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Spread the Word! – Save Jobs.

Spread the Word! – Save Jobs. by Hasenpfeffer Incorporated.
We make and sells dolls, teddy bears, and such. But this isn’t a plug for our business. As a reaction to the dangerous-toy scare last year, the Consumer Product Safety Commission created something called the Consumer Products Safety Improvement Act. It requires all manufacturers of children’s goods to submit their products for testing for lead and phthalates.

While that’s good in the overall scheme, it has some potentially damaging side effects. The problem is that the average testing fee runs a few thousand dollars. Making matters worse, we would have to submit each and every toy for testing since no two are alike (she makes her stuff from salvaged materials like old wool coats and such). Naturally you can see what this version of the act would do to the handmade toy and craft industry (it’s more than macramé owls nowadays).

There is a potential remedy, though. Below is the unabridged copy from the Handmade Handmade Toy Alliance. Below are links to a sample letter and to various legislators.

Save the USA from the CPSIA

In 2007, large toy manufacturers who outsource their production to China and other developing countries violated the public's trust. They were selling toys with dangerously high lead content, toys with unsafe small part, toys with improperly secured and easily swallowed small magnets, and toys made from chemicals that made kids sick. Almost every problem toy in 2007 was made in China.

The United States Congress rightly recognized that the Consumer Products Safety Commission (CPSC) lacked the authority and staffing to prevent dangerous toys from being imported into the US. So it passed the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act (CPSIA) in August, 2008. Among other things, the CPSIA bans lead and phthalates in toys, mandates third-party testing and certification for all toys and requires toy makers to permanently label each toy with a date and batch number.

All of these changes will be fairly easy for large, multinational toy manufacturers to comply with. Large manufacturers who make thousands of units of each toy have very little incremental cost to pay for testing and update their molds to include batch labels.

For small American, Canadian, and European toymakers, however, the costs of mandatroy testing will likely drive them out of business.

* A toymaker, for example, who makes wooden cars in his garage in Maine to supplement his income cannot afford the $4,000 fee per toy that testing labs are charging to assure compliance with the CPSIA.

* A work at home mom in Minnesota who makes dolls to sell at craft fairs must choose either to violate the law or cease operations.

* A small toy retailer in Vermont who imports wooden toys from Europe, which has long had stringent toy safety standards, must now pay for testing on every toy they import.

* And even the handful of larger toy makers who still employ workers in the United States face increased costs to comply with the CPSIA, even though American-made toys had nothing to do with the toy safety problems of 2007.

The CPSIA simply forgot to exclude the class of toys that have earned and kept the public's trust: Toys made in the US, Canada, and Europe. The result, unless the law is modified, is that handmade toys will no longer be legal in the US.

If this law had been applied to the food industry, every farmers market in the country would be forced to close while Kraft and Dole prospered.

How You can Help:
Please write to your United States Congress Person and Senator to request changes in the CPSIA to save handmade toys. Use our sample letter or write your own. You can find your Congress Person here and Senator here.

Thank you so much! 

Comments

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littlecottonrabbits  Pro User  says:

We have a similar thing here in europe with the CE regulations. Basically anyone who supplies (not even manufactures but including gifts) a toy without a CE mark to a child is breaking the law. You can only obtain a CE mark after similar expensive laboratory testing. For the purposes of a CE mark a toy is anything intend for a child under 14 years of age and therefore if you create a toy and stipulate on all listings and packaging that it is not intended as a toy but for decorative purposes you are (I believe) exempt from the regulations (you see the words 'not a toy' on many commercially produced christmas decorations as they have small detatchable parts and would not pass regulations but they are still able to be sold with this warning). Good luck with this - it's another example of governments using a sledgehammer to crack a nut!
Posted 12 months ago. ( permalink )

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LittlePeanutShop says:

Thanks so much for giving permission for Etsians to link to your artwork and text on our blogs. (I found your link in the Etsy forums.) I hope you don't mind me linking it on my blog: littlepeanutshop.blogspot.com/. If it's a problem, just leave a comment for me on my blog and I'll take it down. As one of the sellers who will likely have to close up shop come Feb. 10 I'm saddened by what has happened, yet hopeful that if we band together we can encourage the government to change the law.
Posted 12 months ago. ( permalink )

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Hasenpfeffer Incorporated  Pro User  says:

Thank you, Peanut and Cotton. - Don't worry Peanut. We all will find a way to get around that if we have too. We won't just close up shop. Now that you've done your first craft show anyway. :)
Posted 12 months ago. ( permalink )

hippiedippydesigns [deleted] says:

Thank you so much for this!
Posted 12 months ago. ( permalink )

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Sharona R  Pro User  says:

May I use this button on my blog?
Posted 12 months ago. ( permalink )

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Hasenpfeffer Incorporated  Pro User  says:

Oh. Please! And thanks for spreading the word!
Posted 12 months ago. ( permalink )

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