Art | Resources
Custom Ear Plugs
Question from Alonna
Hi,
How to block airplane noise? Has anyone tried custom-molded ear plugs for sleeping that would be ordered from an audiologist? The material options are silicone or vinyl. Do they have an odor or cause skin reactions? Thanks!
Debra’s Answer
Of these two options for materials, silicone would be safer by far over vinyl.
What Organic Means — From the Experience of Being Organic Farmers
My guests today are Diana Kaye and James Hahn, husband and wife, and co-founders of their USDA certified organic business Terressentials. They own a small organic farm in lovely Middletown Valley, Maryland and have operated their organic herbal personal care products business there since 1996. We’ll be talking about what “organic” means, their experience as organic farmers and problems with the organic system. Terressentials was originally started in Virginia in 1992. It grew out of their search for chemical-free products after Diana’s personal experience with cancer and chemotherapy in 1988. Prior to Diana’s cancer, they were involved in commercial architecture in Washington DC. Diana and James are proud to be an authentic USDA certified organic and Fair Made USA business. They are obsessive organic researchers and artisan handcrafters of more than one hundred USDA certified organic gourmet personal care products that they offer through their two organic stores in Frederick County, Maryland, through a network of select retail partners across the US, and to customers around the world via their informative web site. www.debralynndadd.com/debras-list/terressentials
LISTEN TO OTHER SHOWS WITH DIANA KAYE & JAMES HAHN
- GMOs in Personal Care Products
- Toxics in Essential Oils?
- How to Restore Your “Virgin Hair”
- How to Read a Label on Organic Personal Care Products
- More About “Organic”: Politics and the Regulation of Marketplace Distribution
- The Challenges of Achieving Organic Certification
- Why One Couple Decided to Get an Organic Farm and Make USDA Certified Organic Gourmet Personal Care Products
TOXIC FREE TALK RADIO
What Organic Means – From the Experience of Being Organic Farmers
Host: Debra Lynn Dadd
Guest: Diana Kaye and James Hahn
Date of Broadcast: July 23, 2014
DEBRA: Hi, I’m Debra Lynn Dadd and this is Toxic Free Talk Radio where we talk about how to thrive in a toxic world and live toxic-free. It is July 23rd 2014. I’m here in Clearwater, Florida where we’re having a sunny day. I’m going to get right to my guest because we have a lot to talk about today.
We’re going to talk about organic, what it means, what it’s like to be inside the organic process. My guests today are Diana Kaye and James Hahn, husband and wife and co-founders of the USDA certified organic business, Terressentials. They make some wonderful personal care products out of organic ingredients, many of which they grow themselves on their farm. Others are very carefully selected according to their very high standards, their personal standards.
I’ve been using some of their products lately. They’re absolutely wonderful especially they have some that are fragrance-free and some that are scented with essential oils. And the fragrances are amazing!
I’ve tried a lot of products over the years, but these, they’re fresh and clean and not overwhelming and simple. I have lemon soap that I have in my kitchen sink. I’m washing my hair with their cool mint hair wash. They’re just refreshing and lovely to use. They are exceptional – not that all other products are not. There’s many, many wonderful products, but these fragrances and just the way these products are put together are unusual and outstanding.
Anyway, so I have both Diana and Jim on the line. Last time, Diana has been on the show before. They were going to be on before and James had to go and work, do something on the farm. Today, we’re going to talk to Jim too.
So hi, Diana and Jim.
James Hahn: Hi, Debra.
Diana Kaye: Hi, Debra. That was such an opening. I’m not sure we can live up to that.
James Hahn: No.
Diana Kaye: But thank you. That was awfully kind of you.
James Hahn: Very nice.
DEBRA: You’re welcome.
Diana Kaye: We’re happy to hear that you are enjoying real organic products.
DEBRA: Yes, and that’s what we’re going to be talking about today, what is a real organic product. I do want to say that you’ve been doing your business since 1992. So you’ve been doing this for a long time. So why don’t you start out and just tell us a little bit about how you came to do your business and become organic farmers?
James Hahn: Go ahead, Diana.
Diana Kaye: Sure, sure. Well, really, our journey into the world or organic started with my personal experience with non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma and an urgent situation that didn’t really leave me with a lot of time to evaluate treatment options. It was very aggressive. It happened very quickly and I ended up doing experimental chemotherapy, which is – phew! Talk about an experiment.
So Jim knew me before the pre-cancer, pre-chemo and saw what I went through and then at first hand was right there with me and dealing with the aftermath. The chemo that I dealt with was an experimental protocol in that because my cancer was so aggressive, they doubled the dose in half the time and it really took a huge toll on my body. My body reacted by becoming extremely sensitive to synthetic chemicals.
I became a very reactive person after the chemo. I would have problems breathing, migraine/headaches, bizarre rashes. We didn’t know what was going on. And the doctors, conventional western medicine, the answer often is, “Well, here’s one drug. And if you have a side effect, let us give you another drug to treat that.”
And so it ended up that they said that they were able to arrest the growth of this aggressive tumor that I had, but I had a whole host of drugs they wanted me to continue to take to treat all of these problems that had developed. And again, many of the drugs were to treat side effects.
I was having a hard time with all of these drugs and dealing with it at age 29. The doctors really said, “Well, your option is you’re going to have to learn to live with it” and that was unacceptable to me and Jim.
So we began researching what happened to me, how I got the cancer, what was causing me to have these strange reactions. I essentially was chemically sensitive. At the time, there was no Internet, so this was a lot of research done through the Library of Congress. We lived in Washington D.C. at the time, university libraries, looking up lots of things on microfilms.
DEBRA: I remember those days. I was there doing it too.
Diana Kaye: Yeah! So it was very tedious and it took us several years. But what we essentially learned was that in order for me to regained my health and give my body a chance to rebuild itself, we were going to have to find the purest, possible fuel for our bodies. So Jim was joining me with this. So that meant pure, organic foods. We began using distilled water.
We learned also about skin absorption and inhalation. Our previous backgrounds before going into this business – well, Jim is a registered architect and my background was designed. In fact, we met working for an architectural firm in D.C. So we actually took courses in non-toxic building design, designing for handicap individuals. And in this particular case, it was also individual who were handicapped or disabled due to exposures to chemicals in building supplies.
So the more we learned, the more we realized that we had to make a lot of changes and we did. We couldn’t find personal care products anywhere. We searched health food stores that we could find that met our standards, which would be free from synthetic detergents, synthetic emulsifiers, synthetic fragrances, synthetic preservatives and on and on and on.
So we began making some products for ourselves. And at the time, I was involved with some chemical sensitivity support group and a lymphoma support group and people there in different parts of the country were saying the same thing, “We can’t find clean products” and we realized that there was a need.
And that is how our business was started as a mail order catalog. We offered a lot of books in our catalog at that time, again, because there wasn’t an Internet to help educate people about what they can do to reduce their toxic exposures and offering them alternative products.
We found that we wanted to get out of the city, escape Arlington, Virginia in D.C. because of all the pollution there. And we realized that to do our business, we didn’t need to be in the city and we wanted to be able to grow organically some herbs.
So for several years, we looked for and found an old sheep farm in Maryland and we’ve been here for 18 years. Our business progressed from selling plants to dealing with the increased demand for our personal care products, which today is really what we do.
We actually grow herbs for our experimenting and to create new products, but our demand is such that we actually buy today our herbs from certified organic farms from all over the world, our herbs and oils and butters. That’s kind of where we are right now.
DEBRA: Well, that’s a wonderful story. It’s very similar to my own in terms of starting out because of the damage that my body had from chemical exposures as yours did. It’s interesting that you ended up having cancer and chemical sensitivities because I think that most people don’t realize how much of cancer is associated actually with exposure to toxic chemicals and that there’s all you know, there’s all these attention on the cure, but not so much on the prevention.
And so I just want to really emphasize that part of your story that if you’re concerned about cancer or you want to recover from cancer, the first thing to do is remove toxic chemicals that cause cancer from your life.
Diana Kaye: Debra, that is the most important point.
James Hahn: Sure.
Diana Kaye: One of the things I didn’t mention (and I’m so glad you touched on) is exactly that in our course of figuring out what happened to me, we discovered that I had many toxic exposures in my life and that most likely, I was sensitive to different chemicals, but didn’t know it and didn’t understand what was happening to me. So the ultimate end result was that I had chemical overload, which ended up in the aggressive non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma, which now has been linked to chemical exposures.
DEBRA: We need to take a break. When we come back, we’re going to talk with Jim and Diana about their experience with organic farming and being certified to be USDA organic certified. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd and you’re listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio. We’ll be right back.
DEBRA: You’re listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd and my guests today are Diana Kaye and James Hahn from Terressentials. Their website is Terressentials.com. You can also just go to ToxicFreeTalkRadio.com and see the listing for their show, the show today and it’s got a link to their website.
And so, tell us now, you got an organic farm and then you started with the organic certification process. Well, wait! First, let me ask you, you said at the beginning that now, having tried your products that I have an experience with what real organic is, so what would be not real organic? Tell us about that difference.
Diana Kaye: Go ahead, Jim.
James Hahn: Well, basically what it comes down to – well, if we’re talking about food, the word ‘organic’ is regulated by the USDA and the Organic Foods Production Act spells out a whole set of rules and regulations to be followed.
In our particular field, body care products, USDA says, “We don’t feel that that…” — how would you say it, Diana? “We don’t feel that we need to enforce the regulations.”
Diana Kaye: Right. The USDA has pronounced years ago that personal care product companies are free to get certified through the Federal Organic Regulations, which is known to everyone as the National Organic Program. However, they have said that they don’t feel that they need to enforce the National Organic Program regulation in the personal care marketplace.
DEBRA: What does that mean? In practice, what does that mean?
Diana Kaye: Well, it means that if a company is not certified to the USDA Organic National Program by a legally accredited organic certifier and doesn’t have an organic certificate, then they are not organic. And the sad thing is the majority of companies that we have seen in the personal care marketplace that claim to be organic are not certified by a third-party accredited certification agency and they are making claims, but these are unsubstantiated and unverified claims.
Jim and I find this really disheartening because consumers, many of them don’t understand the National Organic Program regulations. Many consumers are completely unaware that the rules are not being enforced in the personal care marketplace.
And what happens is that people trust that the word ‘organic’ means something in personal care and they will often pay significantly more money for products that make an organic claim, often very boldly on the front label of the product or on the home page of the website and yet, the product formulation is actually conventional synthetic, industrial cosmetic ingredient, not meeting the qualifications for organic certification in any way.
DEBRA: So let me get this right. So people are putting the word ‘organic’ on the label, but it’s not just that they are not organic and they’re not certified. It’s that they’re not even organic.
James Hahn: That’s correct.
Diana Kaye: Many, yes, many products.
James Hahn: That’s correct. And one thing we’ve noticed is that a lot of journalists and writers who are talking about organic issues appear to be completely unaware of this. We see articles that say, “When you see the word ‘organic’, that means it follows the USDA regulations and 95% of the content is organic.” As Diana says, it doesn’t apply to everything. That applies only to food and that is so seldom brought out.
DEBRA: So the USDA Organic Program is only monitoring in the world of food and not in the world of personal care. That is what we have seen. They said that if someone files a complaint, they’ll look into it, but they are not actively monitoring the personal care marketplace.
This is what we find so sad. There are many companies selling products over the Internet, but there are still (and over the years, there had been) a number of companies that were selling via the health food channels and even mainstream grocery story channels. These companies for years were using the word ‘organic’ with abandon.
However, the Organic Consumers Association really called out this misrepresentation and got a lot of media attention to expose this practice. And as a result of that, there had been several class action lawsuit in the personal care marketplace. But the number of companies that have been named in these lawsuits has been – very few companies out of the many, many companies that are out there.
So basically, what’s happening is the enforcement is now being left up to attorney rather than the regulatory body of the USDA. We find that really sad and extremely frustrating because we constantly hear from people who are so proud that they are taking steps to help improve their health and reduce their chemical load and to leave lighter footprint on the planet. We’ve actually had people come into our store and bring a little shopping bag from the Organic Salon saying, “Oh, I just got this organic shampoo.”
So it puts us in an awkward position because we want to help educate and inform the public. And many times, when we do that, it’s the whole ‘don’t shoot the messenger’ thing. Please don’t shoot us!
DEBRA: I understand.
Diana Kaye: Right! If we take that bottle and we turned it around and we look up on the computer the ingredient – we have often had people get really angry with us. We understand what’s happening. They get angry because we pointed out unfortunately that they got duped. And later, perhaps they resolve that situation, but we would rather talk about beautiful organic ingredients and the impact of organic agriculture. But too many times, we have to deal with re-educating people and informing about this labeling issue.
DEBRA: Well, we’ll talk more about this when we come back from the break. You’re listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd and my guest today are Diana Kaye and James Hahn from Terressentials. You can go to their website at Terressentials.com. We’ll be back to talk more about what’s really organic and organic certification and how you can choose the best organic personal care products.
DEBRA: You’re listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. My guests today are Diana Kaye and James Hahn, husband and wife, co-founders of their USDA certified organic business, Terressentials.
Now, I do want to hear about organic certification, but I want to ask you another question first. So are the ingredients in your products – I know that every ingredient in your product is USDA certified organic. But is there in the personal care world the equivalent of being a certified organic product?
I know with food, there’s different amounts of percentages of organic that need to be in the food product in order to get the USDA seal. Is there a comparable program like that for USDA in the personal care products?
James Hahn: It’s exactly the same program. In fact, there is no separate program under the USDA for personal care products. What that means is the ingredients that we use in our products basically are food. They’re things like organic coco butter, organic essential oils, organic extracts. They’re made from plants.
I mean, you wouldn’t want to eat paste, for example. There are no industrial chemical input of any kind that go into our product. So it is the exact same standard that applies to the food products in the store, a pie or a drink or anything like that. It’s exactly the same set of standards.
DEBRA: Okay! Alright, so tell us about getting certified. What’s that process like?
Diana Kaye: Well, could I back up just to clarify one thing?
DEBRA: Sure.
Diana Kaye: Because we would like to make everything really crystal clear.
James Hahn: That’s right.
Diana Kaye: Not every single ingredient in our product is a certified organic ingredient [gasp]. For example, the way that the regulations are written, you are required to use organic materials. However, it’s not just the ingredients that are regulated. The regulation covers how ingredients are grown on the farm, how they’re harvested. And here’s the key – key, key, important point – how they are processed or handled to make the finish product.
Whether it be pasta sauce or body lotion, whether it be bread or body cream, the processing rules and the amount of ingredients in your product determine your degree of certification.
There is a list called the National List of Prohibited and Allowed Substances. Everyone who is certified is required to adhere to that list. They have rules for how you can process different raw materials, organic botanicals, for example.
There are ingredients that are used in food. And here’s an interesting point. For instance, baking soda is not an organic material, it is allowed because it’s essential for the use in baked goods. Clays are used in food because they are used as filtering medium. There are certain clays that are approved for use that are on this national list.
It’s very specific. In order to make use of the organic seal, the USDA seal on a product label or front label, your product has to be 95% organic botanicals processed in an accordance with the regulation. And the remaining 5% might be ingredients like baking soda or other ingredients that may not be organic or agricultural in origin, but are on the National List of Approved Substances.
DEBRA: I think this is a really, really important point. I’m glad that you brought it up because this is true for other kinds of products as well. I think that people in a sense – how can I say this. I was just having this conversation with somebody this week about how organic applies to only the agricultural botanical part of a product, but a lot of products (like you mentioned, baked goods), they need to use something like baking soda. That’s strictly speaking not organic because it’s not a botanical item.
Diana Kaye: Correct.
DEBRA: And that would be true. I was trying to think of something that was 100% organic. Well, something that’s 100% organic could be something like the mattress that I sleep on is 100% organic.
Diana Kaye: Probably not.
DEBRA: Well…
Diana Kaye: According to the rules…
DEBRA: I would say…
Diana Kaye: I was just going to jump in and tell you just a little tidbit.
DEBRA: Okay.
Diana Kaye: People don’t even understand even in the food world, for example, we have a lip protector where every single ingredient in that product is organic. However, if an apple was rinsed with a wash that contained hydrogen peroxide in water, that apple would no longer be 100% organic. That’s how strict the rules are.
DEBRA: Okay, I get it.
Diana Kaye: And that apple…
DEBRA: Yeah, okay.
Diana Kaye: Yeah! So you couldn’t even call your product 100% organic if one ingredient was washed with a rinse water that has hydrogen peroxide.
James Hahn: Although that particular apple could be called “organic” and that’s fine.
Diana Kaye: Absolutely, yeah.
DEBRA: Well, the apple could be called organic because it was grown organically, right? But then in the processing, it was washed with hydrogen peroxide. So now, the processing is not organic.
Diana Kaye: Correct! So it’s kicked down from 100% organic to organic.
DEBRA: This is really…
Diana Kaye: The USDA is complicated.
DEBRA: No, but I’m glad that we’re talking about this because there is this whole thing where I know the consumers say, “Well, I want it to be 100%” and in fact, somebody this week told me that they get more results when they run ads if it has the word ‘100%’ in it, it has those numbers, 100%. That’s the thing that people respond to in ads. And yet I think that the USDA organic is correct for a product for using the seal because there’s all these ways that it’s not going to be 100% and yet consumers have this idea it needs to be 100%. But what else is in there if it’s not 100%?
Diana Kaye: Exactly. And the truth of the matter is in all product categories whether personal care and/or food, it is extremely rare to find a product that can be labeled 100% organic because that is how strict our USDA rules are.
And by the way, they are the most strict set of regulations of any country in the world.
James Hahn: By far… by far…
DEBRA: I know that because I actually had someone on the show who is part of the committee that sets those standards. It’s the highest – I forgot what it’s called, but it’s the one that makes the list, the organization that makes the list. We were talking about what goes on that list and how they make those decisions. I could see how strict it was and I thought at the time that if every single product had that kind of program behind it where the standards were that strict, it would completely change the marketplace.
Diana Kaye: It would!
James Hahn: I totally agree.
DEBRA: We need to go to break. Wouldn’t that be fabulous if all products were made according to something akin to the USDA organic standards? Amazing! That would be amazing.
When we come back, we’re going to hear more about the USDA organic standards and see how wonderful they are. You’re listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio. My guests today are Diana Kaye and James Hahn from Terressentials and they’re at Terressentials.com. We’ll be right back.
DEBRA: You’re listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. My guests today are Diana Kaye and James Hahn, husband and wife and co-founders and owners of the USDA certified organic business, Terressentials where they make real organic personal care products.
Diana and James, I’m looking at the clock and we’re finally getting to talk about you.
Diana Kaye: We know we get on these rolls and soap boxes, don’t we?
DEBRA: No, but everything that we’ve been talking about is so important.
Diana Kaye: It is.
DEBRA: I don’t want to – let’s just get started because we only have about 10 minutes before the show is over.
James Hahn: Okay.
DEBRA: And that’s certainly not enough to talk about the USDA certified organic program in full. Let’s get started and then we’ll have another show and we’ll talk more about it. We’ll just do a show just on the certification program now that we’ve set it all up.
Diana Kaye: Oh, boy!
DEBRA: What else would you like to say at this point?
Diana Kaye: Well, I think there’s another thing that – Jim and I were discussing this. This happens every day with us. There’s something else that’s happening in the personal care world. It’s happening in the food world, but I’m going to point out what it is and then we can kind of delve in to the two different aspects, food versus personal care.
In the personal care world, what we have seen that has been happening over the past 10 years is that the industry itself in the United States and Europe, there are different manufacturers and their suppliers and also, their distribution partners had been getting together and they had been creating their own set of “organic” standards. These are not government standards. They are not standards that have been created with public input. They are not a law in any of these countries – and this is happening in the United States.
We’re very frustrated with this because the National Organic Program federal law in the United States says that you may not have a standard that competes with the National Organic Program of the United States of America.
And so we find it very depressing and disheartening that these different industry groups are coming up with their own standards and some of the products are now even saying ‘certified to this standard’ and the consumer have no idea. They’re thoroughly confused. We’ve talked to hundreds of people and some of them are saying that these standards mean that that’s the certifier and it’s not. It’s such a confusion situation for people.
That’s the personal care. In the food world, the United States has made what’s called a reciprocity agreement with the European Union. The European Union standard – and we also have one now with Canada. The Canadian standard and the European Union organic standards are different in some ways from the U.S. standard. Ours is still the most strict.
But due to international trade, they created this agreement, this reciprocity agreement that has been in effect since 2011 (actually, since June of 2011) where the United States said, “Okay, we’re going to accept any product that’s been certified in the European Union as equal to a U.S. certified organic product in the spirit of international cooperation and trade.” We did the same thing for Canada.
In the food world, there are some differences in the food processing and handling, but most consumers aren’t aware of this. But still, even in the food world, you’re not going to have artificial flavor showing up in a product that comes from Europe or artificial fragrant (in other words, a petrochemical fragrant) because no country allows artificial fragrant to be allowed in an organic product.
Natural flavors is a whole other topic for conversation at another time. But in the personal care world, unfortunately, the processing standards allow many chemicals to be used in the processing that are prohibited under USDA regulation, preservatives to be used which are prohibited under the USDA regulation.
So essentially, what we have in the personal care marketplace is a giant mess.
DEBRA: That’s so unfortunate.
Diana Kaye: I just wanted to add that because…
DEBRA: I’m glad that you did. It’s so unfortunate that it’s a mess, but as life evolves, I think we go from chaos to order. And so I’m hoping at some point it will become more orderly and more understandable. But I think that change is happening.
I remember back, I’ve been doing this since 1978, that’s when I first started. I lived in Northern California in the San Francisco Bay area. I remember when we first started having organic food and California certified organic farmers (I don’t know when they started), but I remember that, “Here’s a certification? What do we do with this? What does it mean?” And now, there’s a lot of certifications for a lot of different things.
There was a time when there were a lot of local certifications. And then the USDA came along and said, “We’re going to have a national certification.” And so there is one certification instead of all these local one.
And so I think it’s all progressing. And as much of a mess as it is right now, I think it’s all moving in a direction. And having conversations like this move it all forward. I’m listening to everything you’re saying today and I’m thinking this is much more complex than I even knew. And this is something I’m studying every day. And so I can imagine how much more confusing it would be for consumers.
I was talking to somebody yesterday who actually owns a business selling non-toxic products and she was saying, “It’s all so complex, I can’t even… you know, I just want to go down to the store and buy a carton of eggs.” There’s so many things that you need to think about and we need to think about these things for every single product and for every single product, it’s different. Waaaa…
Diana Kaye: It’s true! We feel the same way when I go to the grocery store. But I know I want free range, pasture raised organic chicken eggs.
DEBRA: Yeah, yeah.
Diana Kaye: I know I want the Omega-3 fats, the good fat (not the Omega-6’s). I’ve been looking to actually having chickens here in our farm although Jim keeps saying, “No, you don’t have time to do that.”
James Hahn: It’s true.
DEBRA: I had chickens in my backyard and it was fabulous. I loved the eggs…
Diana Kaye: See…?
DEBRA: It didn’t take that much time, but…
Diana Kaye: Thank you. Thank you, Debra.
DEBRA: It really is worth it. It really is worth it… until the police came and took them away because they’re illegal where I live.
Diana Kaye: What?! Oh…
DEBRA: Yes, my chickens were confiscated.
Diana Kaye: That’s ridiculous! You know, that’s happening all across America and I think that’s going to be changing too.
DEBRA: I think so too.
James Hahn: Chicken police.
Diana Kaye: That’s great, a chicken police?
DEBRA: It is chicken police.
Diana Kaye: Don’t they have anything better to do?
DEBRA: No, but see, I’m going to tell you my big – this is my vision. Everybody in the world will come to have the same kind of values that you and I have and all the products on the shelves on the stores, everything that gets made and sold will all be as organic and non-toxic as possible. I think that day will come.
If you and I, both of you and I have been watching this and helping this whole movement towards less toxic things grow and expand over the last 25-30 years, don’t you see that it’s happening that we have more and more all the time?
Diana Kaye: Debra, you could be me talking. I mean, that’s why we do this, why we persist.
DEBRA: Me too.
Diana Kaye: Despite the frustrations that we have to deal with in the marketplace because we have a vision. We’ve been through that whole chemical sensitivity and cancer thing and we know there’s a better life. So that’s why we persist.
James Hahn: I might add that there’s a lot more interest and growing interest all the time in organic products. One thing that has come along with that is that now, there’s a whole lot more corporate influence in the entire world.
DEBRA: Oh, you know, that’s a whole other subject.
James Hahn: It sure is, it sure is.
DEBRA: I don’t know if there’s time because we’ve only got about 1 ½ minutes left.
James Hahn: Great!
DEBRA: So in that 1 ½ minutes, I’m going to just let you say just something very brief just to wrap up whatever you’d like to say that you haven’t said today without starting a new subject.
Diana Kaye: Okay. Well, I want to quickly throw this in. Debra, Jim and I, your books were really very valuable in helping me seriously to survive. I’m not sure that I really would’ve survived the after effects of the chemotherapy and recovered if I haven’t had information like yours to help me.
DEBRA: Thank you so much.
Diana Kaye: And the work that you have done, the educational work, your persistence over the years has been tremendous. It’s so valuable. We wanted to thank you for all the work that you’ve done because it is such a necessary thing in today’s world.
James Hahn: True.
DEBRA: Thank you, thank you. I just want to reach through the microphone and give you a hug.
Diana Kaye: I know! I’d like to do the same.a
James Hahn: Oh, I can feel it.
DEBRA: I know, I know. I totally understand. I totally understand your dedication and I appreciate it so much that if I didn’t have businesses like yours to promote, I wouldn’t have anything to do. I mean, it really is.
Diana Kaye: I think you’d find something, Debra.
DEBRA: So I know the music is going to start.
Diana Kaye: You’re a woman with many missions like me too.
DEBRA: Thank you. Well, you know, I’m going to come up to Washington and see you someday.
James Hahn: Okay!
Diana Kaye: Oh, you should.
DEBRA: Yeah. But I have to go now. We have to get off the air because the music is going to start playing. This is Toxic Free Talk Radio.
James Hahn: Thank you.
DEBRA: I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. Be well.
Diana Kaye: Take care.
How to Remove Toxic Chemical Odors Around the House
My guest today is Kyle Knappenberger. He is the Director of Applications at Timilon Technology Acquisitions LLC, in Naples, Florida. Kyle joined Timilon in 2013 when they acquired the technology behind OdorKlenz®, a consumer brand of household odor removal products. We will be talking about harmful chemical classes around the home and ways to eliminate them—particularly how to remove perfume odors from laundry and washing machines. For over a decade, Kyle has been working on using safe metal oxide technology for odor control and toxic chemical neutralization applications. He has a Bachelors of Sciences degree in microbiology from Kansas State University, and co-holds six patents related to the mitigation of chemical and biological contamination. www.debralynndadd.com/debras-list/odorklenz
Here’s a video Odorklenz made to promote Karl’s interview on their social media. It made me smile 🙂
The MP3 of this interview has been lost, but will be placed here if we can find a copy.
TOXIC FREE TALK RADIO
How to Remove Toxic Chemical Odors Around the House
Host: Debra Lynn Dadd
Guest: Kyle Knappenberger
Date of Broadcast: July 22, 2014
DEBRA: Hi, I’m Debra Lynn Dadd and this is Toxic Free Talk Radio, where we talk about how to thrive in a toxic world and live toxic-free. I’m here in Clearwater, Florida. Today is July 22nd, 2014.
We’re going to have an interesting show today. Well, they’re always interesting shows and guests. I learn something every time someone comes on the show. And the guests that I choose, they really know what they’re talking about. They’re really in the midst of their industries. A lot of them have been doing this for a long time, and they’re providing really good solutions to the toxic chemicals we’re exposed to on a daily basis.
My guest today is Kyle Knappenberger. He’s the director of applications for Timilon Technology Acquisitions and you may have already heard of the brand name of the product we’re going to talk about, which is OdorKlenz. It’s a consumer-brand of household odor-remover products. They work really well.
I’ll just give a little background and say that a lot of people, when there’s an odor in your home, you might reach for an air freshener. But what an air freshener does is one of two things. It covers up the odor with a toxic fragrance. And all perfume and fragrances that are in some products, they’re all made from a whole lot of toxic chemicals.
The other thing that air fresheners can do is that they can deaden your nerves in your nose so that you don’t smell the odor. Those are the two things that air fresheners do. What odor removers do is actually remove the odor.
What we’re going to talk about today is the technology about removing different kinds of odors around the home. And we’ll find out exactly how to do this. One of the things I’m most interested in is removing perfume from laundry like buy something from a thrift store and it’s got perfume on it or like I had a situation where I bought a washing machine and it was scented with a detergent scent, and I had to get the detergent scent out. There might be all kinds of reasons for why you want to get perfume out of something and that’s going to be one of the things we’ll talk about. So stay tuned to the whole show.
I’d like to welcome my guest today, Kyle Knappenberger.
KYLE KNAPPENBERGER: Hi Debra. It’s a pleasure to be on your show today.
DEBRA: Thank you. Thanks for being with me. How did you get interested in reducing odors?
KYLE KNAPPENBERGER: It was actually a bit of a luck. I had gotten introduced to a company many years ago when I was in school and had the opportunity to join that company right out of school. The company primarily focused on destructive absorption technologies and furthering the use of metal oxides for the destruction of really harmful and toxic types of chemicals.
Through the evolution of working for that company for many years, we were really focused on neutralizing some of the really deadly chemicals out there, things like chemical warfare agents or warfighters and military-type of applications.
And about nine or ten years ago, as about everyone should remember, Hurricane Katrina hit down in New Orleans, Louisiana. We had our toxic chemical neutralizer stuff, our military-grade product, and we had a team down there to help with some of the clean-up and mitigation and work with some of the responders.
What we found out was that people should have been more concerned with toxic chemicals from that type of event, but what stuck in people’s minds more than anything was the impact of the odors from this particular event. They were asking us, “Can your chemical neutralizer, your warfare grade neutralizer be effective against a whole host of odor our folks were encountering in their homes?” And of course, this was from a very specific disaster so the odors, as you can imagine, were quite significant and impactful.
Our products worked beautifully for that, which really led that company to start expanding beyond just military-grade chemicals to more common occurrence chemicals because as we all know, we’re exposed to a variety of toxic chemicals on a daily basis. These things can be in our homes.
During your introduction, you mentioned quite a few of them, things like the air fresheners. Frankly, they release quite a few volatile elements to our environment and we’re doing this to ourselves. We’re releasing potentially dangerous chemicals into our environment on a daily basis.
The technology that has been developed over a number of years includes natural earth mineral technology that Timilon has acquired. That’s extremely effective and efficient at neutralizing and wanting to break down a lot of chemicals.
So that’s the progression. I got to join a company after researching water purification techniques in school, went into deadly and toxic chemicals in chemical worker agents and then by extension, more common, toxic chemicals that we’re being exposed to on a daily basis.
DEBRA: We’re going to talk about the technology later, but I just want to ask right now, does this technology, if it was just sitting in a room, would it absorb toxic chemicals like an air filter does? Would someone use it instead of an air filter?
KYLE KNAPPENBERGER: The technology does absorb if you just have these metal oxide granules and powders sitting on a dish. Yes, they’re going to be absorbing those chemicals right out of the air. If you place them into a system (which is what our company does, the commercialization of this technology) and put them into things like air cartridges, air filters, or other mechanisms, or different types of approaches or delivery system, you can much more actively bring the toxic chemicals or the noxious chemicals to the material, which will then increase the removal and the elimination efficiency of those chemicals.
DEBRA: And was there a specific reason for why Timilon acquired this technology?
KYLE KNAPPENBERGER: Timilon is a technology-acquisition company that likes to commercialize a broader array of technology. They have seen and are aware of this technology and when it became available for purchase and acquisition, they moved on doing that.
And Timilon has taken that commercialization of what I would call again, our destruction absorption technologies and they really want to push it into much broader markets for the mitigation of toxic and noxious chemicals, which include odors.
And we really are, here at Timilon, focused on the markets that we would call the personal air quality and surface decontamination with key emphasis on what we would call critical environments where people, children, elderly, the chemically-sensitive people are living their lives. We really want to take those environments and make them much more suited for living by reducing the chemicals and pollutants that are in those environments, so that people aren’t being exposed to them.
DEBRA: I definitely see the change. I first became aware of OdorKlenz a few years ago and used the product at that time. But when I go to your website now, I see many more products than existed then. We’ll talk about those later in the show.
We actually need to go to break, but I think that it’s interesting to me that you started with using this in chemical warfare, which are some pretty toxic chemicals. And now you’re bringing that in the home to handle the toxic chemicals that are in the home. We’ll talk about that when we get back from the break.
My guest today is Kyle Knappenberger. He’s from Timilon Technology Acquisitions and they make OdorKlenz, household odor removal products. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd and you’re listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio.
DEBRA: You’re listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd and my guest today is Kyle Knappenberger. He’s from Timilon Technology Acquisitions and they make OdorKlenz. That’s a consumer brand of household odor removal products. This is something you can use instead of an air freshener, which has toxic chemicals in it. You use this product to remove the toxic chemicals from your home.
So Kyle, tell us about some of the toxic chemicals that people might have in their homes that your product would be good to remove?
KYLE KNAPPENBERGER: It really encompasses quite a few different classes of chemicals, liquid and vapor chemicals. Just think about all the things around your home. You’ve got batteries, which contain sulfuric acid. You’ve got household cleaning chemicals like bleach, which is a sodium hypochlorite solution. You have a variety of pesticide and insecticide which are organophosphates.
This is a bit of a sidenote, but the pesticides and insecticides that you use are extremely comparable in chemical structure to chemical worker agents and nerve agents. And in fact, when we do a lot of our testing against some of our military-grade products or warfare-grade products for warfighter products, we use pesticides and insecticides because they are very similar.
And when you think about what the job a pesticide or insecticide does, it kills things. And folks have these things in their garages, basements, and they’re applying these things in their homes! They’re very dangerous things to have around and they contribute to poor air quality.
And then you have your glass cleaners, which have ammonia and alcohol. Toilet bowl cleaners have a lot of harsh chemicals in them, including acids and phenyls. And the air fresheners that you mentioned, they contribute to a lot of VOCs in the home such as formaldehyde and one particular chemical and all the different repellants that are used in those again (some alcohol and organic compound). And then all the things you find in your garage, you’ve got oils, fuels. And where you live, you might have pool chemicals.
Then there are things that some people don’t even think about. The actual building materials in your home contribute to poor air quality. The laminate flooring or carpet contains a lot of adhesive that can release VOCs to your air. Pressed wood and particle board cabinets, even furniture that you buy and assemble, or even furniture that’s been finished and lacquered and maybe it hasn’t fully dried or cured. It can be a big emitter of a whole host of VOCs and essentially carcinogenic chemicals. They’re everywhere!
And then the first thing that most people do when they try to cover up these types of chemicals is they go and grab an air freshener, which is a masking agent in many cases. That’s just adding additional chemicals to the environment. And we at Timilon have always felt that if you’re wanting to remove odors and chemical pollutants from your daily environment, let’s not add in additional chemical pollutants and odors into your environment.
DEBRA: That would be the smart thing.
KYLE KNAPPENBERGER: Exactly. You would be surprised how many folks and industries are using chemical processes to eliminate odors. They’re eliminating odors by adding odors. And it just seems very counterproductive.
DEBRA: You told me some things over the phone before our interview about the chemicals that are used to clean up disasters. I know that some people do have disasters like flooding and fire in their home. How can your products be used for that? And what are the toxic chemicals that they use to clean up disasters?
KYLE KNAPPENBERGER: I’m going to simplify it down to just a couple of categories of types of disasters. You’ve got your fire and water disasters. That’s a bit of an oversimplification. But when you think about what happens to a home after a fire or a surge backup, you had an event and things have burned or things have been released. All the different compounds in your home are releasing toxic chemicals.
There are disaster restoration crews that can come out sometimes, depending upon the severity of the job, maybe it’s the home owner who’s a do-it-yourself type, but a lot of the chemicals that are utilized after an event like that, they’ll bring in crews and they’ll start removing items from the home, which is good. You want to get the source out. But then they’ll bring in chemicals or generators like ozone machines or free radical hydroxyl machines or even thermal fog, which is basically a chemical that’s heated up or micronized and released out into the environment.
Those processes puts chemical out into the environment to react with the other chemicals that are present in that environment and they may or may not do that. If they do it, that might be a step in the right direction. But those chemical byproducts are still present in that home.
You may have changed what it smells like and you may or may not have reduced any environmental hazards or indoor air quality problems with that. And that’s how this technology (I mentioned Hurricane Katrina in the last segment), that’s really where we started to see that our technology is really good at, mitigating airborne and source chemicals.
And that’s where our process, for example, [inaudible 00:20:24] we’ve taken our materials and we’ve been able to put them into air cartridges that go into portable air units or they can go into a home’s HVAC system so that you can cycle the air, exchange that air, pass it through our materials and let our materials react with it in a safe way to break down those chemicals to actually remove them from the environment.
As opposed to releasing ozone into the environment and hoping that it reacts with the chemical and has that reaction go cleanly, we want to be able to do that same thing, but do it in a confined environment and remove those chemicals in your home, but not have those chemical reactions occur out in the environment. And when they do have source treatment, we can apply our products directly to the sources, treat and neutralize the sources in conjunction with the air process and take care of the whole problem.
DEBRA: Good. We’re going to hear more about how this technology works when we come back from the break. You’re listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd and my guest today is Kyle Knappenberger. He’s from Timilon Technology Acquisitions who makes OdorKlenz, which is the product that we’re talking about right now. I just found a way I can use this in my house and I’m going to tell you when we come back.
DEBRA: You’re listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd and my guest today is Kyle Knappenberger. The company he works for makes a product called OdorKlenz that we’ve been talking about thax`t is a household odor removal product, not an air freshener. It removes the odor and doesn’t just put more toxic chemicals in the air. We’re going to learn more about how the technology works now.
But before the break, I said that I thought of a way to use this product in my home because I don’t have toxic chemicals to remove in my home. I’ve removed them all from the source. But I’m thinking of many ways — not many people live in a toxic-free home as I do, but even in my own home, I was really delighted to see that you have these in HVAC filters.
I know that I don’t have any control over what’s going on with the outside air and sometimes, somebody will, even though I tell people no perfumes, sometimes I’ll have a party and somebody will come in with cigarette smoke residue in their clothing or perfume or detergent. Most likely, it’s detergent scent from washing our clothes. I was saying, “no perfume,” but people don’t understand that there is scent in their detergent.
Sometimes these odors, these chemicals will inadvertently get into my house. It would be so nice to just turn on the HVAC and clean out the air in my whole house. Sometimes they’ll come do lawn work next door or something. I can see that this will be something that if everybody just had one of these filters at their homes, they can just turn on their HVAC and what would happen?
KYLE KNAPPENBERGER: Well, that’s exactly right. Having this technology into a configuration such as an HVAC filter or a cartridge as a standalone device really does help minimize the pollutants that are in your indoor air.
Some of the things that are kind of interesting as homes get built better supposedly more efficiently, we’re essentially tightening up our home, which are trapping and not letting those chemicals out that are being brought in by people into your home. They’re coming in, but not getting out like they used to.
More efficient air filtration is important. Most people’s air filters primarily do only one thing, which is to remove particulates. They get micron or submicron particles, the things that are toxic chemicals or the noxious odors that we can smell or in some cases we can’t smell. Those things go through your traditional air filters. Having a technology like our natural earth mineral technology is much more efficient and brings capabilities to those types of processes that can’t do that.
DEBRA: How does that work? Is it adsorbing? First, why don’t you tell us what the word ‘adsorbing’ meaning because it’s not ‘absorbing’. Tell us what that means first. I want to ask you ‘adsorbing’ or is the material actually changing, breaking down the chemicals?
KYLE KNAPPENBERGER: Well, we do like to use the phrase to describe our technology as destructive adsorption. When our technology comes into contact with it, if you were to say something just ‘absorbs it’, you would essentially be implying that a chemical is just being stored on that material maybe within its pores. That’s what happens with a lot of carbon products or just general absorbents. They can hold onto a material or they’re storing it, but they can release it just as easily.
Now, the process that we call destructive adsorption is a surface phenomenon that our materials have that is taking advantage of the high surface area of our material.
There is a chemical reaction or a chemical process going on because. This is going to be a little bit simplified here, but the different atoms and molecules, they want to have neighbors. They want to be paired up with other chemicals.
But the atoms that are on the surface of things or on the corners or edges, they don’t have as many neighbors. The atoms at the middle of the molecule have friends all around them – left, right, back, up, down. Well, if you can increase the surface area to have more corners and edges, then that molecule (like in the case of our metal oxide), it’s going to have more active sites that can reach out and pair up and grab onto a toxic chemical or a noxious odor, or really whatever type of chemical is out there, whether good or bad.
And that’s what makes our technology really different. We’re combining absorption technology with high surface area materials, really giving it the best of both worlds, so that we can seek out, grab things, react with it, break them down or neutralize it and retain them on the surface of our material. In effect, you can truly then eliminate it.
DEBRA: Wow! So you’re not just collecting the chemicals. You’re actually breaking them down so that they’re not— we’re kind of getting into the function of chemistry. I’ll admit, I never actually took chemistry in school. I think there are probably other people who are listening who don’t quite understand how chemical reactions happen. But I’ve read lots of chemistry books after I started trying to learn about toxic chemicals.
So just to explain again, really briefly how that chemical reaction is taking place, that chemicals are these — well, you tell them because you’ll say it better.
KYLE KNAPPENBERGER: Well, there are earth minerals and metal oxides that we use that are very safe materials, but they are wanting to come into contact with other chemicals. They are wanting to chemically bind with them, react with them, and tear them apart on the surface. This is a very safe process.
Now, the analogy that I like to utilize is imagine if we had spilled a toxic chemical on the floor. It was a liquid and we wanted to soak it up. We’d want to use a material that is ideally safe, but then we’d want to use something that’s efficient in doing so.
I’ll take the example of popcorn and popcorn kernel. Well, if we had a popcorn kernel…
DEBRA: I’m going to interrupt you. We need to go on break. Let’s finish the story when we get back. This is Toxic Free Talk Radio. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd and my guest today is Kyle Knappenberger and we’re talking about OdorKlenz, a consumer brand of household odor removal products. When we come back, we’re going to talk about how all this technology that we’ve just been talking about gets applied in consumer products that you can use in your home to remove toxic chemicals. We’ll be right back.
DEBRA: You’re listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd and my guest today is Kyle Knappenberger. We’re talking about OdorKlenz, a brand of household odor removal products. This is such an unusual product that I’m unaccustomed to saying “household odor removal product.” So, go on with what you were saying before the break, Kyle.
KYLE KNAPPENBERGER: Oh, thank you. I was giving the analogy of if you are wanting to soak up or eliminate a toxic chemical – it’s a bit of a simplification here, but our technology is really in using safe materials.
In the analogy, you have two different, but fundamentally the same things. In one bucket, we have unpopped popcorn and in the other, popped popcorn. If you’re going to soak up a toxic spill, you’re going to want to use something that has more surface area, more internal pores and more active sites. In that case, the popped piece of popcorn. Again, fundamentally, they’re the same thing, chemically they’re the same thing, but one is much more efficient. That’s what we’ve done with our metal oxide technology.
We’ve been able to adapt this technology. Whether it’s metal oxides or things that are commonly found in the ground, but we’ve been able to make them much more efficient at neutralizing a variety of chemicals and odors. And we’ve been able to take this technology (again, which is green and non-toxic) and apply it into a variety of different forms, whether that’s powders, granules, air cartridges or liquid because as you know, when we’re trying to address toxic chemicals around the home or in our laundry or in our daily lives, you have to optimize the way that you come into contact with those things.
If you have a spot on the carpet that’s may be from a pet or a loved one who spilled something and you want to neutralize it, well, you need to make sure that you treat that spot so that you can fully react with, neutralize, and then remove it from that spot. So we’ve been able to adapt our powders into those varieties of different forms to address a wide variety of different applications.
One of the things that when we’re talking at Timilon about when addressing indoor air quality, we have a lot of products that are very good at solving specific problems, whether that’s a pet that got skunked or your clothes has been in an environment where they’ve been contaminated with a variety of odors or things. But we also like to think of this as a system process.
If you really want to address indoor air quality, utilizing these things in conjunction with each other means we’re maintaining a much more comfortable and improved environment in which we’re living in. That’s the approach we like to take, address different varieties of toxic and odor problems.
DEBRA: Tell us what the different types of product that you have, the different ways that you have applied this technology.
KYLE KNAPPENBERGER: Oh, absolutely! Some of the key ones that were originally developed as I’ve mentioned out of the Hurricane Katrina were surface products and air products. We have products like our OdorKlenz S, which can be applied directly to sources whether that’s on a carpet, maybe it’s on a cushion or a chair or something like that where you directly apply our material in a liquid form to that surface, work it into the surface and then you can remove it through either extraction from household cleaning tools or you can let the product dry and then vacuum up any residue that you may have.
We then also have [something] for more of your spill types of applications. We’ve got our OdorKlenz Absorbent product, which is a granular material. If you were out in the garage and you maybe spill over your weed killer or lawn chemical products, you can absorb that up, neutralize that odor and make the situation a lot safer.
We have a new line of products, which is a sport line of product, which as we know, there are a lot of folks that are pretty active in a variety of different events and sports, whether that’s athletic runners and a wide variety of things. You’re creating a lot of odors with those things.
Sometimes you just can’t treat them right away. They often go right into your gear or garment bags. We have a variety of products that can be directly applied to those garments or gears to neutralize odors right after you’ve used them or in the case of our OdorKlenze Laundry Additive, which is by far, one of our most popular products. As we’re just walking around in our day to day lives, whether that’s in our homes or at our jobs, we’re being exposed to a wide variety of chemicals and odors. You want to get those odors or chemicals out of your clothes so that you can start the day clean and fresh.
And kind of an interesting side note, when we initially launched the OdorKlenz Laundry Additive, we have a subgroup of customers that really found us. These are from the chemically-sensitive customers that were not even a market that we were particularly looking at. They were calling us and saying that, “Your product works really good at neutralizing the chemicals and odors in detergent.”
I have a very specific customer who gave me the example that they never travel away from their home for more than a few days because they were afraid of using other people’s washing machines or dryers or even laundromat dryers. They themselves may have tried to minimize what they’re exposed to on a day to day basis, but they don’t know who used that dryer or washer right before them and what their detergents consisted of. I had a customer that said, “This is fantastic! I can now go on a cruise and not be afraid of what the person that used the washer before me may have been exposed to.” That day to day thing, to be able to help someone like that, is actually very rewarding.
DEBRA: I can understand that. But while this is really important to people who are sensitive to some perfumes and scents (these perfumes and scents are toxic to anybody), whether or not you’re reacting to them, they’re toxic. And everybody who’s using laundry in any kind of public place should be using this product because you really don’t know what was in the washer before you put your clothes in there.
KYLE KNAPPENBERGER: Exactly! And again, it’s not just the things, like you said, that people are exposed to, but the chemicals in a lot of laundry detergents themselves – the bleaching agent, whether it’s aldehyde or amine compounds, quat compounds, chlorine, or ethylacetate (which is a fabric softener). A lot of people are very irritated by these things. In higher dosages, they can be toxic. Everybody is being exposed to those sorts of things and having a way to minimize your exposure to it is a wise decision.
DEBRA: I am so pleased that your company is making all these new applications in this because this product is really needed. I’m always talking about removing toxic chemicals at the sources, but I’m really in communication with my readers and my listeners and I know that there are a lot of people who are being exposed to toxic chemicals, but they can’t do anything about it. They can’t remove their carpet because they’re in an apartment and they don’t own it.
There are a lot of people living in apartments, so they can’t do anything about the toxic chemicals that are being emitted from the formaldehyde coming out of the particle board cabinets and things like that. And as much as they would like to, they can’t change their environment. This just opens the door to a whole lot of people being able to reduce their exposure in ways that wasn’t available before.
KYLE KNAPPENBERGER: Absolutely! Simple things like standalone air scrubbers with OdorKlenz cartridge or an HVAC filter that has our materials impregnated into it and combining that with things like treating your carpet with granular products before you vacuum it up or washing your laundry in a good detergent with the OdorKlenz Laundry Additive, these are all things that can contribute to a system-approach to minimizing odors and indoor pollutants and making your environment that you live in on a daily basis much more comfortable for yourself.
DEBRA: Thank you so much for being on the show. I told you it’ll come by really fast.
KYLE KNAPPENBERGER: Time flies when you’re having fun.
DEBRA: It does. So I want to give your website, it’s OdorKlenz.com, so people can go to your website and order online. I see on your website saying it’s free shipping for $50 or more. And if you order before Labor Day, which is some weeks from now, it’s 15% off your entire purchase. If you use the coupon code “summersale”. So this is a good time to try this out.
You’ve been listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio. Thank you so much. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. Be well.
Filtered water while traveling
Question from TA
I’m wondering if you have any suggestions for how to have access to pure water while away from home. On a road trip, I’d probably try to just bring as much water from home as possible, since we have the Pure Effect under-sink filter.
But even on a road trip, there is only so much space in the car and we’d need a good bit of water if we’ll be away for a week or so. And when traveling by plane, it doesn’t seem possible to bring any of our water from home, other than what can be consumed on the way to the airport, since we can’t take it on the plane. If traveling by airplane and staying at our destination (or several destinations) for several days to a week or more, what are the best options for getting pure water?
In the past I have used the Berkey sport bottles, but they require a fair amount of effort to get the water out of the bottle and don’t allow me to drink very much at a time. And they’re plastic and don’t get rid of fluoride. They’ve served their purpose on more than one occasion for me, but I’m looking for other options.
I’ve considered getting a small countertop filter (I think I saw one specifically for travel once), but when carrying that or a travel-size Berkey water filter, they do take up a fair amount of space in luggage.
I’ve seen pieces of charcoal/carbon that can be placed in water to absorb the toxins out of the water, but I don’t know if this is a great option or not. (Does it do a great job? Would it take longer than is feasible when we need water available throughout the day, etc?)
I saw this product, but it looks like it only filters chlorine and taste/odor issues, but there’s a whole lot more I’d like to remove from tap water besides chlorine.
www.everydropwater.com/product-details.html
So I’m wondering if you have any recommendations for accessing clean water away from home in a way that doesn’t take up half of a suitcase, and that filters as much as possible. I realize there probably aren’t any options that do the same quality job that our Pure Effect filter does, but what is the next best thing when away from home? And is there any travel-friendly option that removes fluoride? I’d rather not give my toddler fluoride at all.
On my last trip, I got some reverse osmosis water from one of those dispensing machines at a health food store. I believe we got a 2.5 gallon plastic jug and filled it up from the machine, and I added mineral drops to each glass. But the water didn’t taste great – I think because of the plastic jug. And I’m not sure that adding mineral drops is really enough to correct what is done to the water through the RO process.
We also bought some glass bottles of spring water on that trip, but that gets very expensive very quickly!
Debra’s Answer
Great, great, great question! And I wish I had a good answer.
The small filters you mention, such as the charcoal and everydropwater.com remove chlorine and maybe chloramines, but they are very limited. They are better than nothing, but no match for your Pure Effect filter.
Readers, what do you do for safe water when you travel?
I asked Igor Milevskiy at www.PureEffectFilters.com your question and here is his reply:
The travel size filters that I’m aware of on the market cannot be as effective as the Pure Effect system she has, this is due to the generally small size of the travel filters not allowing room for much of the necessary filtration medias required for thorough and wide range filtration. Another problem with smaller / bottle style filters is that they tend to be more prone to bacteria and fouling issues, due to standing water and constant exposure to human contact and air. Also, after the water is filtered, it sits in the plastic reservoir, where it can absorb plastic chemicals.
That being said, I can recommend she take our CLASSIC system with her into hotels or places where she can hook it up to a faucet. This is our 2 chamber mid-size system that’s not as large for packing and taking with you as the ULTRA system. Also, because it’s only a 2 chamber system, she would need to swap in whatever cartridge is most needed (e.g. Fluorsorb Cartridge if she’s going to a place that fluoridates water, or AntiRad-Plus cartridge where radiation is more of a concern, these are the two cartridges she can choose for that second chamber… the SuperBlock carbon block should always be in the first chamber).
Here is a link to the Classic system, it weights apx. 11 lbs, and may be easier to pack than other systems she mentioned, since it’s only 6″ thick/deep: 10″ (Width) x 12.5″ (Height) x 6″ (Depth):
www.pureeffectfilters.com/filter-units/the-pure-effect-classic.html
The “drop in” charcoal sticks or tablets (coconut shell derived carbon is best) can be good for short term situations like in an airplane, however, they can become fouled and grow bacteria sooner, and should be disposed of within a few days of usage. Also, it’s important to know the source of the carbon, and it’s best if it’s NSF or WQA Certified. I’ve seen some carbon sticks from Japan, and I’m not sure if they may have already absorbed any radiation from Fukushima (e.g. Iodine-131, which is absorbed well by activated carbon), or other impurities.
Safest Interior Paints
Question from Carol
What do you think is the safest interior latex paint, oil-based primer, and oil-based paint to use for bedroom walls, baseboard, cabinetry, etc.? Thank you very much.
Debra’s Answer
There are many ways you can get the answer to this question on this website.
One would be to go to the Paint page of Debra’s List.
Another would be to search for “paint” using the search box at the top of the right hand column on every page.
Here are the search results for “paint.” This has a lot of Q&A about paint.
Without going into a full explanation of all the different kinds of paint, I just want to answer your specific question.
Commercial paint like you buy in a store might be latex paint or acrylic paint. Both are plastics. The key determining factor is VOCs. You want to choose a no VOC brand and even safer would be a brand where the colorants have no VOCs (those are volatile organic chemicals).
But even without the VOCs, you’re still putting plastic on your walls. If that’s OK with you, once it dries you’ll have a nice plastic wall. It will outgas for a while, but eventually will become inert.
I would say that the safest paint would be something like Old Fashioned Milk Paint , which is made from all natural ingredients. The last room I painted I used this paint and I will always now use it to paint walls. It is easy to use and gorgeous and all natural. Perfect.
Now, you also asked about oil-based primer and oil-based paint for baseboard, cabinetry etc. No. No oil-based paint period. It’s very toxic and takes a very long time to outgas. Here’s where you would use a no-VOC satin or semi-gloss paint.
There are natural paints from Germany that are made from plant resins, but I have used them and, though natural, the odors are very strong and take a long time to cure.
So my best answer to your question is milk paint with no-VOC satin or semi-gloss for the trim.
The World of Sustainable Furnishings
My guest today is Susan Inglis, Executive Director of Sustainable Furnishings Council. She has over twenty-five years experience working with artisans and in sustainable manufacture in the home furnishings, fashion, and gift industries. We’ll be talking about the Sustainable Furnishings Council and how they support reducing toxics in furniture. Susan has worked in twenty-seven countries on five continents providing services ranging from identifying procedures for insuring the sustainability of a natural resource base to market-led product development and how to access new markets effectively. Susan’s direction of the SFC has gained national attention and brought the organization widespread recognition as the primary source for verified sustainable home furnishings. Susan has spoken on behalf of SFC throughout the U.S. and abroad and has inspired many companies to adopt a sustainable platform for the future. She is the proud recipient of the 2009 WithIt WOW Award for Education. www.sustainablefurnishings.org
TOXIC FREE TALK RADIO
The World of Sustainable Furnishings
Host: Debra Lynn Dadd
Guest: Susan Inglis
Date of Broadcast: July 16, 2014
DEBRA: Hi, I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. And this is Toxic Free Talk Radio where we talk about how to thrive in a toxic world and live toxic free.
You know I listened to this song that at the beginning of the show everyday, “You take what’s wrong, and try to make it right.”
And that’s what we do here on this show. We’re looking at the wrongness of toxic chemicals and consumer products in the world today, and we’re showing you how to make things right in your life so that you’re not exposed to toxic chemicals that could be making you sick.
And I put that word “could” in there, but for the most part, so many people who are having so many illnesses—and even things that you might be suffering from in your own life, in your own health—all these things have relationships to exposures to toxic chemicals.
And this is what we’re working on sorting out in this show, figure out what’s toxic, where it is, and what you can do instead to protect your health and the health of those that you love.
Today is Wednesday, July 16, 2014. And I’m here in Clearwater, Florida. And we have been having thunderstorms all morning—big thunderstorms, lots of rain. So, if this show gets cut off it’s because the power went out. I am crossing my fingers and thinking good thoughts that we’re going to have power for the next hour, and we’re going to have a wonderful show.
Our subject today is Sustainable Furnishings. My guest is Susan Inglis. She’s the Executive Director of the Sustainable Furnishings Council which is an organization of various companies that make various furnishings of different types—the whole furnishings industry, people who are making different things within the furnishing industry. They’ve come together because there are all working in some sustainable way.
And we’re going to talk about what is sustainable furnishing. But also how toxics fit into that, and what different people are doing. We’ve already had some people, some members of the Sustainable Furnishing—I’m not really sure how to get this right, Sustainable Furnishings Council. I wanted to say Association. It’s the Sustainable Furnishings Council.
We had a guest on the owner and founder of Prairie Rugs. We’ve had on Berry Chic from Naturepedic. And I’m sure we’ll have on some other guest from more organizations, more companies from the Sustainable Furnishings Council.
But today we’re going to talk to the Executive Director, Susan Inglis. Hi, Susan.
SUSAN INGLIS: Hello, Debra. Thank you so much for having me on your show.
DEBRA: You’re welcome! It’s my pleasure.
So, Susan has more than 25 years of experience working with artisans and sustainable manufacturer in the home furnishings, fashion, and gift industry.
So Susan, would you tell us how you got interested in these issues of sustainability and how the Sustainable Furnishings Council came to be?
SUSAN INGLIS: Yes, I will tell you the story of how we got to where we are.
I got interested in issues of sustainability just as a matter of my heritage. I was just born and evolved into it. And so, all my life, my family here in North Carolina, we have been interested in making things with our hands. We’ve also been interested in stewardship of our natural environment. So that’s what I was born into.
And when it came time for me to make a living, I started a business working with artisans. And it evolved over the years from a sweater business to a home textiles business to a brokering business.
And that’s what it was, the small business from the mountain was business brokering hand-made when I got word of a plan to have a meeting to talk about the possibility of starting an organization called Sustainable Furnishings Council.
We were brokering a lot into the home furnishings industries at that time, so I was interested to hear about this. I knew that it would be good for my business and right up my alley. So, I went to that meeting at the showroom of Jerry Cooklin, who is the founder of Sustainable Furnishings Council. He is Peruvian. He was manufacturing furniture in Peru and showing it and selling it out of his showroom in Half Point, North Carolina where there is a major furniture market twice a year.
Jerry called a meeting at his showroom to talk about forming this organization. I’ve heard about it and showed up.
And he told us how he had had an epiphany himself and spent the last several years greening up his operations which involved making very careful choices about the wood he was using, and the processes he was using to make his furniture.
He knew that even greening up his own operation was just having a small impact compared to what the whole industry could do, so he made an effort to bring the conversation to the industry.
I got involved then. And we incorporated some six months later and have been growing ever since.
I hasten to mention that my little business from the mountain working with artisans does still exist, but it’s quite limited because since September of 2006, I’ve spent more and more time working with Sustainable Furnishings Council.
DEBRA: Yes. Well, it was in 2006 that Sustainable Furnishings Council started?
SUSAN INGLIS: Yeah.
DEBRA: So, you’ve been around for eight years?
SUSAN INGLIS: That’s right. We were fully incorporated very early in 2007. And as you said, our members are companies that are involved in the home furnishings industry in various ways. That includes companies that supply materials used in making furnishings (that would be things like wood, fabric, and foam, et cetera) companies that make furnishings products (furniture, accessories, lighting, rug, et cetera), companies that sell these things in stores and interior design firms that specificy these things in projects or homes and offices.
So, that’s an overview of the kinds of companies that are involved in the home furnishings industry in our organization.
DEBRA: So, you really help people representing each different phase of the life cycle, so to speak, of furniture.
SUSAN INGLIS: Exactly.
DEBRA: …from the materials itself all the way to the people that the consumer would have contact with in order to purchase these.
SUSAN INGLIS: Exactly.
DEBRA: I think that this is so great. Because so many times—I say this over and over but, it bears repeating over and over—so many times the problem for consumers is that they go to a retailer, and the retailer doesn’t know anything about the materials or where this product has come from. All they’re doing is selling it.
And so, this is a really good opportunity for your members to meet each other, and get involved with the whole cycle of it, and to be able to then say to a consumer, “I know about this product.”
SUSAN INGLIS: Exactly, you’re exactly right. And we do find that the sales staff in stores are some of the most eager ones for the kind of information we, as an organization, can share with them. We do a lot of educating of industry players. And those retail sales staff, and those interior designers really want the information they need for talking to consumers.
DEBRA: How many members do you have?
SUSAN INGLIS: Right now, we’ve got between—let’s see, I should’ve listed that up Debra. We’ve got over 350 member companies right now. Our membership has hovered between 300 and 400 for the last several years. When we incorporated, there were 40 odd companies that threw their names into the hat to get started with us. And by the end of that first year, we had 100 companies involved. And now it’s hovering between 300 and 400.
DEBRA: What a great accomplishment! We’re going to take a break.
SUSAN INGLIS: Thank you.
DEBRA: We’re going to take a break. And when we come back, we’re going to find out more about the Sustainable Furnishings Council and its members. And how furnishings are sustainable or not.
I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. This is Toxic Free Talk Radio. And my guest today is Susan Inglis from the Sustainable Furnishings Council. And their website is SustainableFrusnishings.org. And we’ll be right back.
= COMMERCIAL BREAK =
DEBRA: You’re listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. And my guest today is Susan Inglis from the Sustainable Furnishings Council. And that’s SustainableFurnishings.org.
Susan, how do companies qualify for being part of the council?
SUSAN INGLIS: We have a simple and important requirement for membership. A company must make their own public and verifiable commitment to sustainability. And they must make a commitment to transparency. And they must make a commitment to continuous improvement.
Now, the first thing you and your listeners will notice is that word “sustainability”. It’s an umbrella term. It’s a big word, and it’s covers a lot. There are many topics that fall under that sustainability umbrella. And our members’ commitment vary.
So, some members are more focused on matters of reducing toxic input. Some are focused more on matters of preserving natural resources, on energy use production, et cetera.
So, all of these things falls under the sustainability umbrella, and they are all important to us as an organization, and they’re all interrelated. But the point of focus of different member companies varies. And that’s fine with us as an organization.
Our premise is that the planet is in enough trouble. And our health is suffering sufficiently that every company has to start wherever they are and go forward.
Grab an oar and go. We want to support progress and implementing more and more best practices.
DEBRA: I totally agree with that. Because I think that as somebody who has been looking for and cataloging products for more than 30 years, I know that if I were to just take only the one—wait, let me just start over with that sentence.
There was a point I started out looking at toxics. And about 20 years ago, 1990-1987—I started in 1982 with toxics. In 1987 I decided, “Oh, my God! There’s an environment out there. And there’s a lot more that’s wrong with products than just toxics.”
SUSAN INGLIS: Exaclty.
DEBRA: And this was before Earth Day 1990. I had a little newsletter called the Earthwise Consumer that started to try to look at green issues before it was even called green.
And what I found was that—what ended happening was after many years, several years ago, I went back to just focusing on toxics because the issue of evaluating a product for sustainability is so multifaceted that if you were to try to find a product that is completely 100% sustainable in every facet, you would have a very short list.
SUSAN INGLIS: That’s right, that’s right.
DEBRA: And so, I decided for myself that what I was going to do was just focus on toxics because that’s where I started.
And if I could just find products that were not toxic, that that was a very important thing to do.
And in fact, nobody else is really doing that. There are a lot of organizations that are doing some pieces of that. But I’m the only one that I know of where I’m taking that idea of having something be not toxic and spreading it to all the consumer products.
SUSAN INGLIS: That’s really exciting, Debra.
DEBRA: Thank you. I’m very excited. Thank you. But I want to say that what you’re doing—I want to first of all, commend you for doing it and tell the listeners that I know how hard it is because I tried to do it for so many years. And that in the realm of sustainability, you really need to acknowledge that there are many facets, and everything from conserving resources, to being non-toxic, to the renewability, or non-renewability—
It’s so many things. What’s the energy is. What’s the water used? How much energy is used in the transportation of the material from where it’s going to (where it’s manufactured) to where it’s sold. It’s just a huge, huge thing.
And so, I know from looking at—I haven’t looked at every single business in your list yet because it’s hundreds. But I know from looking through this that some of your businesses qualify because they’ve reduced their energy use or some because of using organic or renewable materials and some because they’re less toxic.
And so, when people are looking through for furniture and all kinds of furnishings on your site, they need to figure out what is most important to them.
SUSAN INGLIS: That’s right.
DEBRA: And I know my listeners are going to be looking for the ones that are least toxic, but they’re going to find some that are energy efficient and might be toxic.
SUSAN INGLIS: That’s right.
DEBRA: And that’s just the nature of what this is.
SUSAN INGLIS: That’s right, that’s right. Now, all of our member companies fill what’s called our best practices agreement.
One of the first things we did as an organization was to sit down and suss out what our best practices for sustainability in our industry.
And this covers a whole range of things—things about energy use production, things about reducing toxic input, things about making careful choices in materials and processes, etc. So we have this list of best practices. And each of our member companies go through the list, and indicate which practices they are implementing now, which practices they are not implementing, and which practices are not pertinent to their businesses and which practices they’re in the process of implementing this year. And then, they update that every year.
So, when you or your listeners go to our website looking for furniture, you can use the finder to find manufacturers. And say you’re looking for dining room furniture, you’ll click on “dining room,” and up will come these little thumbnail pictures showing you the dining room furniture made by various members of our organization. And you’ll see the one that you like best, and you’ll click on that company, and you’ll see their best practices.
DEBRA: Okay, great.
SUSAN INGLIS: You’re going to see one little image of their furniture. But that’s enough to show you whether it’s your style.
And then, you go to their website and learn more.
DEBRA: We need to go to break. But during the break, I’m going to go to your website and do just that. You’re listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio.
I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. And my guest today is Susan Inglis from the Sustainable Furnishings Council. And we’ll talk more about sustainable furnishings when we come back.
= COMMERCIAL BREAK =
DEBRA: You’re listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. And my guest today is Susan Inglis. She’s the Executive Director of the Sustainable Furnishings Council. It’s a group of businesses that are moving in the direction of becoming more sustainable. They have over 300 members. And you can go there and find some furnishing type products that are less toxic and have other environmental benefits.
Susan, I was just playing around with your website during the break. I can’t seem to get back to the homepage—oh, wait, here we go. It’s not the fault of your website, it’s my browser. But anyway—
SUSAN INGLIS: It may be the storms you’re suffering.
DEBRA: It may be. It’s just I switched to a new browser. And there are things that I like about it, and things that I don’t like about it. But anyway…
So, I did see on your homepage—which I can’t seem to get back to—over on the right—I just want to tell everybody so that everybody knows where to go—over on the right there’s a box—I can’t look at it right now—but it’s says “Materials.”
SUSAN INGLIS: That’s right.
DEBRA: Yeah! And that’s where you need to click. There are four categories of materials. Tell us what they are.
SUSAN INGLIS: They are find materials, find manufactures, find stores, and find designers. It is on the right hand side of the homepage at SustainableFurnishings.org.
When you click on “Find Manufacturers,” for instance, you have a little box where you can find the kind of product that you want. And so you might click on “dining room.” And then you would see all the companies that make dining room furniture.
DEBRA: Right. Wow! I’m really having technical problems here because I’m not able to open any websites.
SUSAN INGLIS: Oh, dear.
DEBRA: It’s not just yours. Jeez!
SUSAN INGLIS: That’s frustrating. And we’re so dependent on those things.
DEBRA: I know!
SUSAN INGLIS: I’ll tell your listeners something else about what they’ll see there. They will see images of the Sustainable Furnishings Council members seal. All our members are qualified to use the members seal in their marketing and advertising. And if they are good enough, we recognize them as exemplary.
So, when you were looking at the list of companies—for instance the list of manufacturers that make dining room furniture—you’ll see that some of them have a silver members seal.
DEBRA: I noticed that.
SUSAN INGLIS: Yeah! So, that means the company has qualified by proving certain things to us. And those requirements that we have include requirement for showing that they are not overly polluting the indoor air. There are requirement for limit on VOC’s or volatile organic compounds.
And in furnishings, there are volatile organic compounds in finishes and in glues. I mean, we’re all familiar with that new product smell, right?
DEBRA: Right, right.
SUSAN INGLIS: And if you walk into a furniture store, you will smell that smell. And it will be the volatilizing of the chemicals used in finishes on fabrics and on wood surfaces or other surfaces.
So we require that these VOCs are limited. And of course, we ideally want there to be no VOCs. But as we were saying earlier in the hour, there are some cases where it’s nigh impossible to get rid of toxins in the world we’re in these days.
DEBRA: Sometimes, yes.
Now, I want to ask you, do you have a minimum requirement for—everyone has to meet a minimum requirement? Or is that one of the options for an aspect that they can choose?
SUSAN INGLIS: The minimum requirement is transparency. All companies must be willing to tell consumers exactly the chemicals that they are using, exactly what the chemical input are. They have to be willing to be transparent about it. But it is the transparency that is the minimum requirement.
Now, for being recognized as exemplary, there are more specific requirements that are specifically for limiting VOCs. And those are akin to what Green Guard Certification certifies.
So if you’re familiar—two things for your listeners. Look for Green Guard Certification. And if you’re familiar with that certification, you know it is a surface certification. So it’s only certifying what volatile organic compounds are coming off the surface of the item. And there’s various certification at various levels.
DEBRA: Right, right.
I think that’s an important point to know about the disclosure because that is also one of the problems that consumers run into. They contact a manufacturer or a retailer, they want to know what’s in the product. Either people don’t know or they refuse to tell them.
So, at the very least we know that if we contact one of your manufacturers, or source, or designers, that we’re going to be able to get the information so that we can make an informed choice.
SUSAN INGLIS: That’s right. And you’re right, that’s a very big deal.
DEBRA: It is. A very big deal.
SUSAN INGLIS: Most often, I think, retail sales staff, for instance, they have no idea. So that you ask the sales person in your local store and they say, “I don’t know.” It is true, they don’t know. And it’s going to be hard for them to push the question up the chain to find out the answers. There’s just way too many industry players, individuals who do not know.
DEBRA: But that’s part of the transformation that’s going on in all industries right now—just for people to be finding out and for people at the beginning of the chain to be disclosing and sending that information up the line, so that everybody knows all along what’s going on, how it’s being manufactured, what are the problems.
And some people don’t like to talk about what their problems are. (I’m going to say this quickly because we’re coming up on break.) But some people don’t like to say what are the problems. But it’s by saying, “This is the truth about what’s going on about our products” that then maybe they can get information. Maybe one of their customers would know how to fix the problem how to do it less toxically.
SUSAN INGLIS: That’s right.
DEBRA: If they would just be open, then all kinds of discussion can happen. And it’s keeping everything secret that keeps it from moving forward. So, bravo to you for doing that with this organization.
We need to go to break. This is Toxic Free Talk Radio. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. My guest today is Susan Inglis, Executive Director of the Sustainable Furnishings Council. And they are at SustainableFurnishings.org. We’ll be right back.
= COMMERCIAL BREAK =
DEBRA: You’re listening to Toxic Free Talk Radio. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. And my guest today is Susan Inglis, Executive Director of Sustainable Furnishings Council. And their website is SustainableFursnishing.org.
Susan, we’re in the last segment now. These hours go—it sounds such a long period of time, but it goes by so fast. Id’ like to make sure that you have an opportunity to say anything that you’d like to say even if I haven’t asked a question. So, is there anything we haven’t covered that you’d like to talk about?
SUSAN INGLIS: Yes. Well, I would like to be sure your listeners know that when their shopping for furnishings, just like when they’re shopping for other products, they can ask questions that insure that the products they buy, the way they spend their money, lines up with their values.
People are always going to be buying furniture based on whatever their taste is and whatever their budget is. So all of us are going to buy the kinds of products we like the look and feel off, at the price we can afford. But know that we can also get these things with an alignment with the values that we hold.
So, when we are very concerned about removing toxins in the entire supply chain, whether a toxic input makes it all the way to your living room or not, if you want to be sure that there are no toxins in the supply chain, just start asking questions.
That’s the main thing I want your listeners to know, just start asking questions.
DEBRA: Well, I totally agree with that since I’ve been asking questions for more than 30 years.
SUSAN INGLIS: Yes, yes.
DEBRA: But the problem—I’ll just say this again—the biggest problem is that when people ask questions—me and other consumers because I hear this over and over again—is that it’s pretty frustrating trying to get answers. And so, the more your organization can do to get more answers for the customers then that’s—I mean starting with disclosure is really important. And I do think that that’s important.
And for some of us—go ahead.
SUSAN INGLIS: I’ll just interrupt you, Debra, to say that we do have a very good resource section on our website. It is one of the sections that we are continuously improving so it’s going to be easier and easier to use. But it’s there now with lots of good resources. So I encourage consumers, your listeners, to make use of that resource section.
I also want to encourage your listeners to be in touch with their congressmen and let them know that they are concerned about toxins in their consumer products and things that come in to their homes because we do not have, at this time, good legislation for insuring a reduction of toxic chemical input.
DEBRA: That’s exactly right. And many of my guests bring this up. And I am totally in support of getting better legislation.
It’s something that we definitely need.
I started doing the work that I’m doing so many years ago because, at the time, there was no information about toxics in consumer products. In fact, I realized the other day that I actually wrote the very first book on toxic chemicals in consumer products.
SUSAN INGLIS: Good for you!
DEBRA: It was published back in 1984. I actually self-published the book in 1982. But the first published book on the subject was in 1984, and I wrote it.
SUSAN INGLIS: Good for you, Debra.
DEBRA: Thank you, thank you.
SUSAN INGLIS: That is so important. Good for you.
DEBRA: And so, there was just no information at all.
And so the point here is that we live in a world where it’s all up to the consumer right now to be evaluating all these products, and all these toxic chemicals. And it’s because we live in a world where consumer products are not safe, for the most part, and there are no laws that say they have to be safe for health or they shouldn’t be on the market.
And people think that the government is protecting us. They are not.
SUSAN INGLIS: Not in that way, you are right.
DEBRA: And I would love to be out of a job. I would love for every manufacturer to only make safe products, to understand how to do that, to decide that they’re going to, so that we could walk into any store, go to any website, and any product would be safe for health. That’s my goal. That’s my goal.
SUSAN INGLIS: It would be great. May we get there quickly!
I too would like be out of a job because that would mean that all the companies in the home furnishings industry are including best practices for sustainability in their regular quality checks. It would just be a matter of quality that they are being responsible about the materials they choose, about energy use reduction, about toxic input reduction, et cetera.
DEBRA: Right, right. So, tell us about—I don’t want you to pick and choose and say, “This is my favorite member,” but give us some examples—
SUSAN INGLIS: Hard to do!
DEBRA: I know! I mean I can’t do that with my list either. Just give us some examples of—because we have just a few minutes left. So give us some examples.
SUSAN INGLIS: Well, I will talk about our exemplary members because companies that have qualified to be recognized at the exemplary level are really achieving remarkable things. And we do have, among our exemplary members, stores as well as manufacturers.
So, one of those stores is Room & Board. And Room & Board does have stores across the country (probably in your entire listening area). And Room & Board emphasizes US manufactures. In doing that, they are reducing the amount of transport required for getting your new furniture to your house.
And a couple of other things about emphasizing US manufacturers. In this country, like actually in most countries, we have pretty good environmental protection laws. Most countries do have good environmental protection laws. But here in the US, we also have good enforcement of those laws, good compliance with the regulation.
So when a product is made here in the US, you can be pretty sure that it is made without exploiting people, without polluting the environment where it’s made, and without exploiting the scarce resources.
Room & Board is a good example of a company that earned that exemplary recognition by addressing the triple bottomline effectively.
And I do want to mention that our requirements for recognizing companies as exemplary do cover the triple bottomline—that is what’s good for the environment, what’s good for the communities of people and other living forms that are part of the ecosystems on our planet, and what’s good for the economy, what makes these communities thrive.
So, that is the triple bottom line. And we are concerned about sustainability in that holistic way. The companies that are recognized as exemplary have demonstrated a concern for this triple bottom line in their operations, in their product choices, and in their outreach. So, when you see the Sustainable Furnishings Council members seal being used, then you can know that there is real substance behind the use of that seal.
DEBRA: Good, good. What’s another exemplary company?
SUSAN INGLIS: Another one is Naturepedic. I know that Berry Chic of Naturepedic has been on your show before.
DEBRA: Yes.
SUSAN INGLIS: Naturepedic is a mattress company. We have several mattress companies that are members. And all of them have very healthy toxin-free mattresses. But I’m going to mention Naturepedic now because they are an exemplary member, and they are a company that was started basically in order to produce the better mattress, to produce a mattress that is free of toxins and serves the customers need for comfort and economy as well.
And those mattresses are made here in the US and are made of responsible materials through and through.
DEBRA: Yes, they are.
SUSAN INGLIS: The companies I’ve mentioned, like others, are also very involved in their communities. They are involved in various ways in their communities, not just selling their products. And that’s an important part too.
DEBRA: It is! So, we’ve come to the end of our time. Thank you so much for being with me, Susan.
Again, Susan Inglis is the Executive Director of Sustainable Furnishings Council. Their website is SustainableFurnishings.org. And you can go there and find different members. And see if they meet your needs. This is Toxic Free Talk Radio.
SUSAN INGLIS: Thank you, Debra.
DEBRA: You’re welcome. I’m Debra Lynn Dadd. Be well.
Labs That Test for Toxics
Question from Joel
Can you please recommend a reliable and affordable lab that tests for lead, asbestos, radon and heavy metals (in food)? I live in New York City.
Thanks.
Joel
Debra’s Answer
This is a great question and one I would like to have an answer to.
I did some searching and didn’t come up with a lab that was really oriented to consumers. Though there are labs oriented to helping manufacturers, they are not affordable.
Are you considering testing every sample of food before you eat it? I think that would be impractical and expensive.
The best advice I can give you is to do your best to source the most organic raw food available to you and then prepare it yourself in your own kitchen. That is the best way to get the least contaminated food. You have a lot of organic food available in New York City.
Tick protection
Question from Karen B
Hi Debra. I have a dilemma because my work has me outdoors much of the summer where I am exposed to ticks . We have a heavy tick infestation here in Massachusetts.
I do use care where I walk but still I have gotten tick bites. I just took an antibiotic for the latest tick bite. This is one case where I would rather take preventative drugs rather than risk Lyme Disease.
So I was wondering what you think about this product, keeping in mind that I do have MCS. It is an ankle gaiter that could stop any entry to the body because most ticks come from the ground up. Do you think this is safe? Do you have any other suggestions? Thank you!
Debra’s Answer
This is one of those situations where it can be better for your health to use something like an insecticide, rather than have the consequences of something worse like lyme disease.
This product appears to be able to protect you from tick bites without you taking anything internally. It’s a cuff treated with microcapsules filled with permethrin, which burst when disturbed to release very small amounts of the insecticide. The amount is so small you probably wouldn’t even notice it, but it can kill a tick before it bites you.
Permethrin, is a made-made version of pyrethrum. Pyrethrum is a naturally occurring insecticide of the chrysanthemum flower. Permethrin has been a registered ixodicide with the EPA since 1977. While ingested permethrin can be harmful, the World Health Organization considers it to be “the insecticide of choice for clothing treatment.”
I would say give it a try and see if you tolerated. The toxic risk is very low, especially when used outdoors, on clothing, not in contact with your body.
FoxFibre Colorganic | Vresis Limited
Fabric, yarn, and sliver made from organic naturally-colored cottons and wools. I remember back in 1985 when these cottons first became available. They are natural colors that are inherent in the cotton, revealed by breeding. I have a sweater made from this cotton yarn that was hand-knit and is still one of my favorites.
Fed by Threads
Clothing for the whole family, made from organic cotton and organic hemp/organic cotton blend (a few items contain spandex, so read the labels). Various safer dyes are used, all are vegan and sweatshop free. They also offer custom-print organic t-shirts. “This all began with the simple idea to have a community shirt made for our dance/yoga/photography studio The Movement Shala in downtown Tucson. At that time, we learned some startling statistics about the depth of the hunger challenge in the United States and while Jade was bulging pregnant with our son, Sequoia, we decided we had to do something, even if it was a small act. So the simple idea was born to feed 12 emergency meal boxes every time one of our community shirts sold. What started as one rack of shirts has blossomed into what is now Fed By Threads! “