CPSIA – Analysis of Pending House CPSIA Amendment (Sections 1 and 2)
April 4, 2011 by Rick Woldenberg, Chairman, Learning Resources, Inc.
Filed under BLOG, Featured Articles
[This is a long essay - I apologize.
CPSIA – How Important is Testing After All?
December 21, 2009 by Rick Woldenberg, Chairman, Learning Resources, Inc.
Filed under BLOG, Featured Articles
Let’s zoom up to 40,000 feet and look down on the CPSIA mess. If Martians were watching this affair unfold before their uncomprehending eyes, what would they think?
In 2007/8, a large number of toy recalls and jewelry recalls dominated the newspaper headlines. A closer examination of these recalls shows that they were largely restricted to lead-in-paint and lead-in-jewelry, but few people bothered with the details – hysteria was a lot easier. Sold on a rationale that it is “impossible” to know if something’s safe without testing it, Congress wrote up legislation to require prophylactic testing of all children’s products, a mind-boggling array of products ranging from pens to t-shirts to science kits to ATVs to shoes.
Being entirely unable to anticipate any problems with this brilliant construct, Congress was shocked to find that the CPSC couldn’t implement these requirements without crushing small businesses (among others). A finger-pointing contest broke out, where Congress insisted that the CPSC had the power to implement the new law with “common sense” (read, make up law to make the whiners go away) and the CPSC pushed back that it lacked regulatory flexibility under the CPSIA and legally was forbidden to assess risk. Standoff!
Of late, a weary and perhaps more sensitive CPSC is now taking a more conciliatory stance, expressing an interest, in the words of Ms. Tenenbaum, “to get it right”. Aside from soliciting feedback from stakeholders, the agency is clearly trying to draft rules permitting small companies to reduce their compliance costs. The net effect: testing is ebbing away. Now with component testing, it is possible for companies to get out of testing altogether for many of their products. Other rules, like flexible rules on rules on sampling and testing frequency, among other rules being crafted, are further reducing the testing burden. [I strongly support this movement by the CPSC, let there be no doubt.]
But I am confused now. Rachel Weintraub of the Consumer Federation of America famously taught us that “Businesses’ assertion that they’re having to test products they know are safe is absurd. You only know if a product is safe if it’s been tested.” [Emphasis added.] Yet the CPSC seems to be pulling away from Ms. Weintraub and her wisdom on testing. Is testing critical or not? Is safety achievable in other ways (perhaps various elements in combination)? If testing isn’t so essential after all, what’s really going on here?
I have a theory to share on this question: The recent movement by the CPSC on testing is tacit acknowledgement of our argument that there is more to safety administration than testing. Furthermore, the ebbing of testing requirements is a further acknowledgement that we are not facing a massive public health crisis in children’s products – and never were. Yes, that means poison zippers, brass bushings, ATVs, pens and bikes really is a joke, as you thought. So why the big fuss, why isn’t everyone linking arms and singing Kumbaya, if there is acceptance that a lesser standard will be sufficient to ensure safety?
It’s simple – the issues go beyond this law, and that’s why the Dems in Congress will budge. In fact, we are pawns in a bigger game, namely the battle to establish the precautionary principle in the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA). This is Mr. Waxman’s dream legislation, his effort to rein in the chemical industry. The folks behind the TSCA reform legislation are deeply suspicious of chemicals in our lives and want to regulate them on a precautionary basis, not entirely unlike the way we approve drugs. It’s the “fear of everything” all over again but BIGGER.
How does this tie back to the CPSIA? We are the test case, kids. The CPSIA was the first skirmish in the TSCA war. The two substances regulated on a precautionary basis under the CPSIA, lead and phthalates, either make or break the case on TSCA. If the Dems give in to our demands and acknowledge that their precautionary scheme didn’t work, that it ate up the regulatory agency (now nicknamed the Children’s Product Safety Commission), then how can they win approval of TSCA?
This is why the Dems are so resistant to rational change of this ridiculous law. This is why they won’t listen to reason or consider facts. The facts are contrary to their larger goals, so they need to ignore them or deny them. In this context, it is better to send us down the river than deal with our issues. Although their tough testing scheme is being unraveled, they won’t admit that it means that the crisis never was; without a crisis to fix, the entire logic of the CPSIA and their precautionary trial balloon fizzles. The Dems must insist that the crisis is still severe and that there is only one solution, the precautionary principle. Otherwise, they don’t get TSCA.
[Side note: There was a "telltale" in the Waxman amendment to the CPSIA last week on TSCA. A big issue in TSCA reform legislation is the possible use of "junk science" to justify removing valuable chemicals from use in our country. With all the self-appointed consumer representatives clamoring for a chemical-free world, there is good reason to fear manipulative use of science under TSCA to disrupt the chemical industry. It's no different than the misuse of lead toxicity and antimony health effects by consumer groups to attack toys and other children's products under the CPSIA. Some people have been insisting on a "peer-review" standard for these scientific challenges to chemical use - which Mr. Waxman fear may hobble his precautionary principle law. This term is used in Section 101 (b) in the CPSIA to make it more difficult to get exemptions - but was stripped out of the law in Mr. Waxman's unilateral amendment. See my first blogpost on his amendment. His "generous act" in removing this ridiculous stumbling block wasn't a signal of increasing sympathy with our problems. No, in fact, it was simply aimed at resolving one of his problems with TSCA.]
I have no easy answers for how this ends. If you feel your anger welling up, you’re not alone. Actually, I think the regulators are sick of it, too. The CPSIA has truly consumed the CPSC and made the daily affairs of that agency some kind of purgatory for the staff there. I can’t imagine it’s much fun being a Commissioner either. Frankly, the biggest shame of all is that by Congress (the Dems, really) insisting on an unworkable scheme for reasons unrelated to children’s product safety, the agency has been rendered ineffective, bureaucratic and stuck in gridlock. The CPSC’s essential role has been mooted. That’s bad for everybody – in a perfect world, the agency is free to do its job and look for real safety problems to solve. Instead, it has to spend its time figuring out whether water slides are primarily intended for children and the like. What a tragic waste.
In the wake of last week’s demise of the Waxman amendment and the extension of the lead content Stay, we must retain our focus and continue to push hard for a change in the law. The facts are piling up and the excuses for inaction are fading. It’s time for action – for the good of consumers, for the good of industry and for the good of the CPSC.
Read more here:
CPSIA – How Important is Testing After All?
CPSIA – My Ruling on Brass Bushings
October 16, 2009 by Rick Woldenberg, Chairman, Learning Resources, Inc.
Filed under BLOG, Featured Articles
The Learning Curve request for exemption for brass bushings on their toy cars is still pending at the CPSC. It is supposedly up for a vote this week. As I have noted in two prior blogposts, this decision will set an important precedent for a number of other products. If, as expected, the Commission votes down the LCI request, brass will be essentially banned in all children’s products, except for the pretzel logic of the pen decision (previously derided in this space). [The logic in the pen decision has never reappeared in another CPSC decision, and therefore should not be used as precedent for ANY other situation under the CPSIA until it actually reappears as part of CPSC common law. The pen decision was simply a gift to the writing implement industry, such as a convoluted and fantastic legal decision can be a gift.]
Among the anticipated victims of the LCI decision (to recap):
- Toys
- Connectors of all kinds
- Brass zippers, grommets and other apparel and footwear components and accessories
- Brass instruments (rentals to schools, certainly), musical bells and certain strings used in string instruments
- Children’s jewelry
It is worth noting, amateur scientists in Congress, that brass has germicidal properties which is one reason why brass is used in doorknobs (icky germs!). Might actually be useful in some children’s products for this reason . . . .
The presence of brass in daily life is an immutable fact. If the CPSC bans brass in children’s products because of the idiotic CPSIA, NOTHING will eliminate the following uses of brass in the daily life of children:
- House keys (good for sucking)
- Doorknobs and locks (touching and licking?)
- Plumbing fixtures and drinking fountains (touching and sucking)
- Pipes to convey potable water (assuming those pipes aren’t made of pure lead)
- Components in cell phones (definitely good for licking)
- Clocks, antiques, artwork (touching)
- Railings (licking)
- Jewelry (sucking)
- Guns and ammunition (no comment)
- Tools (you can poke out an eye with a tool!)
- Etc. etc. etc.
This does not even address the widespread presence of lead in, among other things, our food system, our potable water and our air. There are federal safety standards for allowable lead content in each category. Children are known to consume food, water and air throughout their daily lives without interruption. The obliviousness of the CPSIA in setting such stiff standards for bio-unavailable lead-in-substrate in children’s products in the context of these other lead instances is shameful – and the source of the current issues with brass.
The CPSC Staff has determined that the CPSIA does not allow an exemption for brass bushings. In the understatement of the year, the staff concluded “that the estimated exposure to lead from children’s contact with the [LCI] die-cast toys would have little impact on the blood lead level.” Staff states clearly that they consider brass bushings safe and that the lead transmission from brass bushings is inconsequential and certainly not rising to the level of a hazardous substance. Unfortunately, the Commission has thus far shown no interest in taking bold stands and rejecting the legitimate legal (but nonsensical) conclusions of the CPSC Staff under the CPSIA. Common sense be damned.
In a perfect world (what a joke), the Commission’s decision in this case would hold that although LCI brass bushings are caught up in the limits of the CPSIA, they present NO substantial hazard to children, and therefore using their seldom-used discretion, the Commission grants an exemption for brass bushings in children’s products conditionally. The decision would explicitly state that this decision should be taken as precedent for brass in all children’s products (to cut down on repetitive exemption requests). The decision would be dependent on TWO CONDITIONS, namely that: (a) the particular use of brass in children’s products is not known or held by CPSC Staff to present a substantial hazard to children under the FHSA, and (b) the exemption will be lifted when Congress acts to ban brass from everyday life and takes concrete steps to retrofit America for a brass-free future, replacing all brass doorknobs, artwork, cell phones, keys and locks, plumbing fixtures and water pipes (including, what the heck, lead pipes, too) and so on. For so long as brass remains part of children’s daily life in their home and school environments, the CPSC will not act to restrict brass in children’s products.
The Commission, using common sense not previously known in the CPSIA era, would note that banning brass bushings would be utterly ineffective to change the net exposure of children to lead in their lives but would wreak terrible losses upon the marketplace. Senseless economic destruction is un-American and lacks a social conscience since the losses will be spread ratably throughout society among suppliers, sellers and consumers of all things brass. Finally, the Commission would note that unless and until its decisions to restrict children’s products materially impact safety, the Commission will not keep safe products or components off the market for technical violations of the CPSIA. Brass bushings, in my fantasy, would be granted an exemption to the awful CPSIA.
This idle fantasy can come true if the Commission summons up the courage to act sensibly and to stop being complicit in the shoddy legislative work of Congress. As an independent agency of the U.S. government, NOT a subsidiary of the legislative branch or an organ of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, the CPSC has the authority to make up its own mind and to set rational policy. It’s time that the Commission draw a line for one and all to see. Especially Mr. Waxman.
Read more here:
CPSIA – My Ruling on Brass Bushings

