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March 21 US: Hunters fire back at environmental group’s effort to ban ‘toxic’ lead bullets

March 21st, 2012

From Fox News:

Hunters are up in arms over an Arizona-based conservation group latest bid to get the federal government to ban lead bullets, which the environmentalists claim contaminates the food chain.

The Center for Biological Diversity, which claims 220,000 members, has sent a petition  to the Environmental Protection Agency on behalf of nearly 100 groups in 35 states asking the agency to regulate lead right out of ammunition. It’s the second time the group has attempted to get the EPA to take up the cause, and the group is currently suing the federal agency for rejecting the previous bid.

Hunting groups scoff at the Center’s claims that lead left in the carcasses of animals they shoot but don’t collect harms the food chain and that spent casings can contaminate groundwater. They say the group has long sought to curb their rights to hunt and own firearms.

“They are like a woodpecker without any wood. They just keep pecking away,” Lawrence Keane of the National Shooting Sports Foundation told FoxNews.com. “It’s clear that their motivation is to end hunting in the United States.”

The environmental group claims the EPA has jurisdiction over bullets through the 1976 Toxic Substances Control Act. But an EPA spokesman told FoxNews.com the agency denied the previous petition because the agency does not share the opinion it has legal authority over bullets and shotgun pellets.

Keane, who noted that the environmental group’s original petition did not exempt police officers or military personnel from using lead bullets, applauded the EPA for understanding its role.

“Regulating ammunition for hunting is simply not in the EPA’s sandbox,” said Keane

Officials at the Center for Biological Diversity, a 501(c)3 organization that took in just under $8 million in 2010, declined to comment to FoxNews.com. But earlier this week, spokesman Jeff Miller released a statement outlining the group’s case.

“The unnecessary poisoning of eagles, condors and other wildlife is a national tragedy that the EPA can easily put an end to,” Miller said. “There are safe, available alternatives to lead ammo for all hunting and shooting sports, so there’s no reason for this poisoning to go on.

“This isn’t about hunting — it’s about switching to nontoxic materials to stop preventable lead poisoning,” Miller said.

Keane disputed the claim that lead bullets are a threat to anything other than what they are fired at.

“There’s no sound science that show lead ammunition having an impact on wildlife population,” said Keane, adding that the firearms industry pays a federal excise tax of 11 percent on ammunition, which goes to wildlife conservation programs.

Last month, Rep.Jeff Miller (R-Fla.) has recently authored a bill called the Sportsmen’s Heritage Act of 2012 which places protections on hunting, fishing and shooting. The bill would clarify that materials commonly used in hunting and fishing fall outside the scope of the EPA’s enforcement of the Toxic Substances Control Act.

“Most of our fish and wildlife habitat can be attributed to the taxes paid by the firearms, ammunition and sport fishing tackle industries through sportsmen,” Miller told FoxNews.com. “Ammunition prices are already on the rise and imposing a ban on traditional ammunition and fishing tackle would result in considerable reductions in the number of sportsmen participating in the outdoors, and funding the future of our fish and wildlife habitat.”

We will keep you informed with future updates.

Jan 20 Canada: CCCR Recall Update

January 20th, 2012

From: Health Canada

Health Canada has updated the recall for the Heart shaped pendant and plastic plug bracelet from December 22, 2011. A second item number/UPC code has been added for identification. Below is the recall with the updated information.

This recall involves metallic heart shaped pendants and plastic bracelets.

    • The pendants come with rhinestones on the edge in a variety of colours (pink, blue, purple, green etc.) and words on the front face such as “best friend”, “peace”, “princess”, “dream”, “truth” and “forever”. Pendants may have been sold with or without a metallic necklace. The pendants can be identified by item number U9FA 241 and UPC 06136694241.
    • The plastic bracelets with removable plastic plugs are sold in a variety of shapes and designs. The band attaches with a metallic snap. The bracelets can be identified by item number U9FA 898, U9FA 896, and UPC 061366948986 and 061366948962.

Health Canada’s sampling and evaluation program has revealed that the recalled piece of jewellery contains lead in excess of the allowable limit.

Click on the links for more information.

Jan. 6 Canada: Four Recent Consumer Product Recalls for lead levels in jewellery

January 6th, 2012

From: Health Canada

Throughout the month of December, there have been four separate recalls related to jewellery items containing lead in excess of the allowable limit. Please follow each link below for more information of the specific recalls.

Two styles of pendants from Novelty Necklace and Fashion Jewelry brand.

http://cpsr-rspc.hc-sc.gc.ca/PR-RP/recall-retrait-eng.jsp?re_id=1501

Love Pearl pendant and necklace and Tour Collection AC/DC pendant and necklace.

http://cpsr-rspc.hc-sc.gc.ca/PR-RP/recall-retrait-eng.jsp?re_id=1503

Carina “Special Sparkle” Necklaces

http://cpsr-rspc.hc-sc.gc.ca/PR-RP/recall-retrait-eng.jsp?re_id=1502

Hair barrettes with attached charms of various design

http://cpsr-rspc.hc-sc.gc.ca/PR-RP/recall-retrait-eng.jsp?re_id=1505

We will keep you informed of future consumer product recalls by Health Canada.

Aug. 9 Cda: Lapel Pin Recalled Due to Lead Exposure

August 9th, 2011

From: Health Canada

The “Love. Hugs. Peace” Lapel Pin by Build-A-Bear Workshop® is multi-colour and comes in a 3 dimensional lapel pin. The pin measures 3.8 centimeters (1.5 inches) and features a heart, bear head, and peace sign in front of a globe. The words “Love. Hugs. Peace.” appears at the bottom of the pin.

Surface paints on the lapel pin contain lead above the allowable limit. Lead is toxic if ingested by young children and can cause adverse health effects.

Neither Health Canada nor Build-A-Bear Workshop® has received reports of incidents or illnesses related to the use of these lapel pins.

Follow the above link for more information on this recall.

Aug. 3 US: CPSC Votes on the Feasibility of Meeting the 100 ppm Total Lead Requirement

August 3rd, 2011

From: Bureau Veritas Group

On July 13, 2011, the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) voted 3-2 that a 100 ppm total lead limit for substrates in children’s products is technologically feasible despite concerns expressed by several CPSC commissioners. The 100 ppm lead limit is scheduled to go into effect on August 14th of this year. This requirement will apply to new and existing inventory unless action is taken by Congress to change the law so that this requirement does not apply to products manufactured before August 14, 2011.

Follow the links for more information.

Jun. 20 US: Don’t try this at home, U.S. opens product safety lab

June 20th, 2011

From McClatchy Newspapers- U.S. opens new product safety lab:

The opening of a start-of-the-art testing lab Monday for the chief federal consumer protection agency will give Washington more muscle in preventing Americans from buying and using unsafe products.

Inez Tenenbaum, the head of the Consumer Product Safety Commission, said the new center outside Washington will enable her agency to do better, faster and cheaper tests of the products its inspectors confiscate at the nation’s ports and in unannounced retail store sweeps.

“This is a moment many years in the making,” Tenenbaum told reporters outside the lab in a Maryland suburb 25 miles north of the nation’s capital. “This brand new testing facility behind me is an investment in the safety of American families.”

The 32,000-sqare-foot center is 2 1/2 times bigger than the aging, leaking lab the CPSC had used for decades, with a limited testing capacity that required the agency to hire private firms to evaluate some products.

The new center has 75 engineers and other scientists, almost double the number who worked at the CPSC’s previous lab at a nearby site that was used as an Army missile radar site until 1975.

“Every test they run, every result they record, every hazard they detect, is about one thing in the end — keeping children and consumers safe,” Tenenbaum said.

The center has nine labs to run specialized tests on imported and domestic goods that kill or maim hundreds of Americans a year, from toys and other children’s products to pools and spas, bike helmets and electronics.

Congress increased the commission’s power in 2008 when it passed the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act after a wave of high-profile recalls of mainly Chinese-made toys with high levels of lead.

The opening of a start-of-the-art testing lab Monday for the chief federal consumer protection agency will give Washington more muscle in preventing Americans from buying and using unsafe products.

Click the link above for more information.

Apr. 8 US: CPSC Approves Accreditation Changes for Third-Party Conformity Assessment Bodies

April 8th, 2011

From Bureau Veritas Group:

The Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) has approved changes to the criteria for acceptance of accreditation of third-party conformity assessment bodies for testing to the lead paint and surface coating regulations in 16 CFR 1303. The changes require that currently approved third-party assessment bodies, also known as third-party testing laboratories, become accredited to perform one or more of three CPSC-approved test methods by April 5, 2013. Two of the test methods, CPSC-CHE1003-09 and CPSC-CH-E1003-09.1, involve wet chemistry techniques while the third, ASTM F2853, calls for the use of a specific piece of XRF equipment.

Click on the link for more information.

Feb. 7 US: CPSC Extends Stay of Enforcement for Testing and Certification of Lead Content in Children’s Products Until December 31, 2011

February 7th, 2011

From CPSC

Starting on December 31, 2011, manufacturers and importers of children’s products that are subject to the lead content limit must have the appropriate certificates that indicate that their products have been tested by a CPSC-approved third party laboratory, in order for their products to be sold in the United States.

Despite the stay of enforcement on testing and certification, manufacturers, importers and retailers of children’s products must continue to comply with the federal restrictions for total lead content. The Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (CPSIA) requires that all children’s products have no more than 300 parts per million (ppm) of lead content.

The stay of enforcement does not apply to the 90 ppm limit on lead in paint and surface coatings or to the current 300 ppm limit on lead content in metal components of children’s jewelry.

Follow the links for more information.

Dec. 3 US: Groups Sue EPA Over Lead Ammo and Tackle

December 3rd, 2010

From: ABC News

Three environmental groups sued the Environmental Protection Agency on Tuesday to force it to prevent lead poisoning of wildlife from spent ammunition and lost fishing tackle.

The lawsuit was filed in U.S. District Court by the Center for Biological Diversity, Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility and the hunters group Project Gutpile. It comes after the EPA denied their petition to ban lead ammunition and lead fishing tackle, which the groups say kills 10 million to 20 million birds and other animals a year by lead poisoning.

In the lawsuit, the groups say that EPA erred when it said it didn’t have the authority to ban lead ammunition. They argued that the legislative history of the Toxic Substances Control Act makes it clear that components of ammunition — shots and bullets — may be regulated as chemical substances.

We will keep you informed of any changes resulting from this lawsuit.

Dec. 2 US: Cadmium and lead result in glasses recall

December 2nd, 2010

From: CBC News

A U.S. investigation of lead and cadmium in decorative drinking glasses has led to two more recalls, and a ruling that the glasses are children’s products, which triggers strict limits on the metals…For items that aren’t children’s products, U.S. regulations place no limit on lead content.
The company that imported the glasses had insisted they were adult collectibles, but it has announced a voluntarily recall. Vandor LLC of Utah said it would work with the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission to remove from circulation the approximately 72,000 glasses already sold.
Health Canada has expressed concerns about cadmium, but under the current Hazardous Products Act is unable to launch a recall. Health Minister Leona Aglukkaq has called for a voluntary ban on cadmium in products.
Click on the links for more information.