Chemical Listed Effective April 24, 2001 as Known to the State to Cause Developmental Toxicity: Nimodipine

The Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment (OEHHA) of the California Environmental Protection Agency is adding one chemical to the list of chemicals known to the State to cause cancer or reproductive toxicity for purposes of the Safe Drinking Water and Toxic Enforcement Act of 1986 (Proposition 65). The chemical is listed effective April 24, 2001.

Nimodipine is listed as a chemical known to the State to cause developmental toxicity. The listing of nimodipine is based on a formal requirement by a state or federal agency that the chemical be identified or labeled as causing cancer or reproductive toxicity pursuant to an administrative listing mechanism provided under Proposition 65. Regulations governing the listing of chemicals under the "formally required to be labeled or identified" mechanism are published in Title 22, California Code of Regulations, Section 12902 (22 CCR 12902).

The reader is directed to the Notice of Intent to List Chemicals published in the February 23, 2001 issue of the California Regulatory Notice Register (Register 01, No. 8-Z) for the supporting documentation for the chemical nimodipine, which OEHHA relied upon in making its determination that the criteria for administrative listing had been satisfied.

A complete, updated chemical list is published elsewhere in this issue of the California Regulatory Notice Register.

The chemical listed, effective April 24, 2001, and the mechanism under which it is listed, are shown below:

Chemical

CAS No.

Endpoint

Listing Mechanism*

Nimodipine

66085-59-4

Developmental toxicity

FR

*Listing mechanism:
FR - "formally required to be labeled or identified" mechanism (22 CCR 12902)

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