Order Code RL34479
Revising the National Ambient
Air Quality Standard for Lead

Updated July 28, 2008
James E. McCarthy
Specialist in Environmental Policy
Resources, Science, and Industry Division

Revising the National Ambient
Air Quality Standard for Lead
Summary
The Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), under a
court order to review the National Ambient Air Quality Standard (NAAQS) for lead,
proposed to revise the standard on May 1, 2008, reducing it from 1.5 micrograms per
cubic meter (µg/m3) to within the range of 0.10 to 0.30 µg/m3. The proposal’s
publication in the Federal Register, May 20, began a 75-day public comment period.
The agency must promulgate a final standard by October 15, 2008.
NAAQS are standards for outdoor (ambient) air that are intended to protect
public health and welfare from harmful concentrations of pollution. If the
Administrator ultimately strengthens the lead standard, he will be concluding that
protecting public health and welfare requires lower concentrations of lead pollution
in ambient air than the level previously held to be safe. Lead particles can be inhaled
or ingested, and, once in the body, can cause lower IQ and effects on learning,
memory, and behavior in children. In adults, lead exposure is linked to increased
blood pressure, cardiovascular disease, and decreased kidney function.
Regulation of airborne lead is often described as one of the key successes of the
Clean Air Act and of the Environmental Protection Agency. In 1970, when lead was
widely used as a gasoline additive, emissions of lead nationwide totaled 224,100
tons. Lead was also present then in many consumer products, and thus was emitted
to the air in industrial processes and from waste incinerators. The phasing out of lead
from gasoline, paint, and other products, as well as stricter controls on industrial
emissions, reduced lead emissions 98%, to 4,228 tons in 2000.
The reduction in lead emissions and ambient concentrations have led some to
suggest that there is no longer a need for an ambient air quality standard for lead.
Others, including the Clean Air Scientific Advisory Committee (CASAC), an
independent panel of scientists who advise the EPA Administrator, conclude that the
current NAAQS (established in 1978) is far too lenient, that lead in ambient air still
poses a threat to public health, and that the NAAQS should be significantly
strengthened. CASAC recommended that the standard be reduced from 1.5 µg/m3
to no higher than 0.2. In proposing a more stringent NAAQS, the Administrator
sided with the scientists, rejecting the argument that the standard is no longer needed;
but his proposed range is, in part, not as stringent as they recommended. His
decision appears to rest, in part, on a potentially controversial interpretation of the
statutory requirement to “protect ... public health” with “an adequate margin of
safety.”
The May 2008 proposal follows a multi-year review of the science. Assuming
a new standard is promulgated, nonattainment areas will first be identified (not
expected to occur until October 2011), following which there will be a 5-10 year-long
implementation process in which states and local governments will identify and
implement measures to reduce lead in the air. EPA has also proposed expanding the
monitoring network for lead. Only about 3% of U.S. counties have lead monitors.

Contents
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
The Role of NAAQS in Improving Air Quality . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
What Are NAAQS? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Implementing a NAAQS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Other Pollution Control Measures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
The NAAQS Review Process . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Schedule for Review . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
How the Process Works . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Adding or Deleting NAAQS Pollutants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Lead Emission Reduction: Success, but Not Generally Due to NAAQS . . . . . . . 4
EPA’s Proposal . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
The Primary Standard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
The Secondary Standard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Expanding the Lead Monitoring Network . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Issues Raised by the NAAQS Review . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Finalizing the Standard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
List of Figures
Figure 1. Counties with Monitors Violating the Proposed Alternative
Lead Standards Maximum Quarterly Mean . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Figure 2. Counties with Monitors Violating the Proposed Alternative
Lead Standards Second Maximum Monthly Mean . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Figure 3. Locations of Current Ambient Lead Monitors and
Largest Stationary Sources of Lead Emissions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11

Revising the National Ambient Air Quality
Standard for Lead
Introduction
On May 1, 2008, EPA Administrator Stephen Johnson proposed to strengthen
the National Ambient Air Quality Standard (NAAQS) for lead. The publication of
the proposal in the Federal Register, May 20, began a public comment period that
runs through August 4. Public hearings took place on June 12 in St. Louis and
Baltimore. A final decision on the standard is required by October 15, 2008.1
When the current standard for lead was promulgated in 1978, lead was a
widespread air pollutant. Eighty to ninety percent of it was emitted by the nation’s
automobiles and trucks, a majority of which ran on leaded gasoline. Leaded gasoline
was gradually phased out in the 1970s, 1980s, and early 1990s, and both emissions
and concentrations of lead in the air plummeted. Emissions fell more than 96% from
1979 to 2000. Ambient concentrations fell by a similar percentage.2 As of March
12, 2008, only two areas with a combined population of 4,664 people had air that
remained in violation of the 1978 lead NAAQS.3
These developments have led some to suggest that there is no longer a need for
an ambient air quality standard for lead. Others, including the independent scientific
advisory panel that advises EPA’s Administrator, conclude that the current NAAQS
(established in 1978) is far too lenient, that lead in ambient air still poses a threat to
public health, and that the NAAQS should be significantly strengthened as the result
of the current review. In proposing a new standard, the Administrator generally
agreed with his scientific advisers, proposing to lower the standard to somewhere in
a range 80% to 93% below the 1978 standard. The proposed range is, in part,
though, not as stringent as the scientists recommended; thus, the Administrator’s
final choice may prove to be controversial.
1 The schedule was set by the consent decree in Missouri Coalition for the Environment v.
U.S. EPA, 2005 Westlaw 2234579 (E.D. Mo. September 14, 2005).
2 The data on lead emissions come from various years of EPA’s National Air Quality and
Emission Trends Reports
(titles vary somewhat from year to year), which can generally be
found at [http://www.epa.gov/air/airtrends/reports.html].
3 The two areas are East Helena, Montana, and Herculaneum, Missouri, both of which have
been the site of lead smelters. The East Helena smelter closed in 2001. The Herculaneum
smelter continues to operate. For additional information, see U.S. EPA, Greenbook, at
[http://www.epa.gov/oar/oaqps/greenbk/lindex.html].

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This report provides background on NAAQS, the process used to establish
them, the factors leading to the reduction in lead emissions, the proposed changes to
the lead standard, as well as information regarding the potential effects of any
revision.
The Role of NAAQS in Improving Air Quality
What Are NAAQS? NAAQS are standards that apply to ambient (outdoor)
air pollutants that exhibit two characteristics: (1) they may reasonably be anticipated
to endanger public health or welfare; and (2) their presence in the air results from
numerous or diverse mobile or stationary sources.4 The Clean Air Act provides for
two types of NAAQS: primary standards, “the attainment and maintenance of which
in the judgment of the [EPA] Administrator ... are requisite to protect the public
health,” with “an adequate margin of safety”; and secondary standards, necessary to
protect public welfare, a broad term that includes damage to crops, vegetation,
property, building materials, etc.5
NAAQS are at the core of the Clean Air Act, even though they do not directly
regulate emissions. In essence, they are standards that define what EPA considers
to be clean air.
Implementing a NAAQS. Once a NAAQS has been set, EPA uses
monitoring data and other information submitted by the states to identify areas that
exceed the standard and must, therefore, reduce pollutant concentrations to achieve
it. After these “nonattainment” areas are identified (which EPA estimates will occur
in September or October 2011 for any new lead standards), state and local
governments would produce State Implementation Plans which outline the measures
they will implement to reduce pollution levels and attain the standards. Lead
nonattainment areas would have five years after their designation to actually attain
the standard, with a possible extension of five more years.
As will be noted in more detail later, most areas of the country do not monitor
lead emissions. Thus, in addition to strengthening the lead standard, the
Administrator’s proposal would expand the requirements for lead monitoring.
Installing the additional monitors and compiling up to three years of data to
determine compliance could mean that designation of nonattainment areas might take
an additional 3-4 years, depending on the form of standard the agency adopts. Thus,
implementing a new standard is likely to be a lengthy process.
4 Authority to establish NAAQS comes from both Sections 108 and 109 of the act (42
U.S.C. 7408 and 7409); this definition of criteria pollutants is found in Section 108. The
authority and procedures for controlling the sources of criteria pollutants are found
throughout Titles I, II, and IV of the act. Pollutants that are less widely emitted are
generally classified as “hazardous air pollutants” and are regulated under a different section
of the act (Section 112).
5 The Clean Air Act’s definition of welfare is found in Section 302(h) of the act (42 U.S.C.
7602(h)).

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Other Pollution Control Measures. In addition to requiring states to
submit implementation plans, EPA also acts to control many of the NAAQS
pollutants wherever they are emitted, through national standards for products that
might emit them (particularly fuels) and through emission standards for new
stationary sources (e.g., lead smelters).
The NAAQS Review Process
Schedule for Review. The Clean Air Act requires the agency to review each
NAAQS every five years. That schedule is rarely met, but it often triggers lawsuits
that force the agency to undertake a review. In the case of lead, the last review of the
NAAQS was completed in 1978.6 The Missouri Coalition for the Environment and
others filed suit over EPA’s failure to complete a review in 2004, and a consent
decree established the schedule EPA is following in reviewing the standard.7 The
schedule required EPA to propose any revision of the standard by May 1, 2008, and
to promulgate a final decision by October 15, 2008.
How the Process Works. Reviewing an existing NAAQS is a long process.8
As a first step, EPA scientists review the scientific literature published since the last
NAAQS revision, and summarize it in a report known as a Criteria Document or
Integrated Science Assessment. Generally, there are hundreds or thousands of
scientific documents reviewed, covering such subjects as environmental
concentrations, human exposure, toxicology, animal studies and animal-to-human
extrapolation, epidemiology, effects on vegetation and ecosystems, and effects on
man-made materials.9 A second document that EPA prepares, the Staff Paper or
Policy Assessment, summarizes the information compiled in the Criteria Document
and provides the Administrator with options regarding the indicators, averaging
times, statistical form, and numerical level (concentration) of the NAAQS.
To ensure that these reviews meet the highest scientific standards, the 1977
amendments to the Clean Air Act required the Administrator to appoint an
independent Clean Air Scientific Advisory Committee (CASAC). CASAC has seven
members, largely from academia and from private research institutions. In
conducting NAAQS reviews, their expertise is supplemented by panels of the
nation’s leading experts on the health and environmental effects of the specific
pollutant or pollutants under review. These panels can be quite large. The current
lead review panel has 15 members, in addition to the 7 statutory members of
CASAC. CASAC and the public make suggestions regarding the membership of the
6 43 Federal Register 46246, October 5, 1978.
7 As mentioned earlier, the schedule was set by the consent decree in Missouri Coalition for
the Environment v. U.S. EPA, 2005 Westlaw 2234579 (E.D. Mo. September 14, 2005).
8 For a discussion of the process, and of changes to the process that EPA is now
implementing, see CRS Report RL33807, Air Quality Standards and Sound Science: What
Role for CASAC?
, by James E. McCarthy.
9 EPA indicates that more than 6,000 new studies on lead health effects, environmental
effects, and lead in the air have been published since 1990.

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panels on specific pollutants, with the final selections made by EPA. The panels
review the agency’s work during NAAQS-setting and NAAQS-revision, rather than
conducting their own independent reviews.
Adding or Deleting NAAQS Pollutants. The pollutants to which NAAQS
apply are generally referred to as “criteria” pollutants. Six pollutants are currently
identified as criteria pollutants: ozone, particulates, carbon monoxide, sulfur dioxide,
nitrogen oxides, and lead. The EPA Administrator can add to this list if he
determines that additional pollutants meet the act’s criteria (endangerment of public
health or welfare, and numerous or diverse sources); he can delete them if he
concludes that they no longer do so. Whether lead still meets these criteria is one of
the issues EPA considered in its current review of the standard.
Lead Emission Reduction: Success, but Not
Generally Due to NAAQS
The reduction of lead emissions is often described as one of the key successes
of the Clean Air Act and of the Environmental Protection Agency. In 1970,
emissions of lead totaled 224,100 tons. By 2000, emissions had been reduced 98%,
to 4,228 tons.10
Little of that success is attributable to the setting of a NAAQS, however. The
agency did not set a NAAQS for lead until 1978 (by which time lead emissions had
already declined about 40%), and it established the NAAQS then only as a result of
a lawsuit filed by the Natural Resources Defense Council and others.11 After
promulgating the NAAQS, the agency did not identify nonattainment areas until
1991. The great bulk of the lead reductions “occurred prior to 1990,” according to
EPA.12 So, in general, the reduction of lead in ambient air did not come about as a
result of the 1978 NAAQS, or in the manner prescribed by Title I of the Clean Air
Act, wherein nonattainment areas are identified and the states or areas in which they
are located submit to EPA State Implementation Plans that identify local and national
measures that will be implemented to help such areas reach attainment.
Most of the reduction was a side-benefit of other Clean Air Act programs,
especially the regulation of emissions from new automobiles, beginning in the mid-
1970s. In order to meet more stringent requirements for emissions of hydrocarbons,
nitrogen oxides, and carbon monoxide, which took effect in 1975, the auto industry
installed catalytic converters on new cars. Gasoline with lead additives would have
fouled the catalytic converters, rendering them useless; so, in anticipation of the
10 U.S. EPA, National Air Quality and Emission Trends Reports, cited previously.
11 NRDC v. Train, 411 F. Supp. 864 (S.D.N.Y. 1976) aff’d., 545 F. 2d 320 (2d Cir. 1976).
EPA was ordered to list lead as a criteria pollutant and to develop NAAQS. The agency
listed lead March 31, 1976, and on October 5, 1978, established a NAAQS for lead.
12 U.S. EPA, Review of the National Ambient Air Quality Standard for Lead: Policy
Assessment of Scientific and Technical Information, OAQPS Staff Paper
, November 2007,
p. 2-5, at [http://www.epa.gov/ttnnaaqs/standards/pb/data/20071101_pb_staff.pdf].

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converters’ widespread adoption, EPA mandated the sale of unleaded fuel in the early
1970s, and eventually banned the use of lead in gasoline entirely.
Being a metal, lead remains in the environment, even though emissions have
declined. Thus, although human exposure to lead has declined, it has not done so by
as much as the decrease in emissions would suggest. Furthermore, research
conducted since the 1970s suggests that lead has significant health impacts at levels
well below those previously considered safe.
Current sources of emissions include utility and other boilers, leaded fuel still
used in some general aviation airplanes, trace lead contaminants in diesel fuel and
gasoline, lubricating oil, iron and steel foundries, primary and secondary lead
smelters, hazardous waste incinerators, and about 30 smaller categories of sources.13
In addition, there continues to be exposure from lead particles in soil or dust re-
suspended in the atmosphere as a result of vehicular traffic, construction, agricultural
operations, and the wind.14
EPA’s Proposal
EPA proposes to deal with the remaining issue of lead in ambient air by both
strengthening the lead NAAQS and by expanding the network of monitors that are
used to measure attainment.
The Primary Standard. The primary (health-based) standard, promulgated
in 1978, has been set at 1.5 micrograms per cubic meter (µg/m3) averaged over three
months. With the exception of two small areas (one in Montana, one in Missouri),
the United States has attained this standard, but the current review has found
evidence of health effects at the levels of exposure currently experienced by much of
the U.S. population. The Staff Paper reported “significant associations between Pb
[lead] exposures and a broad range of health effects,” including, in children,
neurological effects, notably intellectual attainment, attention, and school
performance, with “long-term consequences over a lifetime.”15 The Staff Paper also
reported effects on the immune system, with “increased risk for autoimmunity and
asthma.”16 In adults, the Staff Paper found associations between lead exposure and
“increased risk of adverse cardiovascular outcomes, including increased blood
pressure and incidence of hypertension, as well as cardiovascular mortality.”17 Lead
exposure also was associated with reduced kidney function, with adverse impacts
enhanced in those with diabetes, hypertension, and chronic renal insufficiency.
13 Ibid., Table 2-2, p. 2-7.
14 Ibid., p. 2-10.
15 Ibid., p. 3-22.
16 Ibid.
17 Ibid.

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As a result, both EPA staff and the CASAC recommended strengthening the
NAAQS. According to the Staff Paper:
Staff concludes that it is appropriate for the Administrator to consider an
appreciable reduction in the level of the standard, reflecting our judgment that
a standard appreciably lower than the current standard could provide an
appropriate degree of public health protection and would likely result in
important improvements in protecting the health of sensitive groups. We
recommend that consideration be given to a range of standard levels from
approximately 0.1-0.2 µg/m3 (particularly in conjunction with a monthly
averaging time) down to the lower levels included in the exposure and risk
assessment, 0.02 to 0.05 µg/m3.18
CASAC concurred, stating in a January 22, 2008 letter that it “... unanimously
affirms EPA staff’s recognition of the need to substantially lower the level of the
primary NAAQS for Lead, to an upper bound of no higher than 0.2 µg/m3 ....”19
The Administrator agreed that the primary NAAQS should be substantially
lowered, but he chose a less stringent range of 0.10 to 0.30 µg/m3. The proposal
requests comments on alternative levels as high as 0.50 µg/m3, and below 0.10.
The Administrator also proposed two options for revising the averaging time
and form used to determine whether an area meets the standard. Instead of the
current not-to-be-exceeded form, based on quarterly (3-month) averages of lead
concentrations, the proposal would either revise the current averaging form to clarify
that it applies across a three-year span (i.e., to demonstrate attainment, an area would
need to show quarterly readings lower than the standard for 12 consecutive quarters);
or the proposal would revise the measure to the second highest monthly average in
a three-year span. According to agency staff, this latter form would better capture
short-term increases in lead exposure, while allowing the average from one bad
month (perhaps resulting from unusual meteorological conditions) to be disregarded.
The agency notes that “control programs to reduce quarterly mean concentrations
may not have the same protective effect as control programs aimed at reducing
concentrations in every individual month.”20
CASAC also recommended that consideration be given to changing from the
calendar quarter to the monthly averaging time. In making that recommendation,
CASAC emphasized support from studies suggesting that blood lead concentrations
18 Ibid., pp. 5-44 to 5-45.
19 “Clean Air Scientific Advisory Committee’s Review of the Advance Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking (ANPR) for the NAAQS for Lead,” Letter of Dr. Rogene Henderson, Chair,
CASAC, to Hon. Stephen L. Johnson, Administrator, U.S. EPA, January 22, 2008, p. 5, at
[http://yosemite.epa.gov/sab/sabproduct.nsf/427DE71C7D43AFDC852573D8006FB5B
C/$File/EPA-CASAC-08-007-unsigned.pdf].
20 U.S. EPA, National Ambient Air Quality Standards for Lead, Proposed Rule, 73 Federal
Register
29236, May 20, 2008.

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respond at shorter time scales than would be captured completely by quarterly
values.21
As shown in Figure 1 and Figure 2, the two methods of measuring attainment
produce fairly similar, though not identical, results. At the weaker end of the
proposed range (0.30 µg/m3), 11 counties have monitors showing nonattainment
using the quarterly form of the standard, versus 12 counties showing nonattainment
using the monthly form. At the stronger end of the range (0.10 µg/m3), 22 counties
show nonattainment using quarterly averages, versus 23 counties using the monthly
form. There is a more substantial difference in the middle of the proposed range,
however: 14 counties versus 19 counties, depending on whether the standard is set
as a quarterly or 2nd highest monthly average.
The Secondary Standard. As part of its current review, EPA also assessed
the secondary (public welfare) NAAQS for lead, which is currently identical to the
primary standard. The agency concluded that:
A significant number of new studies have been conducted since 1978 that
associate lead pollution with adverse effects on organisms and ecosystems.
However, there is a lack of evidence linking various effects to specific levels of
lead in the air.22
Thus, the Administrator proposed that the secondary standard be identical to the
proposed primary standard.
Expanding the Lead Monitoring Network. Besides finding that the 1978
NAAQS is inadequate to protect public health and welfare, EPA’s review concluded
that “[t]he current monitoring network is inadequate to assess national compliance
with the proposed revised lead standards.”23 Only 104 of the roughly 3,000 counties
in the United States (about 3%) currently have lead monitors, leaving many areas of
the country without any means of determining whether they are in violation of the
lead NAAQS.
Under the current (1978) standard, this was not much of an issue. There were,
at one time, about 900 lead monitors in operation; but, as lead emissions decreased
and as the monitors showed consistent attainment of the standards, many of the
monitors were shut down or removed. As a result, at least 24 states now have no
monitors at all.
21 Ibid.
22 U.S. EPA, “Fact Sheet: Proposed Revisions to the National Ambient Air Quality
Standards for Lead,” p. 3 at [http://www.epa.gov/air/lead/pdfs/20080501_factsheet.pdf].
23 U.S. EPA, “May 2008 Proposal, National Ambient Air Quality Standards for Lead,
General Overview,” Text Slides, at [http://www.epa.gov/air/lead/pdfs/20080501_text1.pdf],
p. 17.


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Figure 1. Counties with Monitors Violating the Proposed Alternative Lead Standards
Maximum Quarterly Mean
(Based on 2004-2006 Air Quality Data)
Source: U.S. EPA


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Figure 2. Counties with Monitors Violating the Proposed Alternative Lead Standards Second
Maximum Monthly Mean
(Based on 2004-2006 Air Quality Data)
Source: U.S. EPA

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The locations of monitors and of major sources of lead emissions are shown in
Figure 3. The figure shows that several of the states without monitors have large
sources of lead emissions. Arkansas, for example, has two of the 12 largest
stationary sources of lead in the United States (those with lead emissions exceeding
5 tons per year), but no ambient lead monitors. Montana, which has one of only two
nonattainment areas for the 1978 lead standard, also has no ambient lead monitors.
Similarly, large sources in Oklahoma, the Texas panhandle, and other locations
appear to be located more than 100 miles from the nearest ambient monitor.24
To address this shortfall, EPA proposed — in addition to the revised lead
NAAQS — to require monitors near all sources of lead that exceed a threshold of
between 200 and 600 kilograms (441 to 1,323 pounds) of emissions per year. The
final threshold would be determined by the stringency of the Administrator’s final
choice of a NAAQS — a more stringent NAAQS would be tied to a monitoring
requirement that includes areas with smaller sources.
EPA also proposes to require a small network of monitors to be placed in urban
areas with populations greater than one million to gather information on the general
population’s exposure to lead in air.
24 Data on monitor locations was provided by EPA’s Office of Air Quality Planning and
Standards, May 6, 2008. See also “EPA to Seek Comment on Increasing Air Monitors as
Part of Lead Rulemaking,” Daily Environment Report, November 29, 2007, p. A-10.


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Figure 3. Locations of Current Ambient Lead Monitors and Largest Stationary Sources of Lead Emissions
Source: U.S. EPA

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Issues Raised by the NAAQS Review
The primary issue raised by EPA’s proposal (as has been the case in EPA’s
recent reviews of the ozone25 and particulate matter NAAQS26) is whether the
Administrator’s proposal is supported by the available science. The range chosen by
the Administrator, while substantially stronger than the current (1978) standard,
would allow him to set a final NAAQS 50% higher than the highest level
recommended by both EPA’s scientific staff and by the independent CASAC panel.
In setting this range, the Administrator states that
... in the case of Pb [lead] there are several aspects to the body of epidemiological
evidence that add complexity to the selection of an appropriate level for the
primary standard.... [T]he epidemiological evidence that associates Pb exposures
with health effects generally focuses on blood Pb for the dose metric. In
addition, exposure to Pb comes from various media, only some of which are
air-related. This presents a more complex situation than does evidence of
associations between occurrences of health effects and ambient air
concentrations of an air pollutant, such as is the case for particulate matter and
ozone. Further, for the health effects receiving greatest emphasis in this review
(neurological effects, particularly neurocognitive and neurobehavioral effects,
in children), no threshold levels can be discerned from the evidence. As was
recognized at the time of the last review, estimating a threshold for toxic effects
of Pb on the central nervous system entails a number of difficulties. The task is
made still more complex by support in the evidence for a nonlinear rather than
linear relationship of blood Pb with neurocognitive decrement, with greater risk
of decrement-associated changes in blood Pb at the lower levels of blood Pb in
the exposed population.27
Furthermore, the proposal maintains
... the Administrator recognizes that there are currently no commonly accepted
guidelines or criteria within the public health community that would provide a
clear basis for reaching a judgment as to the appropriate degree of public health
protection that should be afforded to neurocognitive effects in sensitive
populations, such as IQ loss in children.... In addition, the Administrator
concludes that it is appropriate to consider various air-to-blood ratios, again
recognizing the uncertainties in the relevant evidence.28
Given these uncertainties (particularly the range of air-to-blood ratios — i.e., the
estimated correlation between airborne lead and blood lead levels — and the
uncertainties in the concentration-response functions — i.e., the effect of changes in
blood lead levels on IQ), the Administrator concludes that his decision would be
supported by the science at any point in the proposed range of 0.10 to 0.30 µg/m3.
25 For additional information on the ozone NAAQS, promulgated in March 2008, see CRS
Report RL34057, Ozone Air Quality Standards: EPA’s March 2008 Revision.
26 For additional information on the PM NAAQS, see CRS Report RL33254, Air Quality:
EPA’s 2006 Changes to the Particulate Matter (PM) Standard
.
27 Proposed Lead NAAQS Rule, previously cited, 73 Federal Register 29237.
28 Ibid., p. 29242.

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Of particular interest is the Administrator’s interpretation of the statutory
language requiring him to set a standard that protects public health with an adequate
margin of safety. The preamble to the proposed rule states that CASAC and the
American Academy of Pediatrics both advised the agency that mean IQ loss within
a range of 1 to 2 points “could be significant from a public health perspective.” But
the Administrator decided that a standard level should be selected to provide
protection from air-related IQ loss in excess of this range (emphasis added).29 In
other words, the Administrator’s interpretation of protecting public health with an
adequate margin of safety was to choose a standard that would likely result in an IQ
loss that his scientific advisers told him could be significant from a public health
perspective.30
The degree to which these arguments prove controversial is likely to depend on
where in the proposed range the Administrator sets the final standard. If his choice
falls within the lower half (0.10 to 0.20 µg/m3), there would be less ground for
challenge. A standard in that portion of the range would be supported by EPA staff’s
conclusions based on their review of 6,000 scientific studies, and would be supported
by the unanimous conclusions of the 22-member CASAC review panel, particularly
if the standard were coupled with the monthly averaging requirement. If his choice
falls in the upper half of the range (0.21 to 0.30 µg/m3), it would lack this support and
would almost certainly join other recent EPA decisions in being reviewed by the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit.
Finalizing the Standard
Section 307(d) of the Clean Air Act sets out the procedures for proposal and
promulgation of a NAAQS. It requires the establishment of a rulemaking docket31;
it requires that the notice of proposed rulemaking in the Federal Register be
accompanied by a statement of the proposal’s basis and purpose, including a
summary of the factual data on which the proposed rule is based, the methodology
used in obtaining and analyzing the data, and the major legal interpretations and
policy considerations underlying the proposed rule. The statement is required to set
forth or summarize and provide a reference to any pertinent findings,
recommendations, and comments by CASAC and the National Academy of Sciences,
and, if the proposal differs in any important respect from any of these
29 Ibid.
30 The exact words of the preamble are: “... the Administrator first notes that ideally
air-related (as well as other) exposures to environmental Pb would be reduced to the point
that no IQ impact in children would occur. The Administrator recognizes, however, that in
the case of setting a NAAQS, he is required to make a judgment as to what degree of
protection is requisite to protect public health with an adequate margin of safety. ...
Considering the advice of CASAC and public comments on this issue, notably including the
comments of the American Academy of Pediatrics, the Administrator proposes to conclude
that an air-related population mean IQ loss within the range of 1 to 2 points could be
significant from a public health perspective, and that a standard level should be selected to
provide protection from air-related population mean IQ loss in excess of this range.” Ibid.
31 In this case, the docket number is EPA-HQ-OAR-2006-0735.

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recommendations, provide an explanation of the reasons for such differences. The
act also requires that any drafts of proposed and final rules submitted by the
Administrator to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) prior to proposal or
promulgation, all documents accompanying those drafts, and all written comments
thereon and EPA responses to such comments, be placed in the docket no later than
the date of proposal. The proposal appeared in the Federal Register May 20, 2008.
Publication of the proposal in the Federal Register set in motion a public
comment period that will run through August 4. Public hearings took place on June
12, 2008, in St. Louis and Baltimore. Comments can be submitted at
[http://www.regulations.gov]. Upon completion of the public comment period, the
agency reviews, evaluates, and summarizes the public comments and the
Administrator makes a final choice regarding the standard. Under the consent decree
in Missouri Coalition for the Environment, as recently modified, the Administrator
is required to do so by October 15, 2008.