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HomeHealth and Safety CodeDiv. 103Pt. 5Ch. 8Art. 2§ 105449 Chemical Biomonitoring Priorities

§ 105449 Chemical Biomonitoring Priorities

Health and Safety Code·California
AI Summary·Official Text·Key Terms·Related Statutes·References
AI SummaryVerified

§ 105449 Chemical Biomonitoring Priorities

This law creates a science panel that reviews research and suggests which chemicals California should track in people's bodies, while the main program still makes the final choices.

Key Takeaways

  • •A panel of experts must review science and give recommendations on which chemicals to monitor.
  • •The panel uses specific criteria like how many people could be exposed, how dangerous the chemical might be, and whether labs can detect it.
  • •The program keeps the final say on which chemicals are actually added to the monitoring list.

Example

The state wants to start testing for a new pesticide that might be in people's blood.

The panel looks at how many people might be exposed, how risky the pesticide is, whether labs can detect it at low levels, and other factors, then tells the program whether to add it to the monitoring list.

AI-generated — May contain errors. Not legal advice. Always verify source.

Official Source
View on CA.gov

§ 105449 Chemical Biomonitoring Priorities

(a) The panel shall provide scientific peer review and make recommendations regarding the design and implementation of the program, including specific recommendations for chemicals that are priorities for biomonitoring in California, as specified in subdivisions (b) and (c), with the program retaining final decisionmaking authority. (b) The panel shall recommend priority chemicals for inclusion in the program using the following criteria: (1) The degree of potential exposure to the public or specific subgroups, including, but not limited to, occupational. (2) The likelihood of a chemical being a carcinogen or toxicant based on peer-reviewed health data, the chemical structure, or the toxicology of chemically related compounds. (3) The limits of laboratory detection for the chemical, including the ability to detect the chemical at low enough levels that could be expected in the general population. (4) Other criteria that the panel may agree to. (c) The panel may recommend additional designated chemicals not included in the CDC report, for inclusion in the program using the following criteria: (1) Exposure or potential exposure to the public or specific subgroups. (2) The known or suspected health effects resulting from some level of exposure based on peer-reviewed scientific studies. (3) The need to assess the efficacy of public health actions to reduce exposure to a chemical. (4) The availability of a biomonitoring analytical method with adequate accuracy, precision, sensitivity, specificity, and speed. (5) The availability of adequate biospecimen samples. (6) The incremental analytical cost to perform the biomonitoring analysis for the chemical. (Added by Stats. 2006, Ch. 599, Sec. 2. Effective January 1, 2007.)

Last verified: January 11, 2026

Key Terms

scientific peer reviewpriority chemicalsbiomonitoringcarcinogen or toxicantlaboratory detection

Related Statutes

  • § 105440 Environmental Contaminant Biomonitoring
  • § 105448 Scientific Guidance Panel Composition
  • § 105451 Environmental Justice Program Guidelines
  • § 111840 Enforcement Of Violations
  • § 111845 Minor Violation Discretion

References

  • Official text at leginfo.legislature.ca.gov
  • California Legislature. Health and Safety Code. Section 105449.
View Official Source