The FDA announced on Wednesday that it has banned the use of Red No. 3, an additive used to give food and drinks a cherry-red color.
Discover how California's new law requires baby food manufacturers to publicly test for heavy metals, making it easier for parents to choose safer options.
In the wake of the raging California wildfires, environmental groups are shifting the climate conversation away from mitigation, toward adaptation and resilience.
Trump's order is premised on the idea that increasing Delta pumping would make more water available for the rest of California. But experts say its more complicated than that.
Now, shopping for safer baby food will be easier for parents. In 2024, a California law required baby food manufacturers to test their products for arsenic, cadmium, lead, and mercury at least once a month.
Meyers Nave has announced that it has joined forces with The Sohagi Law Group (SLG), a California boutique environmental and land use law firm, effective February 1.
After years of pressure from organizations like the Environmental Defense Fund, Environmental Working Group, and Consumer Reports, a new California Law will require manufacturers to make test results for heavy metals in baby food publicly available on their websites.
The president’s order has no immediate effect on offshore wind leases already authorized, including two large areas off California’s coast. But it sends a current of uncertainty through the fledgling renewable energy industry,
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has been considering banning formaldehyde and ingredients that release formaldehyde when heated from chemical hair straighteners. This comes after years of studies linking the chemical to cancers disproportionately affecting Black women.
President Donald Trump issued a host of executive orders on his first day, aiming to reverse many of former President Joe Biden’s policies and kick-start his own “America First” agenda.
Frustrated by regulators ignoring their pleas for protection from a cancer-causing fumigant, farmworkers and their supporters gave a dramatic display of the lethal consequences of inaction.
In the most comprehensive study of its kind, researchers from the Keck School of Medicine looked at the link between polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) and the incidence of certain cancers.