TravelinGal
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Feb 9, 2003
- Messages
- 2,064
What a freakin pile of 

The burr in the bonnet of these craft folks is the requirement for unit testing, rather than component testing. If small hobby mfrs. could simply rely on their raw materials suppliers to certify that the fabric or thread or zipper or ribbon or barrette clip, etc. contains no lead and no pthalates, then they could simply certify that the product was manufactured from materials that are certified lead/pthalate-free. However, the way the law is written currently makes it mandatory to test the finished product after it is manufactured, so certifying that the parts meet standards does not help.)
Our news reporter said it is their understand that you will not even be able to give away your used item.
Was it also a video?
Because it the item, there's really no response from the government.
This will be like Prohibition, with gangs of parents having "Speakeasies" to swap clothing.
I was telling my friend selling kids stuff will be the new underground purse party.![]()
Our news reporter said it is their understand that you will not even be able to give away your used item.
yes the video is there too.... it whould be on top of the article![]()
I know because NEWSFLASH.... they have no idea what is really happening!!! this is also why Goodwill would not go on TV.
Maybe they are. Attention problems can be a symptom of lead poisoning.
http://children.webmd.com/tc/lead-poisoning-symptoms
"One of a kind"?? What the heck does that mean? Does that mean original, custom made clothes, or that people can't bulk buy discontinued clothes?
LOL, guess I'm out of luck since I have twins with lots of matching outfits!AND all of their school uniforms, too!.
I'm kind of with Jodi on this, in that I think that perhaps we might all be working ourselves into a panic over something that really isn't going to be a problem. (And yes, I've read the law, and I think that while it is certainly open to strict interpretation, it is also very possible that it won't be enforced at all at the resale level. Enforcement and creation of exceptions is left up to the CPSC; it won't take an act of Congress to make adjustments to this thing.)
I think that while expressing concern is a good idea, jumping to fatalistic worst-case conclusions is not. The law is aimed squarely at manufacturers and importers, and I'm willing to bet that that is where the enforcement dollars will really be spent.
I actually wrote to the Washington Post a little while ago to ask their Checkout feature folks to look into it and try to separate the hype from the reality. They do a lot of reporting on juvenile products consumer issues, so I'm sure that they have good contacts at the CPSC. I have heard that the CPSC *is* working with some mfrs. on the policy details right now, which might well eliminate this concern. There is provision in the law for the CPSC to be able to exempt entire classes of materials based on their inherent unlikelihood to contain enough lead to qualify; I'm thinking that the average cotton t-shirt is a good candidate for that kind of exemption, depending on where the fabric comes from.
I do think that you will see that initially agencies and resellers will refuse anything that looks like it might have pthalates in it: which means most plastic shoes and a lot of clothing items with large plastic applique trims (like those shirts that light up, for instance.)
We're dealing with this issue in the library world, too. Juvie books and children's media products are also covered by the law.