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CPSC Lead Program: Regulations, Guidance, and Outreach Frank J. Nava U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission January 26, 2006 These comments are those of the CPSC staff, have not been reviewed or approved by, and may not necessarily reflect the views of, the Commission.
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01/26/2006U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission 2 Independent, Federal regulatory agency, established 1973 Mission is to reduce unreasonable risks of injury from consumer products Jurisdiction includes over 15,000 types of products sold to consumers for personal use in or around the household or school (does not include cars, airplanes, foods, medical devices, tobacco, or pesticides)
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01/26/2006U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission 3 Regulatory Authority for Lead Consumer Product Safety Act (CPSA), 15 U.S.C. § 2051-2084 Federal Hazardous Substances Act (FHSA), 15 U.S.C. § 1261-1278
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01/26/2006U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission 4 Consumer Product Safety Act (CPSA) Under this Act the CPSC has: Banned paint and similar surface coatings intended for consumer use containing in excess of 0.06% lead by weight (1978) Banned toys and other articles for use by children with lead-containing paint Banned furniture for consumer use with lead-containing paint
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01/26/2006U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission 5 Federal Hazardous Substances Act (FHSA) Authorizes action when a product is or contains a “hazardous substance” [15 U.S.C. § 1261(f)] Covers lead or other toxic substances Considers exposure Requires case by case hazard assessment
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01/26/2006U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission 6 FHSA, Continued Toy or other article intended for children and containing a hazardous substance is a banned hazardous substance, 15 U.S.C. § 1261(q)(1) Product not specifically intended for children may require precautionary labeling, 15 U.S.C. § 1261(p)
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01/26/2006U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission 7 Health Hazard Assessment For Lead Health scientists assess accessibility to the lead in the product and estimate possible level of exposure Assess how long exposure could occur; e.g., a child might mouth the toy every day for a month Define hazardous level of exposure based on level of lead in blood Determine whether the estimated exposure is “hazardous”
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01/26/2006U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission 8 Guidance Policy Guidance Policy for Lead in Consumer Products, 16 C.F.R. 1500.230, 12/22/98 For manufacturers, importers, distributors, and retailers Describes hazard assessment process Recommends analysis to determine whether lead causes the product to be a “hazardous substance”
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01/26/2006U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission 9 Guidance Policy, Continued A product not found to be hazardous may still contribute to lead exposure Unnecessary lead exposure from consumer products intended for or accessible to children should be minimized as much as is practical
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01/26/2006U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission 10 Recent Activities Candy wrappers Children’s metal jewelry Vinyl lunch boxes
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01/26/2006U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission 11 Candy Wrappers Wrappers of some candy products produced in Mexico may contain lead or have lead-containing ink on the outside July 2004, CPSC staff issued letters to manufacturers and importers requesting that shipments be stopped until they ensure that wrappers do not contain lead or have lead- containing ink CPSC staff work continues
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01/26/2006U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission 12 Children’s Metal Jewelry Children may mouth or swallow pieces of jewelry made with lead 2004-2005, millions of items recalled because of dangerous levels of lead February 2005, CPSC staff issued enforcement policy Guidance for manufacturers, importers, retailers to minimize the risk for children Includes laboratory test procedures, and interpretation of results
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01/26/2006U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission 13 Vinyl Lunch Boxes CPSC staff tested about 60 children’s lunch boxes for accessible lead No instances of hazardous levels on inside or outside surfaces CPSC staff reiterated the recommendation that companies avoid lead in products intended for children, and test products for accessible lead CPSC staff’s laboratory test procedure made available
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01/26/2006U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission 14 Possible Hazard Reduction Actions Development of voluntary and mandatory standards Product recall, replacement, refund, redesign Consumer information: Neighborhood Safety Network Program (Boys & Girls Clubs, Indian Health Services, HUD, Meals on Wheels, fire departments) Recall Roundup: teamed up with fire departments, senior citizen organizations, marketplace consultants
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01/26/2006U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission 15 Sources of Information Federal, State and local governments CPSC Hotline complaints/inquiries Written and oral communications Investigations NEISS hospitals, Medical Examiners, death certificates
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01/26/2006U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission 16 Federal Partners Interagency Task Force Groups Cross agency issues: FDA: ceramics, glassware, candy wrappers, tea kettles EPA: playground equipment HUD: miniblinds Customs: refused/detained 180 shipments in 2002 (e.g., children’s products, fireworks, cigarette lighters)
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01/26/2006U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission 17 CPSC Work in the Southwest Border Region
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01/26/2006U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission 18 Contacts Http://www.cpsc.gov Frank Nava, Director, Western Field Investigations, Office of Compliance (916) 914-1678, fnava@cpsc.gov Lori Saltzman, MS, Director, Division of Health Sciences (301) 504-7238, lsaltzman@cpsc.gov Kris Hatlelid, PhD, MPH, Toxicologist, Health Sciences (301) 504-7254, khatlelid@cpsc.gov Joanna Matheson, PhD, Toxicologist, Health Sciences (301) 504-7043, jmatheson@cpsc.gov Mary Toro, Associate Director, Recalls and Compliance, Office of Compliance (301) 504-7586, mtoro@cpsc.gov
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