Monday
Nov232009
Consumer Product Safety Chair Says Toy Recalls Are Down This Year
By Ravi Bhatia - Talk Radio News Service
Inez Tenenbaum, Chairman of the Consumer Product Safety Commission, said Monday that toy recall rates have dropped in 2009 compared to the last two years.
According to Tenenbaum, there have been 38 toy recalls this year, down from 162 in 2008 and 148 in 2007.
“Toys now have to be independently tested and certified by a third party laboratory that they meet the new lead paint limits,” Tenenbaum said. “That’s good for the consumer. There have been 15 recalls involving lead [this year], and that is down from 63 from 2007 and 85 in 2008."
With the hioliday season fast approaching, Tenenbaum urged parents to buy their children age-appropriate toys, even if their child displays the intelligence to play with toys designed for older children.
“Many people will see a label and say that ‘my child is already reading and I’ll get the child something in a higher range group,’” she said. “These are safety standards, [they don’t just measure] cognitive ability. When [a toy label] says three to five, that deals with the safety of your child. Make sure you keep younger children away from the toys of older siblings.”
Inez Tenenbaum, Chairman of the Consumer Product Safety Commission, said Monday that toy recall rates have dropped in 2009 compared to the last two years.
According to Tenenbaum, there have been 38 toy recalls this year, down from 162 in 2008 and 148 in 2007.
“Toys now have to be independently tested and certified by a third party laboratory that they meet the new lead paint limits,” Tenenbaum said. “That’s good for the consumer. There have been 15 recalls involving lead [this year], and that is down from 63 from 2007 and 85 in 2008."
With the hioliday season fast approaching, Tenenbaum urged parents to buy their children age-appropriate toys, even if their child displays the intelligence to play with toys designed for older children.
“Many people will see a label and say that ‘my child is already reading and I’ll get the child something in a higher range group,’” she said. “These are safety standards, [they don’t just measure] cognitive ability. When [a toy label] says three to five, that deals with the safety of your child. Make sure you keep younger children away from the toys of older siblings.”
tagged CPSC, Ravi Bhatia, inez tenenbaum, toy safety in Frontpage 2
Toxic toys
Following a wave of recalls in 2007, Congress passed legislation that gave CPSC more resources to ensure product safety. However, while the legislation stated that companies would have to cease selling toys containing toxic phthalates by February 10th, 2009, the CPSC published a legal opinion informing manufacturers that they will be allowed to sell these products until their inventory run out.
"Unfortunately, while the product safety bill is a major step forward, many of it's protections are still not fully in effect, so it's still buyer beware this year...Congress gave America's children the gift of safer toys and the CPSC is taking them away," said U.S. PIRG Public Health Advocate Liz Hitchcock during a news conference for the release of PIRG's 23rd annual toy safety survey.
In the absence of CPSC protection, PIRG suggested that parents could evade health risks this holiday season by avoiding toys that are made of soft plastics and children's jewelry that is made out of metal since each run the risk of containing toxics or lead.
While Hitchcock did not answer how many of the toys that made this year's list were manufactured in China, Consumer Program Director Edmund Mierzwinksi mentioned that 80% of toys sold in the U.S. are imported from China. While a rise in imports would naturally warrant further safety inspections, Mierzwinski contends that increased inspection have not kept pace with the rising amount of imports.
"There haven't been enough guards at the gate," said Mierzwinski.