WASHINGTON, D.C. – U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) investigators continued to enforce product safety by screening more than 3,700 imported products at ports of entry into the United States and preventing more than 360,000 units of violative and hazardous imported products from reaching the hands of consumers during the second quarter of fiscal year 2012.
CPSC port investigators, working with U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents, successfully identified 319 different consumer products that were in violation of U.S. safety rules or found to be hazardous, between January 1 and April 30, 2012.
In the first half of fiscal year 2012, CPSC port investigators screened more than 6,600 imported products at ports of entry and prevented more than 1,000,000 units of violative or dangerous products from reaching consumers.
Continuing to top the list of products stopped were children’s products containing levels of lead exceeding the federal limits. This was also the leading category of products stopped in the first quarter.
Second on the list was children’s sleepwear that did not meet the federal flammability standards.
Toys and other articles with small parts that present a choking hazard for children younger than 3 years old also continued to be prominent in the second quarter.
In addition to violative toys, children’s sleepwear and other children’s products, other significant shipments stopped at import included noncompliant fireworks and mattresses.
CPSC Chairman Inez Tenenbaum said the proactive work at the ports shows CPSC is on the front lines protecting consumers.
“CPSC investigators are standing shoulder to shoulder with Customs and Border Protection agents and working to prevent defective and violative products from ever reaching store shelves and the hands of consumers,” Chairman Tenenbaum said.
Tenenbaum also said consumers can be confident that the state of product safety is strong and built to last.
“The pilot risk assessment methodology that we are testing is aimed at early detection and targeting of high risk products and repeat offenders at import,” Tenenbaum said. “I believe this will make CPSC even more effective in using our limited resources.”
During fiscal year 2011, CPSC inspected more than 9,900 product shipments at the ports nationwide and stopped almost 4.5 million units of violative or hazardous consumer products from entering the stores and homes of U.S. consumers.
CPSC has been screening products at ports since it began operating in 1973.The agency intensified its efforts in 2008 with the creation of an import surveillance division, and again in 2011 with the creation of the Office of Import Surveillance and Inspection.
Violative Products CPSC Stopped from Reaching Consumers
* The following list includes only seizures of products that violated federal mandatory standards.
To view a listing of products seized during the 1st quarter of FY2012, log on to: https://1.usa.gov/O07Tg8
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