The Consumer Product Safety Commission announced the following voluntary recalls Oct. 17:
The Consumer Product Safety Commission announced the following voluntary recalls Oct. 10:
The Consumer Product Safety Commission has issued a revised standard for infant bath seats that integrates a voluntary ASTM standard that also has been revised (see 2407170037), it said in a notice.
The Consumer Product Safety Commission has extended until Nov. 14 the public comment period for a proposed rulemaking that addresses the risks of death and injury associated with children ingesting button cell or coin cell batteries obtained from toys by adding performance and labeling requirements for battery-operated toys containing such batteries, it said in a notice. The comment period originally ended Oct. 15 (see 2408130012).
The Consumer Product Safety Commission announced the following voluntary recalls Sept. 26:
The Consumer Product Safety Commission announced the following voluntary recalls Sept. 19:
The Consumer Product Safety Commission announced the following voluntary recalls Sept. 12:
The Consumer Product Safety Commission is proposing changes to existing safety standards covering water beads, it said in a notice Sept. 9. The commission’s proposed rule would add requirements to Section 4.40 of ASTM F963-23 -- the portion of the safety standard for toys that addresses expanding materials -- to address ingestion, insertion, aspiration and choking hazards. The proposal would add performance requirements to address those risks, as well as acrylamide level limits and testing, and new labeling requirements. Comments are due by Nov. 8.
The Consumer Product Safety Commission is seeking comments on whether ASTM's revised voluntary standard for soft infant and toddler carriers improves the safety of soft infant and toddler carriers, according to a notice in the Federal Register released Sept. 9. CPSC is accepting comments through Sept. 24.
The Consumer Product Safety Commission said there will be no import delays should there be eFiling errors in the commission's PGA message set pilot, according to a Federal Register notice.