Citizen Advocate: A Report For Members Of U.S. PIRG
USPIRG.ORG HOW YOU CAN HELP MEMBERSHIP

Consumer Protection

Victory! Product Safety Bill Now Law
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KIDS PROTECTED—Nancy Pelosi signs the U.S PIRG-supported product safety bill and sends it to the president. Now that the bill is law, lead is banned from all children's products.

The Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act, signed into law on Aug. 14, is the largest overhaul in the history of the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC), which was established in 1973. It will help make products around the country safer—far less likely to trigger the massive recalls we saw a year ago and, more importantly, far less likely to cause harm to children.

The concentrated, last-minute efforts of U.S. PIRG members, consumers and public interest and scientific groups helped push the measure over the top. In the days leading up to the final vote, more than 7,000 U.S. PIRG members sent letters, signed petitions or made phone calls in support. Despite heavy resistance from powerful interests including ExxonMobil, the National Association of Manufacturers and the American Chemistry Council, we were able to secure this important victory.

Heading Off The Recalls

To address the slew of dangerous products that have recently slipped through the cracks, the comprehensive bill will ban lead and six kinds of phthalates (a class of toxic chemicals) in children’s products, and require third-party testing and certification for products going to children age 12 or under.

The bill will also provide much-needed resources for the safety commission, allowing it to remove hazardous products more quickly, hand out fines and penalties to those violating product safety laws, and create a public database so that consumers and the media can learn about potentially hazardous products.

“Protecting children from dangerous products is now the law,” said Consumer Program Director Ed Mierzwinski. “We look forward to working with a stronger CPSC with more tools at its disposal.”

Health Care And Prescription Drugs

U.S. PIRG Pushes For Health Care Reform

With the cost of health care soaring, families, business owners and governments are struggling to pay their bills—but our research shows three ways to cut costs without reducing care.

This summer, U.S. PIRG conducted research in California designed to ferret out wasteful spending in that state’s health care system. Our research found three major problems that are driving up costs for policyholders: excessive administrative costs, the overuse of invasive treatments and costly hospitalization, and marketing that encourages the use of more—and more expensive—prescription drugs.

To help bring down costs, state PIRGs across the country are advocating policies that would require greater transparency for insurance companies’ spending.

We’re also working to ensure that more of our health care dollars go to actual patient care—and not to company profits and administrative expenses.

“Reforming our health care system is a big challenge,” said U.S. PIRG Senior Policy Analyst Steve Blackledge. “Fortunately, many states are leading the way with smart, consumer-friendly solutions to help rein in rising premiums.”

U.S. PIRG
Citizen Agenda
Fall 2008
Vol. 24, No.2



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Director's Letter

To Our Members

Imagine my surprise, on hearing that a veritable army of ExxonMobil lobbyists were lining up for a Senate hearing on a product safety bill. What does ExxonMobil have to do with safe toys?




MEMBER RESOURCE

HEALTH CARE
Read more about the health care report by clicking here