In the ongoing debate over government regulation, a central question often arises: where is the line between fostering business freedom and ensuring public safety?

While deregulation can sometimes spur innovation and economic growth, there are rare instances where a substance is so unequivocally dangerous that stringent rules are not just a good idea, but a vital necessity. Asbestos is precisely such a substance. 

Recent proposals emerging from Washington to review and potentially reverse a ban on importing chrysotile asbestos represent a profoundly dangerous step backward, ignoring decades of painful history and the enormous risks that still exist within our communities.

Limited Use is Dangerous Use

The current proposal centers on allowing chrysotile asbestos for use in the chlor-alkali industry, which uses it to create semipermeable diaphragms for chemical manufacturing. Proponents frame this as a limited, controlled application necessary for a specific industrial process. However, this argument dangerously downplays the lifecycle of a toxin. Allowing this importation means asbestos must be mined, transported across oceans and highways, handled by workers, and eventually disposed of as hazardous waste. 

Each step in this chain creates new opportunities for exposure and reintroduces a known carcinogen into American commerce, all for a process where safer, viable alternatives already exist. To permit any new use of asbestos sends a terrible message: that a substance responsible for the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Americans is somehow acceptable again.

The Lingering Community Threat 

This is especially reckless given the immense problem of “legacy asbestos” that already plagues our nation at the local level. Before the mid-1980s, asbestos was a ubiquitous building material. It was used to insulate pipes, strengthen floor tiles, fireproof steel beams, and improve roofing materials. Consequently, millions of public and private buildings across the country—including our schools, libraries, hospitals, and community centers—still contain vast amounts of it.

The danger of legacy asbestos lies in its physical properties. The mineral is incredibly durable, meaning it does not break down or decay over time. Its fibers are microscopic, completely invisible to the naked eye, and have no taste or smell. When materials containing asbestos are damaged, disturbed, or simply begin to degrade with age, these tiny, weightless fibers can become airborne, where they can be inhaled by anyone in the vicinity. A school undergoing a simple renovation, a library fixing a leaky pipe in the ceiling, or a homeowner drilling into an old wall can unknowingly release a cloud of these potent carcinogens.

The Critical Need for Professional Abatement

Once inhaled, the fibers embed themselves deep within the lungs and chest lining, where the body cannot expel them. Decades later, this can lead to debilitating diseases like asbestosis and the aggressive, fatal cancer mesothelioma. The victims of this legacy are all around us, often diagnosed in their senior years with an illness caused by an exposure that happened in their youth. Given this ongoing public health crisis, the notion of intentionally bringing more of this material into the country is deeply irresponsible.

Sweeping It Under the Rug

Furthermore, a federal reversal on asbestos policy could foster a dangerous sense of complacency. If the government signals that asbestos is permissible, even in a limited capacity, homeowners and small-scale contractors may become less cautious about dealing with it in older buildings. This brings us to a critical point: managing existing asbestos is not a do-it-yourself project. Proper abatement is a complex and hazardous process that requires highly trained and licensed professionals.

Professionals use specialized equipment, including high-efficiency respirators and full-body protective gear. They establish regulated work areas with negative air pressure to ensure that no fibers escape into the surrounding environment. They follow strict protocols for safely removing, wetting, and sealing asbestos-containing materials in leak-proof containers for transport to a designated hazardous waste facility. An amateur attempting this work without proper training or equipment not only endangers themselves but risks contaminating their entire home and exposing their family to long-term harm. Any policy that might encourage a more casual approach to this threat is a policy that puts lives at risk.

A Case for Public Safety

The debate over asbestos is not a typical case of regulatory overreach. The science is settled, the death toll is staggering, and the availability of safer alternatives is clear. We are already facing a multi-generational challenge of safely managing and removing the millions of tons of asbestos that remain in our built environment. The moral and practical obligation should be to focus our resources on mitigating this existing danger, not on creating new pathways for exposure. In this instance, the line between business and safety is unmistakable. Regulation isn’t just a good idea; it is a vital shield protecting the health of our communities, our workers, and our children from a proven killer.