Many Toxic Toys Still for Sale This Holiday

New Report Exposes Deeper Problems

My husband and I were standing in the toy section of Target a few weeks ago looking to buy a couple of nontoxic toys for our daughter. One aisle was designated to mostly wooden and healthier-looking toys, but the labels on them all said made in China. This wasn’t a shocker — about 80% of all the toys sold in this country are made in China — but it made it impossible to know whether or not the toy was safe enough for my daughter to stick in her mouth. We left empty-handed and slightly frustrated.

There’s obviously been a lot written about recalled toys and what to be afraid of, and today the Michigan-based Ecology Center (along with the Washington Toxics Coalition and other leading environmental health groups across the country) released a Consumer Guide to Toxic Chemicals in Toys at healthytoys.org to help you navigate the confusing landscape. The nonprofit environmental group tested more than 1500 toys for lead, PVC, cadmium and other harmful chemicals, so that you can avoid mistakenly poisoning any small children this holiday season.

Unfortunately, toy manufacturers aren’t self-regulating strictly enough, and the government is not testing for toxic chemicals in toys, so it’s been left up to nonprofit organizations and consumers to take action and try to compel the federal government and toy manufacturers to get rid of the dangerous chemicals.

At healthytoys.org, you can look up how products rank from highest to lowest in terms of lead, cadmium, arsenic, mercury and other chemicals that are associated with reproductive problems, developmental and learning disabilities, hormone problems and cancer. Toys made with PVC (polyvinyl chloride) were also tested because they often contain phthalates and other hazardous chemical additives. Babies and young children are the most vulnerable to toxic chemicals since their brains and bodies are still developing and because they tend to stick everything in their mouths.

According to the campaign director for the Ecology Center, Jeff Gearhart, the problem isn’t just China and isn’t just lead. He says you can get clean toys that are from China and that the real issue is finding manufacturers that have a good handle on their supply chain and can produce good products.

The database includes a section about recalled products, but Gearhart says that a small percentage of the products they tested with high levels of chemicals had actually been recalled. Says Gearhart: "This points to the inability of the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) to deal with the millions of products flooding into the U.S. in a meaningful way."

The Website is part resource, part consumer action guide, urging readers to sign a petition to the top five toy manufacturers asking them to adopt a corporate chemical policy, which they will then present to the manufacturers.

The site also recommends that people contact their state and national representatives to get them to have hearings on chemicals in products more general than toys.

Also, if you don’t see a toy you’re concerned about in the database, you can nominate that it be tested in the future.

To find out when a new toy has been recalled, contact the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission and they'll e-mail you.

Following are some other highlights of from the healthytoys.org study:

Find this article at: http://www.thedailygreen.com/living-green/blogs/organic-parenting/toxic-toys-55120501