Advocacy, Policy, & Civic Engagement

Protecting the Health of Our Communities

Alaska Community Action on Toxics (ACAT) changes policies, laws, and regulations to prevent pollution of our air, waters, food, and communities. We protect the health of the most vulnerable among us, including Indigenous Peoples, people of color, children, women, workers, those with chronic illnesses, and elders. We advance prevention-based solutions and safe alternatives.

How ACAT does this:

Engage people to build grassroots power and create change

Partner with tribes, labor organizations, healthcare professionals, students, scientists, and other environmental health and justice organizations

Educate policymakers, elected officials, and the public

Conduct and publish community-based scientific research that demonstrates the harmful effects of chemicals on wildlife and people

How you can get involved:

Call or write your elected officials

Write a letter to the editor of your local paper

Attend an event

Subscribe to ACAT's policy email list

ACAT sent a candidate questionnaire to every candidate running in the general election. We received only a few responses, but we gave everyone an opportunity to answer and express their opinions on critical environmental questions facing our state in the future.

 

Here is a summary of some of ACAT's policy wins at the local, state, national, and international levels:

Local

Current Policy Goals:

After meeting with our new Mayor, we are seeking to restart our Healthy Babies, Bright Futures program. We had a good conversation with the mayor and her team about it. Also, we are researching to reeducate the new administration about using harmful pesticides on Mayday trees.

Past Policy Wins:

State

Current Policy Goals:

Currently, ACAT is meeting with State Senators and State representatives about the four bills we are advocating to be introduced and passed in this upcoming session. The four bills we are seeking to sponsor this session:

  • PFAS and other classes of chemicals, such as phthalates, heavy metals, bisphenols, parabens, and others, should be banned in all menstrual products.
  • PFAS and other classes of chemicals, such as phthalates, heavy metals, bisphenols, parabens, and others, should be banned in all cosmetic products.
  • All hair-care products should be banned from PFAS and other chemicals, such as phthalates, heavy metals, bisphenols, parabens, and others.
  • A comprehensive ban on microplastics.

Representative Josephson will reintroduce HB 354, a ban on polystyrene packing (Styrofoam) in restaurants, in this upcoming legislative session.

Click here to see what other states have introduced and pass around PFAS and microplastics.

Past Policy Wins:

National

Current Policy Goals:

ACAT is sending several letters of support or opposition to various elected officials to use our voices and hope to educate them on our positions on multiple bills.

  • ACAT is supporting the Fighting Fibers Act of 2024 (S.4884), which Senator Jeff Merkley introduced would require washing machines to include microfiber filtration and commission more research on the impact of microfibers.
  • ACAT is opposing the inclusion of Ambler Road in the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA)
  • ACAT opposes the Energy Permitting Reform Act of 2024 (EPRA) for several reasons.
  • ACAT is opposing the Accelerating a Circular Economy for Plastics and Recycling Innovation Act” (H.R. 9676), a piece of legislation developed in conjunction with the American Chemistry Council and other plastics industry lobbyists. This legislation would carve out dangerous exemptions to existing laws so that plastic incinerators can operate without meeting the Clean Air Act's and other environmental laws' environmental and health protections.
  • ACAT is supporting H.R. 3620, the Cosmetic Safety for Communities of Color and Professional Salon Workers Act of 2023, for several reasons.
  • ACAT is supporting H.R. 6805 – PFAS Action Act of 2023, which would require the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to designate per- and poly-fluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) as hazardous substances under the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980. PFAS are some of the most dangerous chemical groups currently in production and used in many products.
  • ACAT is supporting the 2025 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) with the provision directing the Department of Defense (DoD) to purchase cleaning products free from hazardous chemicals like PFAS and only to use safer chemical ingredients.

Past Policy Wins:

The primary law governing chemicals in the United States is the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA). It was originally adopted in 1976. Along with our coalition partners in the Safer Chemicals Healthy Families Coalition, we worked for years to compel Congress to enact much-needed reforms of this broke, antiquated federal law. In 2016, Congress passed the Frank R. Lautenberg Chemical Safety for the 21st Century Act, a substantial revision of TSCA that requires a health-based standard for chemicals, establishes enforceable deadlines to restrict priority chemicals, and requires protections for vulnerable populations. Although we did not get all we hoped to achieve with the reforms in the Lautenberg Act, it represents a significant achievement for public health. It is critical for the public to stay engaged in order to ensure strong implementation for the protection of the health of children, women, workers, fenceline communities, and Indigenous peoples of the north. For additional details about TSCA and its implementation, please check out this Abbreviated Guide to the Frank R. Lautenberg Chemical Safety for the 21st Century Act.

To ensure strong implementation of TSCA, ACAT presents testimony at hearings, prepares technical comments, and pursues legal actions to hold the EPA accountable for protections of vulnerable populations from harmful exposures to persistent, bioaccumulative, toxic chemicals. ACAT also plays a leading role in legal actions to uphold other federal environmental and public health laws including the Clean Air Act and Clean Water Act.

International

Current Policy Goals:

ACAT is working on the Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants and the new International Plastics/Microplastics Treaty.

Past Policy Wins:

“How could the Arctic, seemingly untouched by contemporary ills, so innocent, so primitive, so natural, be home to the most contaminated people on the planet? I had stumbled upon what is perhaps the greatest environmental injustice on earth.”

—Marla Cone, author of Silent Snow: The Slow Poisoning of the Arctic

Thank you for your generous support!