Your membership has expired

The payment for your account couldn't be processed or you've canceled your account with us.

Re-activate

Save products you love, products you own and much more!

Save products icon

Other Membership Benefits:

Savings icon Exclusive Deals for Members Best time to buy icon Best Time to Buy Products Recall tracker icon Recall & Safety Alerts TV screen optimizer icon TV Screen Optimizer and more

    Advocates of window blind safety not happy with industry-standard talks

    Consumer Reports News: September 07, 2011 01:58 PM

    Late last week, a handful of consumer advocates walked out of discussions of how best to revise window blind industry standards to eliminate safety hazards. Advocates, including Consumer Reports' senior director of product safety and technical policy, Don Mays, said the task force on window blind safety was ignoring the suggestions put forth by the consumer advocates.

    The task force was created last year by the Consumer Product Safety Commission, and is composed of 30 or so members, including manufacturers, federal regulators and consumer safety advocates such as Mays. The goal: To create, by this October, an industry-wide safety standard or risk government regulation.

    While the latest disagreements between task force members may have stalled progress, the danger from window blinds remains very real, say advocates.

    In the U.S., about one child per month becomes entangled and strangled by the cords from window blinds or shades. Yet despite tens of millions of recalled window coverings due to safety hazards, window covering manufacturers have been slow to eliminate the hazard from their products. What's more, the industry, for now, has only a voluntary safety standard composed by the Window Covering Manufacturers Association trade group.

    Advocates believe that without their input, the task force may develop standards that aren't strict enough.

    Earlier this summer, CPSC Chairman Inez Tenenbaum sent a letter to the WCMA that expressed her concern that the organization was considering standard changes that "could continue to expose children to the strangulation hazard."

    Previously:
    Window covering manufacturers get spanked for safety hazards

    Maggie Shader


    E-mail Newsletters

    FREE e-mail Newsletters! Choose from cars, safety, health, and more!
    Already signed-up?
    Manage your newsletters here too.

    Safety & Recalls News

    Cars

    Cars Build & Buy Car Buying Service
    Save thousands off MSRP with upfront dealer pricing information and a transparent car buying experience.

    See your savings

    Mobile

    Mobile Get Ratings on the go and compare
    while you shop

    Learn more