke, toxic fumes, perfumes, aftershave, cologne, and other strongly scented products.
These air-born allergens may trigger a severe respiratory reaction, or cause increased
inflammation in the upper respiratory tract of a person with asthma."
Paul Herzberg
http://www.psych.yorku.ca/herzberg/Stats_News1.htmPosters:
- Skunk - "No scents is good sense"
http://www.yorku.ca/dohs/doc/Guidelines/ScentedProducts/skunk.htm
- "Wake up and smell the coffee"
http://www.yorku.ca/dohs/doc/Guidelines/ScentedProducts/coffee.htm
- States
- Missouri Department of Labor and Industrial Relations
Governor's Council on Disability
"Some persons employed with or visiting Governor¼s Council on Disability offices or
For more on the State of Missouri's Fragrance-Free Policy, see:
events report sensitivities to various chemical-based or scented products.Ý We ask for
everyone¼s cooperation in our efforts to accommodate their health concerns."
http://www.dolir.state.mo.us/gcd/scent-freepolicy.htm
- Theater
How to Be Fragrance Free
By Peggy Munson
http://www.peggymunson.com/mcs/fragrancefree.html
- The Ahmanson Theatre in Los Angeles
Fragrance-free language is on their playbill. Music Center in downtown Los Angeles
135 North Grand Ave at Temple St.
Los Angeles CA 90012"Our policy on Fragrances appears in our program. The section reads:
"FRAGRANCES
"Please refrain from wearing strong perfumes and cologne.
Many people are allergic to heavy scents."
- Success Smells Sweet to `Phantom's' Vroman
By JERRY CARROLL, Chronicle Staff Writer
San Francisco Chronicle
Thursday, December 12, 1996
Excerpted here so visitors have a chance to learn that it is not only fellow patrons who
cannot breathe in a scent-polluted atmosphere, but the actors and actresses, whose very
voices YOU depend upon hearing. Chemicals combined to make synthetic scents can and do
cause laryngitis. -- barb
The San Francisco company of the enormously popular
"Phantom of the Opera" marks its third anniversary and
its 1,260th performance at the Curran Theatre today,
pleasant enough milestones. But the actors are bracing for
one not so nice, the annual New Year's Eve performance.
The house is always packed that night, and therein lies the
problem. "Everyone dresses up big time," said Lisa
Vroman, who plays the virginal Christine in the Andrew
Lloyd Webber musical. "And everyone wears a different
scent." Some really pour it on.
As the play unfolds, body heat in the theater builds and, as
it unleashes powerful waves of perfume and cologne, the
term "the smell of the crowd" takes on new meaning for
folks on the stage. By the time the action has moved to the
roof of the Paris Opera House at the end of Act 1, co-star
Franc D'Ambrosio, playing the Phantom, buries his face
against the fumes as he waits to reveal himself in the nest
of gilded nudes high above the footlights.
"Individually,"' said Vroman, "the scents might be nice,
but in combination you literally gag. Some people are
allergic and it wreaks havoc with sinuses. Sometimes I
can't get my breath. So on behalf of the company, I beg
people to go easy on the scent." ...
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/1996/12/12/DD15845.DTLPrinter Friendly: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/1996/12/12/DD15845.DTL&type=printable
- Transit
How to Be Fragrance Free
By Peggy Munson
http://www.peggymunson.com/mcs/fragrancefree.html
- Transit Agencies in the San Francisco Bay Area
If YOUR transit district doesn't recognize the access and accommodation needs of the
fragrance sensitized population, please contact them and let them know that other transit
districts have policies. This is a work in progress. (But then, so is this entire site!) -- barb
- AC Transit, East Bay
"Scented Products: Please refrain from wearing scented products as there may be
attendees susceptible to environmental illnesses."
http://www.actransit.org/aboutac/bod/boardagendas.wu4
- BART
"Please refrain from wearing scented products (perfume, cologne, after-shave, etc.) to this meeting,
as there may be people in attendance susceptible to environmental illnesses."
This notice appears on BART's meeting agendas. -- barb
http://www.bart.gov/about/bod/meetingagenda_7081.asp
- Central Contra Costa Transit Authority
I cannot find a hint of fragrance-free language, and can't remember if I ever knew
that they respected the access and accommodation needs of the already chemically injured. -- barb
- Cities of Fairfield / Suisun City
- Golden Gate Bridge, Highway and Transit District
Golden Gate Gazette
Reminders from Ms. Etty Ket
"Refrain from applying perfume/cologne before riding the bus‚some folks are allergic."
http://www.goldengate.org/news/Gazette_Jan_2002.pdf08/04 -- Still available from:
http://web.archive.org/web/20030311113414/http://www.goldengate.org/news/Gazette_Jan_2002.pdf
- LAVTA (Livermore-Amador Valley Transit Authority)
- MCTD (Marin County Transit District)
Muni (San Francisco Municipal Railway)
City of Petaluma
SamTrans (San Mateo County Transit District)
Santa Rosa CityBus
Solano Transportation Authority
Sonoma County Transit
TA(Transportation Agency, Santa Clara County)
Tri Delta (Eastern Contra Costa Transit Authority)
Union City Transit
City of Vacaville
Vallejo Transit
The V.I.N.E. and Napa Valley Transit
WestCAT (Western Contra County Transit Authority)
- Travel
How to Be Fragrance Free
By Peggy Munson
http://www.peggymunson.com/mcs/fragrancefree.html
- Toxic Chemicals in Your Environment; Total Environment Centre
I find I am becoming increasingly intolerant to the smell of perfumes.
Can you give me some information on this?
http://www.tec.nccnsw.org.au/member/tec/projects/tcye/faq/Household/faq_140.html
- Workplace
Also see General Suggestions -- this page, above
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/takheart.htm#AccessIt is difficult for me to fathom in this day and age (now, 2004), with all the information
available on the harmful chemicals used to create fragrances, that workplaces are still
putting in a lot of time and energy to protect the employee who wishes to wear scented
products. Workplaces -- employers AND employees -- have an obligation to work
together to improve air quality for all. Goodness sakes, what are the Illness and
Prevention policies all about?The EPA states in its IAQ publication at
http://www.epa.gov/iaq/pubs/insidest.html#Suscauses . . .
Three major reasons for poor indoor air quality in office buildings are the presence of indoor air pollution sources; poorly designed, maintained, or operated ventilation systems; and uses of the building that were unanticipated or poorly planned for when the building was designed or renovated. Sources of Office Air Pollution
As with homes, the most important factor influencing indoor air quality is the presence of pollutant sources. Commonly found office pollutants and their sources include environmental tobacco smoke; asbestos from insulating and fire-retardant building supplies; formaldehyde from pressed wood products; other organics from building materials, carpet, and other office furnishings, cleaning materials and activities, restroom air fresheners, paints, adhesives, copying machines, and photography and print shops; biological contaminants from dirty ventilation systems or water-damaged walls, ceilings, and carpets; and pesticides from pest management practices. [Emphasis added.]
While the EPA doesn't take it that extra step to specifically state perfumed personal care products pollute the air for all, they do provide a clue in that they include air "fresheners." Any employer who just doesn't GET IT regarding the topic of fragrances would do
well to look at the analyses of fragrances. EHN has provided you with the first, as
part of its Citizens' Petition of the US Food and Drug Administration, filed back in
May 1999 and assigned docket number 99P-1340. See "Laboratory 2: Analysis Summary
of Eternity eau de parfum by Calvin Klein." (Notice all of the chemicals listed on the
EPA's Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA) Inventory and on the Registry of Toxic Effects
of Chemical Substances (RTECS).)
http://ehnca.org/www/FDApetition/analysis.htm.
More recently, GreenPeace UK has begun analyzing fragrances. See what they have to
say by visiting
http://www.greenpeace.org.uk/Products/Toxics/chemicalhouse.cfm?producttypeid=5Modern perfumes and fragrances for cosmetics, personal care products and
pharmaceuticals, as well as household and janitorial cleaning and maintenance
products, are largely derived from petrochemicals. Fragrances contain chemicals that
are known or suspected carcinogens, hormone disrupters, irritants (POISONS lung and
skin), neurotoxins, sensitizers (lung and skin) and teratogens (adversely affecting
embryonic and fetal development). Now why would the wearing and using perfume
pollutants be a defendable position in anything but a personal environment?Generally mass-marketed fragrances will be found in any product with the word
"Fragrance" on the label. Frankly, that benign sounding word, tells you nothing and
leads you to believe that because the product has followed the US Food and Drug
Administration's regulation to list "Fragrance" when the product contains it, then that
scented product is under FDA authority. This is highly misleading; the FDA has
demonstrated no real authority. The fragrance industry is self-regulated and further
protected by trade secret laws and the fragmentation of responsibility of government
agencies charged with protecting public health. The FDA doesn't even require its alert
on fragrance products that have been released to market without substantiation of safety.
IF the FDA did, you'd see on labels the words: "WARNING: The safety of this
product has not been determined." (See "FDA Authority Over Cosmetics"
http://vm.cfsan.fda.gov/~dms/cos-206.html.)There is much to learn about fragrance concoctions on various pages of this website,
including EHN's Citizens' Petition of the FDA at http://ehnca.org/www/FDApetition/bkgrinfo.htm.
I also recommend that you check the site of my friend and colleague, Betty Bridges, RN.
Betty has compiled a wealth of information and made it available on her renowned
site, the Fragranced Products Information Network at
http://www.fpinva.org.Additional information can be gleaned from the Environmental Working Group's
petition of the FDA (June 2004) „Skin Deep¾ at
http://www.ewg.org/reports/skindeep/Employers, should you feel you need more information on chemical injury (Multiple
Chemical Sensitivity -- that one advocate labeled: "The disability that cannot say its
name outloud"), please take the time to visit EHN's MCS Links page at
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnlinx/mcs.htm
- Accommodating Employees with Environmental Sensitivities
Debra Sine, Leslirae Rotor and Elizabeth Hare
A 51 page PDF file, definitely worth printing out. Includes section called "Guidelines for
Managers," Part 4 and "Employee Awareness Kit," Part 5. What caught my attention was
this line in Part 4: "Remember that the goal of accommodation is to enable the employee to
remain a productive member of the office team."When I was still gainfully employed, that is all that I was requesting! I wanted to remain a
productive member of the agency. Alas, the management team felt otherwise. I went to work in
good faith, but day in and day out, I was subjected to undisciplined harassment and chemical
assaults. In my opinion, management's decision to support the wearing and using of perfume
pollutants may have contributed to many staff suffering various diseases that are environmentally
caused such as rheumatoid arthritis, cancers, upper and lower respiratory problems,
mirgraines, Parkinson's . . . and, of course, ultimately my developing MCS. Of course, this is my opinion. -- barb
http://www.healthyindoors.com/english/ resources/workplace1.pdfControlling Exposures In Your Workplace
From Dr. Grace Ziem's Environmental Control Plan for Chemically Injured Patients
by Dr. Grace Ziem
http://www.mcsbeaconofhope.com/MCS%20BOH/ziem_env._control.htm#ch7How to Be Fragrance Free
By Peggy Munson
http://www.peggymunson.com/mcs/fragrancefree.htmlAlso, go to Posters on EHN's General Links, page P / Posters
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnlinx/p.htm#PostersLet us keep a thought in mind to those who wear synthetically scented products. They often
have no idea that their own rude behavior, short tempers, irrational moods, et al., could well be the
result of the effects of the neurotxins they are absorbing and inhaling in the fragrance products
they choose to use. It's easy to lay blame on those who recognize chemical injury. Let's also
look to the fact that those who wear and use scents are adversely affected, too.
Besides, they are likely to be dismissive, think we are malingerers, that we are in panic mode
If you stop to think about all the drug ads -- prescribed and over-the-counter -- that's not hard to
understand. It does, however, remain awfully hard to deal with while in reaction to their
fragrance. We, the chemically injured, must deal with our own reactions and be patient with the
ignorance and hateful-hurtfuls doled out by the fragrance user. THAT is a tall order. -- barb
I want to get to the nitty-gritty!
Some of the worst cases of hostility in the workplace that I've experienced, both personally and through messages from others seeking help, have centered around the issue of the use of synthetic fragrances in personal care products, including perfumes, colognes and aftershaves, as well as household and janitorial cleaning and maintenance products. What I've noticed, yet have not seen documented, is the extreme nastiness of the fragrance-user against the individual seeking cleaner air in which to breathe, to think, to work PRODUCTIVELY. To LIVE. Interestingly, the label of "aggression" is quickly linked to the one asking for fragrance-free accommodation, yet the acts of aggression come from the fragrance-users and are directed against those seeking cleaner air that will benefit ALL staff. I've experienced some of the nastiest of nasties from vaious scent-wearing section managers, a lawyer, a human resources manager (don't you love those words . . . human RESOURCES -- conjures up strip-mining and deforestation, only the human variety), an Affirmative Action Officer and a building manager, plus a couple of colleagues.
Of course, nothing I experienced was viewed as discrimination by California's Dept. of Fair Employment and Housing or by the EEOC. Is this an environment conducive to working? Having my work area sprayed with perfume, perfumed people traipsing about my room for no reason other than to leave their noxious vapor trail, having the area just outside my door sprayed with canned "poop" odor day in and day out for a couple of weeks, hateful notes posted to the staff bulletin board, being ostracised (a clear message to staff to not complain about the air quality. I was told by EEOC that had I had an obvious disability it would be different. My "hidden" disability is pretty obvious when in anaphylactic shock, or when in the throes of severe asthmatic coughing with that seal-like bark, or when I'd go splat on the street or sidewalk thanks to the slightest hint of fabric softeners polluting the ambient air, or when I staggered into walls in the workplace after having encountered a scented staffer, or when I had to wear an oxygen tank and a respirator to breathe in my former workplace . . . but none of that "counted." I was forced to take early retirement, but I feel that probably saved my life. (And yes, my health has improved since I left my toxic workplace and began acupuncture treatment while continuing with chiropractic. I'm not "cured" but generally healthier. And, my "quality of life" has greatly improved. And, I'm alive.)
While I'm giving my personal story, here is something else I tried in my former workplace. We are always supposed to maintain our sense of humor . . . and by George! I'll put mine up against anyone's . . . so in that vein, I wrote and attached to my office door, The 90s Workplace. Typically, those who got IT, got it. And the others thought only in terms of their personal rights being put asunder . . . with no regard for the rights of others to work headache- or asthma-free, to be able to think clearly, or to simply to not have to eudure the smell someone else has determined is THE smell to share with all and sundry . . . or, for me to work free of the Many Chronic Symptoms of my MCS, which I acquired in that workplace, thanks to their perfume! Mind you, my workplace was posted against sexual harassment, and fragrances are sold as sexual attractants, but only I seemed to have noticed that connection.
Just think, in a workplace such as the one I had served for 23 years, it all boils down to one's personal right to wear -- with impunity -- synthetic scents concocted with tens to hundreds of toxic, volatilizing chemicals, about which not enough toxicological information is available and whose chemicals can be found on the EPA's Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA) Inventory and the Registry of Toxic Effects of Chemical Substances (RTECS). Perfume stinks in more ways then one, in my opinion. To check the veracity of my statement, see FDA Petition, Analyses http://ehnca.org/www/FDApetition/bkgrinfo.htm#Analyses
The NITTY-GRITTY
And now for something I think may be important. Found, January 20, 2003.
- "... Are perfumes worn by co-workers considered a workplace hazard? YES! ..."
Dept. of Energy / Environment Safety and Health Information Portal
RECORD ID D97-01-009
INFORMATION DATE 01-16-1997
SUBJECT Recordability Of Asthma Attack Due To Perfume At Work
I retired in October 1998. If only I had been able to find this in January 1997! I hope it
helps those of you who are still gainfully employed and trying to educate your management
team about improved air quality for all! -- barb
http://tis.eh.doe.gov/rl/pres/docs/D9701009.HTM
- Business Leadership Network
Includes info on people with disabilities, INCLUDING MCS. Take note Human Resource managers! -- barb
http://www.usbln.com/index.html
- INFORMATION EMPLOYERS CAN USE
Chemical Sensitivity in the Workplace
" ('Fragrance Sensitivity Can Be Considered a Disability and Require Accommodation,'
HR News, April 2001) Like any disability, sensitivities to chemicals and fragrances
require reasonable accommodations in the workplace. [emphasis added]
http://www.usbln.com/tools/sitemailing_2001_06.html#employers
- Canada's Safety Council - Canada's Voice and Resource for Safety
Perfume in the Workplace
"... Chemicals used in fragrances can cause health problems such as shortness of breath,
headaches and migraines, nausea, muscle pain, and cold-like symptoms. Asthma,
emphysema, bronchitis, and allergies can all be adversely affected by the chemicals found
in scented products. According to the Lung Association, one study found that
72 per cent of people with asthma had adverse reactions to perfumes. ...
"In the meantime, what can workplaces do to protect employees with chemical sensitivities?"First of all, when an employee raises concerns about his or her reaction to perfumes,
management should take the matter seriously. Assuming systems are in place to maintain
good indoor air quality, the next step is to identify the exact source of the problem
and assess its extent. If the source is one or two employees, management should let
those employees know the effect their perfume has on other staff and ask them to wear
a lighter scent. ..."
Lighter scents are petrochemically laden, as are so many products misleadingly labeled in the
USA as "fragrance-free" or "unscented." It is OK by our FDA to add scent as a masking odor. -- barb
http://www.safety-council.org/info/OSH/perfume.html
- Dept. of Energy / Environment Safety and Health Information Portal
RECORD ID D97-01-009
http://tis.eh.doe.gov/rl/pres/docs/D9701009.HTM
STANDARD NUMBER
INFORMATION DATE 01-16-1997
SUBJECT Recordability Of Asthma Attack
Due To Perfume At Work
QUESTION
Is this case recordable? We have an employee who has asthma. This employee has had asthma episodes resulting in work absences which her physician says were aggravated by exposure to irritants such as smoke and perfumes. Although our workplace is smoke-free, some employees wear perfumes and it is believed that these perfumes may have aggravated the asthma condition. Are perfumes worn by co-workers considered a workplace hazard?
REGULATORY REVIEW
Yes. An occupational illness is recordable when workplace conditions contribute to or aggravate a medical condition, even if the condition is a pre-existing condition. In general, each work-related asthmatic episode is recordable as a new case since it is triggered by a new exposure. [Emphasis added.] The concept of employer fault does not affect the recordability. As stated in C-12 on page 35 of the "Recordkeeping Guidelines for Occupational Injuries and Illnesses" (the "Blue Book"), "Sections 8(c)(2)and 24(a) of the OSH Act specifically define recordable injuries and illnesses. They make no distinction between incidents that are compensable under State workers' compensation laws, incidents that are caused by worker negligence, incidents caused by employer neglect, incidents that are preventable, or the random incidents that seem to happen when no one is at fault." The hazard status of perfume does not affect the requirement to record an occupational illness triggered by exposure to it in the workplace. In discussing recordable occupational illnesses, the "Blue Book" uses the terms "environmental factors", "suspected agents", and "other conditions", without assigning a recognition of hazard to them.The next three questions to pop into my mind are:
What about the workplace in which scented employees deliberately set about to cause the fragrance-sensitized employee to suffer adverse events? It may be denied, and far too often it is overlooked by management, but far too many of us, who have tried desperately to remain gainfully employed while living with the debilitating and disabiling effects of MCS, have had our experiences of living hell brought to us by our scented colleagues . . . AND management staff, including Human Resources managers.
What about the workplace that ostracizes the person made ill by those toxic chemical fragrance products? Oh, you can bet your bottom dollar that the claim from management is that it's their way of "helping" the chemically ill staff, but all of us who have been put through that experience know otherwise. What that isolation really is, is a very clear message to the rest of staff: Keep quiet.
What about the workplace that fires or forces into retirement the person made ill by those toxic chemical fragrance products? People have sought other jobs when the going got too horrendous in their original workplace, only to discover that once people at the new job learned of their fragrance sensitization, the sensitized individual was again taunted and assaulted and then let go by management because they were "the problem." Workers' Comp and our judicial system is less than useless for the chemically injured individuals. It is time for a shift in paradigm. -- barb
The 90s Workplace
There's a long-time employee in this workplace
Who must play hide and seek with her own face
Her breathing's impaired
So she works adorned by gas mask, not lace.
By perfume that's aired
©barb wilkie; written for Limerick Day, May 12, 1994
then posted to my workplace door.
(A lifetime ago, when I was still gainfully employed. I must admit it was
great fun to have heard it read aloud that day on the Frank and Mike show.
Frank Dill and Mike Cleary, San Francisco radio . . . back in the days when a
station was a station, not some piece of a huge media consortium. -- barb)
- Business & Health
http://www.businessandhealth.com/
Business Journal - Silicon Valley/San Jose Business Journal
- Allergens in the Workplace
Allergens can emerge in settings that appear clean, well maintained and
chemical free...at home and at work.
By Helen Lippman, Contributing Editor
"... The next time you encounter the guy down the hall who always seems to
have a runny nose and red, watery eyes, don't assume it's an intractable cold,
a bout of seasonal hay fever or a stubborn case of the flu. Office workers
may not be exposed to heavy chemicals in spray paints, enzymes in
detergents or the red cedar dust in lumber, but allergists now recognize that
office buildings can harbor a number of allergens or irritants. A sneezing,
sniffling employee could be reacting to copy machine toner, a colleague's
perfume, airborne spores from mold and fungi in the circulation system,
cockroaches or other indoor irritants or allergens. ...
"... The first indication that something's amiss usually comes when employees
report what they believe to be allergicãand job-relatedãsymptoms. But
just getting workers to the point where they're willing to come forward
requires deliberate action. 'Employers need to educate supervisors and other
employees,' Grammer emphasizes. 'They need to be told that if they
develop teary eyes, wheezing, sneezing or other related symptoms, they may
be allergic to something in the workplace and need to tell someone. And tell
them they don't have to worry about being fired,' she adds.
"Keeping workers quiet or dismissing tentative complaints is a highly
ineffective strategy that's likely to deflate employee morale. Delay also
significantly boosts health risks and subsequent costs. ...
http://www.businessandhealth.com/hostedfiles/features/allergiesatwork/physician/article04.htm
- Top 10 Tips for Addressing Allergic Rhinitis
Action Items for Employers
Corporate and clinical experts who participated in a Business & Health roundtable agreed
on 10 practical tactics for employers who recognize the impact of allergies on job performance.
"... 4. Establish a policy addressing strong odors from such sources as perfumes.
Even if such odors contain irritants rather than allergens per se, some employees
may have a low threshold for distress. ..."
I do believe they ought to know that "irritant" used to describe a chemical is not to be
confused with an irritant that is an emotional annoyance. When talking about perfume,
think of irritant as defined in your Oxford Dictionary: POISON. Although,
I must admit, I have found that management teams that prefer to poison the air with perfumed
products do cause distress, as used above. Distress as defined by American Heritage Dictionary
means: A STATE OF PHYSICAL OR MENTAL SUFFERING, PAIN, MISERY, HURT,
AGONY, ANGUISH,WOE, AFFLICTION. Chemical irritants -- poisons -- cause physical injury. -- barb
http://www.businessandhealth.com/hostedfiles/features/allergiesatwork/consumer/article01.htm
http://sanjose.bizjournals.com/
- What's that smell?
Your perfume or cologne can be hazardous to your co-workers' health
by Michelle Hofmann; IN DEPTH: HUMAN RESOURCES
http://sanjose.bizjournals.com/sanjose/stories/2003/06/02/focus1.html
- A Canary's Song
An exchange of workplace e-mail: A "delusional" employee, once again proves
her nose KNOWS! From The New Reactor -- Vol 8, No. 1: Jan - Feb 1998. -- barb
http://ehnca.org/www/newreact/Canarysg.htm
- "Access for People With EI/MCS and Other Related Conditions"
by California's [late] state senator, Milton Marks (in three parts)
http://ehnca.org/www/books/eimcsf1.htm
- Program on Employment Disability, Cornell University
http://www.ilr.cornell.edu/ped/
- Accommodating the Allergic Employee in the Workplace
NC Chemical Injury Network
http://www.NCchem.com/accommod.htm
- ADA and the fragrance-free policy:
- Baker Book House: A scent-free work environment
http://reformed.net/thoughts/policy.shtml
- Scents in the Workplace
By Dan Knight; October 1999
"This article is adapted from one submitted to my employer's company newsletter.
Permission is hereby given to adapt it in your own efforts to raise awareness of
fragrance problems in the workplace. Dan Knight "
http://reformed.net/thoughts/workplace.shtml
- BNA Daily Labor Report - A human resources journal
- Worker Sensitive to Perfume, Hand Lotion Can Proceed with
ADA Claim, Court Rules - DAVIS VS. UTAH
http://web.archive.org/web/20020607071609/http://www.shrm.org/hrnews/articles/default.asp?page=bna0517c.htm
- Breathing Better: Action Plans Keep Asthma in Check
FDA tells us: "...Common asthma triggers include dust, pollen, cockroaches, cold air,
smoke, and other strong odors, such as paint, cleaning fluids, perfume,
hair spray, and powder. ..." Emphasis added.]
This took a long time coming folks, and it appeared without fanfare. -- barb
http://www.fda.gov/fdac/features/2003/203_asthma.html
- Brobeck, Attorneys at Law
- Employee with a Heightened Sensitivity to Strong Fragrances
May Be Disabled Under the ADA - DAVIS VS. UTAH
If neither link works, try searching for "fragrances." -- barb
http://www.brobeck.com/news_events/issues_archive.asp?PrintFl=Y&newsItem=IA2#3OR
http://www.brobeck.com/news_events/issues_archive.asp?newsItem=IA2#3
CCH Canada
AeriasTM
Examples of Accommodation: When Fragrances Are Toxic
"...[N]o-scent policies or scent-free encouragement programs make sense in many
Well said, CCH Canada. Would it were my former workplace took such an intelligent position. -- barb
circumstances. Prevention is the best practice that any employer can adopt in the
workplace. No amount of human suffering is justifiable. In the case of fragrance-
associated health problems, prevention and avoidance are the only cures. Health
advisories and a well-informed workforce make for happier and more productive
employees. "
http://www.ca.cch.com/emonthly/sept/hr/index1.aspOr available through
http://www.ca.cch.com/emonthly/sept/hr/index1.asp#self
- Clark & Bennett Spa Salon
Toxic Fragrances
Examples of Accommodation: When Fragrances Are Toxic; September 2001
"... For all these reasons, no-scent policies or scent-free encouragement programs
make sense in many circumstances. Prevention is the best practice that any employer
can adopt in the workplace. No amount of human suffering is justifiable. In the
case of fragrance-associated health problems, prevention and avoidance are the only
cures. Health advisories and a well-informed workforce make for happier and more
productive employees. "
This is what they had had available . . . at
http://www.clarkeandbennett.com/articles/fragrance.html .
However, in 2003, I can no longer find that page, but their homepage does contain information
on fragrances, which you may find useful. -- barb
http://www.clarkeandbennett.com/
- U.S. EEOC - Fragrance Illness Accommodation - Roberts v. U.S. DOT
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/eroberts.htm
"Better health through indoor air quality awareness"
http://www.aerias.org/default.asp
- Asthma - A National Emergency
" Common indoor pollutants such as molds, animal and insect allergens, and chemicals
trigger asthma. "...Minimizing Chemical Pollutants and Odors. Volatile chemicals and
odors can be minimized through removal of the source and/or use of low-emitting/
low-odor furnishings, materials, and processes. Many
commercial and public
facilities are endorsing smoke free, fragrance-free environments. ..."
http://www.aerias.org/cgi-bin/news-shell.asp?article=159
- Personal Care Products: Perfume, Hairspray, Aftershave, Deodorant, etc.
"Personal care products and their contribution to indoor air quality is a topic that is both
personal and political. These types of products can trigger allergic reactions and
asthmatic attacks in many people as well as being very detrimental to those who are
chemically sensitive. ..."
http://www.aerias.org/cached_document_58.htm
- IAQ Investigations in the Workplace and other Buildings
http://www.aerias.org/kview.asp?DocId=48&spaceid=2&subid=13
American Lung Association (ALA)
- Asthma Magazine article:
Wheezing at Work -- The Office Can be Home to an
Assortment of Asthma Triggers
By: Dawn Marvin and Jackie Trovato
EXCERPTED:
" .... You've given away the pets, cleaned the air ducts, removed carpeting and
asked friends and family not to smoke or wear perfume or colognes when visiting.
But, you may believe that you don't have the same degree of control over your
work environment as you have at home. Or, perhaps you feel that your supervisor
and co-workers wouldn't understand if you asked for changes within the office. So,
you continue to expose yourself to asthma triggers at work. This may lead to your
productivity suffering as well as having to take sick days due to uncontrolled asthma.
"Seventy percent of people with asthma experience a worsening of symptoms when
exposed to allergens and irritants. And many of these substances are present in work
environments. One often hears of reactions occurring in industrial or manufacturing
workplaces, but many asthma triggers can be found in offices as well. To ensure your
health, as well as your employment, it is important that you look for ways to eliminate
or reduce these triggers. ..."
In the scented workplace, it is with good reason the worker asking for fragrance-free
accommodation feels that supervisors, managers, executives and co-workers won't
understand a request for fragrance-free accommodation. That is because the scent-users
-- often "abusers" -- have made it abundantly clear that they won't accept a request for
fragrance-free accommodation! In fact, time and again, it brings on assaults of varying
degrees, carried out with impunity. We all have our stories from hell. We have to deal with
harmful attitudinal barriers along with those invisible chemical barriers. -- barb
http://www.lungusa.org/pub/ast_article4.html
- Appeals by Management for
Fragrance-free workplace: Cleaner air for ALL staff!
These have been posted, where necessary by permission, in hopes of helping YOU. -- barb
- Baker Book House: A scent-free work environment
http://reformed.net/thoughts/policy.shtml
- Memo sent to employees from HR Director
This memo addresses the need of employees to breathe cleaner air. EHN brings it to you with
permission. Helpful links are provided. -- barb Jan. 2001 . . . . updated March 2008
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/mcswkhrm.htm
- Office Manager's Informal Appeal
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/mcswkomm.htm
Addendum: "The 'fragrance-subtle' zone just doesn't cut it. No one knows how to define 'subtle'. "
And to that I add, Our body types are different and therefore even the same fragrance on one
will not have the same affect as on another. See Fragrance Foundation's Questions and Answers
- Question & Answer Guide
"Is it true that fragrance reacts differently on blondes, brunettes and redheads?
Yes. ... " http://fragrance.org/feature_faq_content.html
- Arizona Technology Access Program:
Multiple Chemical Sensitivity -- scroll down for accommodation suggestions
http://www.nau.edu/~ihd/aztap/mcs.html
- Ask the Workplace Doctors - "WEGO"
See section on Perfume & Odors. -- barb
http://www.west2k.com/wego.htm
- Attorneys at Law - Brobeck,
- Employee with a Heightened Sensitivity to
Strong Fragrances May Be Disabled Under the ADA
http://www.brobeck.com/news_events/issues_archive.asp?newsItem=IA2#3
- Breath of Fresh Air
"No Perfume Means Healthier Air"
http://www.ourlittleplace.com/noperfume.html
- Breath of Fresh Air Day (use sense not scents!)
First Annual, May 12, 2000; PR by H.U.M.A.N.
http://ehnca.org/www/PressReleases/breath1.htm
- Fragrance-free Workplace Accommodation Request
By Barbara Wilkie (a formal request; ostracism followed)
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/mcswkpac.htm
- Fragrance-free Workplaces: A Reasonable Accommodation
By Betty Kreeger
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/mcswkpbk.htm
- Government Agency's Public Meeting Notice
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/mcsmtno.htm
- HEAL of Southern Arizona, MCS Accommodation Guidelines
http://www.healsoaz.org/healaccess/mcs%20accommodation%20guidelines.htm
- Is a fragrance free workplace right for you?
January 30, 2003
"I'm a perfume person and I don't feel like I'm really dressed in the morning unless
I have my perfume on," said Suzie Estudillo."
And I cannot help but wonder what adverse health event may be in store for her. It is not as
if she has crushed flower petals on her person; it's toxins in her body. She has a right to know! -- barb
http://www.katu.com/printstory.asp?ID=54226
- Job Accommodation Network (JAN)
Also see: (JAN -- http://ehnca.org/ehnglnx2.htm#JAN)
- Worksite Accommodation Ideas for Individuals
Who Experience Limitations Due To Fragrance Sensitivity
"...An employer could choose to make a request that employees voluntarily refrain
from wearing fragrances or the employer could go as far as creating a policy that
requires employees to refrain. An employer has the right to decide how far is reasonable
when implementing accommodations. ..."
http://www.jan.wvu.edu/media/fragrance.html
- New Workplace Accommodation Challenges for the 21st Century
Presented by
Mandy J. Gamble, MS, CRC & Tracie D. Sabb, MS
Human Factors Consultants; Job Accommodation Network
A Service of U.S. DOL's Office of Disability Employment Policy
This is a great page of information, but for those of us living with the disabiling effects of
fragrance sensitization, use your Find Command to drop right to their section on
Fragrance Sensitivity. -- barb
http://www.google.com/search?q=cache:gm5j_kCCFjkJ:janweb.icdi.wvu.edu/symposium/Symposium_Handouts/Session3.doc+EEOC+and+fragrance+accommodation&hl=en&ie=UTF-8or http://janweb.icdi.wvu.edu/symposium/Symposium_Handouts/Session3.doc
or how I found it . . .
http://216.239.51.100/search?q=cache:gm5j_kCCFjkJ:janweb.icdi.wvu.edu/symposium/Symposium_Handouts/Session3.doc+EEOC+and+fragrance+accommodation&hl=en&ie=UTF-8
- Work-Site Accommodation Ideas for Individuals
Who Experience Limitations Due to Multiple Chemical Sensitivity
(MCS)-Environmental Illness
http://www.jan.wvu.edu/media/MCS.html
- Julia Kendall Award for a Fragrance-Free Workplace
http://ehnca.org/www/PressReleases/99ffwkpl.htm
- And the winner is . . .
http://ehnca.org/www/PressReleases/99ffwklt.htm
- Justice in the Workplace and Multiple Chemical Sensitivity
Guest Editorial by Philip D. Ranheim, MD
Allergy & Environmental Medicine
Appearing in The Townsend Letter for Doctors and Patients
By the way, EHN's website began because I found no justice in the workplace. -- barb
http://www.tldp.com/issue/210/edjusticei.htm
- KATU News
Is a fragrance free workplace right for you?
January 30, 2003
Many people have had a co-worker at one point that wore so much
cologne or perfume that it was practically unbearable.
The solution may be right around the corner: a fragrance free workplace.
The fragrance free policy is cropping up in public buildings and in the
next few years it may start hitting the private sector.
http://www.katu.com/news/story.asp?ID=54226
Printer friendly
http://www.katu.com/printstory.asp?ID=54226
- Kaiser Permanente
Fragrance-free Workplace Policy
"To help promote a healthier and more enjoyable work place, the management team
and space committee have put together a department policy regarding the use of fragrant
products. ..."
STATEMENT OF POLICY
"We recognize that exposure to strong scents and fragrances in the environment can cause
discomfort, as well as directly impact the health of some individuals. Since we hope to
support a healthful environment for employees, physicians, and visitors, it is the intent
of Quality and Operations Support to strive for a fragrance-controlled workplace.
Therefore, for the comfort and health of all, use of scents and fragrant products by QOS
employees, other than minimally scented personal care products, is strongly
discouraged.
"APPLIES TO:
"All employees ..."
Well, this is a bit of a crock, based on my personal experiences, including Nov. 2004.
Believe me, I've tried to track this down and the number of Kaiser people who don't know about it is
really something. The other response I've gotten time and again, is "OH, we have a fragrance-free
policy, we're not to wear more than a modicum of scent." Let me assure you, I've assured the
individuals in the Patient Services section that there is no such thing as a fragrance-free policy
in which a modicum of scent is allowed. When one chooses to use mainstream industry's
petrochemical-derived fragrances, one pollutes not only their body, but the bodies of others because
they pollute the air for all.And, in update, I will definitely add my assault by perfume experience in nephrolgy/Pulmonary
department of the main Oakland Kaiser hospital on July 26, 2005.
3/2/2006: I've not been back to that killer department since. But, I highly praise my internist and
my GYN for doing everything in their power to accommodate my needs; to give me access. -- barb
http://www.internalmemos.com/memos/memodetails.php?memo_id=2361
- Memo sent to employees from HR Director
This memo addresses the need of employees to breathe cleaner air.
Helpful links are provided. -- barb
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/mcswkhrm.htm
- National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/homepage.html
- Chemical Safety
When will NIOSH include synthetic scent chemicals? They volatilize to pollute the air for everyone!-- barb
http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/topics/chemical-safety/default.html
- The Effects of Workplace Hazards on Female Reproductive Health
This document is in the public domain and may be freely copied or reprinted.
The PDF version is available as 99-104pd.html (23 pages, 292K)
It is past time due to include synthetic scents in personal care products, including perfume,
colognes, aftershave, lotions, deodorants, hair care products and cleaning/maintenance products -- barb
http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/99-104.html
- Workplace Stress
" 'Work stress imposes enormous and far-reaching costs on workers' well-being and
corporate profitability,' said NIOSH Director Linda Rosenstock, M.D., M.P.H."
I wonder if they have a clue as to the amount of stress that is applied to the employee with
MCS -- most often in the name of getting him or her to leave of "his/her own volition." -- barb
STRATEGIES FOR PREVENTING JOB STRESS SUGGESTED BY CDC IN NEW PUBLICATION
http://www.cdc.gov/niosh/stresrel.html
- Ohio Network for the Chemically Injured
"NEW MEANING FOR ACCESS?"
http://www.ncchem.com/ONFCI/disability.htmor
http://www.ncchem.com/ONFCI/access.htm
- Philadelphia ABC action news wpvi.com
Fragrances - 1/24/01 "... A few companies are now declaring "fragrance-free" zones, and are banning
scented products in the workplace. That's because many people wearing strong
perfumes aren't considerate of their co-workers. So how much is too much? If you
can smell your colleague's fragrance at arm's length - they're wearing too much.
Another interesting note - a "fragrance-free" product label doesn't necessarily
guarantee no fragrance, it just means no perceptible odor."
What I've been saying on EHN's site for years! It's good to see it on ABC in Philadelphia! -- barb
http://abclocal.go.com/wpvi/health/0120-01272001_HK_Archive.html
- Requesting Workplace Accommodation
Betty Bridges, FPIN
http://www.ameliaww.com/fpin/WkPol.htm
- Scent of a Workplace
Fragrances are a major source of indoor air pollution.
By Peggy Wolff, MS, APRN, HNC
American Journal of Nursing June, 2003 - Volume 103, Issue 6 - Health & Safety
"Q. One of my colleagues wears such strong perfume that it triggers my asthma. How
can I encourage my colleagues to avoid using fragrances in the health care workplace? ...
Regardless of type of workplace, including schools:
First you have to have an administrator/human resources mgr. that demonstrates perspicaciousness;
one willing to look beyond industry hype that its products and their ingredients are "safe and
wholesome." Then the workplace establishes an educational program on cleaner air, which starts
with leaving the perfumed products at home for one's own enjoyment among consenting
adults. While the requests for fragrance-free accommodation have been ignored or denied,
costly adverse health effects such as asthma and migraines have soared. Let's clear the air! -- barb
http://www.nursingworld.org/AJN/2003/june/health.htm
- Think Twice About Wearing a Fragrance to Work
By Maire Farrington; The Noe Valley Voice, San Francisco
"Strolling and shopping in Noe Valley are a breeze for most people. But for
Grand View Avenue resident Amy Marsh -- and for those who share multiple
chemical sensitivity (MCS), often called environmental illness -- running errands
on 24th Street can pose a real challenge."
Amy Marsh, former EHN President, currently serving on Advisory Board. -- barb
http://www.noevalleyvoice.com/1997/October/fragrnc.html
- University of Minnesota
MCS Accommodation Guidelines
http://ds.umn.edu/disabilities/MCSEIPolicy.html
- University of Waterloo
- Guidelines on Wearing Scented Products
University of Waterloo, Indoor Air Quality
"Scented products indoors can have an impact on health." http://www.safetyoffice.uwaterloo.ca/hse/hygiene/scent/scent_guidelines.htm
- Allergies/Sensitivities and the UW Campus
http://www.healthservices.uwaterloo.ca/occupationalhealth/allergies.html
- We Share The Air posters
"Disclaimer: This information is intended for use by the University of Waterloo's campus
community. While the material contained may be reproduced by other individuals
and organizations the University of Waterloo does not warrant its application to other
campuses or workplaces. Comments are welcomed and may be directed to the Safety
Office." Write: safety at uwaterloo.ca
http://www.safetyoffice.uwaterloo.ca/hse/hygiene/scent/scented_posters.htm
- Warning Signs of Sick Building Syndrome and MCS
From MCS Referral & Resources
http://www.mcsrr.org/factsheets/sbsfacts.html
- Workplace and Community Issues
Fragrance And Chemical Sensitivity Support Group
http://www.geocities.com/fragranceallergy/WorkplaceIssues.html
- The Workplace Doctors
"What Can I Do About Co-Workers' Perfume?"
The good doctors are assuming you work with people who are not suffering the adverse
neurotoxic -- including aggressive behavior -- effects of their favorite synthetic scents. Those
seeking fragrance-controlled or fragrance-free accommodation are often sprayed, or their work
area is sprayed, or they have folks sashaying around their work area, only to spread the synthetic
scent. Compassion is out the window. The synthetic scent is in the work area of the already
chemically injured individual who really has little to no recourse. EEOC officials have been
no help. Those in need of accommodation are the ones who are harassed -- including by members
of management. "Persist, persist, persist with goodwill and good humor," say the doctors,
gut that only works if the HR manager isn't also addicted to fragrances. If he/she is, and you
persist, you'll likely be ostracized and then out the door, looking in. Finding another job when
chemically injured isn't easy. The next workplace staff gets wind of your health issues and it
begins again . . . only this time you are officially on probabtion! Time to change the paradigm! -- barb
http://www.west2k.com/wpdocs/q221.htm
Worship
Also see General Suggestions
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/takheart.htm#AccessLet us keep a thought in mind to those who wear synthetically scented products. They often
have no idea that their own rude behavior, short tempers, irrational moods, et al., could well be the
result of the effects of the neurotxins they are absorbing and inhaling in the fragrance products
they choose to use. It's easy to lay blame on those who recognize chemical injury. Let's also
look to the fact that those who wear and use scents are adversely affected, too.
Besides, they are likely to be dismissive, think we are malingerers, that we are in panic mode
If you stop to think about all the drug ads -- prescribed and over-the-counter -- that's not hard to
understand. It does, however, remain awfully hard to deal with while in reaction to their
fragrance. We, the chemically injured, must deal with our own reactions and be patient with the
ignorance and hateful-hurtfuls doled out by the fragrance user. THAT is a tall order. -- barb
- The Anglican Church of Canada
Anglican Journal, October 2001
"Scent-free parishes in vogue"
LEANNE LARMONDIN; WEB SITE MANAGER
"FOR people whose throats virtually close up at the first
whiff of incense or heavy perfume, going to church
can not only be a health risk but lethal. ..."
http://www.anglicanjournal.com/127/08/canada05.html
- Aroma of Christ Ministry
"But thanks be to God, who always leads us in triumphal procession in Christ and
through us spreads everywhere the fragrance of the knowledge of him.Ý For we
are to God the aroma of Christ among those who are being saved and those who
are perishing.Ý To the one we are the smell of death;Ý to the other, the fragrance of life."Ý
2 Corinthians 2:14
http://www.aromaofchrist.com/
- Calvary Chapel Eastside
Fragrance-free room for attendees with MCS or fragrance sensitization.
http://www.calvarychapeleastside.com/ministry/?keyID=226794801
- Chemical Sensitivity Among Quakers -- My Experience and My Leading
by Alicia Adams
http://www.quakerinfo.com/chemsens.shtml
- Colognes, Chemicals, Compassion and the Church
by Don Hooser, United NewsTM
News of the UNITED CHURCH OF GOD, an International Association
http://www.ucg.org/un/un0201/cologne.html
- Friends and Fragrances
by Gerry Glodek
copyright, 2002 Geraldine Glodek: Permission is given to make copies.
http://www.quaker.org/friends-and-fragrances.html
- Interfaith Celebration Gathering
Established for persons with MCS/CI and other disabilities that keep them from being
able to worship in a congregation, Jeanne says "the 'bridges' in Bridges Church is a
statement and symbol of linkage." The linkage is "between one another and to our
rightful places of inclusion and voice back in the general (toxic) community,
including now inaccessible places of worship."
"Bridges is another welcoming door (to) our community whose mission includes
mutual spiritual support and encouragement, and proactive stewardship of the earth
through avenues that promote public awareness, compassion and response."
http://naturescountrystore.com/interfaith/Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism Coalition on the Environment & Jewish Life
http://www.rac.org/home-frame.htmlSundays That Stink
By John Knight
http://reformed.net/thoughts/stink.shtml
- Unitarian-Universalists
What do I say? What do I do?
Interacting with Persons Who Have Disabilities
http://www.uua.org/programs/justice/accessibility/what.html
- Multiple Chemical Sensitivity
http://www.uua.org/programs/justice/accessibility/what.html#multiple
- United Metodist Church - Accommodation
Ask for publications 5136 and 5138 from the Resource Book, Pgs 9-10,
ACCESSIBILITY AUDIT FOR CHURCHES, United Methodist Resource Book
Reprinted by permission. -- barb
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnlinx/methodi.htm
Also see:
- Multiple Chemical Sensitivity Accessibility for United Methodist Churches
http://www.holoweb.com/survivors/UMC_Statement.htm
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Return to EHN's Home Page
(http://ehnca.org/www/)
Complementary Information . . .
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- Christoer Allen, recipient of EHN's first
Julia Kendall Award
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/awardehn.htm
- Sue Hodges, Assemblywoman Aroner's Woman of the Year
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/awardsue.htm
- Sue Hodges wins MTC's Doris Kahn Award
http://www.mtc.ca.gov/publications/transactions/ta09-1099/heroes_main_story.htm#hodges
Bid Specifications
(With a mind to health and true illness and injury prevention)
- City of Santa Monica
Custodial Products Bid Specifications, 1998
" The City of Santa Monica has updated the procurement process for custodial/
maintenance products allowing the City to better evaluate the overall worker health
and environmental impacts associated with their use."
http://www.aehf.com/IAQSchools/BID+FORMS98.html
- City of San Francisco
CHAPTER 21F -- ENVIRONMENTALLY PREFERABLE PURCHASING
http://www.amlegal.com/nxt/gateway.dll/California/San%20Francisco/Admin/chapter00058.htm?f=templates$fn=altmain-nf.htm$3.0#JD_21F.8
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Berkeley's Jean Nandi's page.
Jean had served as chair of Berkeley's Commission on Disability.
DISASTER PLANNING INFORMATION & SUGGESTIONS FOR PERSONS WITH DISABILITIES AND THOSE ASSISTING THEM
Draft of an Appendix to the new City of Berkeley's Earthquake Preparation Handbook, published as the "CERT Handbook" at the end of 1998. Prepared by Matthew Wangeman and Jean Nandi, December, 1996
http://members.aol.com/jeannandi/HOMEPAGE/dis_plan.html
SECTION IV -- SPECIFIC NEEDS FOR PERSONS WITH MULTIPLE CHEMICAL SENSITIVITIES
http://members.aol.com/jeannandi/HOMEPAGE/dis_plan.html#l08
- For Persons with Chemical Sensitivities--Preparation in advance
http://members.aol.com/jeannandi/HOMEPAGE/dis_plan.html#l08b
- For Persons with Chemical Sensitivities--When Disaster Happens
http://members.aol.com/jeannandi/HOMEPAGE/dis_plan.html#l09
- Working with Persons with Chemical Sensitivities--Guidelines
http://members.aol.com/jeannandi/HOMEPAGE/dis_plan.html#l10
Disaster Preparedness and other disability topics, available for purchase
Creating a Disaster - Resistant Infrastructure for People at Risk
Including People with Disabilities, November 30, 1999, 19 pages.
June Isaacson Kailes, Disability Policy Consultant, All Rights Reserved.
http://www.jik.com/resource.html#Disaster Preparedness:
Indoor Air
Think in terms of your home, school, workplace, healthcare facilities, place of worship,
public transit conveyances . . . it is all indoor air and it is more polluted than outdoor air.
If we work to correct the problems we've caused to our indoor air, we will also help eliminate
some of the aspects of global warming. Consumer products are a large source of both outdoor
and indoor air pollution. See CARB-- barb
See links to documents scattered throughout this section, also visit EHN's section on Indoor Air Quality, General Links, page I, Indoor
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnlinx/i.htm#Indoor
- Access Board and Indoor Air Quality
http://www.access-board.gov/news/indoorair-notice.htm
- American Lung Association Applauds Governor [Davis, Calif.] for Signing
Indoor Air Pollution Legislation - Will Help Reduce Breathing Problems
http://www.californialung.org/press/021001ab1173.html
- Health Advocates Concerned about Indoor Air Pollution
from "Public Policy Update", Breathe Easy news magazine, Spring/Summer 2002 http://www.californialung.org/advocacy/indoorair_02ss.html
- Indoor Air Quality Standards Needed for Airlines
Air Quality News, Breathe Easy news magazine, Fall 2002/Winter 2003
http://www.californialung.org/spotlight/02fw_air_quality.html
- Poor Indoor Air Quality Poses Health Risk
http://www.californialung.org/spotlight/air_quality_02ss.html
- Poster: The Sweetest Smell . . .
brought to you by ALA Newfoundland and Labrador
http://www.nf.lung.ca/sweetest_smell.html
- Clean Water Fund's Home-SAFE-Home guide
"Each year, United States industries produce over 250 million tons of hazardous waste
in the manufacture of consumer goods. That equals more than one ton per man, woman,
and child currently living in America, and the numbers increase when we use and
dispose of these products! Convenience items, disposable products, quick-fix household
goods, and an array of non-biodegradable packaging contribute to the pollution of
our air, soil, and water. Over 55,000 chemicals are contained in various household
products and over 1,000 new synthetic chemicals appear on the market each year.
Pesticides, cleansers, chemicals, and hosts of other products may offer instant results,
but many also present health threats and continue to leave their mark on the
environment for hundreds of years!You can help curb the massive tide of pollution threatening our health. Our
Home Safe Home guide will help you make choices that don't expose your
family to toxic chemicals or harm the environment."
I have been able to get this guide in hard copy as an 11x17 folded newsletter format. -- barb
http://www.cleanwaterfund.org/SafeHome.htm
- The indoor air we breathe: a public health problem of the 90's
Public Health Reports; Sept-Oct 1998
http://www.eisc.ca/air-we-breth.htm
- National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences
Common Indoor Air Pollutants
Includes fragrances and pesticides! -- barb
http://www.niehs.nih.gov/external/faq/indoor.htm
- NO SCENTS IS GOOD SENSE
By Brenda Marsh; From the January/February, 1998, issue of OHS Canada --
Canada¼s Ocupational Health and Safety Magazine
http://www.ohscanada.com/virtual-issue/artucle/health.html
- No Scents Makes Sense
Taking the Scents out of Sensitive
http://www.edu.pe.ca/montaguehigh/scents.htm
Joan LaCroix's
Buttons, Caps, Shirts -- Make everyday Earthday -- order yours now!
Joan's buttons are available through EHN's Book order page for $3.50 plus $1 shipping -- for more information, please visit:
http://ehnca.org/www/books/bookordr.htm
Create An Awareness: Our planet wears a gas mask! (reprinted from The New Reactor)
http://ehnca.org/www/joan/tshirts.htm
North Carolina Chemical Injury Network brings you more of Joan's items
http://www.ncchem.com/multiple.htm
Real Estate & MCS
- See EHN's links out to information on Housing
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnlinx/h.htm#HousingThe Word IS Out!
This section of supportive information has grown so large, I've moved it to a page of its own.
Please visit http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/wordout.htm -- barb
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Write YOUR Government Officials
Also see, EHN's Write Now!
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/writenow.htmExecutive Branch
http://lcweb.loc.gov/global/executive/fed.html
Representatives and Senators
- House Directory
http://clerkweb.house.gov/mbrcmtee/mbrcmtee.htm
- Form for reaching your representative
http://www.house.gov/writerep/
- Representatives' web pages
http://www.house.gov/house/MemberWWW.html
- U.S. Senate
http://www.senate.gov/contacting/index.cfm
Return to EHN's Home Page
(www.ehnca.org)
(Please put WWW on subject line.)
For general EHN contact information please visit:
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/contact.htm
please e-mail to and put "NR" in the subject line.
A few additional links that may be of interest:
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnlinx/childstu.htm Note: Why do mislabeled "fragrance-free" and/or "unscented" products -- as well as slightly- scented products -- cause adverse health reactions in the already chemically injured individual? It's the chemicals! Synthetic scents are petrochemical products. There is inadequate testing before marketing and the FDA does not test for safety. The only real testing done has been for dermatological reactions, yet these products are made to be inhaled! Even the dermatologist have not paid close enough heed to those having adverse reactions at the secondary and tertiary levels of exposures.
Synthetic scents contain known irritants and sensitizers, and also contain known or suspected carcinogens, neurotoxins and teratogens (adversely affecting embryonic and fetal development). Check out the analyses of six scents, and further explore the website of Perfumers World. All are available via EHN's FDA Petition. -- barb If you or loved ones, suffer adverse reactions to synthetic scents, OR if you simply feel the public has a right to know, please write to the FDA. Contact info available on the petition page. -- barb http://ehnca.org/www/FDApetition/bkgrinfo.htm
http://ehnca.org/www/ehnlinx/p.htm#Pregnancy
MCS = Multiple Chemical Sensitivity http://ehnca.org/www/ehnlinx/mcs.htm
A report on phthalates in fragrances and cosmetics with links out to information concerning effects upon adult sperm and male fetuses. -- barb http://www.nottoopretty.org
"Cide" means KILL, but not all pests are killed, and with a short life cycle, they quickly develop pesticide-resistant strains. Great for the pesticide industry, for they get to develop more cides. -- barb http://ehnca.org/www/ehnlinx/pestcide.htm
I feel it is important to keep up with what is being said and used against us; to denigrate us. -- barb http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/stufhaps.htm
Links to validating information. -- barb http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/wordout.htm
Fragranced Products Information Network http://www.fpinva.org And, just assuming you can't get enough of good information, I'd like to direct your attention to a couple of articles. Smelling Good But Feeling Bad Synthetic Perfumes, Colognes and Scents Are Turning Up Noses By Damon Franz and Holly Prall E-Magazine, Volume XI, Number I; January-February 2000 http://www.emagazine.com/january-february_2000/0100gl_health.html
What to know before buying a Valentine¼s Day perfume By Francesca Lyman; Feb. 6, 2002; MSNBC CONTRIBUTOR In this article, we learn that the industry "has begun the first study to examine fragrance inhalation." Mirrored by kind permission of Ms. Francesca Lyman and MSNBC http://ehnca.org/www/FDApetition/flscents.htm Had been at: http://www.msnbc.com/news/702445.asp
Chemically / Electromagnetically Injured An opinion piece by barb |
As with all organizations, EHN depends upon your contributions of time and energy, as well as your monetary membership support. For your conveninece, a mail-in membership/donation form is available at http://ehnca.org/ehnmemor.htm. |
Please put WWW in subject line. Thanks.
The URL for this page is: http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/takheart.htm
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http://ehnca.org/www/
The Environmental Health Network (EHN) [of California] is a 501 (c) (3) non profit agency and offers support and information for the chemically injured. Learn from the work of Julia Kendall, work fragrance-free, have fragrance-free schools. See what influence the Chemical Manufacturers have had against those of us with EI. The URL for this page is http://ehnca.org/www/ehnhompg/takheart.htm EHN's new homepage is www.ehnca.org