CPSIA – Nancy Nord Op-Ed on the Wasteful 100 ppm Lead Standard
July 21, 2011 by Rick Woldenberg, Chairman, Learning Resources, Inc.
Filed under BLOG, CPSIA Updates, Featured Articles
From the Washington Times (July 18, 2011): NORD: Playing around with toy makers Stricter lead regulations will cost jobs without making children’s products safer The Obama administration has recognized that excessive and unnecessarily burdensome regulation is a drag on the economy. As the administration has worked to promote job creation, it has publicized its efforts directing agencies to eliminate or revise unnecessarily burdensome and inefficient regulations. Apparently, the Consumer Product Safety Commission has not gotten the word. The commission’s failure to get the word is no more apparent than in its efforts to implement the Consumer Product Safety Improvements Act. The legislation was enacted after agency recalls of imported products illuminated the issue of import safety. The goal of the law is to assure that products intended for children are safe, a goal for which there is universal agreement. The devil, of course, is in the details, and the details of implementing this laudable statutory goal are devilish for sure. For the rest of the article, please click here .
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CPSIA – Nancy Nord Op-Ed on the Wasteful 100 ppm Lead Standard
CPSIA – WSJ’s NINTH EDITORIAL Opposing the CPSIA
July 20, 2011 by Rick Woldenberg, Chairman, Learning Resources, Inc.
Filed under BLOG, CPSIA Updates, Featured Articles
REVIEW & OUTLOOK JULY 20, 2011 Toying With Deregulation Another agency ignores Mr. Obama’s executive order. Here’s a question for White House regulatory czar Cass Sunstein: Do Presidential executive orders mean anything? Only last week President Obama asked independent agencies to examine existing rules and get rid of the duds, but nobody is listening. Within days of the executive order, the Consumer Product Safety Commission voted 3-2 that it is “technologically feasible” to impose a lower limit on lead content in children’s products, reducing the level to 100 parts per million from 300 parts per million. The new limit, which will go into effect August 14, will mean one more round of hair-pulling for small business owners who will have to change their manufacturing processes and junk existing products that don’t meet the new standard. The three votes in favor came from Mr. Obama’s chairwoman Inez Tenenbaum and two other Democratic commissioners. The Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act passed in 2008 in a frenzy of concern over lead content in toys from China, and it has since tormented anyone who makes or sells bicycles, books, children’s jewelry and so much more. Its strictures have imposed costs for testing, recalls and other inconveniences without any reasonable correlation to the risks to children. “No sweetheart, don’t eat that bicycle!” According to the CPSC, the plan to require that products be 99.99% lead free is reasonable because manufacturers would still be able to find materials and because some products already comply. While the additional safety gain will be negligible, the change will do damage in other ways, causing companies to avoid recycled metal and plastic, which may contain higher amounts of lead. It will also raise costs for metal parts, potentially driving some businesses to substitute plastic for metal, or stop producing children’s products. In the bicycle industry, a quarter of manufacturers have stopped making kids bikes. Instead of fixing its manifest flaws, Congressional Democrats who wrote the law have shrugged off small business complaints and opposed any changes. Energy and Commerce Chairman Fred Upton and Commerce, Manufacturing and Trade Subcommittee Chair Mary Bono Mack introduced reforms earlier this year that would revise the law and give the CPSC greater authority to make regulation decisions based on actual risk. The bill is waiting for a mark-up at full committee but any reprieve would likely come too late for businesses facing the mid-August deadline. Mr. Obama’s recent executive order is voluntary, but the President told agency heads that getting rid of red tape was an opportunity to “forge a 21st-century regulatory system that makes our economy stronger and more competitive.” Perhaps Mr. Sunstein will tell toy makers it’s the thought that counts.
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CPSIA – WSJ’s NINTH EDITORIAL Opposing the CPSIA
CPSIA – Alliance for Children’s Product Safety Reacts to 100 ppm Decision
July 13, 2011 by Rick Woldenberg, Chairman, Learning Resources, Inc.
Filed under BLOG, CPSIA Updates, Featured Articles
The Alliance for Children’s Product Safety, a coalition of small business owners, manufacturers, crafters and entrepreneurs who are impacted by the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act (CPSIA), issued the following statement regarding the CPSC’s passage of the 100 ppm for lead content rule today by a vote of 3-2. “Today, just three days after President Obama issued an Executive Order instructing the CPSC and other independent agencies to examine all rules for ineffective and unnecessary burdens and instructed the agency that decisions should be made only after consideration of the costs and benefits of new regulations, the CPSC enacted yet another costly rule that will do nothing to improve product safety but will cause further job losses in the children’s product market. The CPSC has already acknowledged that businesses will not be able to meet the 100 ppm lead standard without cost and disruption, and that consistent compliance with the new standard will be nearly impossible due to material and inter-lab variability and regulatory uncertainty. Most importantly, overwhelming costs imposed by the new standard will disproportionately affect smaller companies. On the other side of the ledger, the CPSC admits the health benefits of the new standard will be ‘minimal’. President Obama’s Executive Order states ‘Wise regulatory decisions depend on public participation and on careful analysis of the likely consequences of regulation. . . . To the extent permitted by law, such decisions should be made only after consideration of their costs and benefits (both quantitative and qualitative).’ The President’s order notes the duty of the CPSC to regulate for public health and safety ‘while promoting economic growth, innovation, competitiveness, and job creation.’ The new rule fails Mr. Obama’s test. It is disappointing that the majority of CPSC Commissioners ignored the explicit terms of the President’s order governing regulatory excess. The 100 ppm standard is a prime example of the economic self-destruction caused by the CPSIA: the imposition of costly and burdensome regulations that don’t improve product safety. It is now up to Congress to fix the numerous ‘unintended consequences’ of the CPSIA before more small businesses are forced to go out of businesses and more jobs are lost.” The Alliance for Children’s Product Safety, Chaired by Rick Woldenberg, is a coalition of small business owners, manufacturers, crafters and entrepreneurs who are impacted by the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act (CPSIA). For additional information, please visit www.AmendTheCPSIA.com or contact Caitlin Andrews at 202-828-7637.
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CPSIA – Alliance for Children’s Product Safety Reacts to 100 ppm Decision
CPSIA – Hey Republicans, You Aren’t Allowed to Think!
July 13, 2011 by Rick Woldenberg, Chairman, Learning Resources, Inc.
Filed under BLOG, CPSIA Updates, Featured Articles
During the July 7th House Energy and Commerce Committee’s Oversight Subcommittee hearing on regulatory reform among independent agencies (a hearing which presumably prompted Obama’s Executive Order two business days later), Ranking Member Diana DeGette (D-CO) trotted out one of the most common arguments against change: “I want to talk . . . about the recent proposals on the other side of the aisle that would undermine the Consumer Product Safety Commission and some of the other good work that they’ve done. Three years ago, this Committee and this Congress worked hard in a significantly bipartisan manner to put meaningful reforms for consumers into the [CPSIA]. This has yielded unbelievable benefits. . . . So I think it’s important to know this, that these reforms were worked out by this Committee in one of the last great efforts that was completely bipartisan. We should embrace that.” This is a familiar argument by Dems. The law passed almost unanimously, guys, so it’s wrong to try to change the law now. What logical point is DeGette making here? How is this argument supposed to persuade us? At first, I thought the Dems were simply arguing the infallibility of Congress. Congress never errs, so how can we doubt something every Congressman voted for? Congress is all-knowing and cannot pass a bill without doing the right thing. [And as Obamacare indicates, Congress apparently doesn't even need to read the bills to get them right.] To argue that this law is a product of infallible judgment is quite a leap. Even the unanimity of the law hardly explains the mental state of Congress at the time. Congress was ANGRY. Have you ever said or done anything in anger you later regretted? ‘Nuf said. No, an infallible Congress cannot be what Ms. DeGette is pushing. Actually, I think it’s far simpler. She is saying that the Dems were right and are still right and have no need or interest in changing their position. She points out that the two parties agreed on the law’s text in 2008 and passed it almost unanimously. Now the Republicans want to make serious changes. She says the Republicans should return to their bipartisan brothers, the Dems, and support the work they did three years ago. She essentially calls into question the motivation of the Republicans in opposing the Dems now, suggesting that this is a by-product of a broken Washington, where partisan posturing is all we can expect from these people. At the heart of her reasoning is the fact that the Dems are holding their course behind the law, and the Republicans have moved, and now she wants the Republicans to be more “bipartisan” by returning dutifully to agreement with the unwavering Dems. Or is it the intransigent Dems? A matter of perspective, I suppose. Come back to the fold with the Dems! DeGette’s argument relieves the Dems of any obligation to reconsider ANYTHING. How convenient. How Waxman-like. Here’s something the Dems won’t tell you – the law was jammed down the throats of the Republicans in both Houses of Congress. Congress was controlled by Nancy Pelosi at the time (she of San Francisco, of course). The CPSIA was purpose-built for getting Democrats elected and was not negotiated with the Republicans in any sense you would recognize. On the national stage, the Obama wave was cresting at that time, too, so what do you think the political calculation was in the Bush White House and in the Minority ranks in either House on the CPSIA? The Republicans knew that any opposition to any aspect of this law, regardless of how awful, would mean attack TV commercials on support for children’s safety at a time of great electoral vulnerability. Bush agreed to sign the bill to protect his party, not to protect kids. At least it neutralized a possibly existential political threat. Each Republican Congressman or Senator had to make a similar political calculation. Only four people (Ron Paul and three Senators) were politically courageous enough to stand up against this excessive bill. It is certain that far more than four members of Congress found fault with the CPSIA at the time. The 2008 “great bipartisan effort” that DeGette romanticizes is an urban legend, a fiction, a fairy tale, a story. She wants to cow the Republicans into losing their political nerve at this critical juncture when some kind of momentum behind our position may actually be growing. She wants them to think ballot box. And for those of you who pepper me with defense of Dems or reminders of past Republican “sins”, all I can say is this: the Republicans have nothing to gain politically from their three-year effort to right this wrong. They are taking electoral risks to help us, and have been unwavering in their support of our mission. I can only believe that this is because they actually are trying to do the right thing. This has never been about policy or safety. The Republicans know that this issue has been played for political gain by the Dems with no remorse over the devastation they have wrought to your businesses, your markets or job creation. For them, it’s just too juicy an opportunity to get reelected. And if that’s so, it must be the reverse for the Republicans. The Republicans are taking this risk on your behalf, for your benefit. I hope there’s a nice occasion to say “thank you”. In the meantime, the likes of Diana DeGette must be vanquished.
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CPSIA – Hey Republicans, You Aren’t Allowed to Think!
CPSIA – Letter to CPSC re Executive Order on Regulatory Review
July 12, 2011 by Rick Woldenberg, Chairman, Learning Resources, Inc.
Filed under BLOG, CPSIA Updates, Featured Articles
President Obama issued an Executive Order yesterday instructing the CPSC to institute “retrospective analysis of rules that may be outmoded, ineffective, insufficient, or excessively burdensome, and to modify, streamline, expand, or repeal them in accordance with what has been learned.” Notably, the order specifies “allowing interested members of the public to have a meaningful opportunity to participate in rulemaking”. In the White House blog announcing the Executive Order, Inez Tenenbaum is quoted as follows: “Earlier this year, I directed agency staff to reinvigorate CPSC’s voluntary review process, which is intended to look at ways to maximize openness and public participation, and effectively review substantive regulations that may require revision, repeal, or strengthening . . . . I believe this approach is consistent with President Obama’s call for a sensible and streamlined regulatory system that is protective of public health and safety, and I look forward to working with the President and Congress, as appropriate, as our review process moves forward.” As you know, I have participated in CPSC public forums numerous times in the last three years, in addition to testifying before a House subcommittee twice on the CPSIA. I have testified at the CPSC at least five times by my count, several times at the invitation/request of the agency. I have done so at my expense. In each case, I believe my testimony was disregarded. My positions on the CPSIA have been publicly documented, principally in my blog which I know you read. My positions have been consistent and backed up by data open to anyone’s review. Now that the CPSC is subject to an Executive Order demanding real public input, I call on the agency to break with its past of disregarding inconvenient opinions or those that may subvert a political agenda, and allow the public to participate MEANINGFULLY in this critical process. Those of us who have attempted to stop the CPSIA train wreck have been thoroughly marginalized by a process that uses us to create an impression of public dialogue without actually taking any meaningful feedback or adjusting any preexisting plans. The President did not order the agency to provide a public forum for VENTING. He has ordered the CPSC to afford the public a “meaningful opportunity to participate in rulemaking”. To me, the Executive Order means that when we present reasoned arguments with actual data, the agency has NO OPTION other than to listen and take into account our views. There is nothing in the Executive Order that indicates that consumer groups speak for the public or should be accorded extra weight in your deliberations, nor that manufacturers are somehow excluded from the group considered to be “the public”. It is time to recognize the legitimacy of the views of those of us who create much-needed jobs. With that in mind, I call your attention to a blogpost I wrote on cost/benefit analysis of CPSC decisions and policies under the CPSIA. Please see my post ” Do Accidents Happen? ” dated June 29th. In this post, I explain that, as a matter of accepted economic theory and legal theory, the policies and decisions of the CPSC in the wake of the CPSIA have crossed the line into inefficiency and bad public policy. This is PRECISELY the issue that the President has charged the agency with investigating and resolving. Speaking as a business owner in the field of children’s products, I can assure you that time is of the essence. Every day counts at this point as the cumulative impact of three years of CPSIA duress has taken a terrible economic toll with virtually no identifiable public health benefit. Writing a law with noble intentions does not ensure that it will be good law or one that benefits society. In the case of the CPSIA, the issue has never been “What price safety?” A failure to effectively enforce the law prior to the CPSIA never constituted a need for new safety rules anymore that a failure to enforce traffic laws means that we need lower speed limits. New approaches to enforcement, perhaps, but new standards, no. The question today is “What price survival”? Businesses and markets have been punished mercilessly in service of the CPSIA but to what end? President Obama’s order comes after years of public outrage over regulatory excesses and significantly, was issued shortly after a House Oversight hearing featuring two CPSC Commissioners examining the question of economy inefficiency in rulemaking. I fully believe that the agency can never fix this mess without taking a strong stance on real CPSIA reform. The CPSIA took away the agency’s right to assess risk, not its ABILITY to assess risk. This is a truly counterintuitive approach to safety, as safety is all about risk management. There is no logic to this approach which sadly renders the expert opinions of the CPSCs legions of Ph.D.s meaningless at critical junctures for my market. I am frustrated, to put it mildly, that ALL CPSC Commissioners do not regularly protest this subversion of process and responsibility. This problem is at the core of the issue with the CPSIA and should be offensive to Democrats and Republicans alike. The failure of any Commissioner to demand the right to exercise his/her honest judgment is akin to acknowledging that they do not trust themselves to act prudently and in the interest of the public. Do the Commissioners really believe that taking away their authority is necessary to ensure sound decision-making? That reasoning never worked with my teenagers. Resolving the issues that the President has ordered the CPSC to examine will certainly require the exercise of judgment. It is inescapable that the Commission must be prepared to deliver this unpleasant news to Congress for better or worse. I look forward to a meaningful public process investigating these issues, and pledge my support and engagement in this process. I want to be helpful but ask in return that the agency turn over a new leaf and let rational arguments supported with data influence outcomes in CPSIA rulemakings and policies. Please do not hesitate to contact me with your comments and questions. Thank you for considering my views on this important subject. Respectfully, Richard Woldenberg Chairman Learning Resources, Inc. Vernon Hills, Illinois
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CPSIA – Letter to CPSC re Executive Order on Regulatory Review
CPSIA – The Axis of Misinformation
July 7, 2011 by Rick Woldenberg, Chairman, Learning Resources, Inc.
Filed under BLOG, CPSIA Updates, Featured Articles
CPSC Spokesman Scott Wolfson wants you to read an article: Scott_Wolfson: If #opengov #gov20 are important to u, pls read this LATimes column: http://t.co/MrrgGwO #SaferProducts.gov #cpsc [From Scott Wolfson's Twitter feed] Wolfson refers you to a hatchet job by David Lazarus of the LA Times on the CPSIA Product Database. I have taken issue with the blather emitted from Lazarus’ PC in the past. In his latest example of irresponsible journalism, endorsed by the CPSC, Lazarus displays his studied ignorance of the issues relating to the database. His lack of research certainly didn’t prevent him from making declarative statements. Wolfson wanted to be sure you didn’t miss it. Lazarus ponders what the issues could possibly be with the controversial database: ” You’ve got to wonder why businesses are fighting so hard to keep this resource away from consumers. Is it because their fears are justified that we’ll misuse this tool (all evidence to the contrary notwithstanding)? Or is it because the last thing they want is a consuming public armed with the latest and most thorough information on the safety of their goods? And if it’s the latter, you might now ask, what are they trying to hide? ” I cannot think of any objections to the database other than self-interest, can you? It’s all a conspiracy, as anyone on the Left can tell you. Businesses have so much to hide! And did you know that evil billionaires are against the database? Lazarus sorts it all out: “Koch Industries — run by billionaires Charles and David Koch, who are active in conservative causes — also reported spending more than $200,000 lobbying against creation of the database.” Lazarus asserts that it is significant that Members of Congress aligned against the database also received campaign contributions from businesses. [Can you find a single member of Congress who has NOT taken contributions from businesses or business people? Just curious.] Lazarus notes that both Reps. Emerson and Pompeo received contributions from business people who are ALSO against the database. It’s all making sense now . . . . Perhaps it was an oversight, but Lazarus fails to mention that the folks on the Left who so vigorously defend the database as implemented have been richly financed by TRIAL LAWYERS. Rep. Henry Waxman raised more than $165,000 in 2010 from lawyers (11% of his total raise). In fact, his top PAC contributor was the American Association for Justice , a group of plaintiff’s attorneys actively opposing tort reform. He also received individual contributions from AAJ lobbyists . Rep. Jan Schakowsky raised a mere $224,000 from lawyers in 2010 (about 15% of her raise). Ditto for AAJ support. Poke around on OpenSecrets.org to check out your other favorites in Congress. It goes without saying that the support Waxman, Schakowsky and their ilk lavish on the database has NOTHING to do with campaign contributions by trial lawyers. It all comes from the heart, cloaked in white. Any idea who pays the bill for all the litigation initiated by the AAJ and its members? Hint: it’s not Waxmn or Schakowsky. No Lazarus article would be complete without the quotes of Rachel Weintraub of the Consumer Federation of America. The strangely influential Weintraub is the Left’s favorite mouthpiece on the CPSIA. Here she tries a new angle to preserve the database, the “sunk cost” argument: “The thing that’s so insidious is that the database is already up and running, This would basically waste all the money and resources that have gone into creating the database.” Insidious! That thrifty Rachel, she literally weeps over government waste. Of course, the database is not controversial simply because it exists; the principal reason the issue lingers on is that Lefties like Weintraub and Bob Adler insisted on unfair administrative procedures that create unreasonable risks for manufacturers unrelated to actual product hazards, like brand slander, misidentified products, lack of accountability by complaint filers, manipulation of civil disputes and unbalanced data creating misleading commercial impressions. These problems are well-documented but have apparently escaped Lazarus’ beady-eyed (in)attention. The Axis of Misinformation is at work here. You have the ignorant journalist (perhaps intentionally so or at a minimum, biased against manufacturers and disinterested in their POV), the shrill consumer “advocate” and the self-serving agency spokesman whose job is to manipulate how we feel about the CPSC (irrespective of reality or the “truth”). CPSC as PR agency is offensive to me. That’s not its function and besides, I think it’s dangerous to me as a consumer. As a practitioner noted this week in private correspondence: ” CPSC stacks the deck by creating alarming recall notices that do not really put hazards in perspective for readers, nor does the agency give consumers enough information to determine whether the amounts that they wind up indirectly paying for the costs of recalls are justified, especially when those costs are spread out to affect products that have not been recalled and present no risk. Hazards and risks are generally overstated, and you will never see any mention of costs to the public even though, as we all know, there is, after all, no free lunch .” It is worth noting that I hear complaints from the CPSC through various channels when they object to the portrayals in this space. It’s so unfair that we have freedom of speech in this country. No doubt that makes the job of regulating all of us idiots so much more difficult. Still, if I get to exercise my freedom of speech, so does Wolfson. Go ahead and read Lazarus. It is informative in a way. It will take you less than 30 seconds to recognize the shoddy journalism and the slanted, biased presentation of a one-sided story. Consider the source of this lead – Scott Wolfson and the CPSC. As I said, it’s informative.
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CPSIA – The Axis of Misinformation
CPSIA – Functional Purpose Exception Is All About Dollars Now
July 6, 2011 by Rick Woldenberg, Chairman, Learning Resources, Inc.
Filed under BLOG, CPSIA Updates, Featured Articles
The purported Functional Purpose Exception in the last draft of ECADA is unavailable to all but the largest and most well-funded of corporate supplicants. Is it even THAT good? Let’s start with the premise that the holding by the CPSC Staff that it is “technologically feasible” to make everything without lead at 100 ppm concentrations. In other words, in CPSIA-speak, it is ”possible” to make EVERYTHING without lead. As noted previously many times, the term “technological feasibility” does not incorporate any concept of money or economics. It simply signifies that it is possible in the real world to do it, damn the cost. Thus, the functional purpose exception is intended for products, components or materials that are either not possible to make without lead at compliant levels (not “technologically feasible”) or if possible, are unreasonably expensive or disruptive to make (“not practicable”). In other words, the functional purpose test boils down to this: ”not possible to make” or “possible to make but too expensive”. As previously noted, this is further limited to items REQUIRING the inclusion of lead. These items are quite limited, generally they are metals only. You’ll never see the law reflect this metals limitation honestly because the Dems want to fool you into thinking this provision is something much more than it is. They don’t want you to know it’s not really for you. The retort to my argument yesterday is that this exception will be a boon for everyone because you can use evidence from prior hearings (paid for by preceding supplicants) to prove your case. But since EVERYTHING can be made without lead according to CPSC Staff, the evidence of preceding supplicants is much less likely to be helpful or even available to you. Why? Because evidence dealing with technological feasibility is a settled question now. There is no need for further evidence so all those expensive consultant reports are moot. The only evidence of prior supplicants that would be useful must reflect on the question of “practicability”. How likely is it that you can use other people’s data on practicability? The pending draft reads as follows: “In demonstrating that it meets the requirements of subparagraph (A), a party seeking an exception under such subparagraph may rely on any nonproprietary information submitted by any other party seeking such an exception and such information shall be considered part of the record presented by the party that relies on that information.” [Emphasis added] In other words, you can only rely on non-proprietary evidence of others reflecting on practicability. Of this, there will be none. The issue of “practicability” is essentially one of having to take steps that are unreasonably burdensome in economic terms. Each competitor in a marketplace has a different cost structure and sets different profit margins. This is very confidential and highly proprietary information. Sources are confidential, manufacturing processes and innovations are usually trade secrets. All these secrets provide competitive advantage and will not be disclosed publicly. Furthermore, the disclosure of such information could devastate the market for the product, once profit margins or technical manufacturing data are disclosed to customers and resellers. No one will disclose this information except under seal. Many people won’t even take that step, distrusting the sanctity of their most precious information assets once it is out of their control. So there won’t be any non-proprietary information to share or use. Besides, each case will be different. In reality, the case for Kawasaki to use lead in its ATV engine blocks will be different from the case of Arctic Cat ATVs because their manufacturing processes, cost levels, manufacturing location(s), market position and so on are different. Deciding practicability for one manufacturer sheds no light on another manufacturer because the entire question is one of economics. Let’s not forget, practicability will be determined not by whether ANY additional costs are imposed, but instead by whether the new costs are unreasonable AND unbearable. That will vary in case by case, market by market. No doubt extraneous subjective factors like the Dems’ paranoia about lead will make for inconsistent judgments of what constitutes an unreasonable burden. After all, there’s no safe level of lead! Nothing will extend from one case to another. Nothing at all. It is not surprising that this confusion lingers. The original concept of the functional purpose exception (a lame idea from the get-go) was focused on the question of technological feasibility. The ability to use other people’s submitted consultant reports had some value in that case. But since that question is now resolved, so the value of sharing the reports is gone. All that’s left is the taste in everyone’s mouth. Where does this leave us? With no exceptions to the CPSIA, none, zippo, nada, nuthin’. You can thank the ever-intransigent Dems for this terrible situation. The functional purpose exception should be DROPPED and replaced with something actually useful to real businesses, before we all expire. The House Energy and Commerce Committee needs to ask: Who are we trying to benefit? What problem are we trying to solve? How will the new provision solve that problem? Who will be the beneficiaries of that solution? [In the real world] Do we like the order in which relief is likely to be doled out? Is it okay to design a provision such that only big companies can get relief in practical effect, or one in which big companies must be granted relief first ? How much will the process cost? How risky is the investment in applying for relief? Is the application for relief essentially automatic, or will it be a case-by-case trial in front of the Commission? How burdensome will the application process be? Is the exemption intended to benefit companies with small high-value product lines of 5-15 products (e.g., ATV manufacturers), or companies with broad product lines (e.g., science educational suppliers can carry many thousands of items)? Let’s get real about the relief we are purportedly offering. Something good and useful can be crafted but not if it must followed the form of the useless functional purpose exception. Please, Congress, don’t play games – write a provision that speaks clearly and honestly about who will benefit and how. After three years of this, we deserve at least something clear and understandable.
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CPSIA – Functional Purpose Exception Is All About Dollars Now
CPSIA – Battles Lines Drawn
June 17, 2011 by Rick Woldenberg, Chairman, Learning Resources, Inc.
Filed under BLOG, CPSIA Updates, Featured Articles
As ECADA moves toward a mark-up, possibly next week, the action over the CPSIA is happening elsewhere on the Hill. In yesterday’s The Hill newspaper, it was announced that the pending Appropriations Bill knocks out all funding for the noxious CPSIA database. It is symptomatic of the partisan gridlock in Washington that a policy debate has to be dealt with by withholding funds. The parties are simply unable to agree on anything. To agree is to give up political advantage. In gridlock, it is always possible to blame the other party and to paint them with whatever black brush is handy. This is particularly attractive to a minority party like the Dems in the House – they want their majority back. Thus, while the “defenses” for the absurdly over-reaching rules governing the database are almost laughable, the Dems posture as though any change threatens the American way of life. That said, it’s a good thing that the Appropriations Bill is doing the work that the House Energy and Commerce Committee hasn’t done or perhaps cannot do. Brokering agreement with someone as unyielding and unreasonable as Henry Waxman is no small feat. Rationality and reason, not to mention good policy, have no apparent effect on this ideologue. He won’t concede that Rep. Mike Pompeo, and the other database haters, have legitimate concerns. NO ONE is asking that the database die, just that it be a fair game for everyone. It’s only because the Dems won’t give a millimeter that you get the Appropriations Bill. If Energy and Commerce can’t change the database, or the CPSIA, I commend the Appropriations Committee for taking action to protect American businesses from government-sanctioned slander. Somebody had to do it. There’s no telling where all this goes. The Republican majority in the House may be able to shine a light on the issues of the CPSIA, but since the Dems control the Senate and White House, it seems as though the Dems are capable of blocking progress. Three years of work have no persuaded one Dem of anything, by all appearances. [Hence my disillusionment, frustration and outrage.] There is little sign that the Dems will give an inch – and you know what that likely means. You and I are (remain) screwed. Stasis means the 100 ppm standard gets implemented in two months, possibly retroactively. It means that you must continue to test internal components for phthalates and test and retest everything else endlessly without relief of any kind. It means that the 12-year-old age limit for everything stays in place, rhinestones and brass remain illegal (but osmium, iridium and ruthenium are still a-okay!), books and bikes and ATVs remain under the thumb of the CPSC, and many, many businesses will further weaken. NO child will be safer, and NO injury will be avoided. The advocates can’t provide evidence that ANYONE was EVER injured so there is no rational reason to believe this massive disruption will save a life or even a paper cut. The battle lines are drawn. Perhaps now you know why I was so disappointed when only one wiener resigned from Energy and Commerce today. I can think of a few more that ought to go . . . . VOTE FOR ECADA AND END THE CPSIA CHARADE!
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CPSIA – Battles Lines Drawn
CPSIA – I Think I Found Someone Who Lost a Few IQ Points . . . .
June 17, 2011 by Rick Woldenberg, Chairman, Learning Resources, Inc.
Filed under BLOG, CPSIA Updates, Featured Articles
Morons on parade . . . . Never failing to disappoint, the Tribune (via its South Florida Sun-Sentinel) today published the latest left wing tripe about the CPSIA Amendment (ECADA). In an article entitled ” Pandering politicians threaten to make hay of product safety “, Nicole Brochu unquestioningly falls in line with Henry Waxman and Rachel Weintraub on ECADA and trashes safety legislation she clearly does not understand. I am pretty sure Ms. Brochu is not a regular reader of this blog. She has successfully remained ignorant of many indisputable facts about safety in children’s products, not to mention the detailed nature of the problems caused by CPSIA. That certainly makes it easier to react emotionally to the “threat” posed by ANY effort to change the ill-conceived CPSIA. And that she does . . . . Ms. Brochu starts by confirming her bias against business and ruling out any consideration of opposing viewpoints (possibly involving FACTS): ” I don’t know about you, but when it comes to keeping the nation’s supply of kids’ toys and other consumer products safe, I’m going with the advice of doctors, scientists and watchdogs. I’m not sure we can rely on toymakers and motorcycle distributors to have the public’s collective back on this one . . . . [The] only thing [ECADA] proposes to enhance is special interests’ bottom lines — not the CPSC’s authority, or its protections of the consumers in its care.” Ah, special interests again! She must have been talking to the estimable Jan Schakowsky. As everyone knows, I am a “very cynical . . . special interest”. You should see my lapel pin! Ms. Brochu regurgitates the platitudes and slogans of the shrill groups opposing any change to the law: ECADA and CPSIA are toy bills. CPSIA was passed by an overwhelming majority of both Houses of Congress and was signed by “pro-business Republican President George W. Bush”. As a result of the CPSIA, there has been a “noticeable improvement in the public’s wounded confidence” (presumably in children’s products and the federal government). “[A] bunch of pandering politicians [are trying] to muck it all up for us. Since Republicans took over majority control of the U.S. House last year (and even before), they have set their sights on diminishing the safety act’s laudatory provisions in the name of lifting the burden off small-business owners.” [ Ed. Note : This is a variant of the argument that only Democrats and consumer groups care about kids, certainly not businesses or Republicans.] ECADA is “a hyperventilating overreach that would put the country’s health and safety at risk. And that’s just what an impressive contingent of folks — including the American Academy of Pediatrics, American Medical Association, Consumers Union, Consumer Federation of America, Kids In Danger, Public Citizen, Union of Concerned Scientists, the U.S. Public Interest Research Group and the CPSC’s chairman and two of its commissioners — say this measure would do.” ECADA “[waters] down the safety act’s firm hold on lead content in children’s products . . . .” The book industry and motorcycle industry are “special interests” seeking a pass for their products. No matter the merits of their claims, the law’s protections cannot be weakened in any way. [ Ed. Note : This is the "zero sum" argument again - if manufacturers are made better off by ECADA, it follows "logically" that children MUST BE worse off.] In each case, I have already replied to these misstatements and mischaracterizations in this space. Since I seem to repeat myself endlessly, I am going to spare you one more trip around the same block today. You can find the answers in my recent postings on ECADA. The author finishes up with one of the biggest misconceptions promoted by the opponents of ECADA: ” The bill would do away with the requirement that manufacturers test their products before bringing them to market, putting the onus instead on the tax-funded CPSC to conduct extensive, costly analyses to determine if testing is necessary. Taxpaying consumers shouldn’t shoulder the burden, or the cost, of making sure the products they buy are safe. In any reasonable scenario, that responsibility should fall on the businesses — big or small — making money selling their wares to the American public.” This remark reflects a gross misunderstanding of how businesses operate and how the proposed change in law affects businesses regulated under the CPSIA. ECADA does not eliminate the need to test children’s products for compliance with the strictures of the CPSIA. The lead standards are still on the books, the rabid regulators are still breathing down our necks and THERE IS NO WAY TO KNOW IF YOU COMPLY WITHOUT PERFORMING PRODUCT TESTS. What ECADA accomplishes, Ms. Brochu, is to stop the government from telling us how to run our businesses. We know better how to comply with these rules than they do, and can save vast sums of money wasted on government-mandated testing overkill. We will STILL HAVE TO TEST. There is no way around it. And if we screw up, we pay. This is not really a change, btw. We have always been subject to American tort law and have always been on the hook for our failures. I wonder if the knuckleheads who believe that ECADA eviscerates the CPSIA understand that the government has no way to force businesses to test. Mandated testing does not mean that every children’s product will be tested, any more than posted speed limits mean that you will never get a speeding ticket. To survey compliance, the CPSC will always have to test products – and cops will always need radar guns. Scurrilous businesses that don’t want to spend the money to comply will lie – and good businesses will spend themselves into bankruptcy paying for endlessly repetitive tests. The mandated testing regime has little to do with these behaviors because this is the realm of compliance . Rules do not eliminate bad behavior as common experience instructs. The drafters of ECADA get this point, and have incorporated the modest concession that the standards are more important to safety than attempting to manage thousands of businesses. Ms. Brochu would know this if she read my blog. I want to draw your attention AGAIN to the important point that Ms. Brochu’s safety neurotics have yet to answer my query – WHERE ARE THE VICTIMS OF LEAD-IN-SUBSTRATE? If we are saving children from a dreaded threat NOW, presumably children were suffering grave consequences in the past. Yet when asked to name these victims and provide case histories and other identifying and validating data, the advocates cannot name even ONE victim – from any country, at any time, using any children’s product by any manufacturer under any living conditions. Zero known victims – but we must bear billions in costs to comply with a neurotics’ legislative and regulatory wet dream. Notably, in May 2010 I published my own analysis of 11 years of CPSC recalls from 1999-2010 and found only three alleged injuries (all from lead-in-paint) and one death (from swallowing a lead bangle from a bracelet). That’s it – and there are no known victims of lead-in-substrate in the CPSC’s publicly-available recall records in that time period to the best of my knowledge. Or at any other time in the history of the world . The absence of lead-in-substrate injuries is stark in comparison to prosaic risks we bear EVERY DAY. Stair falls have killed almost as many people in Japan as fires despite the fact that many structures in Japan are made of wood (1976). In Canada, injuries and fatalities on stairs are at least ten times greater than those from natural disasters (1985). In the UK, it has been estimated that more than 100,000 stair injuries occur annually (1999). Yet the federal government wants us to spend literally BILLIONS OF DOLLARS annually to protect against a health threat not associated with a SINGLE documented injury. We are being governed by idiots. Maybe someday we can expect the media to think before it speaks. Maybe someday the standards for journalism will include knowing what you’re talking about, investigating and challenging preconceived notions and a healthy skepticism for pat answers. Until then, we have the Tribune and Ms. Brochu. VOTE FOR ECADA AND END THE CPSIA CHARADE!
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CPSIA – I Think I Found Someone Who Lost a Few IQ Points . . . .
CPSIA – Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them
June 14, 2011 by Rick Woldenberg, Chairman, Learning Resources, Inc.
Filed under BLOG, CPSIA Updates, Featured Articles
We live in interesting times. There has been no action by Congress to deal with the CPSIA since its controversial passage in August 2008 despite consistent and loud hue and cry. Right now, Dems are blocking progress. Apparently, they think the biggest threat to America is ANY change to the CPSIA. Our markets, our jobs, our livelihoods will be a necessary sacrifice to . . . what? Reelection. During this crisis of thousands of businesses catering to children, a Democrat on the House Committee on Energy and Commerce, the committee charged with managing the CPSIA mess, has been emailing photos of his you-know-what to women and girls all over America. One of Anthony Weiner’s email correspondents was reportedly voted ” Most likely to be involved in a tabloid scandal ” by her high school class (she’s only 21, it wasn’t long ago). I think you get the (sordid) picture. Mr. Weiner has been of no use on the CPSIA, riding the high horse “protecting children” with his Dem brethren, at the VERY SAME TIME he was using the Internet for interactions that are, at a minimum, pretty creepy. So Weiner is against letting even a notch out on the CPSIA belt around our necks, too unsafe . . . but he thinks it’s okay to creep around on the Internet, shooting pics of himself in the Congressional locker room and sending them out to his female Internet pals ( one of whom was a porn star ). Hypocrisy? How can that be, the Dems are cloaked in white, right??? Mr. Weiner remains perplexingly in office. As Chairman of the Republican National Committee Reince Priebus noted on Meet the Press : ” What we called for is for Nancy Pelosi and the Democratic leaders in this country to do what every American knew had to be done immediately and call for his resignation. Now, it seemed to me that for the first 10 days in this circus that the only job [in America] that Nancy Pelosi was interested in saving was Anthony Weiner’s . We’ve got crushing unemployment in this country, we’ve got a president that’s, that’s whistling past the graveyard, we’ve got families that are struggling, and instead we’ve got leadership in a Democratic Party that are defending a guy that deserves no defense .” [Emphasis added] And back at the ranch, the CPSIA Amendment (ECADA) is stalled. Why? Consider the May 25th words of Rep. Henry Waxman, Ranking Member on the Energy and Commerce Committee and principal roadblock to relief: ” But instead of refining a good law, the Republican bill goes after the law with a wrecking ball . The result is an assault on children’s safety. The Republicans call their bill the ‘Enhancing CPSC Authority and Discretion Act.’ A better name is the ‘Unsafe Toy Act.’ “ [Emphasis added] That’s right – the Dem leader is calling the work of the Republican majority the “Unsafe Toy Act”. Hmmm. Please NOTE that the General Counsel of this committee (Gib Mullen) is the former General Counsel of the CPSC and its former Director of Compliance. Is the implication that this former Kirkland & Ellis partner is a “hack”, lacking principle and integrity and is simply doing as he is told by Republican overlords who don’t care about children’s safety? Please, if you believe that, I have a bridge to sell you. The label “Unsafe Toy Act” is an insult and a lie in so many ways. First of all, it isn’t true. As I have discussed extensively in this space, ECADA is a surgical revision to the CPSIA, designed to fine tune the law without restructuring it. Reporters have called me to ask what the big deal is. Good question but the answer is obvious. No rational person subject to the laws of the United States or residing here would want to make toys, or any children’s product, “unsafe”. If you insist that they would, Mr. Waxman, PROVE IT. Oh yeah, you don’t do that, do you? Second, Mr. Waxman impugns the dignity and integrity of anyone who would dare support ECADA. That includes me since for more than 20 years my career has been devoted to making educational products (with perhaps the best safety record in the entire children’s product industry). Mr. Waxman’s label plainly announces to the general public that I favor poisoning kids to make more money. That is rather offensive, to say the least. Members of the House of Representatives are permitted to speak their minds, through and including libelous remarks, while on the House floor. They literally can say ANYTHING with impunity – I can’t sue them for this slander. As such, there is no recourse for this slander. This unfortunate label is at the heart of what the Dems are after – political advantage. Those of you who periodically pepper me with defenses of good Democrats fail to recognize the consistent pattern of obstruction and failure to act reasonably among the small group (cabal) of Dems and associated consumer groups behind this roadblock. The pattern of lies is all for political effect. Can you imagine the reelection commercials? Good for the Dems, bad for anyone who disagrees with them. The threat even applies to Dems who might have a conscience and be willing to stand up to the demagogues – the consumer groups are ready to attack them, too. Everyone knows it, no one wants to say it. Mr. Waxman trots out the usual lies and misstatements, relying on the trick of portraying this law as a “toy law”: ” The Unsafe Toy Act triples the amount of lead allowed in most children’s toys. For some children’s products, the bill would allow lead levels to increase 100 times or more. The bill eviscerates the requirement that toys imported from China be independently tested for safety. . . . Just listen to what the experts are saying about this bill. The Consumer Federation of America says that the bill creates ‘huge loopholes.’ Consumers Union says it will ‘lower standards and roll back safeguards for children and infants.’ The American Academy of Pediatrics and 100 other experts in children’s health wrote to express their ‘deep concern’ over the bill because it ‘would have the effect of permitting more lead in toys.’ Chairman Inez Tenenbaum of the Consumer Product Safety Commission and a majority of the Commission wrote that the bill ‘would effectively revoke key protections … and fails to adequately protect the health and safety of American children.’ ” I have rebutted the consumer group ”arguments” numerous times in this space already. I am not going to repeat myself here. Mr. Waxman’s reference to “triple” lead levels refers to a new limitation on the excessive and useless 100 ppm lead standard that, btw, has never been deemed technologically feasible by the CPSC. The “change” to lead levels of 100 times or more than existing standards refers to the rule exempting metal alloys (like brass) complying with the stay authorized by the CPSC Commission. OMG, you mean we can still use brass in children’s products like pens and trumpets? The HORROR! Neither the consumer groups nor Mr. Waxman and his Dem brethren have answered my question – Where are the victims? This question was asked several times in the April 7th hearing by members of the committee. To date, no one has supplied even one case history. No one calls Mr. Waxman to account for his lies and innuendos, so he persists in trashing those who can’t defend themselves. This is not unlike his unjustified attacks on Toyota that were later proven FALSE . Mr. Waxman did something similar at the April 7th hearing first discussing the CPSIA Amendment. In his opening statement , Mr. Waxman laid it on thick: ” But your discussion draft, which is the subject of today’s hearing, takes a wrecking ball to the law and would endanger young children. . . . Your discussion draft is a very different document. Democrats, consumer groups, and health experts were not consulted. The result is a one-sided proposal that provides relief to industry, but sacrifices children’s health and safety. . . . I have learned over the last few months that there seems to be no limit to the ability of the new Republican majority to pass bad legislation in this Committee and on the House floor. I have no doubt that if you want to do so, you could do so again with your draft bill. But there is no chance that a bill this extreme could ever become law. It would not survive in the Senate and if it did, it would be vetoed by the President . ” [Emphasis added] It’s always nice to end with a threat. The title of this post refers to a lampoon written by now Senator Al Franken (D-MN). In this book , he contends that Republicans are liars. Well, well, well, how times change, huh? Mr. Franken??? Any comment? I didn’t think so.

