CPSIA – CPSC’s Shameful Failure of Leadership

On Monday, the CPSC will decide whether or not to extend the testing and certification stay that has been in place for two years. The 16-page document which sets out the parameters of the decision does not mention risk anywhere. That’s because the law prohibits the CPSC from considering safety in its work under the CPSIA. [Ironically, the CPSC warns users that use of its www.SaferProducts.gov website is at their own risk (see par. no. 2 in the user's agreement) - and ironically, we're talking about a "dot gov" website, too!]

The CPSC explains that extension of the stay is only one of its options. It can do nothing, it can roll all the existing stays forward, or just some of them (to heck with the ATV’rs and the bike industry). Presumably, they will choose to roll all of it forward to September 14, 2011. We can all be screwed on the same day. I like the symmetry of that!

The CPSC has not lost sight of the issues. They know they haven’t finished their work. They note that two years ago on February 9. 2009 when the Commission first extended the testing stay. it was because delaying implementation of the testing requirement by a year “give[s] us the time needed to develop sound rules and requirements as well as implement outreach efforts to explain these [new] requirements of the CPSIA and their applicability.”

How time flies! That didn’t happen, so the Commission again extended the stay by another year on December 8, 2010. Why? Chairman Tenenbaum: “I voted to extend the stay on lead content testing and certification until February 10, 2011, in order to allow component testing adequate time to develop and to give our stakeholders adequate notice of new requirements.” Commissioner Robert Adler: “One of the primary rationales advanced for extending the stay is to await the effective date of the so-called 15-month rule.”

Where does the time go?? None of that ever happened. Hey, CPSC, take all the time you need!

So now the Commission is poised to kick the can down the road until September 14, 2011. Why that date? The CPSC Staff report notes that this gives the Commission time to sort out the new, lower lead standard due to be imposed on August 10, 2011. The CPSC is holding a hearing on February 14 on the feasibility of the 100 ppm standard. As Staff notes, if the Commission doesn’t determine that 100 ppm is feasible, then they will have to set a standard between 300 ppm and 100 ppm that is feasible. “Feasibility” was defined in the CPSIA, lest there should be any disagreement, to exclude ANY consideration of economics. In other words, if it’s possible at any price or under any condition, it is considered “feasible” and thus mandated by the law. I can save the CPSC some time – under that definition, it’s definitely feasible. Completely unreasonable and unnecessary but “feasible”.

The idea promoted in the Staff memo is that we will time to get used to all this if the stay lifts a month after the implementation of the new lead standard. [The concept of "learning disability" floats through my head. Have we heard this song before?] “Staff recommends that the Commission extend the stay to allow time for the Commission to determine whether it is technologically feasible to lower the amount of lead in children’s products to 100 ppm.” I guess once the Commission makes up its collective mind, the CPSC will wave a magic wand and make your business, your supply chain and your sales channel comply with the new rules in a matter of days. The fact that the rules are hazy after almost three years is no concern of theirs. Is it a concern of yours?

I love magical rules and magical plans! It must be a job requirement for Commissioners to be wizards, too.

All concerns over the “15 Month Rule” seem to have evaporated. This is presumably Robert Adler’s doing (see his statement above, which is a rant that the 15 Month Rule and the stay are separable issues). The Staff report intones: “While a Commission decision to extend the current stay of enforcement will give industry an opportunity to test and certify finished products and components according to the final rule and provide the Commission time to clarify any confusion regarding the new rule, it is not necessary for the testing rule to be complete to lift the stay as to the initial test for lead compliance.” Can’t see any problem there, can you???

The CPSC doesn’t want you to worry, however. They have apparently promulgated several documents that set out their policy and whatnot on lead, namely “Statement of Commission Enforcement Policy on Section 101 Lead Limits” (February 6, 2009) (6 pages); “Children’s Products Containing Lead: Interpretative Rule on Inaccessible Component Parts” (August 7, 2009)(32 pages); “Statement of Policy: Testing and Certification of Lead Content in Children’s Products” (October 2009)(5 pages); and “Interim Enforcement Policy on Component Testing and Certification of Children’s Products and Other Consumer Products to the August 14,2009 Lead Limits” (December 28, 2009) (4 pages). If these four documents totalling 47 pages don’t clear up everything, the CPSC is ready for you. “Manufacturers of children’s products can seek guidance for what the Commission considers reasonable and representative testing in these rules.”

You may have to wait a few years for a reply, but darn it, they’re going to answer your question. And that’s because they really CARE. We’re the government and we’re here to help!

A few more cock-ups aren’t deterring the agency. The phthalates standard is still undrafted, likewise the certification procedures for phthalate testing labs. Oopsie! Well, they’ve been busy . . . and the much fantasized-over component testing “market” has failed to materialize. Imagine that, businesses that inadvertently serve the children’s market with components or which derive a small percentage of sales from children’s products aren’t volunteering to test their items and expose themselves to the ravages of a crazy and out-of-control federal agency. Shocking!

Those of you who live in the past may recall my mentioning this very issue on November 6, 2008 (yes, 2008) when I addressed the CPSC Lead Panel. [It's a safe assumption no one was listening at the agency - opportunities for stakeholder feedback is not for listening, it's for venting.] I talked about the futility of expecting our suppliers of aluminum foil (widely used in schools in science kits) to test their products. After all, they are allowed to sell it for use with food without testing, so why should they test for me? If I asked them for a test for compliance with the CPSIA, they would certainly refuse and then ask in outrage why I was selling aluminum foil to kids anyway. As I said, who could see this coming? No one . . . .

For all the outrages that this sick situation brings to mind, NOTHING is as shameful as the CPSC’s refusal to admit that this is all administrative, bureaucratic nonsense (or use your own word for “nonsense”) that has nothing to do with SAFETY. Oh yeah, safety – isn’t that word in the name of this agency – the Consumer Product SAFETY Commission. What about safety, guys? Are you concerned about that anymore? This failure of leadership is the basic issue I have with the folks running the agency today. There’s a reason that bureaucrats are called “soul-less”.

The fact is that this administration at the CPSC (Democrats) will not stand up for what’s right – they are prepared to go down with the ship. It’s ironic that they remain so strident and so stubborn. Mr. Obama can smell change in the air and even he has called for reconsideration of the deluge of regulations. The Republicans in the House have declared war on over-regulations and the House Energy and Commerce Committee has made reform of the CPSIA the top priority of Mary Bono-Mack’s subcommittee.

As I have said again and again – this is YOUR government at work. Their shameful acts which are harming your markets and your business are destroying jobs, discouraging innovation and hurting children by impairing the activities of businesses devoted to children’s welfare. This intolerable situation will only be fixed when you MAKE it change. You can do it and you must. There is a new Congress in town and they need to hear from you. Don’t let the Democrats keep on wrecking your industry. This isn’t about safety and never was. This is politics, pure and simple.

Make them pay for their sins. Call your Congressman.

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CPSIA – CPSC’s Shameful Failure of Leadership

CPSIA – Washington Times SLAMS "Children’s Product" Definition

EDITORIAL:

Bureaucrats way out of tune
Government imposes regulations on children’s CDs and DVDs
By THE WASHINGTON TIMES

The Washington Times
7:09 p.m., Wednesday, October 13, 2010

The government wants to regulate Hannah Montana CDs and DVDs. The bureaucrats at the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) insist that the discs marketed to children be tested for lead, but when the same young starlet churns out raunchier material under her real name, Miley Cyrus, they will escape scrutiny. Never mind that the same 10-year-olds will likely end up buying both products.

For the rest of the article, please click here.

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CPSIA – Washington Times SLAMS "Children’s Product" Definition

CPSIA – Goodbye to Chemistry Sets

Goodbye to chemistry sets

Las Vegas Review Journal
October 1, 2010

Here come the federal regulators.

Many an adult who today makes a good living — and contributes to our standard of living — as an engineer or scientist first had his or her enthusiasm for the field kindled by a home or classroom science kit.

But as the modern nanny state gets busy, such inspiration may become a thing of the past.

The Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008, known as CPSIA, requires extensive — and expensive — safety testing of products designed or intended primarily for children 12 years of age or younger, checking for lead, chemicals, flammability and other potential dangers.

Now caught up in the Consumer Product Safety Commission’s debate about the act’s regulations are those classroom science kits and some of the items they contain — including paper clips, used to show kids how magnets work.

The science kit makers had asked for a testing exemption for the paper clips and some other materials. On Wednesday, in a close 3-2 vote, the commission declined to give them the waiver they sought.

Will the manufacturers spend hundreds of thousands of dollars for new tests to prove that paper clips are safe — or just leave them out? And how about home chemistry sets? We’re sure the Bunsen burners and asbestos heating pads of decades past are long gone. But will the chemicals themselves now have to be tested to find out whether they contain, you know … chemicals?

Will consumers now be carded when they buy things in the toy store .. to make sure they’re 13?

After the science kit vote, CPSC Chairman Inez Tenenbaum sought to reassure people that, “There is nothing in this rule that bans science kits.”

Right. But while the commission vote doesn’t ban the kits, manufacturers say it may crimp the supply of kits for elementary school children.

“If the first introduction a student has is seventh or eighth grade, you’ve lost them already,” warns Steve Alexander, business manager for the Hands On Science Partnership, based in Denver. The costs associated with “the testing requirements would far exceed the value of the materials in the kits,” he said.

The partnership is a coalition of companies that sell hands-on science educational materials.

Or used to.

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CPSIA – Goodbye to Chemistry Sets

CPSIA – It’s Raining Paper . . . .

I have previously made the point (again and again) that the paperwork involved in complying or even understanding the CPSIA has escalated to absurd and previously unimaginable levels. When I recently posted my latest video blog, I noted that MY count of the pages of rules implementing the CPSIA was over 1800. [The CPSC has not promulgated a list of these documents and some of them may not even be publicly available, so that's just my count - no one knows the true number.]

Since then, the paper shower has continued unabated. Here are a few new shovel fulls from your CPSC:

Definition of “Children’s Products”: 52 pages

Standard Operating Procedure for Determination of Phthalates: 8 pages

Proposed Rule: Conditions and Requirements for Testing Component Parts of Consumer Products: 69 pages

Draft Notice of Proposed Rule -Publicly Available Consumer Product Safety Information Database: 172 pages

Proposed Rule: Testing and Labeling Pertaining to Product Certification: 160 pages

Staff Briefing Package CPSIA Certification & Testing, April 1, 2010: 110 pages

Total pages: 571

In addition, public meetings of the Commission on Wednesday morning and all day on Thursday this week will feature major topics of great importance to those companies affected by the CPSIA. These will be Must Watch hearings. Hope you aren’t too busy running your business to stop what you are doing and tune in all day.

There cannot be any rational expectation by the CPSC that businesses interested in the development of CPSIA implementation rules could POSSIBLY keep up with this torrent of paper and hearings. The impracticality of participating in this process means that it is a railroad job, plain and simple. It is intentional, too – overwhelming the regulated community is one way to silence the critics.

Despite the absence of any credible evidence that such a massive expansion in safety rules is justified by injury statistics or any form of safety data from marketplace, the CPSC is in the process of gleefully converting the safety rules governing children’s products into something approaching the Internal Revenue Code in complexity. The compliance burden on businesses will be overwhelming – or simply impossible in a practical sense. As important as Ms. Tenenbaum’s instant death rules are, running our operating businesses will take priority for most people.

With this inundation of complexity, the point of capitulation is upon us. Add to this the known risk of mega penalties. Remember, this CPSC has warned businesses not to dare resist it. The consequences of resistance can be interpolated from the Daiso penalty – $2.05 million for recalls of 698 pieces in five recalls of 19 products over two years without a single reported injury. [Imagine what Mattel or RC2 would pay today under this enforcement scheme. I wonder if my calculator has enough digits for that number . . . .] Ms. Tenenbaum has demonstrated that she will have no reluctance to sic the U.S. Attorney on us for our transgressions without regard to actual market impact, striving to impose “a very high hurdle to jump over to ever get back in the import business again”.

This approach to regulation is an irresponsible act by our government and very damaging to the market. It’s naive and shortsighted, but in the “Father Knows Best” world wrought by Mr. Obama, it’s useless to attempt to reason with the regulators. The promised “dialogue” with the regulated community has been exposed as a sham. It’s hard not to conclude that businesses have now been deemed evil by nature. Otherwise, how do you explain the paper blizzard? Sadly, none of this holds any prospect of making kids safer.

I hate the feeling of shouting in a vacuum. I am not sure what will trigger a revolt against this insanity. Does another work assignment of 600 pages anger you . . . yet? The mountain is at about 2500 pages to read now, and there’s more to come. What outrages will have to take place before you resist?

This may be too urgent to wait for November. Think about how you will deal with penalties for complying with rules you have never read, cannot possibly read and may not even understand. This regulator has already acted to put a minor player out of business. Are you next?

It’s time to act with a sense of urgency. Your customers, your employees, your stakeholders are counting on you.

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CPSIA – It’s Raining Paper . . . .