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SnakeBoy
01-27-2009, 02:57 PM
Yep, only government is qualified to help businesses out of this economic crisis.


Children's clothing makers in a frenzy over lead testing

Jennifer Taggart's testing gun seems an anomaly in this California Market Center room filled with pink tutus and flowery white baby gowns. She holds a laser gun, called the XRF Analyzer, to a tiny dress and waits.

The scanner beeps: The garment doesn't contain any lead. Its designer sighs in relief.

On Friday, clothing buyers from retail boutiques start pouring into the downtown Los Angeles garment emporium to decide which items to stock. Preparations for the year's first market day are always hectic, but they've been tinged with panic this week.

That's because hundreds of clothing manufacturers from across the country have been scrambling to test their children's garments for lead and anxiously awaiting the results, hoping they comply with a new federal law designed to protect kids from tainted products.

The Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act, passed last year, bars the sale of goods aimed at children 12 and under that contain more than 600 parts per million of lead. The law takes effect Feb. 10.


Retail giant Neiman Marcus, the San Diego Zoo and a few small boutiques have already said they won't even look at any children's goods that haven't been certified. The trouble is, many of the independent testing labs around the country are too backed up to return items by the deadline.

Manufacturers also are concerned that retailers will use the law as an excuse to send back previously shipped garments that haven't been selling -- which these days are quite a few.

Many clothing makers say they didn't hear about the law until last month, and now they're busy trying to get everything tested before the deadline.

So as Taggart moves the gun to a blue mother-of-pearl button on the back of a dress, the owner of a Canoga Park company that made it looks on nervously, drumming her fingers on the table.

"We wanted to be proactive," said Yolanda Powers, owner of Cassie's Creations. "If something doesn't pass, we'll have to change it somehow."

The requirements are crippling businesses already struggling in a slow retail climate.

A blow to L.A.'s fashion industry would be another hit to the local economy, affecting jobs in mills and ports as well. Los Angeles County has the nation's highest number of apparel-manufacturing employees, according to the Los Angeles County Economic Development Corp., with 56,617 in the second quarter of 2008, the most recent figures available.

"It's going to really hurt our business, and we're already struggling because retail is not doing very well," said Anastasia Backstrand, the owner of children's clothing manufacturer Tralala Inc., based in Orange.

A children's clothing manufacturer sent its whole line back to India to be re-appliqued with glass instead of crystal, because it feared the line wouldn't meet the lead standards, one showroom owner said.

Taggart, who is paid $100 an hour for her testing service, had to inform a Midwestern maker of onesies that the snaps on her garments had failed. She then fielded a call from the weeping owner, who said she needed the income from her clothing business to survive.

"It is just devastating," said Ilse Metchek, president of the California Fashion Assn.

The testing requirements are holding back shipments of garments, she said, which means they sell for less at retail because stores demand a discount of at least 20% if items arrive late. Some retailers cite the delays in rejecting the goods entirely.

On Wednesday, local manufacturers and showroom owners gathered in a packed conference room at the Market Center to hear a lawyer explain how to comply with the act. The mood, said people who attended the meeting, was one of hysteria.

"We were blindsided by this," said David Gardner, director of sales and marketing at L.A. children's clothing maker Charlie Rocket, which expects to pay $10,000 to $20,000 to have its line tested. "Let's at least have a grace period."

To avoid having their goods rejected by retailers, many manufacturers are scurrying to get certified before their meetings with buyers, which is a nearly impossible task.

"Everybody waited till the last minute, and it's not a short-term test," said Ari McKee Sexton, marketing communications manager for Stork Materials Technology, which runs a lab in St. Paul, Minn., that tests toys and clothing for lead.

Starting in August, only labs that have been certified by the Consumer Product Safety Commission will be permitted to offer the testing. The labs charge an average of $800 per test. Manufacturers are absorbing the costs, knowing that they don't have a choice.

"With the economy the way it is, you can't pass the cost on to the customer," said Joanne Yamamoto, owner of Mimi & Maggie, a Los Angeles maker of girls' clothes.

Many companies say they would be able to comply with the law better if it allowed them to test components of garments, such as buttons or thread, before assembling them. Others say they need more time and can't cover the costs of disposing of any garments that haven't been tested by Feb. 10, as the law instructs.

The safety commission is holding an open comment period until Jan. 30 on component testing, but a spokesman said it was unlikely that any final decision would be made by Feb. 10. It will also hold public meetings Thursday with national apparel and publishing groups.

Nicole Schmidt thinks she knows where all of this is going. The showroom owner has worked in the California Fashion Mart for decades, and she remembers the last hullabaloo over testing for children's clothing, when the government imposed strict flammability standards for children's pajamas in the 1970s.

The rules led manufacturers to make the sleepwear with a chemical called Tris, which was later found to be carcinogenic and was banned. This testing will have unforeseen consequences too, she said.

"It's totally normal to be careful about things," she said. "But this has reached the absurd."

http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-lead16-2009jan16,0,2603976.story

ratm1221
01-27-2009, 03:29 PM
How much whining can you possibly do snakegirl?

SnakeBoy
01-27-2009, 04:33 PM
How much whining can you possibly do snakegirl?

If you're capable of reading the article you'll see that it is retailers and manufacturers of clothing for your age group that are doing the whining.

ratm1221
01-27-2009, 04:36 PM
If you're capable of reading the article you'll see that it is retailers and manufacturers of clothing for your age group that are doing the whining.

So they used your spurstalk account to post this crap? I think you might want to change your password.

SnakeBoy
01-27-2009, 05:00 PM
So they used your spurstalk account to post this crap? I think you might want to change your password.

I know you're only lashing out because you're afraid there might be lead in the clothes your mom bought you. Don't be scared, it'll be alright with this new law. Plus you won't have to wear second hand clothes anymore so cheer up kiddo.


New lead rules may imperil thrift shops

With less than three weeks to go before regulations become law, federal officials are scrambling to clarify rules calling for lead testing on all children's clothing, books and toys that some thrift shop owners and small manufacturers say could put them out of business.

The regulations center on a new law set to go into effect Feb. 10. One problem is that the deadline for public comment on how the law is to be implemented is a week later, on Feb. 17.

One Utah-based bow manufacturer says testing of each finished product as required by the regulations would cost her more money than she has made in 12 years in business. The Salt Lake City-based Kid to Kid resell franchises say an aspect of the law governing sales could mean fines and jail time for thrift-shop owners who don't comply.

"We support our government in trying to protect our children, but the bill was poorly crafted and has horrendous, unintended side effects that outweigh the benefits," said Shauna Sloan, founder of Kid to Kid, with 75 stores in 21 states and Portugal.

Scott Trotter, spokesman for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, said the church is trying to "determine what, if any, impact" the law will have on Deseret Industries Thrift Stores.

Thrift stores already are civilly liable if someone is injured by a product. But under the new law, selling any product containing lead becomes a criminal offense, making it virtually impossible to obtain insurance coverage and "exposing resale businesses to unnecessary risks," Sloan said.

Congress passed the Consumer Products Safety Improvement Act this summer after U.S. officials recalled millions of tainted toys made in China.

A spokesman for the Consumer Product Safety Commission, charged with enforcing the act, said Monday the agency has received thousands of complaints and requests for more information but can do little immediately "because of how tightly the law is written."

"The timetable in place [Feb. 10] is unrealistic," said spokesman Joe Martyak. "We're reaching the breaking point on this. We have very little flexibility and no resources" to figure out how the law should be implemented.

Martyak said that although he understands the retailers' and small manufacturers' concerns, initially the agency will focus on products that pose the greatest risk and the largest chance of exposure, such as children's jewelry, toys with small parts, painted items, cribs and play yards.

Although thrift stores do not have to conduct testing, they face civil and criminal penalties if they sell children's products containing more than 600 parts per million total lead after Feb. 10 -- regardless of whether the items have been recalled, according to the agency's Web site.

The testing requirements have Leslie Smith very worried. Working from her Lehi home, she makes 10,000 new hair bows for Kid to Kid outlets each year.

To comply with the law, Smith said she would have to send several samples of each bow style to an independent lab for testing. In addition, each bow component -- such as the ribbon, barrette, lace, wire and hot glue -- would have to be tested separately, along with more testing for each color.

"I did the math for the current products I have available on my order form, and to test all my styles and colors, it would cost me $138,780," said Smith. "That's more than what I've made during the 12 years I've been in business."

Smith pointed out that even if restrictions were loosened to allow bulk testing instead of individual product testing, she would not benefit. That's because Pennsylvania-based ribbon manufacturer Berwick Offray will not conduct tests because under the new law, its lines are "not considered to be children's products."

Rep. Bob Bishop, R-Utah, said concerns from his constituents, "particularly small producers and resellers -- are legitimate. This probably illustrates why Congress sometimes needs to take more time to react and interview real people to see how proposed laws impact them."

Bishop said in an e-mail that unless some adjustments are made, particularly for products known to be lead-free, Congress may need to "go back and fix this."

The entire Utah congressional delegation voted in favor of the law. Some in the delegation said last week that they have contacted the agency on their constituents' behalf.

http://www.sltrib.com/News/ci_11559106?source=rss

SnakeBoy
01-27-2009, 05:02 PM
"This probably illustrates why Congress sometimes needs to take more time to react"

Ya think?

Bender
01-27-2009, 05:04 PM
I've been messing around with lead for 40+ years... and I'm still here.

fishing weights, wheel weights, lead bullets (I'm a handloader), leaded gas, lead paint, blah blah.