Trouble in Toyland, 22nd Annual Toy Safety Report
2007-11-20
Executive Summary
For
several years, we have reported that toys are safer than ever before,
thanks to decades of work by product safety advocates and parents and
the leadership of Congress, state legislatures and the Consumer Product
Safety Commission (CPSC). Yet, as many have noted, 2007 has been
described as the “year of the recall.” Millions of toys, including
famous playthings like Thomas the Tank Engine and Barbie, have been
recalled in 2007. Many of these toys have been from leading
manufacturers like Mattel, and most were imported from China. Most of
the recalls have been for hazards previously identified in this
report—excessive levels of toxic lead, dangerous small magnets, and
choking dangers. These troubling events have reminded Americans
that no government agency tests toys before they are put on the
shelves. These events provide a warning that as parents and other
toygivers venture into crowded malls this holiday season, they should
remain vigilant about often hidden hazards posed by toys on store
shelves. The dramatic wave of toy, food and other consumer
product recalls has spurred intense attention from policymakers to the
problems of consumer safety generally and the limits of the
long-neglected Consumer Product Safety Commission specifically. The
CPSC is the nation’s smallest safety agency, yet it is responsible for
15,000 different products— from chain saws to escalators and from
kitchen appliances to toys. Its current actual budget ($63 million) is
less than half of what its 1974 startup budget ($34 million) would be
today if merely corrected for inflation ($140 million). It has only one
toy tester at its decrepit Maryland laboratory; worse, only 15 of 400
total staff (down from a 1980 peak of 978) are on duty full-time as
port inspectors. That problem is exasperated because since the
tragedies of September 11, customs inspectors and others that had
buttressed this tiny force have been re-tasked.
In addition to
expanding the agency’s budget, policymakers are planning to give the
CPSC more tools to hold corporate wrongdoers accountable and speed
recalls, to ban toxic lead except in trace amounts and to greatly
improve import surveillance. The holes in the product safety net
can, and must be, repaired to restore the confidence of parents and
other toygivers that the gifts that they purchase will bring pleasure,
not worry. The 2007 Trouble in Toyland report is the 22nd annual
Public Interest Research Group (PIRG) survey of toy safety. This report
provides safety guidelines for parents when purchasing toys for small
children and provides examples of toys currently on store shelves that
may pose potential safety hazards. We visited numerous toy stores and
other retailers to find potentially dangerous toys and identify trends
in toy safety. This year, we focused on four categories of toys: toys
that may pose choking hazards, magnetic toys, toys that are excessively
loud, and toys that contain lead and other potentially toxic chemicals.
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Read our news release.
Download the full report.
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