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Congress's war on toys

By LISSA HARRIS  |  February 9, 2009

Quincy dressmaker Kiki Fluhr could face an even more brutal choice: stop making children's clothes or give up her business altogether. Six months ago, unaware of the looming CPSIA, she began working full-time on her line of girls' dresses and quilts, All The Numbers. Fluhr sells wholesale to local boutiques, as well as on online DIY marketplace etsy.com.

Like Wilson, Fluhr is using a rented X-ray gun to test her wares. She recently found a package of vintage buttons that contained about 1600 ppm of lead, and promptly discarded them. It was a wake-up call for the dressmaker, who says she — and many other small handcrafters — would be willing to buy only supplies that were certified lead-free. But as it currently stands, the law says she must eventually begin doing third-party testing on one dress in each batch.

"I can make about 15 dresses from a bolt of fabric," she explains. "Once I get a new bolt, I have to start all over again. The way the law is written right now, I will not be able to keep my business open."

Rick Woldenberg, chairman of the Illinois-based educational company Learning Resources, is one of the leaders of the increasingly viral online movement railing against the CPSIA. On his Web site, learningresourcesinc.blogspot.com, he obsessively documents stories like Fluhr and Wilson's, in the hopes that Congress and the CPSC might be listening.

"This is only partly about our business," he says. "For me, it's more about the community I live in. That's what keeps me up till two in the morning. It just frosts me — I feel like my way of life is being hijacked."

Liz Koch, owner of the eco-friendly baby boutique Hatched in Jamaica Plain, recently had a sad little epiphany over the future of her business at a movie theater. In The Tale of Despereaux, a king, addled by his grief over the soup-related death of the queen, outlaws soup throughout the land.

"I was like, 'That's what it's going to be like,' " she says. "Some kid somewhere ate a lead-laden toy, and as a result, there's going to be nothing anywhere. All the beautiful toys will be gone."

090205_toys2-main2
BITE THIS: It's okay if you do, because this dress from Kiki Fluhr's Etsy shop is certifiably lead-free.
Lead and dread
It seems inevitable that, unless the law is amended, there will be fewer children's products on the market, and fewer people making them. The largest manufacturers will survive, and pass their increased costs on to consumers. The rest will face difficult choices.

With many different industries falling under the CPSIA umbrella, it's hard to get a handle on how much of the economy will be affected. But the brunt of the law's economic impacts will probably fall on the clothing and shoe industries, on which Americans spent $371 billion in 2007. By way of comparison, toys generated only about $23 billion in revenue in the US that same year, according to the Toy Industry Association. (On the other hand, the law will be a boon to product-testing labs — though manufacturers worry that there will not be enough labs to handle the coming deluge of products.)

A recent story in BusinessWeek estimated that there are more than 46,000 one-person businesses in the US making clothing or children's toys. Microbusinesses are out in force on the Internet, rallying fierce opposition to the CPSIA. One Web site, endangeredwhimsy.com, is maintaining a keepsake gallery of handmade clothes and toys that could be effectively banned by the new legislation.

Larger businesses are getting organized as well. New trade associations are springing up, like the recently formed "CPSC Legwear Coalition," whose members felt it necessary to declare in a recent press release that "lead is not commonly used in legwear manufacturing." Publishers are incredulous at the very idea that books could contain lead; bicycle makers express disbelief that anyone would suck on a bike tire. Until the CPSC's recent stay of enforcement, the American Library Association was pleading with both Congress and the CPSC to exempt libraries, schools, and museums from the law before February 10 — if not, they said, libraries would have to ban either children or their books.

Increasingly, children's product makers, stymied by the law's complexity and the impossibility of compliance, are calling for the whole thing to be scrapped.

"There's a growing sentiment that an exemption here and an adjustment there isn't going to be enough," says Wilson. "We almost need a complete repeal of the law."

Lawyer Michael Gidding agrees. A 30-year veteran of the CPSC, now in private practice in Washington, DC, he says that his former colleagues believe the law is overkill.

"If Congress is under the Pollyannaish impression that people are going to pay for all these tests and not pass the costs on," he says, "they're smoking something."

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Related: Congress bans kids from libraries?, Obama explained, It can happen here, More more >
  Topics: News Features , Congress, Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act, Toys,  More more >
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Comments
Re: Congress's war on toys
Forcing importers and manufacturers to prove there is no lead in their toys and books? Now how will my child get his minimum daily requirement of lead?  
By cheneysrear2 on 02/05/2009 at 8:18:00

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