The Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act (CPSIA) mandates expensive, destructive, third-party testing for all products designed and marketed to children aged twelve and under. Large corporations can reasonably absorb the costs of such testing; however, it places an undue burden on small businesses or companies that produce limited quantities of unique or handmade goods for children. Ironically, many of these small businesses were founded by moms, dads, and grandparents in response to concerns about unsafe, mass manufactured toys flooding the market. As these small businesses - toy-makers, clothiers, artisans, publishers, and others - scramble to comply with the CPSIA, or face bankruptcy, Mattel quietly won a waiver from the CPSC that allows it to test its own products for compliance with the new lead and phthalates standards set by the CPSIA.
Have we forgotten who got us into this mess in the first place? There were six Mattel-related recalls in 2007 that involved more than 2 million toys. Mattel agreed to pay a $2.3 million civil penalty for violating the lead paint ban.
According to the AP, the CPSC approved seven Mattel labs, located in Mexico, China, Malaysia, Indonesia and California as "firewalled third party laboratories" — the first to get that designation under the CPSIA. "Firewalled" means they are deemed to be "insulated from undue corporate influence." According to federal records, Mattel spent more than $1 million in 2008 on lobbying. It was instrumental in getting the "firewall" exception added to the law.
But there were laws in place to regulate permissible lead content prior to the CPSIA. If Mattel has the means to do all this rigorous safety testing in-house, why were 2 million toys recalled in 2007?
Why does Mattel get a pass, when Mom and Pop businesses whose products have never proven to be unsafe to children go bankrupt? This isn't about "child safety." This is about protecting corporate interests and shareholder profits.
It is becoming more and more important to me that corporations and governments adhere to ethical standards. And I'm going to vote with my wallet on this one.
Buy Old Children's Books, Instead
The kids will thank you for it, when they're older.
The CPSC interprets the law to include books. Although they have declared "ordinary books" printed after 1985 to be presumed safe, old and classic children's books printed prior to 1985 must be removed from store shelves and libraries for testing. Or destroyed.
Read CPSIA and Vintage Books: A Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Law. The CPSC cavalierly stated that "Children’s books have limited useful life," estimated at approximately twenty years. Tell that to the books on my bookshelf.
So, let's all buy "dangerous" old books that are past their "limited useful life," and maybe some handmade toys and clothes this Christmas season, and take a pass on the "safe" mass-market toys out there.
How to Contact the Consumer Product Safety Commission
:
Toll-free Consumer Hotline: 800-638-2772 (TTY 800-638-8270). Call to obtain product safety and other agency information and to report unsafe products. Hotline staff may be reached from 8:30 am - 5:00 pm ET. Messages may be left anytime after these hours. Available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
Headquarters
General Information: (301) 504-7923 M-F 8:00 am - 4:30 pm ET
Fax: (301) 504-0124 and (301) 504-0025
E-mail: Please use our Contact Form
Street and Mailing Address
U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission
4330 East West Highway
Bethesda, MD 20814
How to Contact Mattel
Mattel Inc. AG Brands | Fisher-Price Brands Mattel Europa, B.V. |
Toys I Won't be Buying this Christmas
100% Hot Wheels® American Girl® American Girl® Magazine Angelina Ballerina™ Baby Playzone™ Barbie Consumer Products Barbie® Collector Barbie™ Batman™ Bear In the Big Blue House™ Blue's Clues™ Chatter Matters™ Coconut™ Disney and Pixar's Toy Story Disney Princesses Disney's Atlantis Dora the Explorer™ ESPN Toys Fisher-Price® Fisher-Price® Games Fisher-Price® Preschool Toys Flavas Girls of Many Lands ™ Happy Family™ Hilarium™ Hot Wheels® Electric Racing Hot Wheels® Shop.com? Hydro Strike Jimmy Neutron Boy Genius™ Justice League™ Kelly™ Laugh & Learn Little Mommy Looney Tunes™ Loving Family™ Sweet Streets Magic 8 Ball® Mary-Kate & Ashley Matchbox® Matchbox® Kids Mattel Games and Puzzles Max Steel™ Mind Trap Miracles & Milestones My Scene™ Nickelodeon® Rugrats™ Ocean Wonders™ Othello™ Pixel Chix Polly Pocket™ Power Wheels® Radica™ Radica™ Rock'em Sock'em™ Robots Scrabble® (International) Sesame Street® Shakira Shield Blaster™ Skateboard Shannen™ Spellmaster Super Electronic Ker Plunk!® Timeless Treasures™ Toss Across® Tyco® R/C Vidster™ What's Her Face™ Wiggly Worms Winx™ | American Girl Today® American Girl® Books American Girls Collection® Avatar the last Airbender Baby University Barbie Doll of the World BarbieGirls™ Barney™ Battle Force 5™ Bitty Baby® Boom-O™ Classical Chorus™ DC Universe™ Disney Games Disney® Diva Starz™ ello™ Fashion Avenue™ Fisher-Price® Baby Gear Fisher-Price® Infant Toys Fisher-Price® Rescue Heroes™ Geo Trax™ Grow to Pro™ Harry Potter™ Hot Wheels® Hot Wheels® Racing HotWheelsCollectors.com™ Imaginext™ Juicebox™ Kasey the Kinderbot Kitchen Play Learning Patterns™ Little People® Loving Family Doll House Loving Family™ Sweet Streets Magna Doodle® Masters of the Universe® Matchbox® Collectibles Mattel Classic Games™ Matty Collector™ Mickey Mouse Miracle Baby™ My First Dollhouse Nickelodeon® Rocket Power™ Nickelodeon® Wild ThornBerrys™ OnePiece™ Outburst® Pixter™ Pound Puppies® PowerTouch™ Radica™ Rebound® Scene It?™ See 'n Say® Shake n' Go Shannen & Scooch Shining Stars® Snap n' Style SpongeBob SquarePants™ Thumbelina® Tip-It® Tumblin' Monkeys™ UNO® View-Master™ Who Wants to Be A Millionaire? Winnie The Pooh Yu-Gi-Oh™ |
More on CPSIA from my Blog:
I haven't written on the CPSIA in a while. I naively hoped that sanity would prevail in Washington. Apparently, that's not going to be the case.
Want to Do More?
Check out these Web sites:
- Contact Congress
- CPSIA FORUM
- CPSIA Ning
- Fashion-Incubator
- Handmade Toy Alliance
- Rick Woldenberg
- The Toy Association
- Vote to influence Obama @ Change.org
I welcome your thoughts and ideas - that's what Comments are for!




Comments: 16
I didn't so no teabaggers carrying on over this.
What's sad is I'm not really surprised at what the government has done this time.
For Christmas, my grandchildren and great-grandchildren will receive books, but books by authors from a small publisher. Hmmm ... censorship by any other name is still censorship.
To have Mattel and a few others be exempt from the same law that is threatening to close me down is a slap in the face! How dare they run small business out of business while Mattel get to do whatever they want to.
I'm also saddened as a parent who looks for alternatives to Mattel for her children. I don't buy Mattel and I never have but now what choices to I have. The CPSIA has run so many great toy makers out of the US market or out of business that it's getting tougher to find alternatives. Perhaps that was the goal all along!
It's been an awful year for my business...I'm not sure it'll ever recover. Too Mattel can't say the same thing!
Thank you, Jennifer, for telling your story. I just wish more people would read it - understand how widespread the negative impact of the CPSIA really is, see how it affects THEM, and help us put a stop to the madness.
Granted, it's not the only madness in the world. But still - we do what we can, right? Help spread the word?
I'm trying to keep from screaming. My business is impacted through costs, which are higher. Customers will pay more for any items for children under thirteen years of age.
The economy was already in bad shape.
I think motorized vehicles shouldn't be for children anyway. I know of too many who have been killed or injured.
Yes, I do wish I could be out of touch at times, and definitely that reality were nicer than it is.