The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is recognizing October as Children’s Health Month. Every year, EPA begins the fall season by raising awareness about the crucial role the environment plays in the ability for children to grow up healthy.
“Every child deserves to breathe clean air, drink clean water, and live in healthy, thriving neighborhoods,” says EPA Administrator Michael S. Regan, “At EPA we are committed to making this a reality by advancing policies that reduce health disparities, and ensure that communities have the tools to safeguard their children’s future and lifelong health.”
Children, especially in vulnerable communities, are susceptible to the damages of pollution and climate change. Their developing bodies are sensitive to toxins, where they live can increase their exposure to pollutants and poverty can impact their recovery from environmental exposures. Early exposure to pollutants can last a lifetime. Most recently, EPA took these actions to advance children’s health protection:
• Launching the Kids and Climate Health Zone, a collection of stories and information about how climate stressors are impacting children’s health at various life stages across different regions of the U.S.
• Reducing diesel emissions and creating cleaner air for children and communities by awarding nearly $900 million through the EPA Clean School Bus Program Awards to approximately 5301 school districts to support the purchase of over 3,400 zero-emission and clean school buses, part of an overall $5 billion investment.
• Reducing exposure to lead in drinking water for countless families through the Drinking Water State Revolving Fund (DWSRF), which announced $3 billion to help identify and replace lead service lines, part of a $9 billion total investment to replace an estimated 1.7 million lead service lines nationwide and $50 million in funding to reduce lead exposure in schools.
• Preventing exposure to “forever chemicals” by investing $10 billion to tackle PFAS in water, establishing the first-ever national drinking water standard for PFAS to protect over 100 million people, and initiating cleanup efforts at Superfund sites to protect children and public health.
• Finalizing a suite of standards to reduce air pollution from fossil fuel-fired power plants and investment in the transition to a clean energy economy.
• Strengthening safeguards to protect families and children from lead in contaminated soil at residential sites; and more.
Read more on Children's Health Month here.