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Well there is good news to report on this topic.
Some states in the US are finally bringing in laws to disallow production and importation of any goods containing toxic substances.
Greatly needed funding which was denied by the Bush administration has been allocated by the current administration to protect the public from being poisoned by the products they purchase. (However to Bush's credit he did sign the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act - though I think he may have thought he was signing his room service slip for a bottle of scotch and a massage.)
Manufactures of children's toys have only begun to give in to pressure to stop using lead in toys.  Now there will likely be another long struggle to bring in legistation to prevent them from merely substituting them with other substances that are nearly as harmful.

CPSC Chairman’s Statement on Cadmium in Children’s Products
By Chairman Tenenbaum on January 11, 2010


"The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) is moving swiftly to deal with the replacement of lead with cadmium in certain children’s products imported from China.  [They moved "swiftly" to stop the use of lead and it took years to get to this stage. LWB]

In a taped keynote speech to be delivered Tuesday to regulators at the APEC Toy Safety Initiative/Dialogue in Hong Kong, CPSC Chairman Inez Tenenbaum warns against the use of heavy metals, “especially cadmium,” in children’s products. While praising the removal of lead in children’s products, Tenenbaum encouraged manufactures in China to refrain from substituting cadmium, antimony or barium in place of lead.

“All of us should be committed to keeping hazardous or toxic levels of heavy metals out of surface coatings and substrates of toys and children’s products,” she says.

Later on in the speech, Tenenbaum notes that “Voluntary efforts will only take us so far.” She points out that CPSC staff has been working on testing protocols and lab accreditation rules for regulated children’s products. The agency will develop mandatory standards, as needed, to deal with heavy metals in children’s products.

CPSC staff has opened a formal investigation into children’s metal jewelry identified in a recent news story to determine the action CPSC needs to take to keep children safe
."

This address for this post is: http://www.cpsc.gov/onsafety/2010/01/cpsc-chairmans-statement-on-cadmium...


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