Now, the U.S. Consumer Product Unsafe Commission (CPUC) has ruled that
teethers, pacifiers and other baby products containing the banned
plastics are fine for use, until February 10, 2009.
No doubt, this outrage is another of the despicable WHITE HOUSE WAR
CRIMINAL's farewell gifts to an electorate that scorns the very
mention of his name.
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"Some Toys With Banned Plastics Will Stay on Market"
By Annys Shin
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, November 19, 2008; D01
A new federal ban on the use of the controversial chemical phthalate
in teethers, pacifiers and other children's products won't apply to
goods already in warehouses or on store shelves, federal safety
regulators said yesterday.
The decision, issued by Consumer Product Safety Commission general
counsel Cheryl Falvey, means it will be illegal to sell products made
after the ban takes effect Feb. 10 that contain certain types of
phthalates, chemicals used in soft plastic that have been linked to
reproductive problems.
Any products made before that date will still be legal to sell, even
after the ban is in place.
The ban, which was passed in August as part of a landmark product
safety law, is supposed to remain in effect until a panel finishes a
scientific review of phthalates. Backed by Democratic California Sens.
Dianne Feinstein and Barbara Boxer, it was modeled on a law in their
state that goes into effect in January.
Consumer advocates and several Hill staffers who worked on the
provision say the CPSC's decision violates the intent of the law.
"That obviously is not what was intended," said Diana Zuckerman,
president of the National Research Center for Women & Families, a
Washington advocacy group.
CPSC spokeswoman Julie Vallese said that the way the law is written,
technically the ban must be prospective.
Consumer advocates also say the decision will cause confusion for
consumers.
"How will parents know whether the rubber ducky they're buying was
made today and not in March?'" said Rachel Weintraub, director of
product safety for Consumer Federation of America.
Vallese said consumers can call a manufacturer to find out when a
product was made.
By contrast, the decision came as a relief to makers of children's
products, large and small, who faced the prospect of having to test
products and components at great expense. Testing a product for
phthalates can cost thousands of dollars, said lawyers and consultants
advising companies on how to comply with the law.
"I'm glad to hear they are grandfathering product already in place
because there is dispute about whether those phthalates are harmful,
and what are they going to replace them with," said Kathleen McHugh,
president of the American Specialty Toy Retailing Association, which
also represents small toy makers.
Toy Industry Association president Carter Keithley also praised the
CPSC for its "careful analysis" of the law.
Businesses still have plenty of questions about how to meet the law's
other requirements, such as the new limits on lead and mandatory
testing and certification, which pose myriad practical and financial
challenges.
Despite a series of public meetings hosted by the CPSC for businesses,
companies in search of more specific guidance say they've largely been
left in the dark.
For instance, does a business have to perform lead tests on shopping
cart seats that are primarily used by small children?
"What's the likelihood a kid is going to be sucking on the seat?"
McHugh said. "That's where we've gone so overboard."
Or take a company that makes harmful chemicals that already carry a
warning label. "Are you supposed to kill a bunch of white rats so you
can prove your label is accurate?" said Mike Gidding, a former CPSC
official who now works with companies. "It sure would be nice to be
able to call someone at CPSC and say, 'What's the answer?' "
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/11/18/AR2008111803206.html
Hummmm!! The Trojan Horse from China!!! How clever, them Chinese!!!!
> http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/11/18/AR200...
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What A600? Show us a picture.