The Public Interest Research Group publishes an annual report that covers some of the broad strokes of toy safety as well as identifying current hazardous toys and children’s products in the market. This report was published this past November and it is worth noting that some of the items identified in their report have already been recalled. They do much more than report on unsafe toys, so check them out.
You can find the report here. It is very thorough and outlines some of the hazards associated with toys available in the market and those covered in our safety standards. Prior to the enactment of CPSIA, the standard widely known to cover toys, ASTM F963 was considered a ”voluntary” standard, although many retailers mandated conformance to its requirements. However there have been loopholes. Lets say you are an importer, listed as the “importer of record” on your customs documents and distributing goods from your own warehouse, many retailers would not require proof of compliance to safety standards. This, I would assume, is how we still have hazardous products in the market. No one has required them to prove conformance to US and Industry requirements, although some major US retailers are in the midst of changing that practice too.
Working in regulatory compliance, I wonder how some guy somewhere determines that it’s wise to allow those products to ship, rather than working with reliable factory sources and testing the product prior to shipment. Although testing can be expensive, isn’t it cheaper than a recall and the mandatory penalties that the government will levy? Perhaps they didn’t test the product or its materials at all; trusting that the factory would ship compliant goods.
There are so many variables in importing toys from abroad that sometimes things get lost in the daily log of duties, but importing safe products shouldn’t be at the bottom of the list. If for any reason (and not that it is the most important one), the financial strain it is going to cause your company. Someone like PIRG comes along, tests your product and discovers a ton of lead or phthalates and the CPSC will not only recall your products, but some serious civil penalties will be coming your way! You will pay more than the product was ever worth in the first place.
No one is exempt and no product quantities are too small to be discovered. I am sure that these companies think their exposure is limited and no one will find their products….but you are wrong. Groups like PIRG and forward thinking retailers like Toys R US and Wal-Mart are in the process of changing these practices, to not only protect themselves, but more importantly, children.
Several years ago, a little boy died after swallowing a charm from a pair of Reebok tennis shoes purchased for his sister. The charm was almost entirely made of lead. Yet, if you look in the PIRG report, they discovered a charm sold at Claire’s that was over 70% lead! How can this happen?! How could someone allow it to happen?
I think the work that PIRG is doing is keeping consumers informed and it adds a layer of policing that will keep these guys on their toes. Ship unsafe products and someone will find you….






