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SOUTH
CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF
CONSUMER AFFAIRS
3600
Forest Drive, 3rd Floor
P.O. Box 5757
Columbia, SC 29250
(803) 734-4200 or (800) 922-1594 (toll free in S.C.)
Teletips (803) 734-4215 or (877) 734-4215 (toll free in S.C.)
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CONSUMER
PRODUCT SAFETY RECALLS |
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Ask
Consumer Affairs
Click
Below

Teletips
RECORDED CONSUMER INFORMATION
(803) 734-4215 or
(888) 734-4215 (toll free in S.C.)
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For the second year in a row, the Consumer Product Safety Commission
(CPSC) is conducting a Recall Round-Up to get hazardous products
out of consumers' homes. Despite recall notices and public
warnings, CPSC has found that many products with the potential to
seriously injure or kill are still being used. CPSC has enlisted
the assistance of my office to help publicize the safety campaign
and distribute information on the hazardous products.
Consumers should do some spring cleaning and
check their attics and other storage areas for old products that
could be hazardous. We can get dangerous products off store
shelves, but the real challenge is to get them out of families'
homes. On Wednesday, CPSC will launch the recall round-up
by broadcasting a video to television stations across the country.
This video will include examples of hazardous products that might
be in consumers' homes, such as the following:
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Playpens
that can collapse and entrap a child in the folded top rails because they
have a hinge in the center of the top rails that must be turned to set up
the playpen. CPSC is aware of 11 deaths to children when the top rails
of playpens collapsed. A new voluntary standard requires that the
top rails of these playpens automatically lock into place when the playpen
is fully set up. CPSC obtained voluntary recalls of the following
playpens with top rails that people had to turn into place when setting
up the playpen: Evenflo "Happy Camper, Happy Cabana, and Kiddie
Camper;" Century Models 10-710 and 10-810; Baby Trend "Home and
Roam, Baby Express;" and Kolcraft "Playskool Travel-Lite Model."
CPSC also issued a safety warning about All Our Kids Models 742 and 762
playpens imported by a firm that is out of business.
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Bunk
beds that can strangle young children. Since 1990, CPSC has received
reports of 54 children who died after becoming entrapped in bunk beds.
Since 1994, CPSC has obtained the recall of more than half a million hazardous
bunk beds. In January 1998, CPSC voted to begin the process of developing
a mandatory standard to address the hazard of children's entrapment in bunk
beds.
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Approximately
40 million halogen torchiere floor lamps made before February 1997 need
to be repaired to help prevent fires. CPSC knows of at least 189 fires
and 11 deaths involving halogen torchiere floor lamps. The industry
is giving free wire guards to people to install on top of lamps at home.
People also should use a halogen bulb of 300 watts or less. The free
wire guard is available at most major retail stores or by calling 800-985-2220.
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Hand-held
hair dryers can cause electrocution when they fall in water if they do not
have a built-in shock protection device (a ground-fault-circuit-interrupter,
GFCI) in the plug. Before the current voluntary standard took effect in
1991 requiring GFCIs in hair dryers, CPSC had reports of about 20 electrocution
deaths each year when hair dryers fell into water. Since the standard
took effect, the toll has fallen to approximately 2 deaths every year.
CPSC has recalled several hand-held hair dryers because they do not have
GFCIs.
Consumers are encouraged to get CPSC's list of recalls and check
for old products that could be hazardous. Send a postcard
to "Recall List," CPSC, Washington, DC 20207.
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