|
|
||
The Thin Lead LineU.S. House passes toy safety bill with tightened lead standardsPosted at 7:35 AM on 20 Dec 2007The U.S. House of Representatives unanimously passed a bill yesterday aimed at improving the safety of toys sold in the country. The bill lowers the allowable lead level in children's toys, mandates independent testing, increases the budget of the Consumer Product Safety Commission, and raises the cap on potential civil penalties for manufacturers from $1.25 million to $10 million. The popularity of the House bill was due in large part to its relative ease on industry. A tougher, and therefore more controversial, bill in the Senate is scheduled for debate sometime after the holiday recess. The current draft of the Senate bill would do many of the same things the House-passed version does, but would also allow state attorneys general to sue to enforce federal product-safety laws, protect employees who report safety law violations, increase the civil penalty cap to $100 million, and give industry less time to comply with the lower lead standards. Expect dilutions aplenty when Congress resumes debate in the new year.sources: The Hill, Reuters, The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal |
Also in Grist
The Week's Most Popular
From the Archives
As Tom Goes Bye. Tom Tancredo dropping out of presidential race; dozens of Republicans mourn.
EPA: Nay. U.S. EPA won't let California enact vehicle greenhouse-gas limits.
Ogle Cranky Academics Instead. Top British scientist tells women to stop drooling over gas-guzzling males.
|
|
You are not logged in. Thus, you cannot post a comment. If you have a Gristmill account, log in below. If you don't have a Gristmill account, well, by all means go make one! Meet you back here in five.