November 21, 2007
Attention parents: Be careful when you buy cheap toy jewelry at dollar stores for your children. It may have dangerous levels of lead. The latest round of tests by Westchester County of toy jewelry bought at local stores is in – and 70 percent of the items have excessive amounts of lead.
Much of the national attention has been to the level of lead in Chinese-made toys. This summer, many of these products were recalled by the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC).
At the time of those recalls, County Executive Andy Spano directed the Department of Consumer Protection to visit local stores to make sure the recalled products were removed from the shelves. Once that was done, he decided to go a step further and look at imported products that were not the subject of recalls.
“I was very concerned that toy jewelry that kids play with also could have dangerous levels of lead, so I decided we would do our own testing of these products ” said Spano.
“The results were disturbing,” said Spano. “There is no safe level of lead, and it has no place in children’s products. We will do everything we can to address this problem. But to keep their kids out of harms way, parents should beware of children’s toy jewelry. With Halloween approaching, parents should be particularly on guard and not purchase these products as part of a costume.”
While the county praised the settlement reached today by New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo that will result in some of these kinds of items being pulled from shelves, Spano continues to call on the federal government to act to ban the import into the United States of all toys and children’s jewelry with lead.
“Only action by the federal government can really ensure that our kids are not playing with dangerous toys,” Spano said. “This piecemeal approach is not working,”
In all, the county lab tested 56 items, collected at 16 stores. Of these items, 39 contained significant amounts of lead. At the direction of the Spano administration, the items were removed from the shelves by the stores.
Exposure to lead can have a wide range of effects on a child’s development and behavior, ranging from poor learning to irreversible brain damage. Children under the age of six are especially susceptible to adverse health effects because their bodies are growing quickly and their brains are still developing.
“We are trying to keep our kids safe, but this really needs to be addressed by the federal government,” said Spano, who reiterated his call for Congress and the CPSC to ban the importing of all these children’s products with lead. “While we will do what we can to get these products removed from our shelves in Westchester, it needs national leadership.”
Currently in New York, it is illegal to sell toys with lead paint or a surface coating of metallic lead in excess of .06 percent. Spano said that the state should consider tightening its law further as well. (The use of lead paint has been banned in the United States since 1978.)
In the meantime, the following has been done, part of Spano’s aggressive effort to get dangerous toys and other products with lead off the shelves in Westchester:
- At the county’s request, the stores that sold the items have agreed to remove the products.
- Spano previously issued an executive order banning the sale or distribution of toys with lead at any county government-sponsored event. All vendors of toys, jewelry or other similar items intended for use by children under the age of six who sell such items to the county must affirm in writing that any such toys, jewelry or other similar items which may be sold or distributed to children under the age of six by the county are lead free.
- If residents find they have some toy jewelry with lead they may dispose of it at the county’s Household Chemical Clean Up Day.
Lead-containing jewelry poses a particular risk because children often place jewelry in their mouths, which can result in excessive lead absorption and even death if the jewelry is accidentally swallowed. Last year, a four-year-old child in Minneapolis died from lead intoxication after swallowing a piece of children’s jewelry.
“I recommend that parents not allow their children to use inexpensive toy jewelry,” said Dr. Joshua Lipsman, county Commissioner of Health. “With so much lead-containing toy jewelry in the marketplace, why take a chance? It’s better to be safe than sorry.”
In 2004, the CPSC recalled 150 million pieces of metal toy jewelry sold widely in vending machines. Since then, millions of additional pieces of toy jewelry have been recalled. So far this year the CPSC has issued 20 recalls due to the presence of lead in children’s jewelry, and over 6 million items have been recalled.
However, none of the lead-containing items found by inspectors on local store shelves has been the subject of a federal recall.
Lead-containing jewelry was being sold at the following stores in Westchester:
A Dollar, Jefferson Valley
A Dollar, White Plains
American Dollar, Port Chester
Dollar Dream, Tarrytown
Dollar Dream, Yonkers
Dollar Tree, Peekskill
Dollar World, Ossining
Just A Buck, Somers
Lin’s 99 Cents and Up, Port Chester
99 Cents More, Yonkers
99 Cents USA, Mohegan Lake
1 Dollar Zone, Yonkers
Reol Triple Discount, New Rochelle
Smart Dollar, New Rochelle
Sports Time USA, Elmsford
Nov