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Toy Safety News
For Immediate Release:
11/20/2007
For More Information:
Joe Rupp 512-479-7287 Consumer Group Alerts Shoppers to Hidden Toy HazardsAustin--Hazardous toys are still sold in stores across the
country, according to the 22nd annual toy safety survey released today by the Texas
Public Interest Research Group (TexPIRG). According to the most recent
data from the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC), toy-related injuries
sent almost 73,000 children under the age of five to emergency rooms in 2005.
Twenty children died from toy-related injuries that year. TexPIRG’s 2007 research
focused on several categories of toy dangers: toys that pose choking hazards,
toys with powerful magnets, toys that contain lead, and toys that pose
strangulation hazards. Most of the recalls this year have been for hazards
identified in previous editions of the TexPIRG report—small powerful magnets,
choking hazards and toys with excessive levels of toxic lead, Hicks noted. 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. TexPIRG researchers went to just a few stores and easily found four
children’s toys or jewelry containing high, actionable levels of lead. One
piece of jewelry we found was 65% lead by weight, or over one thousand times
current CPSC action levels. 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
choke hazard warning on toys with small parts for children aged between three
and six. “The Consumer Product Safety Commission, or CPSC, is a little agency with a big job it simply cannot do,” said Hicks. “Congress needs to give it the tools it needs to do that big job better.” Hicks called on Congress to pass the strongest possible product safety reforms under consideration: Congress should ban lead except at trace amounts. The PIRG-backed HR 3691, the SAFE Consumer Product Act, sponsored by Rep. DeLauro (Conn.)and 150 co-sponsors, would reduce all lead levels – in paint or in the product -- to the level recommended by the American Academy of Pediatrics, 40 parts per million or 15 times less than the current allowable level of 600 ppm. Congress should increase the budget and staffing of CPSC as much as possible. CPSC has only one toy tester and a tiny force of 15 inspectors to check millions of toys at hundreds of ports of entry. Congress should require companies to guarantee that their products have been subject to independent third party testing before they put them on toy store shelves. Congress should also give CPSC more tools to punish companies that break the law. “It doesn’t matter whether a toy is made in China or made in Kansas,” said Hicks. “Companies need to make sure that it is safe.” Hicks also reminded parents
that the toy list in the TexPIRG report is only a sampling of the potential
hazards on store shelves. ###
TexPIRG, the Texas 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.texpirg.org. More information on
toy safety is available at PIRG’s toysafety.net site.
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