Miaow
20-11-2007, 06:56
Children's toys fail safety testing
November 20, 2007 12:00am
SANTA will need to be vigilant this year to make sure all good girls and boys get safe toys.
A Choice examination of 30 toys ahead of the Christmas splurge has found 14 failed the consumer group's stringent safety tests.
In what Choice has described as the year of the toxic toy, almost half of toys tested by the consumer watchdog breached Australian safety standards.
The consumer group chose toys that would appeal to under-3s, purchased from discount stores and large retailers.
Toys tested included puzzles, drums, soft toys, action figures and battery-powered items found in various outlets.
The tests -- which involved researchers dropping, pressing or pulling toys as most young children will -- found most suffered small parts breakages that posed choking hazards to potentially destructive tots.
The consumer watchdog's toy tests follow several alarming recalls in recent months.
The tests did not detect lead, despite several high-profile toy recalls this year involving toys contaminated with lead paint.
Eleven of the 14 had small parts break off under rigorous testing, while four are alleged to have allowed access to battery compartments.
http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,22785689-662,00.html
November 20, 2007 12:00am
SANTA will need to be vigilant this year to make sure all good girls and boys get safe toys.
A Choice examination of 30 toys ahead of the Christmas splurge has found 14 failed the consumer group's stringent safety tests.
In what Choice has described as the year of the toxic toy, almost half of toys tested by the consumer watchdog breached Australian safety standards.
The consumer group chose toys that would appeal to under-3s, purchased from discount stores and large retailers.
Toys tested included puzzles, drums, soft toys, action figures and battery-powered items found in various outlets.
The tests -- which involved researchers dropping, pressing or pulling toys as most young children will -- found most suffered small parts breakages that posed choking hazards to potentially destructive tots.
The consumer watchdog's toy tests follow several alarming recalls in recent months.
The tests did not detect lead, despite several high-profile toy recalls this year involving toys contaminated with lead paint.
Eleven of the 14 had small parts break off under rigorous testing, while four are alleged to have allowed access to battery compartments.
http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,22785689-662,00.html