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Proposal to phase out the sale of “forever chemicals” passes Colo. Legislature

PFAS risk assessor Kelsey Barton collects samples from fish caught around Fountain Creek at Fountain Creek Regional Park in Fountain, Colorado on Wednesday, Sept. 9, 2020. (Hyoung Chang, The Denver Post)

Read the full article by Conrad Swanson (The Denver Post)

“A measure to ban the sale of carpeting, furniture, cosmetics and other products containing PFAS – or forever chemicals linked to cancer and birth defects – needs only Gov. Jared Polis’ signature before becoming law.

Groundwater across the state is contaminated with the toxic chemicals. Attorney General Phil Weiser also filed a lawsuit in late February against companies that produce the chemicals.

House Bill 1345 is an attempt to cut into the number of products containing the compounds.

The General Assembly passed the bill this week and Conor Cahill, a spokesman for Polis, did not say whether the governor intends to sign the legislation but said he will consider it when it lands on his desk.

If Polis signs the bill into law by Jan. 1, 2024, the state would prohibit the sale of products containing PFAS including:

The measure had bipartisan support and was backed by environmental groups like Metro Water Recovery, GreenLatinos and the Colorado Public Interest Research Group.”

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