CPSIA – Oh No, They Didn’t Go Away
April 10, 2011 by Etienne
Filed under BLOG, Featured Articles
As you may have heard, the federal government stuck around this week. No shutdown, which means that the CPSC is still busy, busy, busy protecting us. We should all appreciate it. At least that’s what they tell us. So why do I have such a bad attitude? How would you feel if the people running this federal agency told Congress in writing that you were intent on poisoning children. They didn’t accuse me by name, or you, but instead accused us all together. Perhaps they think we are all intent on doing it. They said, clear as day, that we were ready and waiting to “dose” children with lead. The purposefully-chosen word “dose” suggests an act of volition, something intentional and sinister. The word connotes an unwitting victim. Bottom line, they are saying that we are perversely stalking innocent children unaware of their “fate”. Really, really nice. Especially by a Chairman of the CPSC and her cohorts holding a majority vote controlling the agency. Those of us in business, we tend to take our reputation seriously. It is deeply offensive to be insulted by strangers, people unable to know us or our intentions. I don’t think the word “slander” is too far a stretch. How can the three Democrats (Inez Tenenbaum, Bob Adler and Thomas Moore) be so arrogant to stand before Congress and assert that they (and their law) stand between the American consumer and infamy? I simply can’t say. It really is disgusting. Not only is this is a devastating insult, but it is frankly a crushing blow to the FUTURE restoration of trust in this agency. NEVER previously has there been such a broadcasting of intentions, a profound and dirty bias against manufacturers and in favor of media pandering. Whether they are taking instructions from someone off-stage or not, their letter to Congress confirms that they cannot be trusted to be fair or open-minded. The three Democrats are certainly not a government for all of us because manufacturers and retailers are now frozen out of the community. The Dems have pushed them out. This is not an American government anyone would want. What will Congress do? Rumorville has it that I am not the only one whose jaw hit the ground and whose blood began to boil when they read the Dems’ letter. Some people around town actually care about the fairness of government. Some people believe in fairness and are sensitive to any odor of ignorant prejudice, minds made up before evidence is presented. Some people believe government must be accountable. Some people believe there is no excuse for this kind of behavior. The Dems put themselves in the soup. G-d willing, they will be held to account. Stay tuned.
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CPSIA – Oh No, They Didn’t Go Away
CPSIA – If The CPSC Goes Out, Do You Think They’ll Come Back???
April 8, 2011 by Gil
Filed under BLOG, Featured Articles
With the Federal government about to shut down, one wonders – could we possibly live without the CPSC for a few days? I, for one, would very much like to find out. But what about the CHILDREN, you say. It’s a horrifying thought. After all, with annual expenditures of north of $100 million per hyear and in recent times an obsession with children, the CPSC has managed to uncover one death allegedly tied to lead (swallowing a jewelry bangle) and three injuries tied to lead-in-paint over an 11-year period from 1999 – 2010. That’s what you get for regulatory expense of more than $1 billion – four alleged injuries. Value for the dollar . . . . In the last couple years, though, the federal government in its infinite wisdom has chosen to pass all regulatory cost increases on to YOU. Yes, in a new innovation making rising taxes obsolete, Congress raised YOUR costs by billions each year when it inflicted the CPSIA on America. I have previously presented an analysis based on Congressional testimony that estimates those costs at more than $5.6 billion each year. And I think that’s low. I know you’re probably not a statistician, but what are the odds that lowering the ten-year results from four alleged injuries to zero alleged injuries would be considered statistically significant? I believe the answer is zero or very very low. $5.6 billion a year doesn’t buy much, does it? The scale of the threat was explored in a revealing moment yesterday when the infamous Rachel Weintraub of the Consumer Federation of America was asked by four different members of Congress for names or lists of victims of lead-in-substrate. She couldn’t name any. Dana Best had no chance to answer such questions, because she bolted before questioning. I rather doubt the members were much in the mood to accept an answer of “jillions” anyway. I haven’t had a chance to review the tape yet, but I understand Ms. Weintraub assured Congress in response to these queries that lead is a “silent” harm-doer. Rachel says there;s no way to tell . . . so I guess the implication is that we should assume millions of kids have been harmed. Possibly bazillions. Who knows?! Has anyone considered the possibility that the injured children that only Ms. Weintraub and Dr. Best can see are IMAGINARY? Consider this argument: Rachel and Dana and their ilk have had three years to find a victim, any victim, at any time since Hector had pups. They have failed in this endeavor. Maybe Rachel and Dana didn’t try, maybe they don’t care. After all, they probably thinks they’re right and who are we to challenge either of them. No response required. . . .. But IF Rachel’s right, why don’t the numbers yield up MANY victims? It really shouldn;t be hard to find injured kids – which makes the failure to do so all the more galling. There are lots of children in the regulated age group – more than 50 million. That population is constantly changing because kids “age out”. So if you look over a decade, say, you might be talking about 75+ million. What do these kids do? What all kids do. They play, they breathe, they eat, they ride ATVs, they lick bicycles, they suck on the ink end of pens, they consume fistfuls of rhinestones, the usual. Some of them oddly do extreme things. You are looking at a BIG population. Over a decade, that’s HUNDREDS OF TRILLIONS of product interactions, some of them excessive. And yet there are no known victims. Hmmm. Perhaps this is a pretty low probability event. And not worth $5.6 billion a year in excess costs. So when the CPSC goes out, will anyone notice? That;s a good question. It may be an experiment worth running. And if the world doesn’t come to an end without them, perhaps Congress might find something new to cut when life gets back to normal. There’s no safe level of fear mongering, guys. Your Friend, The “Lead Doser”
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CPSIA – If The CPSC Goes Out, Do You Think They’ll Come Back???
CPSIA – If The CPSC Goes Out, Do You Think They’ll Come Back???
April 8, 2011 by Rachele
Filed under BLOG, Featured Articles
With the Federal government about to shut down, one wonders – could we possibly live without the CPSC for a few days? I, for one, would very much like to find out. But what about the CHILDREN, you say. It’s a horrifying thought. After all, with annual expenditures of north of $100 million per hyear and in recent times an obsession with children, the CPSC has managed to uncover one death allegedly tied to lead (swallowing a jewelry bangle) and three injuries tied to lead-in-paint over an 11-year period from 1999 – 2010. That’s what you get for regulatory expense of more than $1 billion – four alleged injuries. Value for the dollar . . . . In the last couple years, though, the federal government in its infinite wisdom has chosen to pass all regulatory cost increases on to YOU. Yes, in a new innovation making rising taxes obsolete, Congress raised YOUR costs by billions each year when it inflicted the CPSIA on America. I have previously presented an analysis based on Congressional testimony that estimates those costs at more than $5.6 billion each year. And I think that’s low. I know you’re probably not a statistician, but what are the odds that lowering the ten-year results from four alleged injuries to zero alleged injuries would be considered statistically significant? I believe the answer is zero or very very low. $5.6 billion a year doesn’t buy much, does it? The scale of the threat was explored in a revealing moment yesterday when the infamous Rachel Weintraub of the Consumer Federation of America was asked by four different members of Congress for names or lists of victims of lead-in-substrate. She couldn’t name any. Dana Best had no chance to answer such questions, because she bolted before questioning. I rather doubt the members were much in the mood to accept an answer of “jillions” anyway. I haven’t had a chance to review the tape yet, but I understand Ms. Weintraub assured Congress in response to these queries that lead is a “silent” harm-doer. Rachel says there;s no way to tell . . . so I guess the implication is that we should assume millions of kids have been harmed. Possibly bazillions. Who knows?! Has anyone considered the possibility that the injured children that only Ms. Weintraub and Dr. Best can see are IMAGINARY? Consider this argument: Rachel and Dana and their ilk have had three years to find a victim, any victim, at any time since Hector had pups. They have failed in this endeavor. Maybe Rachel and Dana didn’t try, maybe they don’t care. After all, they probably thinks they’re right and who are we to challenge either of them. No response required. . . .. But IF Rachel’s right, why don’t the numbers yield up MANY victims? It really shouldn;t be hard to find injured kids – which makes the failure to do so all the more galling. There are lots of children in the regulated age group – more than 50 million. That population is constantly changing because kids “age out”. So if you look over a decade, say, you might be talking about 75+ million. What do these kids do? What all kids do. They play, they breathe, they eat, they ride ATVs, they lick bicycles, they suck on the ink end of pens, they consume fistfuls of rhinestones, the usual. Some of them oddly do extreme things. You are looking at a BIG population. Over a decade, that’s HUNDREDS OF TRILLIONS of product interactions, some of them excessive. And yet there are no known victims. Hmmm. Perhaps this is a pretty low probability event. And not worth $5.6 billion a year in excess costs. So when the CPSC goes out, will anyone notice? That;s a good question. It may be an experiment worth running. And if the world doesn’t come to an end without them, perhaps Congress might find something new to cut when life gets back to normal. There’s no safe level of fear mongering, guys. Your Friend, The “Lead Doser”
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CPSIA – If The CPSC Goes Out, Do You Think They’ll Come Back???
CPSIA – Three Dem CPSC Commissioners Accuse Industry (You) of Dosing Kids with Lead
April 7, 2011 by Timothy
Filed under BLOG, Featured Articles
In a revolting display of cowardly fear mongering, the three Democratic CPSC Commissioners yesterday wrote the House Committee on Energy and Commerce and its Subcommittee on Commerce, Manufacturing and Trade to protest the proposed CPSIA amendment. In this letter, in defense of the lead-in-substrate provisions, the Dems sow fear by suggesting what you might do: “The CPSIA set one of the most protective lead limits for children’s products in the world. The public health community continues to hold its overwhelming consensus: There is no safe level of lead. We oppose any change in the law that would lead to an increase in the DOSES OF LEAD to which our children are exposed on a daily basis, particularly when the marketplace has for the most part already adjusted to lower lead levels and is well on its way to getting the lead out of children’s products .” [Emphasis added] Hmmmm. Apparently we evil toymakers, sinister educational product makers, monstrous t-shirt and jeans producers, venal shoemakers, diabolic rhinestone merchants, demonic ATV purveyors, fiendish motocross enthusiasts, vile vending machine operators, corrupt jewelers, slimy resale shop owners, worthless book publishers, perverse pen companies, satanic carpet weavers – we all are just waiting for the CPSC to look the other way so we can “dose” children with lead. This kind of asinine accusation normally would be something to deride and lampoon in this space, but in this case frankly, it’s not at all funny. Here you have three CPSC Commissioners with a majority vote (including Chairman Inez Tenenbaum) going national with serious, maligning insults of our values and our integrity. They can hardly restrain themselves – they go further to assert that we have only “for the most part adjusted” to the new rules – you know, by firing people, cutting products, withdrawing from markets. This is your “leadership” on the Commission. I want to vomit. CPSC Commissioners are appointed by the Senate. I wonder if a better word is “planted”. The letters make clear where children have lead exposure risk. Lead in D.C. tap water, no, that’s fine – what can anybody do about THAT? House paint, environmental sources – nah! No, the real problem is industry and its “dosing” through children’s products. The last line of defense is the CPSIA. The three Dem Commissioners put it succinctly – change the law and poison children. Better to over-regulate than under-regulate because it’s a zero-sum game, right? As usual, the Dems don’t mention that THEY CAN’T PRODUCE EVEN ONE INJURY VICTIM FROM LEAD-IN-SUBSTRATE IN CHILDREN’S PRODUCTS. There are more than 50 million children in this country in the regulated age group and no one can find a single injury victim – EVER. Nonetheless they apparently think it’s perfectly fine to wag their fingers at us and accuse us of unspeakable acts. Who’d say anything, anyhow? Won’t get fooled again. . . . I guess we have a hint here how these people might vote on the technological feasibility of 100 ppm. Giving them an extra year to lower the boom won’t do anything to protect my employees or my customers – they are TELLING US that the die is cast. That’s because you and I apparently want to “dose” children with lead the first chance we get! They reinforce the hyperbolic tone by standing pat on the age limits under the CPSIA – we NEED the 12 year old limit. Why? Because Mommy says so. Junk science to the rescue! We can’t have kids eating their ATVs, can we? Does anyone wonder why trust in this agency is destroyed beyond repair? Who in the business community would ever expect to get a fair shake from these consumer group front men? Government for all us? Hardly. Defending themselves on a weak point, the Dems contend they are sympathetic to small business. Myself, I can’t measure commitment by limp and syrupy words of consolation – I look at what they do, not what they say. These people have done precisely ZIPPO for small business after three years of begging, pleading, screaming. I am tired of hearing about how much they CARE about small business. [Guess who drafted the letter?] As a friend of mine used to say, it’s bullpucky. Here’s a shocker: I actually agree with one thing these people say – that parents deserve safe products regardless of who makes them. Of course that makes sense (no one cares whether a tortfeasor is a big company or a small company) which is why I want sensible standards that apply equally to everyone. In this case, the government should stop telling us how to run our businesses. Make a reasonable set of standards based on a real and defined “substantial product hazard” standard and go from there. This is parent-friendly and quite workable for small business. Of course, my suggestion would make these Democrats much less important and certainly less heroic. Their letter makes clear who “saved” America – the CPSIA, the Dems in Congress and the Dems on the Commission. They’re the ones who really CARE. Won’t get fooled again . . . . Fittingly, the letter wraps up with words dripping with insincerity: ”Nevertheless, while it is true that no one, including us, wishes to over-regulate, similarly we cannot support under-protecting the American consumer, particularly our nation’s children.” In other words, the Democrat Commissioners are daring Congress to loosen the nose around out necks and are prepared to blame them if anything goes wrong. This also provides cover for zealot Senators who will make sure you have a great opportunity to go bankrupt or remain under the thumb of their out-of-control agency. I don’t think it’s much of a stretch to say it looks like a conspiracy – Democrats against you. It would be wrong to call this letter disillusioning. That happened a long time ago. It also conveys little new information. Anyone truly shocked by this letter by these authors has been asleep at the wheel for the last three years. This merely confirms or updates what we already knew. I don’t have a solution to people like this running the show. I can’t do anything about it. One of them, Thomas Moore, is now about six months past the end of his term. Maybe Congress forgot about him. Pay attention today. The stakes are high and getting higher. The CPSC is working against you. We will need keep fighting to survive.
The rest is here:
CPSIA – Three Dem CPSC Commissioners Accuse Industry (You) of Dosing Kids with Lead
CPSIA – Witness List for April 7th CPSIA Amendment Hearing
April 6, 2011 by Rachele
Filed under BLOG, Featured Articles
Memo to Members of the House Subcommittee on Commerce, Manufacturing and Trade: When you listen to Dr. Dana Best fling around numbers tomorrow, please remember that “bazillions” is not a real number. When she asserts that there are possibly “millions” of injured children from lead-in-substrate, please demand real, auditable data! The Witnesses: Panel 1 Mr. Robert Jay Howell Assistant Executive Director Hazard Identification and Reduction U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission Dr. Barbara D. Beck, Ph.D., DABT, FATS Principal Gradient Dr. Dana Best, MD, MPH, FAAP American Academy of Pediatrics Panel 2 Ms. Erika Z. Jones Partner Mayer Brown On Behalf of the Bicycle Product Suppliers Association Mr. Paul C. Vitrano General Counsel Motorcycle Industry Council Principal Ms. Sheila A. Millar Partner Keller and Heckman LLP Caroline Cox Research Director Center for Environmental Health Panel 3 Mr. Frederick Locker Locker Greenberg & Brainin PC Mr. Charles A. Samuels Member Mintz, Levin, Cohn, Ferris, Glovsky and Popeo, P.C. Mr. Dan Marshall Vice President, Handmade Toy Alliance Co-Owner, Peapods Natural Toys & Baby Care Ms. Rachel Weintraub Director of Product Safety and Senior Counsel Consumer Federation of America
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CPSIA – Witness List for April 7th CPSIA Amendment Hearing
CPSIA – Majority Staff Memo on CPSIA Amendment for April 7th Hearing
April 6, 2011 by Jolie
Filed under BLOG, Featured Articles
The Majority Staff memo on the CPSIA hearing was sent out to members of the committee to explain the CPSIA amendment ahead of the hearing. You can read it HERE
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CPSIA – Majority Staff Memo on CPSIA Amendment for April 7th Hearing
CPSIA – The Hill Publishes My Op-Ed on CPSIA Hearings
April 6, 2011 by Jolie
Filed under BLOG, Featured Articles
Enough already! It’s time to amend the lead law By Richard Woldenberg 04/06/11 02:51 PM ET After almost three years of bickering over the law regulating lead in children’s products, a comprehensive amendment is finally up for discussion in the House of Representatives. It’s about time. In August 2008, the 110th Congress passed the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act (CPSIA) in an overreaction to notorious lead-in-paint toy recalls. Claiming that weak regulation “caused” these violations of law (lead-in-paint has been illegal for decades), consumer groups coined a slogan to sum it up: “There is NO safe level of lead”. Stooping low to sow fear, they have even warned the CPSC about the perils of bicycle licking and playing brass instruments in the school band. Their lead slogan has been repeated endlessly to justify a stifling, over-reaching law which has accomplished little but damaged many fine companies, killed jobs and depressed markets. The CPSIA deems companies “guilty until proven innocent” by forcing them to test products over and over again at huge expense to prove compliance with the new lead standard. The screams of law-abiding companies have been consistently ignored by CPSC as it has implemented ever-harsher regulations under the new law. The safety agency is even considering ratcheting down permissible lead from 300 ppm to the unimaginably low 100 ppm level. Economics be damned! In contrast to the claims of CPSIA backers warning that the sky is falling, CPSC recall records list only four alleged lead injuries from 1999 to 2010 among the nation’s 50+ million young children. Advocates have never produced victim case histories to justify the draconian rules and simply wag their fingers at anyone daring to question their cherished law. As directed by Congress, the CPSC has dutifully banned the sale of rhinestones to children, ended the era of youth model ATVs and forbidden the use of brass bushings in toy car wheel assemblies. Why? They might emit a single atom of lead! The supporters of the law justify these extreme actions on the grounds that lead is a poison but somehow overlook that kids are exposed to more lead every day from eating a snack, drinking water or playing outside in the fresh air. The descent into regulation purgatory is down a slippery slope. Being governed by this law can give you fits. For example, to be able to continue to legally sell our geology kits to schools (featuring real rocks!), we must give this warning: “Caution: Federal law requires us to advise that the rocks in this educational product may contain lead and might be harmful if swallowed.” We don’t relish looking like idiots at the hand of the U.S. government. We’re certainly not alone in feeling the pain. The law affects many safe products spanning the U.S. economy, like books, t-shirts and shoes, ATVs and dirt bikes, bicycles, donated or resale goods, musical instruments, pens and educational products. The number of companies touched by the CPSIA is in the many thousands. The CPSIA was written in response to failings of big companies, but hammers small and medium-sized companies with particular vengeance. Our small business has already lost customers who now feel that selling toys is too confusing or too much of a “hassle”. Market shrinkage courtesy of the federal government is our new reality. The technical rules and ever-changing legal requirements are beyond the capability of all but the most highly-trained quality managers or lawyers to comprehend. For this reason, small businesses bear the greatest risk of liability under the law, despite being responsible for almost no injuries from lead in the last decade. The double whammy of massive new regulatory obligations and the prospect of devastating liability are driving small businesses out of the children’s market. Our family business makes educational products, and we work tirelessly to ensure that our products are safe. We have tested our products for decades now. None of us could ever tolerate lead poisoning. Nevertheless, I believe that our company should not be crushed by our government over some consumer groups’ phobias and junk science. The 112th Congress should know better after years of hearings, comment letters, op-eds, pleading and even direct appeals from the five CPSC Commissioners. To quote The Who, “We won’t get fooled again.” If Congress is serious about fixing our economy and creating jobs, it’s time to lift the yoke of the CPSIA and set the children’s product market free once again. Richard Woldenberg is Chairman of Learning Resources, Inc.
Original post:
CPSIA – The Hill Publishes My Op-Ed on CPSIA Hearings
CPSIA – What’s Missing from the CPSIA Amendment?
April 5, 2011 by Rick Woldenberg, Chairman, Learning Resources, Inc.
Filed under BLOG, Featured Articles
I have summarized my comments on the pending CPSIA amendment in my two prior blogposts.
CPSIA – What’s Missing from the CPSIA Amendment?
April 5, 2011 by Rick Woldenberg, Chairman, Learning Resources, Inc.
Filed under BLOG, Featured Articles
I have summarized my comments on the pending CPSIA amendment in my two prior blogposts.
CPSIA – Analysis of Pending House CPSIA Amendment (Sections 3-11)
April 4, 2011 by Rick Woldenberg, Chairman, Learning Resources, Inc.
Filed under BLOG, Featured Articles
Continuing with my analysis of the pending draft of the CPSIA Amendment:
Section 3

