U.S. hadn't updated crib safety standards for 30 years
June 20, 2011Setting aside objections from retailers and manufacturers, the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission is implementing new safety standards for baby cribs later this month.
Effective June 28, anyone who manufactures or sells cribs will be required to meet the new standards, although day care centers, crib rental companies and hotels will have until December 28, 2012 to update their cribs.
“I am very pleased that the new mandatory crib standards will stop the manufacture and sale of dangerous traditional drop-side cribs and will vastly improve the structural integrity of cribs,” said CPSC chair Inez M. Tenenbaum, noting that crib safety standards have not been updated in nearly 30 years.
Detaching drop-side rails were associated with at least 32 infant suffocation and strangulation deaths since 2000, according to the CPSC. Additional deaths have occurred due to faulty or defective hardware.
Manufacturers and retailers had objected that the new rules would cause an economic hardship, particularly on smaller stores but the commission voted 3-2 to impose the new standards on schedule.
The new standards will:
stop the manufacture and sale of dangerous, traditional drop-side cribs;
make mattress supports stronger;
improve slat strength,
make crib hardware more durable; and
make safety testing more rigorous.
The standards aim to keep children safer in their cribs and prevent deaths resulting from detaching crib drop-sides and faulty or defective hardware. The tougher standards were mandated by the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008.
Tenenbaum said the commission granted the delays to child care centers, crib rental stores and hotels and motels were necessary not only to minimize the economic impact but also to prevent shortages of new cribs. She estimated that replacing all of the cribs already in use at such locations would create a demand of approximately 935,000 cribs, which would amount to nearly $467 million in replacement costs.
“In order to ensure sufficient availability of compliant cribs and ensure an orderly and successful transition to the use of complaint cribs by child care providers and places of public accommodation, the Commission adopted a two-step phase in of the rule,” Tenenbaum said.
Retailers
unhappy
Any cribs not meeting the current standard must be destroyed if they’re not sold by June 28. Industry estimates put the number of unsold cribs between 10,000 and 20,000. Some retailers, hoping to clear out their stock, have offered steep discounts to consumers.
“Overregulation is going to lead to the destroying of thousands of cribs that are perfectly good — many that are better than what will come out after the new regulations,” Gene Francis, a South Dakota-based retailer and member of the National Independent Nursery Furniture Retailers Association, told Kids Today.
But Commissioner Thomas Moore showed little sympathy for that argument.
"We expect companies to comply with the Commission’s
rules," he said. "It appears that the vast majority of retailers
did plan and are ready to comply by the June 28th date. In a
rule of this magnitude, it is expected that there will
be
some market disruption and that some companies will experience
economic loss."
Moore said it was impractical to ask the CPSC to allow retailers to continue selling cribs that do not meet the new standard.
"There is little that we know about the noncomplying cribs these retailers want to sell or about the reasons the retailers find themselves with noncompliant inventory. However, there is much that we don’t know. When were these cribs made? Who made them and where? Who tested them and when? What standard were they tested to? When were they ordered? Did the quantity ordered take into account the looming effective date of the new crib standards?"
"Were retailers buying imported noncomplying cribs at fire sale prices to try to make a profit before they had to start buying more expensive cribs that met the new standards?" Moore asked. "Will retrofit kits be available to bring the cribs into compliance? We simply do not know."