This Christmas, A Lump of Lead?
Thursday, Sep. 06, 2007
By JYOTI THOTTAM
Enlarge Photo
Photo Illustration by Andrew Lewis / Shutterstock; Michele Cox / Shutterstock
It's September. Do you know where your children's Christmas toys are coming from?
Even if you haven't thought about it yet, U.S. toymakers are so worried about losing the confidence of
wary
parents this holiday season that the industry has asked the Federal Government to require
mandatory
safety testing at the toy companies' expense. It's a remarkable admission of just how thoroughly this year's massive recalls of goods from China have
shaken up
Toyland.
Mattel's recent recalls of more than 19 million toys--including a Sept. 4 warning about lead paint in 675,000 accessories for its
iconic
Barbie dolls--were the largest in the history of the world's largest toymaker and have
put
the entire industry
on high alert.
"This year's recalls were not a happy thing for us," says Carter Keithley, president of the Toy Industry Association (TIA), a trade group whose 500 members make about 85% of all the toys sold in the U.S. Even companies that haven't been hit with recalls are scouring their production lines for problems, and testing labs say they have been
deluged with
work. "We're looking at everything right now," says Wayne Charness, a senior vice president at Hasbro.
Recalls
are meant to
act as
a safety valve
, a quick way to get potentially dangerous products off store shelves before they do harm. Instead, the wave of recalls this year from China--the source of 80% of the world's playthings--has cast a cloud of suspicion over any toy carrying the MADE IN CHINA label. Keithley met with U.S. toymakers at a safety conference in China in July, and he says
they all had one concern
: "How can we
tighten
this
up
?"
Their solution is
a three-part safety plan
, announced Sept. 5: a federal requirement to make safety testing mandatory; new, industry-wide standards for testing procedures; and certification for independent labs. Keithley says the labs may devise a logo to be
stamp
ed on toys indicating that they
meet
federal standards
. Most large companies in the U.S. use both internal and third-party testing, but there is no legal requirement and therefore no uniform method of testing or
seal
of approval that might restore consumers' trust. For many products, including toys and children's jewelry, the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) sets standards for safety but does not require companies to do testing and doesn't test the toys itself. "No one's asking for proof," says Sue DeRagon, associate director for toys at Specialized Tech Resources, a testing lab in Enfield, Conn.
That could change this fall. Democratic Florida Senator Bill Nelson introduced a bill that would require toys to be
third-party
tested to make sure they meet safety standards-- or be banned from import to the U.S. (Hearings are scheduled for Sept. 12.) Toymakers are supporting stricter regulation in part because "it would create a level playing field," says Joan Lawrence, TIA's vice president of standards and regulatory affairs. Today, the only penalty for failing to meet the standards is a recall, so some companies don't test at all.
Voluntary testing and recalls have clearly failed to stop lead-painted children's jewelry from entering the U.S. market. After the CPSC recalled 150 million pieces of toy jewelry in 2004, new guidelines "urged manufacturers generally to reduce the lead content of their products." Since then at least 21 million more pieces of children's jewelry--including 6 million this year alone--have been recalled because of lead-poisoning risk, ranging from $3 fake-diamond rings sold at Big Lots! to $95 Juicy Couture charm bracelets. The CPSC recommended a federal ban on
lead exceeding
0.06% by weight in children's jewelry late last year; California, Illinois and the city of Baltimore have already
enact
ed bans.
Unfortunately for anxious parents, the new rules on toys will not be ready for the 2007 Christmas shopping season. Most toymakers have just a few weeks left before their holiday
orders
are shipped. So instead, the TIA is sending its members
a
detailed
list of
precautions to make sure their holiday toys are safe.
Near the top is
strict
oversight
of every
contractor
and subcontractor that touches toys
at any point on the path from
factory
to
shelf.
That's what tripped up Mattel, which traced its problems with lead paint to subcontractors who used
unapproved
lead-based paint. To
plug
that quality-control gap, Mattel has begun testing finished products in addition to testing the paint, plastics and other materials that go into its toys. The company is also increasing the frequency of random checks.
Other companies are making similar changes--and don't be surprised to hear about them in this year's holiday advertising. Hasbro has reduced the number of contractors it uses, to keep tighter control of the production process, and it too has increased the number of spot checks. That's good news for the checkers. "Our phones are ringing
off the hook
," says DeRagon of the STR testing lab, which tracks toys from initial design to
batch
testing of wet paint to
audits
of contractors' factories.
Until the new rules are
in place
, should parents stick with gifts crafted close to home, particularly if the extra safety measures raise the price of Chinese imports? U.S.-made toys may still use imported parts, but manufacturers have more control over how they're put together and can test them more easily. "
On the surface
,
there is reason to
believe they're safer
," says John Quelch, a professor at HarvardBusinessSchool. However, he notes, every big toymaker that does produce in China is going
flat out
to avoid the nightmare of a holiday recall. This Christmas could
end up
the safest one of all.










wary
[
ˈweəri, ˈweri
]
If you are wary of something or someone, you are cautious because you do not know much about them and you believe they may be dangerous or cause problems.
mandatory
If an action or procedure is mandatory, people have to do it, because it is a rule or a law. (FORMAL)
It's a
remarkable
admission of just how
thoroughly
this year's
massive
recalls of goods from China have
shaken up
Toyland.
(complex sentence)
shake up
shocked, upset or frightened by sth
Shaken is the past participle of shake.
iconic
(formal) acting as a sign or symbol of sth
put
the entire industry
on high alert
deluge
[
ˈdelju:dʒ
]
~ sb/sth (with sth) [usually passive] to send or give sb/sth a large number of things at the same time
We have been deluged with applications for the job.
are meant to
a safety valve
[
vælv
]
阀,活门
valve
a device for controlling the flow of a liquid or gas, letting it move in one direction only
the wave of
recalls this year from China--the source of 80% of the world's playthings--has
cast a cloud of suspicion over
any toy
carrying
the MADE IN CHINA label.
the wave of
cast a cloud of suspicion over
they all had one concern
tighten
up
If a group, team, or organization tightens up, they make an effort to control what they are doing more closely, in order to become more efficient and successful.
a three-part safety plan
stamp
[often passive]
~ A on B
~ B (with A) to print letters, words, a design, etc. onto sth using a special tool
meet
federal standards
seal
an official design or mark, stamped on a document to show that it is genuine and carries the authority of a particular person or organization
third-party
enact
[often passive]
(law) to pass a law
order
~ (for sth) a request to make or supply goods
a
detailed
list of
Near the top is
strict
oversight
of every
contractor
and subcontractor that touches toys
at any point on the path from
factory
to
shelf.
oversight
(formal) the state of being in charge of sb/sth
the fact of making a mistake because you forget to do sth or you do not notice sth
contractor
a person or company that has a contract to do work or provide goods or services for another company
plug
that quality-control
gap
plug
~ sth (up) to fill a hole with a substance or piece of material that fits tightly into it
off the hook
脱离困境
batch
number of people or things that are dealt with as a group
audit
an official examination of business and financial records to see that they are true and correct
the new rules are
in place
On the surface
表面上
,
there is reason to
believe they're safer
is going
flat out
to avoid
flat out
竭尽全力
,
用全速
,
疲惫
This Christmas could
end up
the safest one of all.
end up + N
If you end up doing something or end up in a particular state, you do that thing or get into that state even though you did not originally intend to.
If you don't know what you want, you might end up getting something you don't want.
Every time they went dancing they ended up in a bad mood.
She could have ended up a millionairess.
posted on 2007-09-11 13:41
niuniu 阅读(222)
评论(0) 编辑 收藏 所属分类:
【每日精读】