Thursday, February 26, 2009

Toy Industry Association



TIA Launches Electronic Certification System for CPSIA Compliance

New York, NY February 10, 2009 – As businesses, consumers and government officials across the nation turn their attention to the enhanced safety of children’s products and today’s implementation of the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act (CPSIA), the Toy Industry Association, Inc. (TIA) proudly announces the launch of its new Electronic Certification System (ECS) for toys. This web-based platform provides a comprehensive workflow to help domestic manufacturers and importers of toys to the United States efficiently meet the General Certificates of Compliance (GCC) requirements of the CPSIA.

“The makers of children’s products must provide verification of compliance to a broad range of toy safety regulations, including those for lead paint and small parts,” explained Elizabeth Borrelli, TSCP executive director and TIA vice president of corporate social responsibility. “The new ECS helps to reduce the burden of paper certificates while also providing for easy and secure access to electronic certificates by regulators, retailers and distributors.”
Among its benefits, the ECS provides:
  • a single, easily accessible website that accommodates the needs of a broad range of suppliers, retailers and regulators; user-controlled organization of certificates (e.g., grouping by key data such as product type, factory, etc.) and management of display results; secure access, user validation and tracking; and
    an ability to demonstrate compliance with legal requirements while maintaining the confidentiality of proprietary information.

Feedback from a small set of users that were engaged in a week-long soft launch of the ECS has been positive: “Using the TSCP website is not only extremely convenient, it is very user-friendly,” said Rori McKinley, ImagAbility, Inc. “The ECS provides an avenue to update and release our … safety documents and certificates at any hour of the day.”
Launch of the ECS is the first phase of TIA’s new Toy Safety Certification ProgramSM (TSCPSM), a comprehensive and sustainable system that will provide reasonable verification that toys meet applicable mandatory U.S. toy safety standards. Development of the program began in August 2007 through a collaborative process that brought together representatives of toy companies, retailers, toy testers, factory auditors, government representatives, consumer groups and conformity assessment experts. The initiative was organized by TIA in partnership with the American National Standards Institute (ANSI), coordinator of the U.S. voluntary consensus standards and conformity assessment system.

Additional components of the TSCP and its ECS will be phased in throughout the year in accordance with the schedule of requirements in the CPSIA. Beginning in November 2009, for example, the law requires the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) to initiate a program for manufacturers to label product as compliant and to establish protocols and standards to ensure on-going compliance when there has been a material change in the product’s design or manufacturing process including the sourcing of component parts. Historically, CPSC has given recognition to credible and effective industry-created compliance programs versus imposing their own.

The ECS will be demonstrated during the TIA-hosted Toy Safety Seminar on Monday morning, February 16, at the American International Toy Fair in New York City. A Drop-In Learning Center (Booth # 781 on the Toy Fair show floor) will also feature ECS demonstrations on Sunday, February 15, and Tuesday, February 17. Additionally, a webinar introducing the ECS is available.

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Vac-Alert






Pool Safety Council Investigation Reveals New Drain Covers Easy to Obtain

DESPITE RECENT REPORTS that Virginia Graeme Baker Pool and Spa Safety Act-compliant drain covers are hard to come by, an investigation by the Pool Safety Council found the situation is improving rapidly or is non-existent.

"Everybody's starting to step up," Wade Arens, co-founder of major drain manufacturer Aquastar Pool Products, said of himself and his colleagues. "It's getting better daily."

The Virginia Graeme Baker Act is named after former Secretary of State James Baker's granddaughter, who died after becoming entrapped on a residential spa's drain. Before opening in 2009, all public pools install approved safety drain covers. All single drain public pools must also install an anti-entrapment device, such as a Safety Vacuum Release System.

A rash of stories, including one in the Wall Street Journal, have surfaced around the country about public pool owners and operators having great difficulty finding drain covers that comply with the law. But over the course of two weeks, the Pool Safety Council spoke with top manufacturers of VGB-complaint drain covers and found they are experiencing either minor or no delays.

Arens admitted his company, which makes an assortment of VGB-compliant drain covers, was hit hard when the law when into effect Dec. 18. But while demand was so high at one point orders were backlogged six to eight weeks, Aquastar has already slashed their turnaround time. "If an order comes in [now,] we're getting it out in two-and-a-half weeks," Aren said. Aquastar has manufacturing facilities working 24 hours a day, seven days a week to meet demand, and the company has hired more than 40 new employees in the last month to help manufacture the drain covers.

Hayward Pool Products, one of the larger drain cover manufacturers, has no wait for smaller drain covers and no more than a week's backlog for larger drain covers, said Product ManagerJoe DiOrio. Like Aquastar and others, Hayward experienced a swell of demand around the time the Pool and Spa Safety Act went into effect, but DiOrio said the company is now handling the load without problems. "Demand is pretty much all caught up at this point," DiOrio said.

Todd Williams, project manager for Paddock Industries, Inc., said there is virtually no wait time to acquire their stock drain covers, which include large 20 by 20 inches and 24 by 24 inch size. Pool operators looking for large, custom made drains can expect a bit of lag time — Williams estimated custom orders to take about 3-6 weeks to complete — but that overall the company is handling the drain cover rush just fine. "We're going to easily be able to carry the load with no problems," Williams said.

Ron Schroader, whose Drain Safe/New Water Solutions company makes anti-entrapment covers for sumps between five and eight inches in diameter, said he only experienced a backlog for a short time as demand for the covers took off. "We ran out two days before Christmas," Schroader said, adding, "for two hours." Schroader, who hired his son to come on and help with the uptick in demand, said that as a pool professional, he was relieved the Act was in place. "I'm just really glad that people are staring to realize there are layers of protection out there," Schroader said. "And thanks to the CPSC it's finally starting to happen."

Though demand initially outweighed supply, local officials are not worried about being ready for the forthcoming outdoor pool season. Dave Long, citywide maintenance district manager for San Diego, California, said that while the larger drain covers public pools need have been hard to come by so far, he is confident the large number of outdoor pools expected to open when the weather warms up will do so on schedule. "We've been pretty
Safe drain covers successful," Long said. "We've been able to meet the requirement."

Once pool owners and operators have acquired the drain covers they need to comply with the Pool and Spa Safety Act, they can often use divers to install them and avoid draining their pools. One pool in San Diego, California, hired divers to perform the installation, but they ran into difficulties and the decision was made to drain the pool. That time-consuming process — coupled with a heating system that broke and needed repairs after the pool was drained — resulted in the pool being closed from Dec. 22 until Jan. 5, said pool manager Julie Jones.

Small drain cover manufacturers have run into few or no problems meeting demand. "We have not had any problems as far as supplying," Michael Marshall, director of sales and marketing for A and A Manufacturing said. A and A Manufacturing makes the Anti-Vortex Single Channel (AVSC) drain that measures about 7 by 31 inches. And Bob Spillar, president of marketing for the Balboa Water Group, said his company is meeting demand in the hot tub industry he caters to just fine. "We are not having any problems meeting demand in the hot tub industry," Spillar said. Balboa manufactures two- and three-inch drain covers for hot tub suction return fittings.

Aren admitted the new influx of business took him by surprise, but given the state of the nation's economy, he was not complaining. "It's a good problem to have," Aren said.

This article was brought to you by the Pool Safety Council.

Pool Safety Council
Dedicated to the Prevention of Child Drowning Nationwide
http://www.poolsafetyconsortium.org/

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Toys"R"Us Travel Safety Initiative




Toys“R”Us, Inc. And Safe Kids Worldwide Partner to Offer Tips to Help Parents Keep Kids Safe When On-The-Go

Parents and Caregivers Urged to Practice Simple Travel Safety Measures to Prevent Unintentional Childhood Injuries and Deaths

To help prevent childhood injuries when on-the-go and away from home, Toys“R”Us, Inc. has partnered with Safe Kids Worldwide to offer parents and caregivers valuable travel safety tips.

“We love kids, and helping parents create fun, happy memories for their children is at the heart of what we do at Toys“R”Us. To that end, we remain committed to helping keep children safe at all times, including while traveling,” said Jerry Storch, Chairman and CEO, Toys“R”Us, Inc. “We hope parents and caregivers will utilize the valuable safety information we have developed with Safe Kids Worldwide to help ensure family trips and vacations with little ones are enjoyable and injury-free.”

From planning for the journey to making sure kids have everything they need to be safe and happy when they arrive at their final destination, preparation is required for every stage of the trip. Tips are available at www.Toysrus.com/Safety on several topics, including Preparing for the Journey and the Destination, Getting There, On-theGo Sleep, On-the-Go Meals, and In a Crowd.

“When families are enjoying time away together, it can be easy to let important safety routines fall by the wayside. Safety requires constant vigilance, especially in unfamiliar places where children face unknown hazards,” said Mitch Stoller, President and CEO, Safe Kids Worldwide. “Taking the simple precautionary steps outlined in the tips we’ve developed with Toys“R”Us will help ensure safe travels.”

A broad assortment of safety items – from car seats and first aid kits to baby monitors and sleepsacks – are available at Toys“R”Us and Babies“R”Us stores nationwide and on http://www.toysrus.com/. In addition, trained and knowledgeable employees are always on

Toys“R”Us, Inc. is the world’s leading dedicated toy and baby products retailer. Currently it sells merchandise through more than 1,550 stores, including 847 Toys“R”Us and Babies“R”Us stores in the U.S., more than 700 international stores in 33 countries, which includes licensed and franchise stores, and through its Internet site at http://www.toysrus.com/.