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Consumer Group Alerts Shoppers to Hidden Toy Hazards Source:Calpirg.org Date: 12/1/08
Calls passage of strong reforms good step forward, but warns “Buyer Beware” this year
Hazardous toys are still sold in stores across the country, despite a
new
law overhauling the nation’s product safety watchdog agency, according
to the 23rd annual toy safety survey released today by the California
Public Interest Research Group (CALPIRG). The group also warned that
the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) is taking actions to
delay one of the new law’s toxic toy protections indefinitely. “While
the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act is a major step forward,
many of its protections won’t be in effect until 2009, so it’s still
Buyer Beware for this shopping season,” said CALPIRG’s Erin Steva.
“Worse, last week the CPSC told companies that they could continue to
sell toys with toxic phthalate chemicals until they ran out of them,
instead of complying with the law’s clear prohibition against selling
them after February 10th.”
According
to the most recent data from the Consumer Product Safety Commission
(CPSC), toy-related injuries sent more than 80,000 children under the
age of five to emergency rooms in 2007. Eighteen children died from
toy-related injuries that year.
For
23 years, the CALPIRG Trouble in Toyland report has offered safety
guidelines for purchasing toys for small children and provides examples
of toys currently on store shelves that pose potential safety hazards.
Because
of the passage of the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act in August
2008, CALPIRG’s research this year focused on new standards for toxic
toy dangers enacted by the law, using laboratory tests to identify toys
that contain lead and toxic phthalates.
Among the findings of the 2008 Trouble In Toyland:
Lead
in Toys and Children’s Jewelry: Children exposed to lead can suffer
lowered IQ, delayed mental and physical development and even death. In
2006, a four year old died of lead poisoning after he swallowed a
bracelet charm that contained 99% lead. CALPIRG researchers went to
just a few stores and easily found three children’s toys or jewelry
containing high levels of lead or lead paint. One piece of jewelry we
found was 45% lead by weight, or more than 750 times current CPSC
action levels.
“Congress
took important steps to address the serious health risks that lead
poses to children, yet consumers can still find lead-laden children’s
jewelry and lead painted toys on store shelves until the protections
take effect next year,” continued Steva.
Toxic
Phthalates: Numerous scientists have documented the potential health
effects of exposure to phthalates in the womb or at crucial stages of
development, including (but not limited to) reproductive defects,
premature delivery, early onset puberty, and lower sperm counts.
Effective February 2009, the CPSIA bans toys for children that contain
concentrations more than 0.1% of a toxic chemical used in plastics
called phthalates. CALPIRG found toys that contained concentrations of
phthalates up to 40%.
“Congress
clearly intended that the new law would also stop the sale of toys
containing toxic phthalates in February, but last week’s CPSC legal
opinion told manufacturers that can keep selling the remaining millions
of hazardous toys until they run out, which could take years,” said
Steva. “Congress gave America’s littlest consumers the gift of
safety—they should not let the CPSC take it away.”
Steva
noted that CALPIRG’s DC office and Congressional champions intended to
take every possible action to overturn the CPSC decision and restore
the February 2009 ban on sale of toxic phthalate-laden toys.
Choking
Hazards: In 1979, the CPSC banned the sale of toys for children younger
than three if they contain small parts. The 1994 Child Safety
Protection Act required an explicit prominent choke hazard warning on
toys with small parts for children aged between three and six. CALPIRG
found toys with small parts for children under six without the required
explicit choke hazard warning. “The
Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act gave the CPSC the tools it
needs to do a better job for America’s littlest consumers,” said
Steva. “Now it’s up to Congress to fully fund them and for the
Consumer Product Safety Commission to vigorously carry out its new
responsibilities.”
Steva called on Congress and the CPSC to do the following:
•
CPSC should vigorously enforce the CPSIA’s strong protection against
lead and reverse its recent decision allowing continued sale of toxic
phthalates in children’s products. CPSC must also move swiftly to
implement all rules required under the new law; must ensure that new
third-party testing programs meet the new law’s standards; and, must
also move quickly to implement the new law’s publicly-accessible
hazards database requirement.
•
Congress and the Administration should work to overhaul U.S. toxics
policy to begin to assess the thousands of chemicals currently on the
market for which little or inadequate health data are available, and to
require manufacturers to ensure that they are using the least hazardous
chemicals possible.
•
Congress should fully fund the CPSC’s increased budget authorizations
for the next five fiscal years, and conduct vigorous oversight over the
implementation of the new law.
Steva
also reminded parents that the toy list in the CALPIRG report is only a
sampling of the potential hazards on store shelves, and urged consumers
to shop with a copy of PIRG’s Tips for Toy Safety, included in the
report and at www.toysafety.net.
“Shoppers
should remember to examine all toys carefully for hidden dangers before
you make a purchase this holiday season,” Steva concluded.
CALPIRG,
the California Public Interest Research Group, takes on powerful
interests on behalf of its members, working to win concrete results for
our health and our well-being.
The full report is available at www.calpirg.org. More information on toy safety is available at PIRG’s toysafety.net site.
http://www.calpirg.org/news-releases/food-safety/food-safety-news/consumer-group-alerts-shoppers-to-hidden-toy-hazards2
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