99% Invisible - 572- WARNING: This Podcast Contains Chemicals Known to the State of California to Cause Cancer or Other Reproductive Harm
Episode Date: March 5, 2024Intimidating Proposition 65 warnings can be found on all kinds of products manufactured or distributed in the State of California. They can seem rather terrifying at first, but within the state, they ...are ubiquitous, on everyday objects from power tools to potato chips, dietary supplements, leather jackets, gas pumps, coffee tables, the list goes on. All of which raises the question: if these labels are on so many things, are they actually useful in warning us of real dangers?572- WARNING: This Podcast Contains Chemicals Known to the State of California to Cause Cancer or Other Reproductive Harm
Transcript
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This is 99% Invisible.
I'm Roman Mars.
Around the summer of 2023, 99PI producer Vivienne Lay decided her life was in need of an upgrade.
Oh god, yes.
That's Vivienne.
My husband and I were dying to move into a new apartment.
We've jumped around a lot from place to place, and our previous residences included a rundown
dingbat, a basement studio with
questionable structural integrity, and my mom's house, so we were ready to live luxuriously.
And after a long Zillow search, we ended up finding a bougie apartment building in a walkable
neighborhood of Los Angeles, with a pool, a gym, and a god-tier amenity, Central AC.
Welcome to the good life, Viv. Thank you, we were very excited.
But on move-in day, as I was schlepping boxes
through the lobby doors, I spotted something
that slipped my attention during the initial walkthrough.
Stuck to the entrance of my beautiful new apartment building
was an ominous looking sign.
It read, warning, entering this area can expose you to chemicals known to the state of California to cause
cancer and birth defects or other reproductive harm, including benzene, a chemical used
in urinal cleaners, and toluene, a chemical used in common household cleaning products.
For more information, go to www.p65warnings.ca.gov.
This was a Proposition 65 warning.
You can find these labels on all sorts of products manufactured in or distributed to the state of California.
They generally all have similar language, with buzzwords starting with warning,
and quickly followed by chemical, cancer, birth defects.
For people who live outside the state of California,
a label like this might look pretty terrifying.
Maybe you've at one point ordered bedroom furniture
manufactured in San Diego and found yourself Googling,
can I get cancer from a lampshade?
Question mark.
But for those of us who do live here,
there are a few things more common or more Californian
than a Proposition 65 warning label.
As a California lifer, I've seen them on everything from power tools to leather jackets
to potato chips to dietary supplements, dishware, gas pumps, coffee tables, parking garages.
I've seen these labels on so many different things that by the time I saw it on the five-story
169 unit apartment building that I was moving into I didn't panic or move apartment buildings or even question What toll you mean is I just carried on with my day like I always do whenever I see these labels on anything
Which made me wonder what good these warnings are even doing if people like me are just ignoring them.
Well, kind of a lot, because it turns out these ugly, clunky warning labels are somehow the most
elegant solution we've got for tackling an even uglier, clunkier environmental problem.
To trace the origin of these poorly designed warnings, you need to talk to this man. We may be getting somewhere.
I can hear that.
Who, ironically, was interrupted by a poorly designed warning during our interview.
Everyone remain calm, it says.
Perfect.
This man, by the way, is David Rowe.
For 25 years, I was a senior lawyer
with the Environmental Defense Fund,
and in 1985, I wrote a ballot proposition
called Proposition 65 for the 1986 ballot.
The mid-80s was probably a wild time
to be an environmental lawyer
because everything was poison.
At the time, Los Angeles was averaging a total of 273 hazardous air quality days a year.
There had been nearly 7,000 accidents involving toxic chemicals, which killed over 135 people
in the past five years alone.
The California state legislature declared childhood lead exposure the most significant
environmental health problem in the state state and nearly half of Californians
Were afraid to drink their tap water
It's the giver of life to the earth
But this most elemental offering of nature to man now carries a threat
There are people drinking water that's contaminated and they don't know that the water's contaminated.
The United States does not have a good record
when it comes to keeping people safe from toxic chemicals.
Federal agencies like the FDA and the EPA
were created to protect human health and the environment.
But even in 1985, there were still huge gaps
between the intent of laws regulating toxic chemicals
and impact.
My favorite example was the toxic section
of the Clean Air Act.
The Clean Air Act was originally passed in 1963
and is enforced by the EPA.
At the time, it was a landmark environmental law
that aimed to set limits on certain pollutants
in the air.
David said it was great in theory, but in execution, not much was actually getting
done.
The legislation said here are 189 chemicals.
Those are the ones we want you to figure out how much is too much for and then go around
and start banning them for things beyond how much is too much. Well, in 20 years, they had managed to set those limits
for six chemicals out of 189.
Chemical companies and lobbyists resisted federal regulation
because they felt it was costly and a burden on business
to change their behavior.
David wanted to actually make it in their best interest to change their behavior.
And if it couldn't happen on the federal level, then it would happen on the state level.
And David was about to get the opportunity to do just that.
The following year in 1986, there was going to be a big election for the governor of California.
The incumbent Republican governor had a really bad record on toxic chemical cleanup, and
the Democratic challenger was supported by a number of environmentally progressive groups
like the Sierra Club and the Campaign for Economic Democracy.
Leaders from these groups believed that they could sway more left-leaning voters to come
out to the polls and vote for their Democratic candidate if they could write a ballot initiative
addressing toxic chemicals and get it on the 1986 ballot.
So they needed somebody to write it.
And I was sort of the only guy left in the room.
So I essentially got to write the whole thing myself.
But passing a law via ballot initiative
came with its own set of challenges.
Writing a ballot initiative is different
from writing a law in a legislature.
It has to pass.
It has to work once it passes, but it also has to pass,
which means it has to be pretty simple to explain,
and it has to be pretty good at fending off tricky negative arguments.
In order to appeal to voters, this initiative would have to
walk a very fine line. It needed to have a strong environmental message, but also
be simple to execute. It needed to be tough on toxic chemicals, but not so tough
that it would be a burden on California businesses. Which is how David came up
with the Safe Drinking Water and Toxic Enforcement Act of 1986, aka Proposition 65.
According to the core language of the law, Prop 65 would do something new and innovative and
honestly kind of wimpy. What it said was, if you know you're exposing me, you business, if you know you're exposing me to a chemical
that you know causes cancer, just tell me.
Not putting anybody out of business.
But if you're going to do that, just tell me.
The law wouldn't ban toxic chemicals.
It wouldn't limit exposure to toxic chemicals.
It wouldn't even punish businesses for adding dangerous chemicals to their products
or to the water system.
It just said that in the state of California,
if a product contained a chemical
that caused cancer or birth defects,
there had to be a quote, clear and reasonable warning.
The law would broadly be applied to all products
in California rather than trying
to target individual chemicals.
It also applied to businesses who distribute products in California, rather than trying to target individual chemicals. It also applied to businesses
who distribute products into California
from anywhere outside of the state.
The idea was that no sane company
would wanna brand itself with a scarlet warning label
saying that they were intentionally poisoning you.
So this law would nudge companies towards the magic word.
Reformulation. Reformulation.
Reformulation.
If a company knew that it was making something
with a dangerous ingredient,
it would reformulate to leave out that ingredient.
And if it didn't, the product would need a warning.
And the ideal number of warnings is zero.
The Proposition 65 campaign began in earnest in 1986. And to be honest, not even
the people running the campaign had much hope of the law passing.
The messaging, I mean, we used as our tagline get tough on toxics, which I think in the
end probably wasn't the best tagline. This is Tom Epstein, the campaign manager for Prop
65. He says the initiative came up against
some pretty looming odds. The incumbent governor came out in opposition to the law, along with
oil and chemical companies and a number of businesses and agricultural groups. And along
with that opposition came a lot of money supporting the no on 65 campaign. We only had about a million
dollars in the opponent's spend, almost five million.
But Prop 65 did have a couple things going for it.
One, a pretty reasonable environmental message.
And two...
Let's get ready.
Stand with your feet shoulder-width apart.
Tummies are in.
Hips tucked under.
Jane Fonda.
Inhale and exhale. Again, Inhale and exhale.
Again, lift and exhale.
Actress and activist Jane Fonda and her husband at the time,
State Assemblyman Tom Hayden,
were co-founders of the campaign for Economic Democracy.
Fonda and Hayden were both big supporters of the Democratic candidate running for governor
and very involved with the Prop 65 campaign. Fonda used her celebrity poll to wrangle a group of famous people to hit the campaign
trail to raise awareness and funds for Prop 65.
It was really fun.
It had a lot of the really young kind of black pack stars but also older friends of Jane.
About 40 Hollywood people, some very famous
and some famous only if you watch TV series,
but quite a collection of people.
Whoopi Goldberg, Ed Bagley Jr., Rob Lowe,
and Chevy Chase all got behind the initiative.
Here's Michael J. Fox,
outside of a yes on Proposition 65 party at MGM Studios.
Why I'm interested, I think,
is why anybody would be interested in it.
It's essentially saying those responsible for dumping toxins, dumping poisons in areas
and situations where it contaminates our drinking water have to live up to it, admit it, tell
us what they're dumping, how it's getting to us, and I think that that's a real easy
thing to support for me.
Jane Fonda, unfortunately, was not
available for an interview for this story.
The good news is I did manage to track down
a clip of her speaking at a yes on 65 event.
The bad news is it's only about three seconds long,
and she's shouting what sounds like the word jelly bean.
Jelly bean!
Woo!
I don't know, I'm sorry.
The star-studded group crammed into a fleet of buses which they called the Clean Water
Caravan and embarked on a three-day, nine-city tour up and down California.
As a member of the campaign, David Rowe got to travel with the celebrity caravan.
At one point, we were driving in the Central valley and were pulled over by a couple of
motorcycle cops.
According to the LA Times, Rob Lowe and Daphne Zuniga popped open the emergency latch at
the top of the clean water bus and were hanging out the roof at 60 miles per hour.
And so the cop stops, the lead bus pulls him over and the bus driver is signal to get out.
So the bus driver comes out to talk to the motorcycle cop and out comes Jane Fonda,
and Chevy Chase, and Morgan Fairchild, and all these people.
And the cop just completely loses it.
And it was hysterical because it was just, oh.
Did you get a ticket?
We did not get a ticket.
Signs like this are going up at thousands of businesses in California, warning that somewhere
on the premises there are chemicals which could cause cancer or birth defects.
The new warning signs are the result of a 1986 ballot initiative.
Proposition 65 passed overwhelmingly by California voters.
Armed with some impressive celebrity endorsements and a clear environmental
message, Proposition 65 passed in a landslide victory.
It was the first environmental ballot measure to pass in California since the Coastal Act of 1972. So it had been 14 years.
In the actual language of Prop 65, the drafters of the law never actually defined what a clear
and reasonable warning meant. So David Rowe says that when the law actually went into effect,
many businesses tried to weasel around this technicality by being purposely opaque about warnings.
trying to weasel around this technicality by being purposely opaque about warnings.
And the way they did that was to set up an 800 number
and put a sign in front of grocery stores
and hardware stores and things like that.
In the early days, a pro-business group
called the Ingredient Communication Council
was created to help companies
scheme around Prop 65 regulations.
Instead of advising businesses to warn customers about chemical exposure in their products,
they hung up generic warning signs outside of places like grocery stores.
Those signs basically said, hey guys, there's this law in California that says we have to
warn you about cancer causing chemicals and if you want to learn more about that, call
this 800 number.
If a consumer called that 800 number, they would be directed to a call center in Omaha,
Nebraska.
The person at the other end of the phone would say, well, do you mean the large size
can or the small can?
Do you mean the peas in water or the peas with cream sauce?
Do you mean the brand by this company or the brand by that company?
If you got to the end of the 20 questions, they'd push a button and give you a recorded warning.
This was quickly determined to be illegal.
But this early confusion of what constituted
a clear and reasonable warning did do one thing.
It created a very strong incentive
for businesses to go in and beg for regulation.
Tell us what will get us off the hook. And there's a formula of words
that the state came up with early on.
That formula of words determined by the California Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment
was warning. This product contains chemicals known to the state of California to cause
cancer and birth defects or other reproductive harm.
From there on out, environmental advocates put Prop 65 to good use.
The very first Prop 65 action filed was by a Democratic Senate candidate who used the
law to target oil companies accused of polluting California's groundwater.
And in order to avoid a warning label, a lot of big companies did exactly what the architects
of Prop 65 intended. Lots of companies, including Coca-Cola and Gillette, reformulated to avoid the warning label.
Uh, Roman, you forgot the uh...
Oh right, reformulated.
Back in the day, there was this liquid called White Out. Are you old enough to remember this?
And how? Whiteout had a toxic chemical in it.
And after Prop 65 passed, they changed the formulation to eliminate that toxic chemical, which, you know, people were touching with their hands and breathing in and stuff like that.
So that was the idea, that if they were forced to put a warning on in cosmetics and stuff like that, they would stop doing it.
In an ideal world, this is how Proposition 65 would work.
Dangerous chemicals would be taken out of products
and no warning labels on anything, end of story.
But in reality, it's been a lot messier than that.
Mostly because people who violate Prop 65
don't face criminal penalties.
They face lawsuits.. They face lawsuits.
A lot of lawsuits.
We didn't anticipate that this, you know,
legal industry would develop around suing everybody.
The attorney general is the principal prosecutor,
but Prop 65 states that any private individual
acting in the public interest can file a lawsuit
against any company exposing consumers to
toxic chemicals without properly warning them.
And that means it is essentially enforced by everyone.
Regular enforcement by district attorneys and attorneys general and city attorneys couldn't
possibly cover the waterfront.
Environmental problems just pop up in too many places.
So let's enlist citizen enforcement.
That's a way to make sure that more things get covered.
So if a product doesn't have a warning label on it,
any private individual can test that product for themselves.
And if they find a significant level of a toxic chemical,
they can file a lawsuit against that business.
If that individual wins, they
get to collect a penalty fee, which the defendant has to pay.
It's the responsibility of the business being sued to prove their product is under the Prop
65 limit. And if they can't, they're liable to pay up to $2,500 per violation per day,
which could be a lot of money. These settlements that we're talking about are in the five or six figures, which is a
lot of money for an up and coming and growing business, especially if you're not based in
California, especially if your profit margins are low, especially if you've invested your
life savings in developing this brand.
This is Baovoo, a partner at Stoll Reves in San Francisco who heads up the firm's Proposition
65 practice.
You know, I've had some clients that during the course of the representation go bankrupt.
The private enforcement element of Prop 65 has been a powerful tool for environmentalists,
but it's also incentivized more lawsuits, which is an issue because not everyone who
violates the law is a must-tortling Captain Planet villain. Today there are over 1,000 chemicals on
the Proposition 65 list and please don't freak out, but there are varying amounts
of these chemicals in a lot of the crap that we eat, buy, and are exposed to. For
some businesses, especially smaller ones, it could be difficult and expensive
to test for all 1,000 chemicals.
I've done this for over a decade. This is why I do day in and day out. It's still hard
sometimes to come up with a crystal clear yes or no answer about whether or not a warning
is needed. And if this is my bread and butter, how can a small business navigate that law?
According to one 2019 study, Prop 65 lawsuits were costing California businesses around
$30 million a year.
And 76% of that $30 million went straight to attorney's fees.
This law is enforced by bounty hunters and the lawyers that they work with. Nicole Krim is the Product Regulatory Compliance and Trade Manager at Diso USA.
If you've never heard of it, Diso is sort of like a Japanese equivalent to the dollar
store but with cuter stuff.
Nicole's job is to make sure all Diso products meet federal, state, and local regulations.
And one of her biggest beefs is with the type of plaintiffs commonly referred to as bounty hunters.
These are the serial plaintiffs that seek out
easy settlements to collect penalty fees.
You get bounty hunters that just treat your company
like their own personal bank.
They will come.
They will buy a handful of items.
They'll go test those items.
If they don't see something, they'll come back, they'll buy more, and then they'll see you for a handful.
And then you settle. And then they come back around, they'll see you for a couple more.
And then as soon as you settle, they come back around and they see you for a few more.
Sometimes these plaintiffs are individuals, sometimes they are advocacy groups,
and sometimes they are advocacy groups, and sometimes
they are finger quote advocacy groups. So it seems like the sole thing that they do is they sue
companies for money. And then they don't seem to do anything with the money for the good of the
people of California. I fell down a rabbit hole researching these advocacy groups.
A lot of them have pseudo environmental sounding names and the same exact Margaret Mead quote
on their website.
I tried very hard to speak with one of these groups to ask where the money goes from their
settlements, but these people are harder to get in touch with than Jane Fonda.
And then there are concerns over who these serial plaintiffs are coming after.
I have had clients and potential clients reach out to me and say that they feel a lot of
Asian brands are recently being targeted.
Proposition 65 annual conference debates about overwarning all the time.
Pity the poor maker of Asian snacks.
This is something that's gotten, seriously, this has gotten
attention because some lawyers trying to make money have sued some of those.
Something that's been whispered about inside of Prop 65 circles is the number of Asian businesses
who have been slapped with lawsuits. You can see this in the number of Prop 65 violation notices
on the Attorney General's website,
but it's also very apparent if you've ever stepped inside an Asian supermarket in California.
There are Proposition 65 warning labels lining entire supermarket shelves.
While I was in the middle of writing this very sentence,
I stopped what I was doing to dig through my own pantry.
I pulled out at least 11 different Asian food products with a Proposition 65 warning
on them.
There are a few possible reasons for this. A lot of these businesses sell goods imported
from countries with different chemical regulations. Another reason is that some of these businesses
are smaller and can't afford a lengthy litigation process, so they are more likely to settle.
I can't explain their motivations for that, but I will say that it's often hard for those
companies to navigate Proposition 65 when they're faced with a suit.
You know, a lot of times you go to Asian markets being Asian myself because the products are
cheap.
And so when you're hit with a notice of violation demanding, you know, five or six figures,
it's really hard for a bomb and pop company to pay for that.
I don't want any exposure to toxic chemicals, but it does make you wonder if these products
have a label on them because they're a threat or because the manufacturers and distributors were
an easy target. The amount of lawsuits has become such an uphill battle that many businesses just
take the easier route and cover their bases. What we see nowadays is given the challenges
to defending a Proposition 65 case,
we're seeing a lot of over-warning on products.
The running joke is,
oh, in the state of California,
you can get cancer from everything.
Critics of Prop 65 describe it
as a well-intentioned environmental law
that has caused unnecessary collateral damage.
Even those who support Proposition 65 admit that as a warning system, these labels have
a lot of flaws.
But Alan Hirsch, the former Chief Deputy Director of the California Office of Environmental
Health Hazard Assessment, which is the agency that regulates Prop 65, says that despite those
flaws, the labels serve a purpose far beyond just warning us.
All the exposures that we incur every day add up,
they contribute to the risk of cancer that we all face.
And...
They contribute to the risk of cancer,
that was where we were, interactive.
Okay.
But this is the great sound effect.
You see, I should be talking with a siren
in the background, it's perfect.
Before Alan Hirsch was interrupted
by yet another scatter shot warning system,
he was telling me that even if they are oversaturated,
on a surface level, Prop 65 labels
can help consumers make informed decisions about their health.
The warning is one heads up that you may want to think about whether you want to buy this product.
If you do, fine.
It's your right to do it.
This is one exposure.
It's not necessarily a life-changing thing.
But if you, again, you want to try to manage that cumulative risk, the
warnings are one piece of information that you can use to do that.
And on a deeper level, Hirsch wants to emphasize that those ubiquitous warning signs are just
the most conspicuous part of a hidden system that's actually working.
There have been any number of reformulations over the years, many of which honestly, we
don't know that much about because businesses do it quietly. They don't announce it. But
we have heard many times from business lobbyists, boy, when you guys list a chemical, you wouldn't
believe how much activity, you know, it generates among businesses. What's this chemical?
Are we using it?
How do we get it out of the product?
Can we do that?
By having these warnings, I think it drives the market to do better.
They can do better.
This is Todd Cooberman.
He's a researcher and president of ConsumerLab.com, which provides independent product testing.
He actually doesn't think the labels themselves
are great at communicating danger,
but he says it's not necessarily
the labels protecting Californians.
The Prop 65 law is really the only state law out there
and really it's the only law in the country
in many regards for a limit on how much contamination
there can be in a product, at least without a warning label.
The FDA does have some limits where products just shouldn't be sold, but it's really far
behind Prop 65 in terms of limits on most products.
We often have to look at other countries.
Canada is certainly head of the US in terms of setting limits.
You win this round, Canada.
California is very unique, you know, and hats off to your state for setting these limits.
When I was talking with David Rowe, he pointed out a striking example from around the time
when Prop 65 was first passed.
It involved the amount of lead, a substance dangerous at any level, that was allowed to
be in the pipes that carried our drinking water.
Lead-free under federal law was defined as 8% lead.
Anything less than 8% lead was officially, legally, quote, led free.
And it's just to show you the gap between theory and practice in federal law,
because obviously that was lobbied to that particular regulation that said led
free equals less than 8% was a triumph of lobbying into a law that was supposed
to keep lead out of things.
Prop 65 was able to act as a safeguard to those gaps in federal regulations by encouraging companies to regulate themselves.
And it's remarkable how many things and what an incredible range of things seem to have gotten through that federal safety net and have been caught by the backstop of Prop 65.
David actually whipped out a list of all of these things.
Brass faucets, dishes, china dishes, calcium supplements, water meters, galvanized pipe, crystal decanters,
foil caps on wine bottles, brass keys, hand tools, exercise weights, raincoats, electrical tape, electrical
cords, bicycle locks, baby rash powders, anti-diarrhea medicines, hair dyes, nasal sprays, spot remover.
I won't even keep going.
Those are all things that lead specifically was taken out of. It's important to note that the federal definition of lead-free was eventually lowered from 8%
to 0.25%.
But that change didn't take place until 2011.
When companies remove dangerous chemicals to meet Prop 65 guidelines, it's not just Californians
who benefit from that.
The same products are made safer for
the rest of the country as well. And because the state of California has the fifth biggest economy
in the world, producers globally are pushed to do the same. That's just a little adjustment to the
world that's invisible to most people. Nobody really knows it's happening, but is making a big difference in how many toxic chemicals
and how many contexts people are getting exposed to in their daily lives, which is, of course,
the point.
I asked everyone for this story if they could change anything about Prop 65, what would
it be?
Balvu said that he would want to make the law easier
to navigate for businesses.
Todd Cooperman would want the warning labels themselves
to be more helpful to consumers.
Alan Hirsch wants it to be a little harder
to bring about frivolous lawsuits.
And David Rowe?
I get this question every year at the annual conference,
as you can imagine.
And of course, somebody wants to either have an aha moment
or make me look extremely proud of the original drafting.
I try to avoid both.
I realized though that how should we change Prop 65
wasn't the right question to be asking at all.
What we should be actually asking is,
how can the federal government do more to protect us
so that we don't need Prop 65 anymore?
Because imperfect as it is,
and for all of the headaches, frustrations, and confusion it has caused,
Prop 65 is kind of the best thing we've got.
Now, when I see that Prop 65 label stuck to the front of my fancy new apartment building,
I definitely don't brush it off anymore.
That sign is a reminder that I'm witnessing a system that's failing, because if it worked,
then there wouldn't be a warning label at all.
But on the other hand, at least I know there's some sort of system in place trying to keep
us all safe.
Which I wish I could say felt more comforting.
So could I, I was wondering if I could help, if you could help me navigate something.
Todd Cooperman does product testing and analysis, so I figured if anyone could help me figure
out the sign on my apartment building, it would be him.
It says, uh, warning, entering this area can expose you to chemicals known to the state of
California to cause cancer and birth defects or other reproductive harm, including benzene,
a chemical used in urinal cleaners, and toluene, a chemical used in common household cleaning
products. Like me as a resident of the building, what's the best way for me to
calculate that risk for myself? I don't know. Yeah, I don't know. Yeah, I'm on my own for that one.
After the break we...
Ugh, again?
Okay, we'll wait for this to pass.
Okay.
After the break, we revisit another story about excessive alarms.
Stay with us.
We first ran this next story that you're about to hear back in 2018 as part of our year-end
mini-stories.
It was the first story that Vivian Lay reported for us.
Coincidentally, it was also about excessive alarms. And if you listen really closely,
you can hear how nervous she is.
So I want to start with the worst nuclear accident
in US history.
Goodness, okay, go ahead.
For many years, there has been a vigorous debate
in this country about the safety
of the nation's 72 nuclear energy power
plants. That debate is likely to be intensified because of what happened early this morning
at a nuclear power plant in Pennsylvania.
So you probably heard about this before because of this big news, but back in 1979 there was
a partial core meltdown at the Three Mile Island nuclear power plant near Harrisburg,
Pennsylvania.
A cooling pump broke down and the plant did just what it was supposed to do.
Shut it's all off.
But not before some radioactivity had escaped.
A bunch of communities around the reactor ended up having to evacuate and it just freaked
a lot of people out.
Well, they should have been freaked out.
That was freaking scary.
So in the aftermath of what happened, the president ordered a commission to investigate
what happened and there was this big post-mortem report to try to understand what had gone
wrong.
And what actually did go wrong?
Well, it was kind of complicated because a lot of things went wrong.
But Three Mile Island was a classic cascading failure type accident.
So essentially, a relief valve in one of the react units got stuck in the open position, which caused all the
coolant to be released. So the coolant ran out of the core and
it started to overheat. And in the end, it ended up being a
pretty minor mechanical breakdown. But what they found
out was that it was actually human error that made the whole
situation worse.
Humans make everything worse.
They really do. They really do.
A cascading failure of humans.
But, you know, the plant operators could see and they could hear that something was wrong because all these lights are flashing and alarms are sounding,
but it wasn't clear exactly what was wrong because all the alarms were really confusing and just made the situation worse. Because they went off all at the same time, that would have hindered communication at
the very time when they needed to communicate.
And who is that?
So that's Judy Edwards.
She studies psychoacoustics and alarm design at the University of Plymouth.
And she told me that Three Mile Island is actually a really common case study when it
comes to bad and ineffective alarm design.
Three Mile Island is very well known for having hundreds of alarms going off in a
very short period of time.
Now that's an example where there was no alarm philosophy because that shouldn't
have happened.
So alarm design really matters.
Yes, it definitely matters.
And there have actually been other major accidents where alarms that were supposed
to help people respond to emergency, but instead they made the situation worse.
Like the Deepwater Horizon accident in 2010, which caused a ton of oil to spill into the
Gulf of Mexico.
I didn't know that had anything to do with alarm failure.
Oh yeah, yeah.
It turned out that a bunch of the alarm systems on the Deepwater Rig had actually been inhibited
for at least a year before the accidents happened because TransOcean, which is the company that ran the rig,
didn't want false alarms to wake up the crew
while they were sleeping.
So the alarms were too easily triggered
and so they just turned them off
so they didn't upset the operation of the rig.
Yeah, exactly, false alarm syndrome basically.
So this is the kind of stuff
that Professor Edwardi thinks about a lot.
Yes, yeah, she thinks about the best ways
to design alarms
so that they can accomplish what they need to do.
And one of her big concerns is that humans are just bombarded
by so many alarms in our everyday life
that we just start tuning them out.
Or turning them off.
Yeah.
Because I think the whole world suffers from alarm fatigue.
Because I think we're just so used to alarms
just going off all the time.
And they're almost, they're just a backdrop to our lives.
She says that the average person probably hears about 100 different types of alarms a day.
They're just all the time, you stand at the cash register and it's beeping away and it's,
and then you hear cars, car alarms going off and you've got microwaves and you've got to,
everything beeps.
And for no good reason, quite a lot of the time.
And so people just start tuning them out
and they lose track of which alarms are important
and which ones aren't.
If everything in the world is beeping,
we kind of forget that those beeps
are trying to point out actual problems.
But another consideration is that alarm tones themselves
should communicate something about what the problem is.
And so how does that work?
Okay, so when you think of an alarm sound, what do you think of?
Well, I think of a bracing, klaxon, beeping, siren, high-pitched, shrill, alarming, alarming, upsetting.
Yes, yes, exactly. So we basically all have like one cultural reference point for what an alarm should sound like.
And that's because like in the olden days,
we didn't really have much range in terms of alarm mechanisms.
In the past, alarms, you could only make an alarm by either
pushing sand, pushing air through an object like a klaxon,
or by hitting something like a bell.
We associate these archaic noises like bells and whistles and sirens and kaxons with auditory alarms because that's just what the technology at the time
allowed for and we got used to it. So Judy made actually this kind of funny point which is that
we have such a narrow idea of what an alarm should sound like that it even shows up in
futuristic sci-fi movies. Sci-fi films, all sorts of wonderful things happen in the film.
But when you've got alarms go off and they're just the same alarms that we're just used
to.
It's like in the film The Martian, right?
They can do all these wonderful things in good Mars, but they can't design better alarms
than we've got now. That's a lot of alarm sounds. Yeah.
They're lirty.
And they all kind of sound the same.
They're guys in trouble.
Yeah.
Totally.
But yeah, but with digital sound, you know, so much more as possible, you can make an
alarm sound like basically anything.
You can use music.
Some people use tones or sequences or melodies.
You can use sounds that are use sounds as real objects,
doing real things.
And we tend to refer to these as auditory icons,
but really they're just metaphors.
And I love this.
I love the idea of auditory icons and metaphorical sounds.
It's just really interesting and cool to me.
So what's a good example of an auditory icon?
Okay, so hospitals are notorious for having
these terrible soundscapes because the sheer amount
of alarms that are just constantly going off
and like at all hours of the night.
And they're all just beeps and tones
that are kind of variations of each other.
So Judy designed this new tone that's meant to be used
when there's a problem related to a patient's medication.
And this is how it works.
What you might do is you would announce an alarm
by using something like this.
That gets your attention followed by...
See?
Yeah, I mean, that's interesting.
So there's a little bit of an attention graver
and then something metaphorical
so you can really tell what it
is. Right, the sound of the pill bottle kind of cues medication in your head so you kind
of already know what the problem is before you even address it.
What we find with these auditory icons is that they're very, very easy to learn. You
just tell people once what they mean and then they're away. They've understood it.
So instead of some generic and alarming alarm sound that could literally mean anything,
which is what happened at Three Mile Island, you can imagine these auditory icons that
kind of communicate exactly what the problem is.
So there wouldn't be this confusion about trying to decipher what this one tone means.
Except for at Three Mile Island, when there was a hundred things going wrong, it would
sound like a preschool classroom of sounds, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, of, yeah, you basically have to rethink an environment from the top down in terms of what it sounds like.
Well, cool. Well, thank you so much.
No, thank you.
99% of his book was produced this week by Vivienne Lay and edited by Nina Pautuck.
The Auditory Alarms mini-story was originally reported by Vivienne Lay and produced by Delaney Hall,
mixed by Hazique Ben-A Ahmad Fareed and Martin Gonzalez.
Music by Swan Real, fact checking by Graham Hayshad, tape syncing by Catherine Monaghan.
Kathy Too is our executive producer, Kurt Colston is the digital director.
The rest of the team includes Chris Barube, Jason De Leon, Emmett Fitzgerald, Christopher
Johnson, Laucham Adon, Joe Rosenberg, Gabriella Gladney, Kelly Prime, Jacob Maldonado-Madina,
Sarah Bake, and me,
Roman Mars.
The 99% of his below-goat was created by Stefan Lawrence.
Special thanks this week to Tom Epstein and Michael Waters.
Michael wrote all about Prop 65 for Vox, and if you want to read more, you can find a link
to that article on our website.
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It's a great time over there.
There's a link to that, as well as every past episode of 99PI and 99PI.org.