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February 11, 2009 3:51 PM

Feds Urge Vigilance When Toy Shopping

(CBS/AP)  Federal regulators sought Tuesday to restore parents' confidence in toy safety, urging vigilance during the holiday shopping season with little mention of lead hazards that have prompted a record number of toy recalls.

Consumer groups countered that they had found numerous cases where toys that posed choking hazards or the danger of lead poisoning had made it improperly onto store shelves. "Consumers looking for toys still face an industry full of safety loopholes," said the U.S. Public Interest Research Group.

Consumer activists in California went shopping just last week and found nine toys, including the popular Dora the Explorer and Sponge Bob items, had very high levels of lead, some with 24 times the level of lead acceptable in paint, reports CBS News correspondent Sandra Hughes.

Three days before the start of the busy shopping season, Nancy Nord, acting chief of the federal Consumer Product Safety Commission, issued safety tips in a two-page release that urged parents to "stay informed" about safety risks by reading product warning labels and signing up for direct e-mail notification of recalls at www.cpsc.gov.

Among the biggest toy hazards the commission cited:

  • Riding toys, skateboards and inline skates that could cause dangerous falls for children.

  • Toys with small parts that can cause choking hazards, particularly for children under age 3.

  • Toys with small magnets, particularly for children under age 6, that can cause serious injury or death should the magnets be swallowed.

  • Projectile toys such as air rockets, darts and sling slots for older children that can cause eye injuries.

  • Chargers and adapters that can pose burn hazards to children.

    The agency noted that the Chinese government recently agreed to help prevent lead-painted toys from reaching the United States, and the CPSC was "taking the action needed to remove violative products from the marketplace."

    Consumer groups were not so sure.

    In its 57-page annual survey, U.S. PIRG agreed that toys with small magnets as well as small parts that pose choking hazards create significant risks.

    Between 1990 and 2005, at least 166 children choked on children's products, accounting for more than half of all toy-related deaths at a rate of about 10 deaths per year, the group said. Several times this year potentially dangerous toys were sold without the required warning labels of possible choking risks while the CPSC also has been slow to issue public warnings, U.S. PIRG said.

    "We want parents to really focus on where is the risk for their child. And we do know that it's choking, inhaling small parts, that children do go on riding toys and get hit by cars," CPSC spokesperson Julie Vallese told CBS' The Early Show.

    U.S. PIRG and the Center for Environmental Health, based in California, also pointed to continuing risks involving lead-tainted toys, millions of which were recalled this year. They cited weak laws that clearly ban lead only in paint.

    "We want parents to understand that earlier this year when we realized that there was a violation of lead paint in the system, we did a top-to-bottom real inspection of the toys on the shelves," Vallese told The Early Show.

    "And the toys that are on the shelves this year have been more heavily investigated and scrutinized than any year in the past."
  • © 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
    Add a Comment See all 20 Comments
    by denn034 November 21, 2007 12:38 AM EST
    This whole episode is sad. People shouldn''t have to be vigilant.
    Reply to this comment
    by jerr11 November 20, 2007 10:54 PM EST
    That''s very helpful advice and very timely too.

    The fed is always one step behind the curve.

    Like grounding all the planes AFTER the 911 attack.

    Why didn''t they stop the attack in the first place?

    LOL.
    Reply to this comment
    by theseventh-2009 November 20, 2007 10:49 PM EST
    Whatever...everything is dangerous. Please don''t give your kids spoons or forks. They might kill themselves! They tell us that the cows, pigs, and chickens are being fed each others sh*t and know no toys!

    Play with rocks like we used to. You can kill someone with that too.
    Reply to this comment
    by ssm9451 November 20, 2007 10:22 PM EST
    TOY SHOPPING??? Who the h*ll has money to buy toys, when the cost of food, gas, home utilities, etc has sky rocketed. But not the pay check.
    Reply to this comment
    by feelfree1 November 20, 2007 10:06 PM EST

    We will prevail in the War on Toys.
    Reply to this comment
    by hungry1968 November 20, 2007 8:05 PM EST
    If the feds are worried, why wasn''''t the Consumer product safety commission watching this before it happened. Isn''''t that thier function? Is this just another lame, expensive govt bureacracy that accomplishes nothing?

    Posted by CultureChang at 04:55 PM : Nov 20, 2007



    Perhaps it has something to do with the fact that Bush gutted their budget for the fourth year in a row, and they are working with less money and less personnel than they have in many years.
    Reply to this comment
    by culturechang November 20, 2007 7:55 PM EST
    If the feds are worried, why wasn''t the Consumer product safety commission watching this before it happened. Isn''t that thier function? Is this just another lame, expensive govt bureacracy that accomplishes nothing?
    Reply to this comment
    by hypnotoad72 November 20, 2007 7:48 PM EST
    Fed also predicts more will be out of work next year. Shy not just buy and swallow as many imported *** as possible? Why is China continually rewarded for continually making toxic products, and given lucrative deals by the very industries that claim to hate piracy?
    Reply to this comment
    by edla67 November 20, 2007 7:06 PM EST
    It would be a easier if companies produce safe stuff rather than parents coming into the stores with lead detectors, lead test kits, swabs, sniffing every toy shelves
    Reply to this comment
    by displeased November 20, 2007 6:54 PM EST
    No projectile toys or riding toys? In other words, no FUN!

    I noticed the government didn''t mention horses or pitbulls or stray cats. Aren''t they toys that are a danger to society?
    Reply to this comment
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