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CPSC Excludes Mattel From Third-Party Safety Tests
By Jennifer C. Kerr, Associated Press Writer
Manufacturing.Net - August 27, 2009

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WASHINGTON (AP) -- Toy-makers, clothing manufacturers and other companies selling products for young children are submitting samples to independent laboratories for safety tests. But the nation's largest toy maker, Mattel, isn't being required to do the same.

The Consumer Product Safety Commission recently, and quietly, granted Mattel's request to use its own labs for testing that is required under a law Congress passed last summer in the wake of a rash of recalls of toys contaminated by lead. Six of those toys were produced by Mattel Inc., and its subsidiary Fisher-Price.

The new law sets strict limits for lead, lead paint and chemicals known as phthalates. It mandates third-party testing for companies, big and small, making products geared for children 12 and under.

"It's really ironic that the company that was a principal source of the problem" is now getting favorable treatment from the government, said Michael Green, executive director of the Center for Environmental Health in Oakland, Calif.

Mattel is getting a competitive advantage, Green said, because smaller companies must pay independent labs to do the tests. Testing costs can run from several hundred dollars to many thousands, depending on the test and the toy or product.

Mattel says it demonstrated to the CPSC that its products go through rigorous safety tests. Spokeswoman Lisa Marie Bongiovanni also said Mattel has an appropriate "firewall" in place to ensure test results are protected from corporate influence.

"We have extremely qualified people who work feet away from our production lines," Bongiovanni said. "It allows us to do more testing than any other toy company out there."

Lead can cause irreversible brain damage. The six Mattel-related recalls in 2007 involved more than 2 million toys. They were part of a slew of recalls by several dozen companies. The recalls frightened parents and pressure came to bear on Congress to pass the new law, known as CPSIA. Mattel and Fisher-Price have not had any lead recalls since.

In June, Mattel agreed to pay a $2.3 million civil penalty for violating the lead paint ban.

CPSC spokesman Scott Wolfson said Mattel proved its case that its labs were insulated from undue corporate influence.

Similar requests from other companies that want to do their own testing are pending at the agency. The CPSC would not name the companies.

The agency approved seven Mattel labs as "firewalled third party laboratories" -- the first to get that designation under the new law, which permits the "firewall" exception. Mattel pushed hard for the firewalled labs provision when Congress was considering the legislation. The company spent more than $1 million in 2008 on lobbying, according to federal records.

Mattel's "firewalled" labs are in Mexico, China, Malaysia, Indonesia and California.

CPSC issued no press release about the 3-0 vote in Mattel's favor, and information on the vote was not posted on the commission's Web site section pertaining to the CPSIA law.

Mattel says its situation is unique because it owns its production factories outside the U.S. and can do the required safety testing there. Mattel's Bongiovanni says the company also ships out some product to third-party labs, something it's been doing for years.

While Congress mandated the third-party testing, the commission in January said it would delay enforcement for a year of some of the testing requirements for phthalates and lead content -- though many companies are doing the tests anyway.


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Mr Green has said it:  8/27/2009 5:29:00 PM
ironic and unfair advantage. The CPSC must be getting kick backs to allow Mattel to skate on indepenant testing. Mattel's firewall does not appear to be to good when they have already slipped on lead coming from China. Look at the factory/location of the labs. Why is this allowed at all.
Mattel Exclusion  8/27/2009 6:00:00 PM
If Mattel's labs are so wonderful, why were the six toys with lead paint allowed to be sold to the public ?
A kabuki dance of 'safety'  8/27/2009 6:07:00 PM
Four of their labs are overseas - including CHINA?? Mattel press flacks must be very well paid - to keep a straight face while shoveling this BS.
A good move for CPSC  8/28/2009 9:44:00 AM
Considering how badly Mattel was burned a couple of years ago by penny pinching contract suppliers, I would feel very comfortable with their in house testing, as they will certainly not want to take a chance of a repeat!
So the fox gets to watch the henhouse?  8/28/2009 10:03:00 AM
Who thinks this is a good idea? Really?
Yeah, a Firewall  8/28/2009 10:50:00 AM
This is singularly unacceptable behavior by a federal entity. If Mattel gets a "bye", then there must be a process for others to as well. Mattel should NEVER, EVER be freed from having to pay for their abysmal supply chain management programs. CPSC needs to get a grip.
Ethics  8/28/2009 11:00:00 AM
I think Apple recently proved that “code of conduct” and other programs mean little in practical terms in a country that has the level of endemic corruption that China has. Internal self audit has generally proven to be unreliable. Until Mattel brings manufacturing back to the US or another reasonably ethical locale, I would not touch their products.
How long before more lead is on the shelf?  8/28/2009 10:06:00 PM
Let's get the number correct. Mattel was fined for importing 900,000 toys with excessive lead. Their subsidiary Fisher-price had 1.1 million toys recalled due to lead content. Now we're going to trust them to monitor their own items again. Keep in mind they were only fined $1 per recalled toy. How much profit did they make on those items. Generally only 15% of recalled items are returned to the manufacturer. The rest they made money on, lot of money.
Mattel can test YOUR products  9/3/2009 3:24:00 PM
The labs show up in the following CPSC link of 'accredited' third party testing facilities. http://www.cpsc.gov/cgi-bin/labapplist.aspx Maybe Mattel has created 6 new profit centers? Anyone can create a 'firewalled' testing lab within their facility, you just have to be able to pay for it. Mattel lobbied for this right, they probably threw some new paint on the walls of their exisitng testing offices, changed the locks and created a seperate reporting entity and they are now potentially in the business of third party testing.....


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