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Product Safety

 

What's New

The U.S. House and Senate have now both overwhelmingly passed legislation to beef up the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) and guarantee the safety of children’s toys and other consumer products. The two bills are similar in many ways, but not all, so the House and Senate are now in the process of reconciling differences in a “conference committee” where they will finish the bill to send to the president. We’re now working to ensure that the strongest parts of each bill make it into the final law to be sent to the President.

Read our statement from March when the Senate passed its bill.

For regular updates, read the blog at static.uspirg.org/consumer.



How You Can Help

Email your local paper

The U.S. House and Senate have overwhelmingly passed legislation to beef up the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) and guarantee the safety of children’s toys and other consumer products. The two bills are similar in many ways, but not all, so the House and Senate are now in the process of reconciling differences in a “conference committee” where they will finish the bill to send to the president.

You can help by emailing your local paper calling on Congress to support the strongest parts from each bill and to send a final law to the president by Memorial Day.



Current Campaigns

Toy Safety

Toy manufacturers should act swiftly to recall unsafe products and give parents the information they need to allow them to purchase safe toys for their children. Read more.

Food Safety

To provide the safest food possible, the federal government must work with state and local governments and allow them to do what it takes to protect public health. Read more.

Overview

Our product safety net isn’t up to the job of protecting us from dangerous product. For one, America is facing a hyper-competitive, globalized marketplace, with enormous pressure to cut costs—and cut corners. And at the very moment that both corporate CEOs and top government officials should be demanding greater vigilance, we've seen regulations weakened or repealed and funding for watchdog agencies slashed. Just 20 years ago, there were twice as many staff at the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC), the body charged with ensuring the safety of consumer goods. Funding at that agency is now at an all-time low. And the CPSC, along with other agencies led by administration appointees, is too willing to let companies call the shots.

High-profile recalls of food, drugs and consumer products has families wondering what else is slipping through the safety net. In 2007, 25 million toys were recalled because they were laced with lead or contained small, powerful magnets that could perforate a young child’s intestines. Before that  60 million pounds of pet food recalled because they were peppered with rat poison. Drug-maker like Merck were exposed for selling Vioxx even after their own clinical trials showed that the drug had lethally dangerous side effects. The drug ended up ending the lives of thousands after 2 million people were prescribed the drug
 
That’s why, along with PIRG leaders in 23 other states, we’re launching the Corporate Safety Challenge. Together, we want to challenge CEOs to take action on product safety before another major recall occurs. We need to challenge our government to set better standards, hold companies accountable, and put enough cops on the product safety beat to get the job done.

 

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