Mercury in Mascara? Minn. Law Bans It
By Martiga Lohn
Associated Press
December 14, 2007
ST. PAUL, Minn. — The quest for thicker lashes and defined eyes
should get safer in Minnesota on Jan. 1, when a state law banning
mercury from mascara, eye liners and skin-lightening creams takes
effect.
Minnesota apparently is the first state in the nation to ban
intentionally added mercury in cosmetics, giving it a tougher
standard than the federal government.
Retailers who knowingly sell mercury-containing cosmetics in
Minnesota could face fines of as much as $700. Penalties could reach
$10,000 for manufacturers who fail to disclose mercury on product
labels, according to the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency.
"Mercury does cause neurological damage to people even in tiny
quantities," said Sen. John Marty, the Democrat from Roseville who
sponsored the ban. "Every source of mercury adds to it. We wanted to
make sure it wasn't here."
Most makeup manufacturers have phased out the use of mercury, but
it's still added legally to some eye products as a preservative and
germ-killer, said John Bailey, chief scientist with the Personal
Care Products Council in Washington. That group doesn't track
mercury in beauty products and favors a national approach to
regulating cosmetics, instead of laws that vary from state to state.
Federal law allows eye products to contain up to 65 parts per
million of mercury. The exposure a person would get from a product
used in small quantities around the eyes would not cause a problem,
Bailey said.
"It's added at very low levels, and for good reason," he said.
No other state has specifically gone after mercury in cosmetics,
said Stacy Malkan with the Campaign for Safe Cosmetics in Berkeley,
Calif. Connecticut, Rhode Island and Louisiana ban products
containing more than low levels of mercury, with some exceptions.
New York and Illinois prohibit consumer products with mercury, such
as figurines, toys and jewelry.
"Personal care products contain many problematic chemicals,"
Malkan said. "Many ingredients aren't listed on the labels."
Minnesota's cosmetics provision is part of a larger ban targeting
better-known sources of mercury, such as thermostats, barometers,
industrial switches and medical devices. The law also covers
toiletries, fragrances and over-the-counter drugs such as eye drops,
nasal sprays, hemorrhoid treatments and antiseptics.
State pollution regulators said they don't know how many beauty
products containing mercury are sold in Minnesota.
The new law is intended as a warning to cosmetics manufacturers
not to use mercury, said John Gilkeson, with the state Pollution
Control Agency's toxics reduction program. Enforcement will happen
mainly when consumers complain.
Using eye makeup with mercury is unlikely to cause immediate
health problems, but mercury accumulates in the body, so consumers
should avoid exposure whenever possible, said Carl Herbrandson, a
toxicologist with the state Health Department.
"Mercury is bad, basically in all forms that get into the body,"
Herbrandson said.
Mercury can retard brain development in children and fetuses, who
are most vulnerable to the metal's toxic effects. But it can also
cause neurological symptoms in adults.
Mercury fumes can collect inside a jar of skin cream or a tube of
mascara, and a person could inhale them when the container is
opened, Herbrandson said.
Imported skin-lightening creams and soaps with high levels of
mercury have been found in other states; they are illegal under
federal law. Herbrandson said skin products with mercury are more
dangerous than mercury-containing eye makeup because people apply
larger quantities to their bodies.
On the Net:
• Minnesota Pollution Control Agency:
http://www.pca.state.mn.us
• Personal Care Products Council:
http://www.personalcarecouncil.org
• Campaign for Safe Cosmetics:
http://www.safecosmetics.org
• Minnesota mercury ban:
http://tinyurl.com/ysg2bj
Publics Right to Know.
http://www.publicsright2know.org
For Safe
Products without harmful chemicals