California State Rock Stirs Up Asbestos Debate
A little over half of the U.S. states have official rocks. Florida has agatized coral, North Carolina has granite, and California has serpentine.
Officially named the state rock in 1965, serpentine was chosen because, at the time, it was heavily mined and was a representation of California’s Gold Rush period.
Currently, State Senator, Democrat Gloria Romero of Los Angeles is petitioning to drop serpentine as the state rock of California because it contains a form of asbestos known as chrysotile. Exposure to asbestos can result in a various number of illnesses, one of the worst being mesothelioma, a lethal form of cancer caused by the inhalation of asbestos fibers.
The Senator’s goal is to raise awareness and educate people about the dangers of asbestos exposure.
The bill, SB 624, has been approved by the State Senate and is being reviewed by the Assembly. It has support from the Asbestos Disease Awareness Organization (ADAO), the Children’s Hospital of LA, and the Consumer Attorneys of California.
California leads the U.S. in asbestos related diseases and deaths. Supporters do not believe the state should be celebrating a mineral that has such devastating effects.
However, there are also those on the other side who are against removing this historic symbol. Geologists in particular strongly oppose the bill. They say that in its natural state, asbestos is not harmful. And that no one is at risk with the casual exposure to asbestos that occurs when handling the rock. The danger would arise if it was hammered and broken up into little pieces.
In a statement on the campaign to drop the state rock, CEO and Co-founder of ADAO, Linda Reinstein explains how “the World Health Organization, the Environmental Protection Agency, and U.S. Surgeon General agree: all forms of asbestos are carcinogenic and there is no safe level of asbestos exposure. Drop the Rock is an effort to remove a symbol that no longer has relevance for the State’s mining industry and unfortunately perpetuates a false message that asbestos is safe.”





