Kirk, I don't disagree about Paraformldehyde, (polyoxymethylene), but the reference I saw was to how it formed formaldehyde & sodium hydroxide in D85, there's plenty of Sodium ions in the solution, and in the Agfa Ansco equivalent AN79 Potassium ions as well.
After I found D85 made up with 7.5ml Formaldehyde solution in place of Paraformaldehyde barely even tarted to develop lith & line films I measured the pH of. It wasn't alkaline, it's 30 years ago so I can't remember the exact pH meter reading now
Kodak now use Sodium Formaldehyde Bisulphite instead of Para-formaldehyde in Kodalith developers and a part B of Sodium/Potassium Carbonate and usually Sodium/Potassium Hydroxide.
Paraformaldehyde in water is neutral so where else is the alkali needed for this lith developer to work coming from ? The developer needs a working pH of around 10. There's a reaction somewhere between the Paraformaldehyde and most likely the Sulphite or (Meta)bisulphite that's generating the hydroxide ions.
Sandy, this Reprolith developer (D85/AN79) gives excellent edge effects on all the lith/line films I've used, and was far superior to any of the non formaldehyde types of developer, which is it's why it's still in production today although the formula has evolved.
Ian