ENVIRONMENT COUNCIL OF RHODE ISLAND
RESOLUTION


ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION FROM INDUSTRIAL LAUNDRIES

Adopted March 3, 2004

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Whereas industrial laundries pose significant environmental hazards, including wastewater emissions of toxic solvents and metals that are dangerous to people and wildlife; and

Whereas industrial laundries are among the largest emitters of "endocrine-disrupting" toxins to public wastewater systems, resulting from their use of detergents containing alkylphenols; and

Whereas the US Environmental Protection Agency has proposed draft water quality criteria for the most serious types of the alkylphenol endocrine disuptors ("nonylphenols"); and

Whereas in 2003, the European Union banned these chemicals from industrial and household detergents; and

Whereas rapidly biodegradable detergents made from alcohol ethoxylate are readily available and do not pose a known risk of hormone disruption in fish; and

Whereas Cintas Corporation, the market leader in the industrial laundry market, has routinely violated its wastewater permits at its facilities throughout the United States and leaked industrial contaminants into open waters; and

Whereas the Attorney General of Connecticut and citizen organizations in multiple states are suing Cintas in response to excessive violations of the Clean Water Act; and

Whereas these violations make protecting the environment more difficult and may raise utility costs to taxpayers; and

Whereas Cintas plans to operate a laundry in Cumberland, Rhode Island, which will discharge wastewater to the Narragansett Bay Commission; and

Whereas this company has received a tax-abatement from the Town of Cumberland despite a history of endangering the environment;

Now therefore be it resolved that the Environment Council of Rhode Island: