CPSIA – Perpetrators of CPSIA Feel the Heat

Could we get this lucky? One of the Senators responsible for the penal phthalates ban in the CPSIA and a big CPSIA advocate, Barbara Boxer, seems to be fading in her effort to hold her “safe” seat in California. See “Poll: Fiorina beating Boxer in California“. In another CA race involving a featured performer in this space, Jerry Brown (Democratic candidate for governor) is in a dead heat with Meg Whitman. Mr. Brown has already occupied the CA governor’s mansion once before. This race is all about whether California voters learned their lesson last time.

Mr. Brown distinguished himself this week by suing bouncy house operators for lead-in-vinyl at the urging of the offensive Center for Environmental Health, bringing yet more prestige to the Golden State: “Jerry Brown: California’s top bouncy house cop saves the day” (”L’Affaire Bouncy partially explains why Jerry has been slowly unveiling his gubernatorial campaign and positions: He’s been busy investigating this insidious scourge of California’s families. Fight on, Attorney General, fight on! UPDATE: Spotting the hanging curve ball out over the plate, Team Whitman has quickly assembled and lawyered a response to the L’Affaire Bouncy, as if it needed one: ‘There’s something very ironic about Jerry Brown, of all people, investigating the combination of hot-air and make-believe,’ says Whitman spokesperson Sarah Pompei said.”).

I hate to be out-quipped but gotta hand it to the Whitman folks, that’s solid.

Of course, our dear Democratic leaders from California are also the innovative developers of the “Green Chemistry” initiative that will require that we all send in chemical analysis of all of our products for the state’s approval and remediation. This bonanza for safety has the potential to drive our company out of the CA market for good. California is the fifth largest economy in the world – we don’t want to leave it. The LA Times has consoled me with their assurance that we will all save money in medical expenses. We have descended into LaLa Land.

I remain stunned over this succession of deadly legislation all in a row. Even more shocking is how the Dems puzzle over WHY people are so angry about persistent unemployment or a lack of investment by business. Go figure.

Personally, I am cheering in all the races involving the principals behind the CPSIA, hoping for some additional unemployment in those districts (one job loss per district). In some cases, I am doing more than cheering. If you are also fed up and can’t go forward this way any longer, I URGE you to take dynamic steps to take back YOUR nation. These folks don’t own the place – you do.

Stay tuned!

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CPSIA – Perpetrators of CPSIA Feel the Heat

CPSIA – Let’s Count the Reasons to be Outraged by CEH

Perhaps like me, you felt a surge of fear and loathing today over the Center for Environmental Health’s effort hand-in-hand with CA Attorney General Jerry Brown to find products with “high levels of lead”. CEH announced to great fanfare that it had found seven items that violated the law, and Jerry Brown plowed right in behind with a cease and desist order, demanding that these items be removed from shelves immediately. Several of the affected companies denied categorically that there were violations of law. I assume that Proposition 65 lawsuits are being prepared, and suitable penalties will rain down from the heavens in due course (you know, in three years) to properly punish the “scofflaws”. Nice work, CEH.

CEH justifies its actions to destroy the children’s product industry with misleading facts about lead. Here’s how they describe the dreaded danger they are “protecting us” against:

“Lead is a stunningly toxic metal. A long list of problems has been linked to lead exposure: lowered intelligence, behavior problems, cancer, strokes, high blood pressure, kidney problems, anemia, cavities, and delayed puberty. While exposure to lead paint in old houses remains the most significant source of children’s lead exposure, about 30 percent of children with high blood lead levels are exposed to other sources of lead, including toys and other children’s products.”

They go on to list a parade of horribles, such as “University of Cincinnati researchers found that arrest rates of young adults (both for violent crimes and all arrests) were linked to the blood lead levels of these adults when they were children. Higher childhood lead exposure was associated with higher arrest rates.”

The interesting thing about these assertions about lead is that they are TRUE . . . and they are also IRRELEVANT in this case. There is absolutely no way to prove or even assert in any reasonable fashion that the products cited here could EVER poison children in this way or are responsible for ANY of the cited lead horrors. The CEH is just using plain vanilla scare tactics – did it work on you? Unfortunately, some newspapers bought it, hook line and sinker.

I hardly know where to start. Here are a few reasons to be flippin’ mad about this stunt:

I. The Seven Items Present Little or No Risk. Consider this list of “frightening” product defects:

a. Disney Tinkerbell Water Lily necklace – Connector on pixie dust charm contains 22,000 parts per million lead. [I believe this connector is perhaps 3 mm in diameter.]

b. Barbie Bike Flair Accessory Kit – Pink star fabric contains 6196 parts per million lead. [This is an item used on a bicycle.]

c. Dora the Explorer Activity Tote – Orange fabric on back of tote contains 2348 parts per million lead. [I believe his fabric is not detachable and cannot be chewed.]

d. [This one's my favorite] TKS girl’s sandals – Orange insole contains 3957 parts per million lead. [To access this lead, you must lick or chew on the INSOLE of a pair of sandals. Yum!]

e. Kids poncho – Yellow fabric contains 677 parts per million lead. [Gotta chew on your poncho.]

f. [This is a close second] Faded Glory girl’s shoes – Sole contains 1331 parts per million lead. [It's like my old joke about licking the soles of your shoes after walking to school. Happens all the time . . . .]

g. Cherokee boys belt – Surface of belt contains 4270 parts per million lead. [I have no idea what the problem is here. Still, belt chewing is exceptionally rare and not foreseeable in my opinion.]

I hope you haven’t begun rioting in the streets over these tragic “violations of law”. Let’s recap – this rogue’s gallery includes a CONNECTOR, the fabric of a decorative star on a bike accessory, backing on a tote, the INSOLE OF A SHOE, the SOLE OF A SHOE, a poncho and a belt.

Let me be blunt – how brain-damaged must someone be to actually believe these things are dangerous?

II. Cassandra Here, Have I Mentioned My Concern about State AGs? Ahem, I believe I have noted my strong concerns about State AG enforcement of the CPSIA in the past (note, especially my April 4 post about Mr. Brown). In fact, I made a big point of this issue in my unread letters sent to the Congressional conferees in July 2008 . . . to no avail. Obviously, I was way off in my thinking. Worrywart . . . .

How outrageous is Mr. Brown’s enforcement action? Well, he worked in concert with CEH apparently without talking to the CPSC. CEH practically brags about this (”In collaboration with the California Attorney General the Center for Environmental Health has spent the last six weeks monitoring compliance with the new law. . . . In October and November 2009 we purchased about 250 children’s products from major retailers in the Bay Area and San Diego. . . . We provided information about all of the violations to the California attorney general for enforcement action.”). The CPSC seems to be irrelevant to CEH and Mr. Brown.

Ahem, CPSC – what do you think about being rendered irrelevant by a grandstanding State AG and an even more disruptive consumer group? Welcome to my world. Ms. Tenenbaum, in your continuing efforts to cultivate a positive relationship with the State AGs, you may wish to reflect on the behavior of Mr. Brown and his apparent commitment to you and your efforts to calm the markets and implement the new law. Yes, commitment, that’s a nice word for it, don’t you think?

Here’s a word to ponder: “preemption”.

III. Publicity-Hungry Consumer Groups Have Proven Their Own Corruption. Stirring up this kind of public shame and panic may be good for raising contributions to CEH, but it is nothing more than a shameful demonstration of anti-social behavior. REAL JOBS and REAL LIVELIHOODS are impacted by CEH grandstanding and NO possible public good was accomplished by the latest losses inflicted by the new toy safety laws. Even CEH concedes things are much better these days (on CBS News, Executive Director Michael Green noted “It is definitely a safer Christmas than it was two years ago.”). Thanks, Mike, you have really reassured the American consumer!

CEH’s grandstanding over ridiculous assertions of danger is irresponsible and in light of Green’s concession of the safety of the marketplace, morally corrupt. Consider that in a six-week effort to find something “bad”, the CEH schemers examined 250 products, and all they could find is a connector to a charm, the sole of a shoe and the INSOLE of a shoe. Wow, what a smoking gun! However, with a hepped-up State AG perhaps preparing a gubernatorial bid, even these pathetic findings are the perfect makings for a publicity event.

As if these acts of desperation, self-interest or moral degradation were not enough, both CEH and State AG Brown then attempt to convince the public that these products actually constitute a danger. “‘Private testing uncovered a number of products designed for children that contain dangerous and illegal levels of lead,’ Brown said in a prepared statement. ‘These products must be removed from store shelves at once to protect our kids from toxic lead exposure.’” In the quote above, CEH contends that the presence of lead in products like this can be connected to “lowered intelligence, behavior problems, cancer, strokes, high blood pressure, kidney problems, anemia, cavities, and delayed puberty”. Oooh, sounds AWFUL – now prove it! CEH and their merry band of anti-commerce loonies can only assert these harms – NO data exists that can link lead in these manifestations to ANY physical harm. But what’s a good consumer group publicity event without unaccountable fear mongering?

Any sane adult or experienced parent knows that all this is baloney. This sad state of affairs confirms that the consumer groups do NOT deserve a leading role in setting the rules of the road in safety. They gave up the moral high ground when they decided to sell fear rather than advocate for safety.

Final Words: I was recently sent a blogpost link written by a consumer group about my testimony at the CPSC on November 10 about the CPSIA public database. Of course, since I am apparently a force from the Heart of Darkness (as you know), the consumer group blogpost scorned my testimony and painted the usual conspiracy theories that the wingnuts tend to favor. What was particularly notable about this post was the following note at the bottom of the page: “Comments are closed.”

Get it? The consumer groups like having the last word. They like spreading the news that best suits their interests but don’t want to answer to anyone else. [We have seen this before.] The consumer groups depend on the kindness of strangers – they need your contributions to pay their salaries. What better way to do this than sell their souls for some headlines? If you are the ones paying into their coffers with the thinking that they are looking out for you, I think you should carefully ponder the “good work” of Mike Green and his gang this week. Is this good for America? Is anyone safer now or better off? Or . . . are CEH and the other aligned consumer groups a bigger part of the problem than previously recognized?

After this stunt, I certainly hope no one will stick a microphone in Mike Green’s face again.

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CPSIA – Let’s Count the Reasons to be Outraged by CEH

CPSIA – Randy Swart Takes My Spot in PSL!

Never tiring of a good thing, the Product Safety Letter today published an Op-Ed by Randy Swart entitled “CPSC’s Guidance Is Not as Confusing as It May Seem“. Mr. Swart is the founder of the Bicycle Helmet Safety Institute. In this article, Mr. Swart replies to Rob Wilson’s Op-Ed in PSL on Resale Shops and Inez Tenenbaum in a way not exactly reminiscent of my rejected Op-Ed on the same subject. Recognizing the PSL’s reputation for “neutrality” and “accuracy and clarity”, I am trying to figure out why Mr. Swart got the nod over me. Could it be that Mr. Swart’s views might be more pleasing to the regulators that feed the PSL its life-sustaining information? Golly, that’s a head scratcher. . . .
Mr. Swart: “CPSC’s Guidance Is Not as Confusing as It May Seem”
RW: “Tenenbaum Silence on CPSIA Speaks Volumes”
Mr. Swart: “As all readers of Product Safety Letter know, CPSC is struggling to maintain any level of enforcement at all, and will not be going after yard salers!”
RW: “Scott Wolfson, a spokesman for the agency, said it wouldn’t be dispatching bureaucratic storm troopers into private homes to see whether people were selling recalled products from their garages, yards or churches. ‘We’re not looking to come across as being heavy-handed,’ he said. ‘We want to make sure that everybody knows what the rules of engagement are to help spur greater compliance, so that enforcement becomes less of an issue. But we’re still going to enforce.’”
Mr. Swart: “In fact, [the CPSC] would have no more idea than the parent which old toys contained phthalates or had lead in the paint, and would have to test to establish that. Finding recalled product would be looking for needles in haystacks. It just will not happen.”
RW: “After all, didn’t NY Attorney General Eliot Spitzer secretly inspect resale shops in 2003 and then release names and addresses to the media? Interestingly, Spitzer was joined by some of the same consumer advocates who are behind the CPSIA. The CPSC has the same power to embarrass.”
Mr. Swart: “It is not fair to blame the Commission or Congress for not grandfathering the dangerous toys in our market. We need to get them out of circulation [Ed. Note: Who, the Commission or Congress?], and that fact is independent from the enforcement of the CPSIA legislation. It will impose a hardship on some retailers, but that pales in comparison to the alternative–to tolerate the continuation of poisoning our children for years to come until those toys are worn out.”
RW: “’The [West Michigan] Salvation Army does not have thousands of dollars to spend on lead-testing equipment, so anything that looks suspicious — plastic toys, painted toys, toys with magnets or small parts, toys made in China — is pitched, said Robert Pierce, director of operations for the Salvation Army stores. Only about 20 percent of donations to the Salvation Army — compared to about one-third before the law — make it onto the store floor.’ The CPSC’s tough talk on enforcement is having a chilling effect on the business community – and that cost must be weighed when regulators get ‘tough’”.
Mr. Swart: “In fact, any threat of CPSC retribution is probably less real than the possibility of being sued by the buyer if someone is injured by a recalled product. That should give the yard saler pause if nothing else does. Many people trash some items that they would have sold or Freecycled because of that risk.” [And this guy thinks he is helping make a case for the CPSC and the new law???]
RW: “The agency previously played a critical role in setting safety priorities, assessing risks and interpreting the law. . . . The Chairman can show she is a leader by providing an honest assessment to Congress of the problems with CPSIA and mapping out the necessary changes. Ironically, none of this is about safety – it’s about a law that just doesn’t work.”
Okay, I can’t figure it out! Can you?
A couple final thoughts (can’t resist): Mr. Swart says “The chemical detoxification of America is just beginning, and this is one of the early skirmishes in a long war.” Please remember this blather. This is the mantra of the “everything-is-bad-for-you” crowd. If you want to see this mania in action, watch this video (and if you have the time and energy, the three other segments). This outlook is extremely dangerous but with Mr. Waxman as champion, threatens to infect federal regulation of many markets besides toys. This is the so-called “Precautionary Principle” and is the basis of the proposed amendment of the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA).
Second, in response to Mr. Swart’s comment “It will impose a hardship on some retailers, but that pales in comparison to the alternative–to tolerate the continuation of poisoning our children for years to come until those toys are worn out”, I want to reprint the words of a staffer from the office of Illinois’ own Senator Dick Durbin:
April 16, 2009: “I think you are right that the CPSIA imposes costs on businesses, and because of economies of scale it’s the smaller businesses that will feel these costs more acutely. This is part of a larger calculation that it’s worth the costs to shift from the old system of post-market correction (once a dangerous product is out in the market and leads to sick kids, recalls, lawsuits, etc.) to a new system of pre-market testing and certification (instead of just assuming products are safe and paying the price for false assumptions). . . .” [Emphasis added]
I can hardly express my joy at being a Congressionally-selected victim for the greater good of our country! Their “larger calculation” sounds so sophisticated. I will go out with a smile on my face.
The barf bags are over on the shelf on the left.

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CPSIA – Randy Swart Takes My Spot in PSL!

CPSIA – My Answer to Sean Oberle on Resale Shops and Tenenbaum

Some of you may have been following the recent debate in the Product Safety Letter (PSL) on the CPSC’s noxious Resale Roundup program. A wave of unfavorable media coverage has dogged the new CPSC initiative, noting the risk of high fines and the unwelcome intrusion of federal regulators into an innocent American ritual, the garage sale. A highly-publicized Fox News piece apparently triggered a response by CPSC Chairman Inez Tenenbaum in PSL on October 3 entitled “Garage Sales and CPSC — Sorting the Facts from the Myths“. In this piece, Ms. Tenenbaum promised not to fine garage sale operators, and chose to emphasize the CPSC’s noble goal of ending the resale of recalled products.

Next, Rob Wilson of Challenge and Fun, Inc., a Massachusetts-based toy company, published an Op-Ed in PSL on October 9 entitled “Consumer Confusion Comes From CPSC Guidance, Not the Media” in which he noted that the fear Ms. Tenenbaum sought to calm came not from media reports but instead from CPSC policy. In particular, he pointed out the impractical and confusing advice given in the CPSC’s own CPSC Handbook for Resale Stores and Product Resellers. Mr. Wilson closed with the following observation: “Chairman Tenenbaum vowed at her Senate confirmation hearing to bring a common sense approach to CPSIA implementation. We are still waiting for signs of common sense from the agency regarding CPSIA.” Ah, that “common sense” thing again!

Sean Oberle, owner, publisher and editor of PSL, replied to Mr. Wilson in his own publication on October 13 in an editorial entitled “Clarity and Accuracy — CPSC, the Media and Garage Sales” in which he defended Ms. Tenenbaum on the grounds that her limited statement did not constitute a comprehensive summary of her feelings or actions on the CPSIA. It’s a remarkable piece, I hope you will read it. [In his editorial, Mr. Oberle makes the following observation: "a quick search of the blogosphere and other new-media sites finds more pieces running the gamut from mild warnings to doomsday predictions" - hmmm.] Interestingly, Mr. Oberle stresses his “neutrality” and “defense of accuracy and clarity” THREE TIMES. Draw your own conclusions.

Well, I sent Mr. Oberle MY Op-Ed reply to the debate he not only published but contributed to. Suffice it to say, he turned me down. I am publishing the Op-Ed here for your review and consideration. I would be interested in your thoughts.

I think it is critical to reflect on this rebuff and to delve into its deeper meaning. [My ego can take it, btw.] The Product Safety Letter (along with BNA) was cited by John “Gib” Mullan (Assistant Executive Director, Office of Compliance and Field Operations, CPSC) as the definitive source for information on safety issues at last February’s ICPHSO meeting. An august publication, apparently. Yet, what does a stilted debate in PSL’s pages signify? Only Mr. Oberle can say for sure. My article asks Ms. Tenenbaum to be accountable for the actions of the CPSC in implementing the defective CPSIA. Mr. Oberle has already publicly stated his neutrality on agency issues several times. [Quoting from Hamlet, "The lady doth protest too much, methinks."] What’s going on here?

The American way of life is frankly dependent on our Constitutionally-guaranteed freedom of speech. The foundation of the visionary American system of a free media is its INDEPENDENCE. What if the media organs we depend on lose their independence? What if fear of retribution or a possible chilling in access to information challenges editorial decisions? In thinking about the end of the debate about the CPSC’s Resale Roundup in PSL, these questions resonate. I hope this is not the Obama Revolution we have all been hearing about.

My Op-Ed for your reading pleasure:

Tenenbaum Silence on CPSIA Speaks Volumes
Sean Oberle notes that CPSC Chairman Inez Tenenbaum in her recent PSL article “Garage Sales and CPSC — Sorting the Facts from the Myths,” chose to rebut sensational media reports on the CPSC’s new Resale Roundup initiative with reassurances about the limited purpose of the program and not to address other CPSIA issues. Mr. Oberle contends that it is unfair to characterize Ms. Tenenbaum’s response to Fox News as an indication of her indifference to those other dilemmas. Perhaps that may be true, but isn’t Ms. Tenenbaum’s silence on the messy aspects of the CPSIA also a serious issue worthy of note? That is precisely the problem today – a lack of accountability for CPSC inaction on the myriad issues under the CPSIA.
It is important to recognize that the controversy over Resale Roundup was created in part by the CPSC itself. The Fox News article quotes Ms. Tenenbaum: “Those who resell recalled children’s products are not only breaking the law, they are putting children’s lives at risk. Resale stores should make safety their business and check for recalled products and hazards to children.” In an August 20 article, McClatchy Washington Bureau writes: “Scott Wolfson, a spokesman for the agency, said it wouldn’t be dispatching bureaucratic storm troopers into private homes to see whether people were selling recalled products from their garages, yards or churches. ‘We’re not looking to come across as being heavy-handed,’ he said. ‘We want to make sure that everybody knows what the rules of engagement are to help spur greater compliance, so that enforcement becomes less of an issue. But we’re still going to enforce.’”
This is scary stuff. It is hard to take comfort in the CPSC Chairman’s soothing words in light of such tough talk. After all, didn’t NY Attorney General Eliot Spitzer secretly inspect resale shops in 2003 and then release names and addresses to the media? Interestingly, Spitzer was joined by some of the same consumer advocates who are behind the CPSIA. The CPSC has the same power to embarrass.
Even having reassured the public about the penalty policy in its Resale Roundup initiative, Ms. Tenenbaum fails to account for the negative consequences of her vigorous publicity campaign. As the Kalamazoo Gazette noted on September 30, “The [West Michigan] Salvation Army does not have thousands of dollars to spend on lead-testing equipment, so anything that looks suspicious — plastic toys, painted toys, toys with magnets or small parts, toys made in China — is pitched, said Robert Pierce, director of operations for the Salvation Army stores. Only about 20 percent of donations to the Salvation Army — compared to about one-third before the law — make it onto the store floor.” The CPSC’s tough talk on enforcement is having a chilling effect on the business community – and that cost must be weighed when regulators get “tough”. These terrible costs cannot be justified by the Resale Roundup’s meager accomplishments.
By emphasizing strict compliance and enforcement, the CPSC strikes a tone designed to appeal to those behind the new law. But in taking this position, the Chairman undermines her other messages of openness and partnership. In her speech of August 1 at the APEC Conference in Singapore, Ms. Tenenbaum stated: “My regulatory philosophy embraces open dialogue, information sharing with all stakeholders, and a commitment to finding mutual interests.” In her June 16 confirmation hearing testimony, Ms. Tenenbaum wrote: “While emphasizing the life-saving mission of the Commission, I will also ensure that industry knows that their views will be heard and considered.” Ms. Tenenbaum’s strident tone of firm enforcement erodes the trust she apparently sought to build with the business community in the early days of her administration.
Ms. Tenenbaum’s recasting of the Resale Roundup should not be judged in a vacuum. First, the CPSC seems to be embracing a strict liability enforcement policy on the strictures of the CPSIA. Just last week, the CPSC announced a recall of 40 inflatable toy baseball bats for violation of the controversial phthalates ban. You can hold 40 uninflated bats in one hand. Earlier, Target was fined $600,000 for lead-in-paint violations that occurred three years ago despite the fact that it had obtained passing test reports, had no actual knowledge of the problem, was increasing its safety vigilance at the time and voluntarily turned itself in to the CPSC. The Target settlement agreement (signed by the CPSC) deemed Target’s QC procedures “reasonable” and noted that it had “satisfied the standard of care” – yet Target was whacked with a huge penalty. We in the business community judge the CPSC by its actions, not its talk. These recent CPSC actions suggest that there is much to fear nowadays, notwithstanding Ms. Tenenbaum’s assurances to the contrary.
Second, the CPSC is still sitting on literally thousands of unanswered questions from the business community but is making no attempt to slow the CPSIA implementation process until these issues can be addressed. Some of these questions are more than a year old. Is that fair? Should this inactivity inspire confidence in a business community subject to the prospect of Target-style penalties? Finally, it is notable that the CPSIA phthalates testing standard has not been completed, exactly zero labs have been certified to perform phthalate tests since the August 14, 2008 passage of the CPSIA and the long-awaited component testing rule (noted as an urgent need by then-Acting Chairman Nancy Nord on January 30) is still unpublished even in draft form. Is this the right environment for a “trust me” message?
Chairman Tenenbaum’s message of vigorous but “friendly” enforcement may make a good sound bite, but the Chairman has yet to show any desire to make the agency anything more than Congress’ police force. The agency previously played a critical role in setting safety priorities, assessing risks and interpreting the law. This discretion was removed by CPSIA. The Chairman can show she is a leader by providing an honest assessment to Congress of the problems with CPSIA and mapping out the necessary changes. Ironically, none of this is about safety – it’s about a law that just doesn’t work. The torturous process of implementation of this law is causing corporate casualties every day. These disasters can only be avoided by doing the hard work now. An accountable Chairman Tenenbaum will be an effective Chairman Tenenbaum.

Rick Woldenberg is chairman of Learning Resources Inc. and the Alliance for Children’s Product Safety.

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CPSIA – My Answer to Sean Oberle on Resale Shops and Tenenbaum