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Sarah Hess started taking her toddler, Josie, to New Orleans’ Mickey Markey Playground in 2010 because she thought it would be a safe place to play after Josie had been diagnosed with lead poisoning.

Hess had traced the problem to the crumbling paint in her family’s century-old home. While it underwent lead remediation, the family stayed in a newer, lead-free house in the Bywater neighborhood near Markey, where Josie regularly played on the swings and slides.

“Everyone was telling us the safest place to play was outside at playgrounds, so that’s where we went,” Hess said.

Josie’s next blood test was a shock. “It skyrocketed,” Hess said. Josie’s lead levels had leapt to nearly five times the national health standard.

When the soil at Markey was tested in late 2010, it too was found to have dangerously high levels of lead. But the city took no meaningful action to inform Markey’s users or make the park safe. Parents started posting warning signs at the park and flooded City Hall with outraged calls and emails. Holding Josie in her arms, Hess made an impassioned speech to the City Council.

Two pink child size sneakers are seen on a sidewalk

A child’s shoes are left in the dirt next to the playground at Mickey Markey Park in the Bywater neighborhood of New Orleans in November 2025. It’s common for children to play barefoot at this playground. Christiana Botic / Verite News and Catchlight Local / Report for America

In short order, the city had hired a company to test Markey and other parks, and pledged to fix the lead problem wherever it was found.

“I couldn’t have been more pleased,” Hess said. “They were totally into it. My impression was they were going to make them all lead-free parks.”

But a Verite News investigation conducted over four months in 2025 found that lead pollution in New Orleans parks not only persists, it is more widespread than previously known. Dozens of city parks with playgrounds remain unsafe, including Markey and others that underwent city-sponsored lead remediation in 2011. The city does not appear to have conducted any major remediation or lead testing of parks since that time.

The findings indicate that city officials fell short in their cleanup efforts then, and that a very large number of New Orleans children are exposed to excessive amounts of lead now, said Howard Mielke, a retired Tulane University toxicologist and one of the nation’s leading experts on lead contamination.

“It’s a failed program,” he said. “They didn’t do what they needed to do to bring the lead levels down in a single park.”

Verite News reporters tested hundreds of soil samples from 84 city parks with playgrounds in fall 2025. Adrienne Katner, a lead contamination researcher with Louisiana State University, verified the results. The testing found that about half the parks had lead concentrations that exceed a federal hazard level established in 2024 for soil in urban areas.

“I am surprised they haven’t been tested and mitigated,” said Gabriel Filippelli, an Indiana University biochemist who studies lead exposure. “If there’s evidence of kids playing in soils that are as high as [Verite’s testing] described, that’s kind of horrifying.”

Public health researchers and doctors say that children under 6 absorb lead-laden dust more easily than adults, contaminating their blood and harming the long-term development of their brains and nervous systems. There is no known safe exposure level for children, and even trace amounts can result in behavioral problems and lower cognitive abilities.

Find out what the lead levels are at New Orleans playgrounds

New Orleans is in financial straits with a budget deficit of about $220 million, and it’s unclear what priority or resources Mayor Helena Moreno will, or even can, allocate to restart lead remediation efforts. In response to the financial crisis, Moreno has eliminated dozens of positions and plans to furlough 700 employees one day per pay period to save money. Moreno’s administration did not respond to requests for comment.

The city doesn’t routinely test for lead in parks, said Larry Barabino, chief executive officer of the New Orleans Recreation Development, or NORD, Commission, the agency that oversees most of the city’s parklands. He confirmed the last significant effort to test parks ended in 2011.

He called Verite’s results “definitely concerning” and pledged to work with city departments and local experts to potentially remediate unsafe parks.

“Safety is our number one priority here at NORD,” Barabino said. “If there’s anything that’s a true environmental concern or risk, that’s something that we believe in definitely making sure we take action.”

Andrea Young heard similar pledges 14 years ago. Like Hess, Young had a child who frequented Markey and had high lead levels in her blood. The mothers helped form a community group called NOLA Unleaded that pushed the city to clean up Markey and other parks. Young thought they had succeeded, but said she now realizes that the city had not done enough.

“It makes me question the value of the work that [the city] did, and the safety we felt in letting our kids play there again,” Young said with a trembling voice. “It just sort of shakes me up a little bit, you know?”

Testing New Orleans parks

Verite News conducted soil tests on the city parks that property inventories and maps list as having play structures. Samples were taken from surface soil, which is most likely to come into contact with children’s hands and toys or be inhaled when kicked up during play or blown by the wind.

Lead is typically found in very small amounts in natural soil. The average lead abundance in U.S. soils is 26 parts per million, equivalent to less than an ounce of lead per ton of soil.

Soil samples collected by Verite from New Orleans parks averaged about 121 ppm — nearly five times the national average.

A woman and man stand in a park holding instruments to measure lead

Verite reporter Tristan Baurick tests lead levels while reporter Halle Parker maps the exact GPS coordinates of the reading at Mirabeau Playground in the Gentilly neighborhood of New Orleans in September 2025.
Christiana Botic / Verite News and Catchlight Local / Report for America

The federal hazard level for lead in soil was 400 ppm until early 2024, when the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency under President Joe Biden lowered it to 200 ppm for most residential areas and 100 ppm in areas like New Orleans with multiple sources of lead exposure, including contaminated soil, lead paint, and large numbers of lead pipes.

More of a guide than a mandate, the EPA screening levels can steer federal cleanup actions and are often adopted by state and city governments to inform local responses to lead contamination.

California has long had a much lower standard of 80 ppm. Of the New Orleans parks Verite tested, 52 — or about two-thirds — had results that fail California’s standard.

In October, President Donald Trump’s administration rolled back the EPA screening standards. The administration retained the 200 ppm threshold for residential areas but eliminated the 100 ppm level for areas with multiple lead sources.

The administration didn’t dispute the validity of the 100 ppm threshold, but argued that a single level “reduces inconsistent implementation and provides clarity to decision-makers and the public.”

The change, according to Mielke, doesn’t align with the science, which has long shown that children are harmed when exposed to soil with levels below 100 ppm. He was one of several scientists who had pushed for lower thresholds since the EPA established its first screening levels more than 30 years ago.

Children and a couple are seen in a shady park

Families spend time at Confetti Playspot in Algiers Point on the West Bank of New Orleans in November 2025. Christiana Botic / Verite News and Catchlight Local / Report for America

Mielke said the 100 ppm screening level should still be applied in urban areas, especially New Orleans. The city has a long history of soil contaminated with lead from a combination of sources, including lead-based paint, leaded gasoline, and emissions from waste incinerators and other industrial facilities. Lead particles spread easily by wind, eventually settling in the topsoil.

Verite found lead levels above 100 ppm at numerous places that get heavy use by children. Lead contamination more than four times that level was recorded near the slides at Markey, outside a playhouse in Brignac Park near Magazine Street and at a well-worn spot under an oak tree at Desmare Park in Bayou St. John.

Elevated lead levels tended to follow the age of the neighborhood. The city’s older neighborhoods, including the Irish Channel and Algiers Point, had some of the highest lead levels, while Gentilly and New Orleans East, which were developed mostly after the 1950s, tended to be lower, according to Verite’s findings.

Search all of Verite News’ test results

Verite spoke to more than a dozen parents at playgrounds across the city, and most were surprised at the levels of lead in the parks.

In the Irish Channel, Meg Potts watched her son run around the dusty playground at Brignac. All of Verite’s samples at the park surpassed the threshold the EPA deemed safe for urban areas, reaching nearly 600 ppm.

Potts knew high lead levels existed in the city, but didn’t realize her neighborhood park could be a source of exposure for her son.

“ I’m just thinking about all of this now because he’s had to go in and have his lead tested,” she said. “He’s like right on the cusp of having too high lead.”

The invisibility of lead makes it challenging for parents to manage among other priorities. Meghan Stroh, whose children often play at Markey, said it’s hard for parents to protect their children from every threat, but tackling lead at parks is one way the city could help.

Children play on a playground

Children play at Desmare Playground in the Bayou St. John neighborhood of New Orleans in November 2025. Christiana Botic / Verite News and Catchlight Local / Report for America

“It’s a concern that I have amidst a myriad of others,” she said while holding her 10-month-old daughter on her hip. “So, it would be nice to have one thing checked off the list.”

Katner, the LSU researcher, said Verite’s results can serve as a starting point for city officials to conduct more comprehensive testing in parks, noting that even a single lead hotspot in a park is concerning.

“ It doesn’t matter where it is in the soil; there’s exposure there,” she said. “The kid playing in that part of the park is going to get the highest dose.”

A legacy of lead

Before the 1970s, lead was nearly everywhere. A 2022 study estimated that the vast majority of the U.S. population born between 1960 and 1980 was poisoned by dangerously high levels of lead in early childhood. On average, lead exposure has resulted in a loss of 2.6 IQ points for more than half the population through 2015.

Lead pollution from cars spread into areas near roads, especially major thoroughfares, until leaded gasoline was phased out by 1996. Similarly, emissions from trash incinerators and industrial sites contaminated the surrounding soil. New Orleans had at least eight incinerators that blew toxic gases and lead dust over several neighborhoods, including Algiers Point and St. Roch, until they were closed in the 1970s and ‘80s.

Today, the most pervasive source of lead in soil is degraded paint. Lead-based paint was used extensively for homes and buildings until it was banned in 1978. In New Orleans, most of the houses were built before 1980, according to the 2024 American Community Survey. As the paint deteriorates, Tulane University epidemiologist Felicia Rabito said it can chip or turn into toxic dust.

A toddler sits in the dirt

Edith Salmon, 10 months, plays with dirt and other debris scattered across the playground’s rubber tiles at Mickey Markey Park in the Bywater neighborhood of New Orleans in November 2025. Christiana Botic / Verite News and Catchlight Local / Report for America

“ The leaded paint goes straight into the dust and it goes straight into the soils, which is a major source of exposure for young children in the city,” said Rabito, who studies lead poisoning and other health conditions.

Children under 6 years old are especially vulnerable, in part because they love to stick their hands in their mouths. Rabito stressed that kids don’t have to eat the soil directly to be harmed. Children putting their thumbs in their mouths after playing on a seesaw or eating a dropped Cheerio can be enough.

Even a one-time exposure to contaminated soil can raise the level of lead in a child’s blood, Rabito said. They’re at an even higher risk if they have a calcium deficiency.

”Lead mimics calcium, so the body essentially thinks that the lead is calcium,” Rabito said. After the lead enters the bloodstream, it’s hard to fully remove. Most of it is stored long-term in the body’s bones, accumulating over time and potentially releasing into the bloodstream again later.

Rabito recommended that parents steer clear of contaminated playgrounds because it’s hard to avoid exposure.

Green paint peels off a pole

Lead paint peels off a pole at Hunter’s Field Playground in New Orleans in September 2025. Christiana Botic / Verite News and Catchlight Local / Report for America

The only way to know if a child has lead poisoning is a medical test. By state law, Louisiana healthcare providers are required to ensure every child between 6 months and 6 years of age receives at least two blood tests by age 1 and age 2.

But the law did not include a way to enforce those testing requirements, so many providers don’t test, according to a 2017 report from the Louisiana Department of Health. The screening rate has always been very low in New Orleans, Rabito said. In 2022, fewer than one in 10 children under 6 years old were screened for lead poisoning in the city, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“ There’s not anything that we can say about lead poisoning or lead levels in children in Orleans Parish with any scientific certainty,” Rabito said. “ As you see from your own testing, there are different pockets of contamination depending upon where you’re playing. Parents really need to get their children tested.”

Limited soil testing, patchy fixes

In 2010, Claudia Copeland joined Hess and other Markey regulars in having their kids tested for lead. One of Copeland’s children, born in Germany, had a blood lead level considered normal at the time. But her younger, New Orleans-born child showed elevated levels that set off alarm bells for Copeland, a molecular biologist.

“There really is no safe level, but it was really bad,” she said.

Copeland hurriedly made signs and posted them around the park. “THE SOIL IN MARKEY PARK IS TOXIC!” they blared in big black letters.

A woman stands in a playground

Claudia Copeland, a mother and activist who pushed the city to remediate Mickey Markey Park in 2010, poses for a portrait at the park in the Bywater neighborhood of New Orleans in December 2025. Christiana Botic / Verite News and Catchlight Local / Report for America

“The city was aware, but they just were not doing anything,” Copeland said. “Parents needed to know. We were all so ignorant about what was in the soil. You know, we’re all saying ‘a little dirt never hurt.’”

Outcry from parents prompted the city to first fence off and padlock Markey, and then promise a more comprehensive response.

The New Orleans health commissioner at the time, Karen DeSalvo, said the city should do “everything we can to understand what the risk might be and to remediate it.” But she also appeared to minimize the dangers of lead at city parks, saying other health risks, like the flu, were greater.

“In the scheme of the many public health challenges that kids have, it’s not the greatest challenge, honestly,” DeSalvo told The Times-Picayune in February 2011.

Then-mayor Mitch Landrieu was more definitive, pledging a swift, far-reaching action.

A green twisty slide is seen in a playground

A child goes down the slide at the Daneel Playground in Uptown New Orleans in November 2025. Christiana Botic / Verite News and Catchlight Local / Report for America

“The city will take all necessary measures to investigate possible lead contamination in other parks and playgrounds and remediate them as soon as possible,” he said in March 2011.

Two months later, testing and remediation were completed at several parks. Members of NOLA Unleaded celebrated and brought their kids back to familiar playgrounds.

But Verite’s review of work orders shows that the city’s testing and remediation efforts were limited to a small number of parks. Despite city leaders’ assurances of a broad response, only 16 parks were tested in 2011, according to documents obtained through public records requests.

Mielke and NOLA Unleaded’s members believed most or all of the city’s parks were tested, pointing to Landrieu’s promises and an article in the Atlantic that reported that the city agreed to “test all of the public parks in the city.”

“I guess I kind of believed that, and then you realize that that’s not actually true,” said Young after learning the city’s testing was more limited than she thought. “If the majority of the parks they tested were high [in lead], what would make them think all the others are fine?”

A photo shows a yellow street sign by a park, with an image of children playing on a seesaw

A weathered sign warns drivers that there are children playing nearby at Evans Playground in Uptown New Orleans in November 2025. Christiana Botic / Verite News and Catchlight Local / Report for America

Landrieu did not respond to a request for comment. DeSalvo, who retired last year as Google’s chief health officer, said “extremely limited resources” forced the city to weigh its response to lead contamination with the many other health threats residents faced.

“We worked to address the range of exposures whenever possible with the resources we could muster,” she said.

Of the 16 parks the city tested, only two — A.L. Davis in Central City and Norwood Thompson in Gert Town — had levels below 400 ppm, the federal threshold at the time, and were deemed safe by Materials Management Group, or MMG, which was and still is the city’s environmental consultant. One park, Evans in the Freret neighborhood, was found to have lead levels as high as 610 ppm but wasn’t remediated for reasons not made clear in testing documents and progress reports submitted by MMG. Thirteen parks, including Markey, underwent remediation after testing showed the properties exceeded the 400 ppm threshold that MMG used to determine soil hazard levels.

Fourteen years later, Verite’s testing found A.L. Davis and Norwood Thompson have comparatively low lead levels, although A.L. Davis had one sample slightly above the 100 ppm threshold.

Evans, which did not undergo remediation despite unsafe lead levels in 2011, had the highest lead reading of all soil samples collected by Verite. Alongside a low-hanging oak branch, on ground worn bare by children’s play, Verite recorded lead at 5,998 ppm, a level nearly 60 times the urban soils threshold and more than twice that of Verite’s second-highest sample, taken at Soraporu Park in the Irish Channel.

In 2011, MMG recommended remediation at Evans, including installing a fabric layer topped with clean soil in three areas, including the northeast corner where Verite collected the 5,998 ppm sample. MMG noted in a 2015 progress report that it had not performed the work, but the firm did not explain why.

A child plays on swings in a playground

Zen Trismegistus, right, relaxes on an inflatable couch she brought from home while she watches her daughters Axeliah Dupuy, 10, and Zeniya Walters, 3, play nearby at Easton Park in the Bayou St. John neighborhood of New Orleans in November 2025. Christiana Botic / Verite News and Catchlight Local / Report for America

MMG did not respond to requests for comment.

Documents obtained by Verite show that the city’s remediation efforts focused on covering patches of contaminated soil rather than the comprehensive treatment Mielke recommended to city leaders in 2011. Mielke had urged the city to fully cover play areas with clean soil, a strategy his research showed was highly effective in reducing lead exposure.

In 2010, Mielke led an effort to reduce lead exposure at 10 child care center playgrounds in New Orleans. He and his team covered the entire footprint of each playground with water-pervious plastic fabric and then six inches of Mississippi River sediment from the Bonnet Carre Spillway, a source of clean, cheap, and easily accessible soil. Lead levels fell, with most playgrounds testing below 10 ppm.

The remediation at city parks also used fabric and soil layers, but the coverings were mostly limited to areas with lead levels above 400 ppm, leaving many hazardous areas exposed. Testing and remediation reports obtained by Verite typically show soil capping in only two or three spots, with most of each park remaining untreated.

The remediation at Comiskey Park in Mid-City, for instance, was limited to a 200-square-foot circle in a soccer field and a 400-square-foot strip along a basketball court. No remediation was done near the playground, where Verite’s testing detected lead levels between 155 ppm and 483 ppm.

At Easton Park in Bayou St. John, the 2011 remediation covered four areas totalling about 4,700 square feet, but the park’s playground was left untouched. Verite measured four samples around the playground that exceeded the 100 ppm threshold, including 1,060 ppm and 603 ppm readings near Easton’s swingset.

The soil cover at Markey was more extensive than in other remediations, stretching across much of the park’s playground and shaded picnic area. But Verite’s testing found high levels of lead in the remediated area, including two samples above 200 ppm and one just above 400 ppm.

“That’s kind of shocking,” Copeland said. “At Markey, the kids play everywhere, and in the sandy areas, they really dig down. I’ve seen holes going almost three feet down, like they’re playing at a beach. They could be getting into contaminated soil and distributing it around.”

Mielke was surprised to learn that the remediation results were far more limited than he recommended. He was blunt in his assessment of the work.

“They worked on too small an area, and they should have been using … large amounts of soil and covering over large areas,” he said.

Hess, a New Orleans native who recently moved to Colorado, said failing to deliver on projects is all too common in New Orleans, a city infamous for chronic dysfunction and mismanagement.

“It’s so sad to have done such a shit job,” she said. “But that’s so New Orleans. I’m sorry. I don’t live there anymore, but it still makes me sad.”

A roadmap for cleanup?

Barabino, the recreation district CEO, said he would share Verite’s results with city project managers and MMG.

“It’s definitely concerning if it’s at the level that’s considered a true risk of threat, and we wouldget it to [the] capital projects [administration] immediately to get MMG out there, so we could take the steps needed to remediate and make those areas and grounds safe for our kids and families to use,” Barabino said.

Filippelli said the city should conduct comprehensive testing of every park and do regular checkups. But because lead contamination in New Orleans parks is extensive and city leaders are struggling to close a large budget deficit, Filippelli recommends that the city remediate the worst parks first.

Kids play in the grass in front of a basketball court

Twins Justice and Jamar Johnson, 6, play in the grass with Stevie Irish, 5, at Soraparu Playspot in Uptown New Orleans in November 2025. Christiana Botic / Verite News and Catchlight Local / Report for America

He and Mielke don’t believe the city must take the route of full remediation, which involves digging up lead-tainted soil and trucking it to a hazardous-waste landfill. That’s very costly and is usually unnecessary if a park is properly capped with clean soil, Filippelli said.

Verite obtained cost estimates for 10 of the 13 parks targeted for remediation in 2011. The total cost was $83,000 in 2011, or about $120,000 today. The work covered more than 1.3 acres across the 10 properties. Compared with similar remediation efforts described by Mielke and Filippelli, the city’s remediation efforts were very expensive. Filippelli estimates that similar work can be done for about $20,000 per acre — about a fifth of what was spent to remediate just over an acre at New Orleans parks.

Evans, Markey, and many other parks with high lead levels have about an acre of open soil or grass that could be capped for about $20,000. Some parks with the biggest lead problems are the smallest in size. Soraporu Park, which scored the second-highest lead levels in Verite’s testing, would need about a half-acre of coverage. Union and Brignac parks, each less than a quarter acre, could be capped for about $5,000, according to Filippelli’s rough estimates.

Mariah Lee carries her daughters in her arms at the Lafitte Greenway playground in New Orleans in November 2025. Christiana Botic / Verite News and Catchlight Local / Report for America

Remediation should be coupled with efforts to reduce contamination from nearby sources, primarily old houses, Rabito said.

“When you clean up soil, you’re not going to do it much good if you haven’t identified what’s contaminating the soil,” she said. In many cases of recontamination, the culprit was a nearby house that was shedding lead paint.

“Which means the soil was clean for a hot minute before it got recontaminated,” she said. “So, we need to make sure that those homes are cleaned up and maintained in a lead-safe way.”

Cleaning up New Orleans parks will also likely require sustained public pressure, said the parents involved with the lead issue in 2011.

“I was not intending to kick butts or make anybody look bad,” said Copeland of her efforts to alert parents about the dangers at Markey. “But nothing would have happened unless all these parents were calling in to the city.”

How Verite News tested New Orleans parks

Two Verite News reporters were trained to use an X-ray fluorescence (XRF) analyzer to test 531 soil samples over a month in late 2025. The XRF is a $30,000 handheld device that can detect the unique traits of lead at trace levels, down to 10 parts per million. The analyzer is widely used by government and university scientists.

The reporters tested 531 soil samples over a month in late 2025, following protocols developed by retired Tulane University toxicologist Howard Mielke and vetted by three other lead-contamination researchers. The reporters tested surface soil in and around play structures and other areas of parks that children use. Of the more than 110 parks in New Orleans, Verite concentrated on the 84 that city property inventories and maps list as having play structures. The reporters collected between three and 11 samples at each park, depending on the size, site accessibility, and levels of contamination. The GPS was accurate to within a few feet depending on cloud cover and signal blockage from buildings and trees.

Verite’s results were reviewed by Adrienne Katner, a lead-contamination researcher at Louisiana State University. She verified the testing’s accuracy by comparing it with a smaller set of park soil samples collected by her team last summer. Due to the limitations of Verite’s sampling method, the results can’t be used to describe the state of a whole park. But they provide a starting point for city officials to conduct more comprehensive testing that could guide remediation.

This story was originally published by Grist with the headline Poison at play: Unsafe lead levels found in half of New Orleans playgrounds on Feb 13, 2026.


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Five years ago, climate activists stunned corporate America by winning three seats on Exxon Mobil’s board. Similar revolts have forced some of the nation’s biggest companies to address climate change. Now, the federal regulator overseeing shareholder rights is making it harder for small investors to convey their concerns.

In November, the Securities and Exchange Commission, or SEC, announced that it would essentially stop weighing in on whether companies must put shareholder proposals to a vote. Then, in January, the agency said it would no longer allow investors with less than $5 million in shares to use its online system to send communiqués, known as exempt solicitations, to fellow shareholders. Such documents are often used to lay out an investor’s stance on a given issue, including climate action.

The SEC says the moves are an attempt to rein in the scope of government and ease burdensome regulation. But others see them as a way to contain the influence of potentially irksome investors. “We are concerned that they limit the voice of [company] owners,” Steven Rothstein, chief program officer for Ceres, a sustainability nonprofit working with companies and investors, said of the changes. “Shareholders are being cut out of the process.”

The SEC had already made it harder to place a resolution on the voting docket during President Donald Trump’s first term. And companies are still allowed to block such proposals for several reasons — for example, if they can’t reasonably implement them or if they amount to micromanagement of business operations. But, prior to November, companies could expect the SEC to offer guidance on whether the government would take action if a proposal was excluded. While technically non-binding, these so-called “no action” letters were a strong sign that the government would let the company’s decision stand.

The SEC said it would retreat from its role as arbiter for at least a year, citing “resource” considerations and last fall’s prolonged government shutdown. Andrew Behar, CEO of the shareholder advocacy group As You Sow, wouldn’t be surprised if the SEC extended the pause. As he put it, “they are no longer going to be the referee.”

The government also lamented that the “large volume” of requests often require prompt attention from staff. According to nonprofit think tank The Conference Board, which has more than 2,000 companies as members, last year the SEC ruled on 291 “no-action” requests from companies on the Russell 3000 stock market index. That’s up from 207 the previous year, and 144 in 2023. “It was too much,” said Ariane Marchis-Mouren, an expert in corporate governance at The Conference Board. “This is a way for them to shift the responsibility to the companies.”

Marchis-Mouren argues that without the SEC’s input, companies face greater legal risk from investors or the SEC, which could make them think twice before excluding proposals. But Behar and other activists worry the opposite will occur: Because the SEC has rarely taken enforcement action in this arena and lawsuits are often prohibitively expensive for smaller shareholders, there is little left to prevent companies from omitting resolutions they don’t like.

“Exxon wouldn’t put them on their proxy statement,” said Behar, giving an example. Still, he remains unsure whether the new SEC approach will spur activists to flood companies with proposals, or shy away. What’s more clear, however, is the impact on exempt solicitations.

Advocacy nonprofits and corporate gadflies have been the main drivers of exempt solicitations, according to data from The Conference Board. As You Sow topped the list, writing more than 200 of them since 2018, on a range of concerns, including climate change. But, under the new rules, Behar said groups like his would be almost entirely sidelined.

Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Paul S. Atkins testifies before the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee.

Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Paul S. Atkins testified before the Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee on February 12. Win McNamee / Getty Images

Some argue that this is a good thing — that exempt solicitations have devolved into a platform for activism that’s better reserved for other platforms. “These notices were not meant to be the means for any shareholder to broadcast its views via EDGAR,” an SEC spokesperson told Grist in a statement, referring to the commission’s official online system. Shareholders can instead use “press releases, emails, websites and social media, and electronic shareholder forums.”

But Rothstein argues that the targeted nature of the official SEC systems helps give often niche or nuanced issues more weight. “People may not see that newspaper story or that radio interview or whatever it might be,” he said. An exempt solicitation, on the other hand, “reaches the people voting.”

Ultimately, Behar said, limiting small investors’ options for holding corporations accountable removes incentives for those companies to constructively engage with advocates. “Companies generally sit down with us,” he said, noting that As You Sow had more than 100 such engagements last year alone. “It’s all part of a process.”

On Wednesday, SEC chairman Paul Atkins doubled down on his deregulatory push in testimony before the House Committee on Financial Services. He said that, in addition to the steps already taken, the SEC is reevaluating the frequency of financial statement reporting, which is now quarterly, and considering scaling back other disclosures a company must make. Lawmakers asked him about this apparent shift toward shareholders having access to less information.

“In general, it comes down to the company’s decision as to what they believe is material or not,” he said during an exchange with Representative Ayanna Pressley, a Democrat from Massachusetts. “Our rules are geared to the company.”

The SEC did not respond to follow-up questions from Grist, including whether the one-year pause on no action letters will be extended or, without them, how the government plans to enforce noncompliance.

Rothstein worries that the current trajectory could have broader consequences for the economy.

“Engagement has made our capital markets great,” he said, arguing that tamping the dialogue between companies and its owners will reduce transparency and could make people less likely to buy stock in U.S. companies. “We think that is very harmful to the American economy.”

This story was originally published by Grist with the headline It just got harder for shareholders to push companies on climate on Feb 13, 2026.


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Meet the froghopper: a tiny insect that builds a bubble fortress out of sap, pee and air to protect itself from predators. Fully grown, it’s one of the best jumpers on Earth, leaping to heights nearly 100 times its body length. This is Episode 6 of Stranger Creatures, a series where biologist Romi Castagnino ventures into the Amazon Rainforest to uncover nature’s strangest survivors. From frogs with see-through skin to mind-controlling fungi, she explores the bizarre adaptations and mind-bending survival tricks that make the Amazon’s wildlife — weird or familiar — truly extraordinary. Episodes each week!This article was originally published on Mongabay


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A new collaborative study, led by University of Utah Professor of atmospheric sciences Kevin Perry, provides policymakers, agency leaders, and the public with the most comprehensive assessment to date of potential dust control options for the Great Salt Lake, as declining water levels continue to expose vast areas of lakebed to wind erosion.


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Thailand has begun using a birth control vaccine on elephants in the wild to try and curb a growing problem where human and animal populations encroach on each other—an issue in areas where farms spread into forests and elephants are squeezed out of their natural habitat.


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Article Summary

• The MARA Act would enable commercial-scale demonstration projects of all types— finfish, seaweed, and shellfish—in federal waters (3 to 200 nautical miles offshore).

• Supporters say it’s needed as a first step toward cutting red tape and reducing U.S. reliance on imported seafood. They also point out the need to feed a growing population, and that the open ocean is a more stable environment for raising seafood than are coastal waters.

• Opponents fear that offshore farming could repeat the mistakes of large-scale coastal fisheries and argue that other acts being considered by Congress could encourage local fish processing and distribution, cutting the need for imports.

• So far, there’s little research on the ecological impacts of submersible pens in deep ocean water. The act is intended to promote science-backed pilot projects with stringent oversight.

Half a mile off the Big Island in Hawaii, where the currents run swift and the depths reach 200 feet, Blue Ocean Mariculture raises kanpachi (Seriola rivoliana), a native Hawaiian yellowtail, in what is the United States’ sole open-ocean, commercial finfish farm.

Small in comparison to coastal Norwegian salmon farms, with annual combined exports of 1.2 million tons, Blue Ocean Mariculture produces about 1,100 tons of fish annually in net pens submerged 30 to 130 feet under water. Roughly half the fish is sold to distributors and stores in Hawaii, while the rest goes to markets on the U.S. mainland, according to Taylor Korte, vice president of marine operations at Blue Ocean Mariculture.

The company’s conservation efforts have earned it Seafood Watch’s rank of yellow, or a good alternative to endangered species like bluefin tuna, but not quite as stellar as a green ranking for sustainably harvested seafood, like farmed mussels or Arctic char. Blue Ocean kanpachi, a rich, mild-flavored, versatile fish, is on the menu in restaurants across the country, from Mama’s Fish House in Maui to Sugarfish in New York and California, where it’s served raw as sashimi or ceviche—or baked, grilled, or steamed.

Although it is close to shore, Blue Ocean Mariculture is considered an environmental and economic model for very deep open-water aquaculture. And now, it has become the poster child for the Marine Aquaculture Research for America (MARA) Act.

The MARA Act creates a pathway for permitting pilot systems to get them in the water, where they can be researched following rigorous criteria.

The bill was introduced last fall to develop aquaculture of all types (finfish, seaweed and shellfish) in federal waters, defined as 3 to 200 nautical miles offshore. The bill has strong bipartisan support and could advance in the Senate as early as March, Maddie Voorhees, U.S. aquaculture campaign director for the Environmental Defense Fund (EDF), told Civil Eats.

The MARA Act is the latest bill to reflect a decades-long drive, largely by industry groups such as the Stronger America Through Seafood Coalition, to advance U.S. aquaculture in the open ocean. Coalition members include Cooke Aquaculture, one of the world’s largest aquaculture companies, responsible for the 2017 fish escape disaster in Puget Sound; big feed businesses like Cargill and JBS; and Sysco, a food service giant.

MARA Act champions say the law is needed to cut red tape and reduce U.S. reliance on imported seafood. Opponents of industrial fish farming fiercely push back on the proposal and say there are better ways to boost consumption of domestic seafood.

While the MARA Act rehashes prior bills—like the 2020 AQUAA Act and the 2023 SEAfood Act, which failed to pass because they couldn’t garner enough support or overcome the opposition—it differs in that it includes more robust provisions for researching the ecological and economic viability of offshore aquaculture operations before fully authorizing them. In essence, the MARA Act creates a pathway for permitting pilot systems to get them in the water, where they can be researched following rigorous criteria laid out by the law and with substantial stakeholder oversight.

With the high level of discord and chaos in the country right now, it’s anyone’s guess whether Congress will be able to focus on passing the bill this year. But one thing is certain: The bid to develop offshore aquaculture is not going away. And neither are its opponents.

The Continued Push for US Aquaculture

Offshore aquaculture proponents’ central argument is that it will help the country lessen its dependency on seafood imports. The U.S. now imports 90 percent of the seafood it consumes, half of it farmed, but that’s partially because the country has lost much of its processing infrastructure and sends most of its catch to other countries for cleaning, filleting, freezing, canning, and smoking.

As Voorhees sees it, we already consume lots of farmed seafood. “We’re just not involved in the regulatory process of making sure it’s sustainable,” she said. “There’s a big question about our ability in the U.S. to become leaders and follow the science and see how we can do it well.”

U.S. aquaculture is puny by global standards, and proponents like Michael Coogan, research assistant professor at New Hampshire University’s Center for Sustainable Seafood Systems, see opportunity. “The U.S. produces 0.2 percent of the world’s aquaculture, which is insane, because we have the largest exclusive economic zone in the world, 200 nautical miles all around our entire coastline that we can work with,” he said.

“There’s a big question about our ability in the U.S. to become leaders and follow the science and see how we can do it well.”

Of course, there are other ways to close the seafood import gap, including by investing in our own seafood processing capacity. The Domestic Seafood Production Act, introduced into the House of Representatives in 2024 but not yet voted on, would provide resources for working waterfronts to invest in processing, as well as distribution infrastructure to support local food systems. It could help Americans reconnect with less familiar wild-caught species that are now largely exported.

Another central argument advanced by MARA Act advocates is that the law is needed to clarify the convoluted regulatory pathway for offshore aquaculture. At present, there are more than 60,000 regulations set by multiple agencies. That’s three to 70 times more than in any other food production sector, including beef and wild-caught fish, according to doctoral research by Margaret Hegwood at the University of Colorado at Boulder, which will be published this year.

“There’s no consolidated piece of legislation [for aquaculture] like wild capture [of seafood] has with the Magnuson-Stevens Act,” said Halley Froehlich, associate professor of aquaculture and fishery sciences at the University of California Santa Barbara.

The lack of a clear regulatory pathway is also why there are currently no commercial aquaculture producers in federal waters, although a few, including Ocean Rainforest, a kelp farm off Santa Barbara, and Velella Epsilon, a red drum producer in the Gulf of Mexico, are deep into the process of seeking permits.

Offshore aquaculture proponents also want to scale up ocean-based proteins to feed a growing world population, because seafood often has a lower greenhouse gas footprint than land-based proteins like beef. And, they say the open ocean offers more space and a more stable environment for growing seafood than do coastal waters, which have many competing uses and are more vulnerable to storm surges.

“The shallower the water, the smaller the body of water, the larger the impacts are going to be” from big storms or hurricanes, Coogan said.

Submersible high-tension nets, like those used by Blue Ocean Mariculture, are engineered to withstand storms, and they can dig down deeper into the ocean if a big storm comes through, he said, adding that a lot of the wave energy is lost at a depth of about 30 feet. Such nets may help reduce escapes, one of the major concerns with finfish farming, though there is little data on this.

Diving Into the MARA Act

The MARA Act would enable commercial-scale demonstration projects of all types—seaweed, shellfish, and finfish—in federal waters. Only species that are native or “historically naturalized” (i.e. thriving in the wild) are eligible. That means no Atlantic Salmon in the Pacific.

Also, the act directs the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) to create a program, with external research institution oversight—including by the National Academies of Science—for studying the farms’ impacts and economic potential over a ten-year period. The act streamlines and clarifies the regulatory process for permitting aquaculture in federal waters, codifies into law NOAA’s authority over aquaculture, and strengthens the agency’s strategic plan for aquaculture.

The bill’s science-based approach won the backing of the EDF and its Coalition for Sustainable Aquaculture. They joined forces with the Stronger America Through Seafood Coalition in a letter of support to Congress signed by 140 representatives of research institutions, along with aquaculture and food companies—but notably no other conservation or environmental groups.

“The MARA Act gives us the science-driven space to research this and help build a domestic seafood industry that we can really trust,” Voorhees said. “We need these commercial-scale demonstration projects [because] we don’t have the data to say [whether] this is the right move for the U.S. and that it’s going to be safe and environmentally sound. But we also don’t have the data to say that it’s not.”

“We don’t have the data to say [whether] this is the right move for the U.S. and that it’s going to be safe and environmentally sound. But we also don’t have the data to say that it’s not.”

Fish-farming opponents scoff at the research provisions in the bill and say there’s already enough science documenting the myriad problems with finfish aquaculture: fish escapes, disease, antibiotic use, waste accumulation, and reliance on wild fish for feed, with heavy impact on those fisheries and the communities they sustain.

“The evidence is pretty clear that it’s a bad operating model,” said James Mitchell, policy director of Don’t Cage Our Oceans, a campaign led by the North American Marine Alliance (NAMA). NAMA also sent a letter to Congressional leaders opposing the bill, signed by 420 fishing groups, food advocacy and conservation organizations, farmers, aquaculture producers, chefs, tribal groups, and others.

“The MARA Act is not ‘Let’s study everything first.’ It’s putting them in the water, letting them get a foothold, and then later saying, ‘What are some best practices we can learn from this?’ ”

But it’s a bit of a chicken and egg problem, said Froehlich, at the University of California Santa Barbara. “People are asking, what is [the farm] going to do in the water in this particular context? But there’s no permit that allows you to get anything in the water and [do the research]. You can’t have it both ways.”

Froehlich also points to more recent advances in aquaculture, like more efficient feed production, that are addressing some of its challenges.

Fish farm opponents further claim the bill is an industry giveaway, but that’s not how Neil Sims, a marine biologist and aquaculture entrepreneur who cofounded Blue Ocean Mariculture and other ventures, views it. The MARA Act “is compromise legislation for the industry, not what I would have originally liked to see.”

Sims frets about “the limited number of farms of limited scope,” and the lengthy, step-by-step process that will take ten years before a facility is given the green light. The reporting requirements and university oversight are “a lot heavier regulation and closer monitoring than is needed from my perspective,” he said.

Still, Sims acknowledged, “that’s probably what’s needed at this stage—complete transparency.”

Why Does the Push for Offshore Aquaculture Keep Failing?

Opposition to coastal finfish farming is substantial in the U.S., based on well-documented problems in the salmon industry, and that leads to wariness about developing farms in deeper ocean waters. Mitchell, for example, cites a special 2024 issue of Science Advances, devoted to aquaculture, that included ten articles and essays documenting the negative impacts of the practice—including fish-based feed that depletes wild fisheries; animal welfare; water pollution; and impacts on wild fish, among them the spread of disease.

There is scant research, however, on the ecological impacts of submersible pens in deep ocean water. Studies on submersible systems in Panama and Puerto Rico have found little environmental effect on either the water column or the ocean floor, but they warn of possible impacts if the operations grow larger.

Blue Ocean Mariculture has been collecting environmental data, including on shark and marine mammal interactions, for nearly two decades and is partnering with two university researchers to publish the data this year. Those studies will help advance the science on these kinds of systems.

“We would really need some assurances that the farm product isn’t going to out-compete the wild product.”

Pushback can also come from the commercial fishing industry and from coastal communities who fear potential pollution problems. Finfish species for offshore aquaculture need to be carefully selected to not conflict with wild-caught fisheries, said Eric Brazer, deputy director of Gulf of America Reef Fish Shareholders’ Alliance, citing red snapper as an example of an important species for commercial fishers that should not be farm raised in the Gulf.

“We would really need some assurances that the farm product isn’t going to out-compete the wild product,” he said.

Fisher organizations worry, too, about competition over NOAA’s limited resources and ability to regulate effectively.

“We’re already struggling with financial and resource limitations on the wild fish management side [at NOAA],” Brazer said, citing ten Gulf fishery management rules they are waiting for that have “gotten lost in the process somewhere.”

Nevertheless, Brazer said that his organization generally supports offshore aquaculture, especially after NOAA included them as stakeholders in the process for siting aquaculture opportunity zones in the Gulf. “We think that if it’s done right, you can have sustainable offshore finfish aquaculture and sustainable wild harvest fisheries living together, but you have to involve commercial fishermen.”

While Brazer worries that NOAA’s resources could be drained by offshore aquaculture, Froehlich worries about the agency’s ability to set strong criteria for evaluating the demonstration projects under an administration that is dismantling regulations and disregarding rules and norms.

“The Mara Act looks great in normal times, but what we are experiencing is not normal right now,” she said.

Not All Aquaculture Is the Same

Finally, there is a public misunderstanding that aquaculture is all the same, and a lack of knowledge about what the MARA Act covers. Aquaculture is not just finfish, and it’s not all large scale. Smaller-scale seaweed and shellfish farms such as the Ocean Rainforest kelp project could also be placed in federal waters.

Coogan is experimenting with a mussel and scallop farm that’s 2.7 miles offshore as an example of what could be built in federal waters. The farm is 130 acres, larger than what he would have been able to secure along the coast, and lies at a depth of 150 feet. The mussels are raised on vertical lines and the scallops are grown in cages.

“All or nothing when it comes to food is not really how it works.”

“Aquaculture in general, people just think it’s bad,” said Froehlich. “They don’t recognize the diversity. And just like any kind of food system, it will have an impact, but the relative amount is dictated by who is doing it, how it’s being overseen, how it’s monitored, and where that data goes.”

Froehlich authored an opinion piece that laid out more recent advancements in aquaculture and went toe-to-toe with the Science Advances issue. “There are still big challenges in aquaculture, like disease. But ignoring the improvements already made and not focusing on how to improve the real issues is frustrating. All or nothing when it comes to food is not really how it works.”

Is Blue Ocean Mariculture a Viable Model?

Voorhees cites the small-scale Blue Ocean Mariculture as the model for what the MARA Act could achieve. Limited studies suggest that farming in the open ocean has less impact on the environment, though siting and the number of facilities in a given area are important considerations.

The swift currents around the Blue Ocean Mariculture farm keep the fish healthy, Korte said. He added that the company does not use antibiotics or pesticides to treat diseases or parasites, though it does treat the fish for skin flukes, or worms, with hydrogen peroxide. The company chose the site carefully, he said, considering the hydrology—the water’s depth and flow around the site—and how nutrients might disperse into the surrounding environment.

Feini Yin, communications director at NAMA, questions the economic viability of small farms. She worries they will have to grow to be profitable, and that if they expand, their environmental impact will increase. Consolidation in the salmon industry gives cause for concern.

In response, Korte told Civil Eats that the company is “cash positive on different months.” Its core operational profitability is pretty good, he said, “but we do have a lot of capital expense,” and the company is “in a slow growth phase” as it proves out its economics and market acceptance.

Korte said the company does not have big expansion plans at its Big Island site. However, it envisions developing similar farms in other U.S. locations. “Our current goal is [1,650 tons] by the end of 2028, and that’s a great model for an economically and ecologically viable farm,” he said, adding that he thinks that farms that size are a “viable economic solution for growing the seafood industry in the U.S.”

Indeed, small-scale producers in many segments of U.S. aquaculture are profitable, Carole Engle, an aquaculture economist at Virginia Agriculture and Research Extension Center, told Civil Eats. “It all depends on them building an effective business model that takes into account the generally higher costs of small-scale production when they design their overall marketing plan.”

With big food businesses and their investors pushing for offshore aquaculture, it seems unlikely, however, that the MARA act will result in the creation of many small-scale, sustainably oriented farms. Indeed, the Act does not set size parameters for the commercial demonstration projects it will authorize. NOAA will do that.

“A lot of farmers go into aquaculture because they want to do something connected to nature and don’t want to hurt the environment. That’s not the case for everybody,” Froehlich said. “Who is involved in the aquaculture process and who’s benefiting from it matters a lot.”

The post Bipartisan Bill Seeks to Advance Offshore U.S. Aquaculture appeared first on Civil Eats.


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Savannah Peters
Associated Press

EDGEWOOD, New Mexico — A man charged in connection to the 2021 disappearance of a Navajo woman pleaded guilty Jan. 29 to robbery, marking the latest turn in a case that been emblematic of the epidemic of killings and disappearances in Native American communities.

Preston Henry Tolth appeared before a federal judge in Phoenix. Tolth, who has been in custody since 2023, will not spend any additional time in prison if the court accepts the terms of the plea agreement reached with prosecutors.

Prosecutors allege that Tolth assaulted Ella Mae Begay, stole her Ford F-150 pickup truck and drove it across state lines. In the plea agreement, he admitted to punching Begay in the face several times and leaving her on the side of the road before selling her truck for money and drugs.

Begay’s case helped bring national attention to the high rate of violence faced by Native people, providing fuel for tribal leaders and victim advocates as they continued pushing for law enforcement resources and more cooperation for investigation across jurisdictional lines.

There have been marches, listening sessions and congressional hearings in recent years, and federal authorities have funneled more investigators and prosecutors to field offices in key locations around the United States in hopes of solving cases and prosecuting offenders.

Still, Begay has never been found and her family remains heartbroken.

Known in her community as a master rug weaver, Begay lived in Sweetwater, Arizona, a town on the Navajo Nation not far from the Four Corners Monument. Gerald Begay, the eldest of her three children, remembered his mother as someone who was always willing to lend a hand, even to a stranger.

Gerald Begay listened to Thursday’s court proceeding via phone from Denver. He called the plea deal a “slap on the wrist” for Tolth and said mistakes made by law enforcement during interrogations cost his family a just outcome.

Gerald Begay called on authorities to find his mother’s remains.

“She belongs in the community where she resided,” he said. “If I could bring my mother home, I could at least have some closure.”

Timothy Courchaine, the interim U.S. Attorney for the district of Arizona, declined a request by for an interview.

Attorneys representing Tolth did not respond to a request for comment.

Tolth initially entered a plea of not guilty to assault and carjacking resulting in serious bodily injury — charges that carry a maximum penalty of 10 and 25 years in prison, respectively.

In August 2025, a federal appeals court ruled that a confession made by Tolth was not admissible in court because officers did not honor his decision to stop speaking during the interrogation and instead persuaded him to waive his right to remain silent.

A sentencing hearing is scheduled for April 9 in Phoenix.


The post Man could avoid more prison time with guilty plea in Navajo woman’s disappearance appeared first on ICT.


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After nearly 40 years of research on how Listeria bacteria manipulate our cells and battle our immune system to cause listeriosis, Daniel Portnoy and his colleagues have discovered a way to turn the bacteria into a potent booster of the immune system—and a potential weapon against cancer.


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As Canada experiences record snowfall, new research from the University of Waterloo suggests that tiny amounts of industrial pollution trapped in snow can change how sunlight reaches the ground below and significantly alter fragile environments.


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Federal fisheries regulators said a cap would balance protections for Western Alaska salmon with the health of pollock fisheries.


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In Manchester this week, governments endorsed a report that tries to do something business has long resisted: treat biodiversity as economically material. The new assessment from the Intergovernmental Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES) argues that the loss of nature is no longer an environmental side issue. It is a systemic risk to firms, financial stability and long-term growth. The claim rests on a simple observation. All businesses depend, directly or indirectly, on living systems. Crops require pollination and soil fertility. Hydropower depends on stable watersheds. Insurers price flood risk. Even companies that appear distant from forests or reefs rely on supply chains shaped by water availability, climate regulation and the steady functioning of ecosystems. Since 1992, human-produced capital per person has roughly doubled, while stocks of natural capital have fallen by nearly 40%. The economy has grown, but part of the asset base on which it rests has been drawn down. The report places these trends in financial terms. In 2023, an estimated $7.3 trillion in public and private finance flowed into activities with direct negative impacts on nature. Around two-thirds came from private finance. By contrast, roughly $220 billion was directed toward conservation and restoration. Harmful subsidies alone amounted to about $2.4 trillion. The imbalance is stark. It suggests that markets and policy still reward degradation more reliably than stewardship. Deforestation in Borneo. Photo credit: Rhett A. Butler / mongabay For companies, the implications are practical, the assessment argues. Biodiversity loss creates physical risks, such as crop…This article was originally published on Mongabay


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Keeping amphibians as pets offers hobbyists an opportunity to connect with the non-human world, often increasing interest in conserving animals in the wild. But there's a dark side to the amphibian trade, according to a study from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, published in the journal Biological Conservation. The study is titled "Tracking the hidden trade of non-native pet amphibians in the United States."


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Heading into the Milan-Cortina 2026 Olympics, skiers and snowboarders were already adjusting to a ban on fluorinated waxes long prized for making their equipment faster. This week, the Winter Games saw their first enforcement of that rule, which is aimed at protecting public health and the environment.

South Korean cross-country skiers Han Dasom and Lee Eui-jin were disqualified from the women’s sprint event on Tuesday. That came one day after Japanese snowboarder Shiba Masaki was disqualified from men’s parallel giant slalom. In all three cases, routine testing found banned compounds on their equipment.

For decades, elite snow sports athletes have relied on waxes with fluorocarbons that are exceptional at repelling water and dirt. Former U.S. cross country racer Nathan Schultz told Grist the so-called ‘fluoro’ waxes provide a “really ridiculous speed advantage,” especially in warmer conditions like those experienced at these Games.

But these waxes also contained PFAS, short for per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances. This class of 15,000 so-called “forever chemicals” are notorious for never breaking down. Studies have linked exposure to PFAS to thyroid disease, developmental problems, and cancer, and research has found elevated levels in ski technicians who regularly handled the waxes. PFAS have also been detected in soil and water near ski venues, including wells drawing from aquifers in Park City, Utah, suggesting broader environmental contamination.

Amid growing concern over the environmental impacts and the risks to skiers, their technicians, and others, the International Ski and Snowboard Federation, or FIS, called for a ban in 2019. The prohibition took effect in 2023, and applies to all events governed by the federation, including nordic, alpine and freestyle skiing, ski jumping, and snowboarding.

Officials test multiple points on each competitor’s equipment, using Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) Spectroscopy to detect fluoros. If a given spot on a ski or snowboard turns green, it passes. A red result indicates the presence of the banned substance.Three or more red spots leads to disqualification.

Representatives for the Japan team did respond to comment. A spokesperson for the Korea Ski association initially told the South Korean news agency Newsis that the organization was “perplexed” by the results. “They tested negative in all previous international competitions with no prior issues,” they said. “We will consult experts from wax and ski manufacturers to investigate whether the issue lies with the wax or skis.”

In an emailed statement, the Korean Olympic Committee told Grist that fluoride was detected in what it believed to be fluoride-free waxes. “The Ski Association has purchased fluoride-free wax products, so it will protest,” wrote the spokesperson. The team will also replace the wax and check the skis again after cleaning to “prevent recurrence.”

It is unclear if a protest was ever officially filed or what the outcome was. The Korean team declined to elaborate and FIS did not immediately respond to Grist’s questions. But unlike some infractions, like those related to doping, discipline for unintentional fluoro use generally applies only to the event in question. The Korean athletes competed again Thursday in the 10km freestyle event, finishing 73rd and 80th.

This time the results stood.

This story was originally published by Grist with the headline The Olympics just saw its first ‘forever chemical’ disqualifications on Feb 12, 2026.


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