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Government Attempts To Improve Toy Safety
by Joel Simon, Joe
The new law was certainly welcomed by safety groups, but people are still angry that it too so long.

Each year, thousands of deaths are attributed to dangerous products, including toys and sporting equipment. It has been estimated that up to 33 million Americans were injured by consumer products in 2007.

The Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 overwhelmingly passed the U.S. The vote to pass the bill was overwhelming.S. Senate on July 31, 2008 by a vote of 89-3. President Bush signed the act into law on August 14, 2008.

The law requires toys and infant products for children 12 and younger to be tested for lead before they are sold. In addition to banning lead, the law bans phthalates, toxic chemicals that are used in plastic products. Studies have shown that phthalates have been linked to changes in hormone levels and birth defects including genital defects in males. Some scientists believe that phthalates are linked to allergies and asthma in children. Studies of rodents have concluded that phthalates cause damage to the liver and testes.

The law also gives state Attorneys General the authority to enforce federal product safety laws, creates a public database so consumers can learn about hazardous products, and grants whistleblowers new protections.

In law, in addition to banning lead, provides the CPSC with almost double their existing budget over the next 5 years. The agency's annual budget will rise from its current $80 million to $118 million starting in fiscal 2010 and grow further to $136 million over five years. The CPSC has been widely criticized for its handling of recent lead-related recalls of children's toys. Most of the toys recalled in 2007 were imported from China. As the agency was put under public scrutiny, outrage grew over the CPSC's outdated testing facility in Maryland and the fact that the agency only employed one full-time tester for children's toys. According to the Toy Industry Association, of the estimated three billion toys sold each year in the United States, about 80 percent are made or include parts made in China. The emerging global power is therefore responsible for the vast majority of children's toys and products including lead. Lead Ban Should Have Come Sooner Consumer rights organizations were quick to applaud the government's move to ban lead and phthalates from children's toys, but some argue that the get-tough stance took too long to come to fruition. Millions of American children were put at risk of life-threatening injuries from toxic toys while the government debated how to craft legislation designed to ban lead and other harmful substances from children's toys, critics said. Safety advocates applaud the governments action, but are perplexed why it took so long. Toy-selling giants Wal-Mart and Toys "R" Us went so far as to develop their own quality-control standards after becoming frustrated with "unworkable and inefficient" state and national guidelines, company officials said. Other toy companies complained that their industry has forever been tainted because of the government's failure to block toys containing lead from reaching consumers.
Joel Simon has sinced written about articles on various topics from Fitness, Anger Control and Legal Matters. If you are a parent who is concerned about , you can request a free legal consultation from an experienced. Joel Simon's top article generates over 1900 views. to your Favourites.
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