Updated Green Seal Standard Focuses on Kids, Vulnerable Populations
September 9, 2008
Protecting the health of school-age children and other
sensitive and vulnerable populations is a key focus of latest version of the
Green Seal Environmental Standard for Industrial and Institutional Cleaners,
the organization said releasing its updated guidelines.
The new version, issued August 29 and announced last week,
is the fourth edition of the standard that Green Seal calls GS-37, which was
first released in 2000.
The standard sets environmental requirements for cleaning
products used in professional and public settings. The guidelines cover
institutional and industrial general-purpose, restroom, glass and carpet
cleaners: products that are used to clean offices, institutions, warehouses and
industrial facilities.
Based on research and discussions among stakeholders, the
fourth edition of the standard is aimed at making Green Seal-approved products
safer for vulnerable populations, including children in schools and childcare,
patients in long-term care facilities such as nursing homes and the people who
use the cleaning products or are exposed to them on a regular basis, the
organization said.
The latest version represents 21 months of work to bring the
guidelines into alignment with the latest research and technological
developments, increased health awareness and other industry concerns, according
to Green Seal.
The primary goal of the revision is to "ensure that it
continues to represent an environmental leadership standard in the marketplace
and, vitally, to incorporate criteria that fully protects human health,
including that of children and custodial workers," Green Seal President
and CEO Arthur Weissman said in a statement.