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News Alert
March 2, 2001
Less than two years after a mandatory
fluoridation bill stalled in the state legislature (see - http://www.penweb.org/issues/fluoride/hb939stalls.html) , another mandatory fluoridation bill has been
proposed for the state of Pennsylvania. If passed, the bill will require that
every water supply in the state serving more than 500 people be fluoridated.
To learn more about the bill, contact
Ellie Rudolph of the Pennsylvania Environmental Network (PEN) at frudolph@aol.com.
The bill has been referred to the Health
& Human Services Committee. The Chairman of the committee is Dennis O'Brien (R), tel: 717-787-5689 and the Co-Chair is Frank Oliver (D), tel: 717-787-3480.
THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF PENNSYLVANIA
HOUSE BILL
No. 595 Session of 2001
INTRODUCED BY TIGUE, HENNESSEY, BUTKOVITZ, M. COHEN, CURRY, DeLUCA,
FRANKEL, HALUSKA, McCALL, PISTELLA, PRESTON, ROEBUCK, SHANER, STABACK,
TRELLO, WOJNAROSKI, SAINATO, SOLOBAY, THOMAS, WALKO AND YOUNGBLOOD, FEBRUARY
8, 2001
Referred
to Committee on Health and Human Services, February 8, 2001
AN ACT
Providing for
fluoridation of public water.
The General Assembly of the Commonwealth
of Pennsylvania hereby enacts as follows:
Section 1. Short title.
This act shall be known and may be cited
as the Fluoridation Act.
Section 2. Purpose.
It is the purpose of this act to prevent
dental disease as a health care cost-contaminant measure.
Section 3. Fluoride content of
water.
Whenever the fluoride content of water
served by public water suppliers to 500 domestic water connections or more is
less than 0.8 milligrams per liter of fluoride, the person, association,
firm, corporation, authority or municipality having jurisdiction over the
supply shall add a measured amount of fluoride to the water so as to maintain
a fluoride content of between 0.8 milligrams per liter and 1.2 milligrams per
liter, in accordance with regulations adopted by the Department of Environmental
Protection in consultation with the Department of Health, and recommended
levels as established by the United States Public Health Service and the
Environmental Protection Agency.
Section 4. Enforcement.
The Department of Environmental Protection
shall enforce this act commencing one year after the effective date of this
act.
Section 5. Effective date.
This act shall take effect in 120 days.
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