I lost my toy tossing virginity last week. And I'm not happy
about it.
Last year, I talked many parents through their anger, frustration,
and anxiety as lead-tainted toy after lead-tainted toy was
recalled. I calmly explained the issues regarding
BPA and steered freaked out families towards safer bottles (and
canned goods) as the stories about this hormone disrupting chemical
popped up in just about every publication from parenting magazines
to local newspapers.
But throughout all of this advice giving, I remained personally
untouched. The extremely well-researched (fine -- over-researched)
toys in my own house weren't being recalled. They're the
tried and true green things -- not so-called natural toys.
Sure, sometimes I wish my kid could have every shiny plastic doll
she develops a "thing" for, but I'm not risking it.
Especially not when she's this young. In fact, since my
daughter was born, we've never purchased a plastic toy (a few
plastic gifts have been grandfathered into an only-in-the-car bin).
I don't say this to sound smug. I just honestly practice what I
preach. It's a pain in the ass but it makes me feel
safe(r).
Ha.
A site to which I often steer parents in the market for toys --
HealthyToys.org-- releases its latest results today,
December 3rd, in time for holiday shopping. And to my shock and
horror and disgust, more than a few toys we own apparently contain
lead, arsenic, chlorine (which indicates something is PVC when it
claims not to be) and other undesirables. Did I mention how sad I
am?
HealthyToys is a project of The Ecology Center. They use a handheld
X-ray fluorescence (XRF) device manufactured by Innov-X Systems to
test for lead, cadmium, chlorine, arsenic, bromine and mercury, as
well as chromium, tin, and antimony. The methodology and the
results are well described on their site, and the sampled toys are
clearly listed by hazard level (low, medium, high). These materials
were selected
"because they have been identified by many regulatory agencies as problematic chemicals or they are associated with problematic compounds and because of their toxicity or suspected toxicity, persistence, and/or their tendency to build up in people and the environment. These chemicals have also been linked in animal and sometimes human studies to long-term health impacts such as birth defects, impaired learning, liver toxicity, and cancer. They were also chosen because these chemicals, or their elemental building blocks, have been subject to either regulatory restrictions or voluntary limits set by industry associations or third party environmental certification organizations."
More from the site:
"When children put these products into their mouths, some of these chemicals may enter their bodies. Some of the substances, which are not always chemically bound to the products, may also be released directly onto skin, or into the air that children breathe. There may also be exposure through chemicals that collect in house dust. However, the detection of a chemical in a product does not necessarily mean there is direct exposure."Melissa and Doug toys show signs of lead and PVC***
Well it's hard, when you see a toy you researched and spent
good money on listed on the site as a high hazard, to try to
rationalize this way.
How the heck am I to know if the PVC HealthyToys found in the
Melissa & Doug kitchen dollhouse set my mother recently bought
my daughter is a route for direct exposure? Surely the lead and PVC
they also found in the Melissa & Doug harmonica she puts in her
mouth -- it's made to be put in mouths!! -- constitutes direct
exposure, right? It came with a 7 Piece Beginner Band Set. The
metal in the Set's jingle sticks also showed high levels of
lead.
Both of these things went directly in the trash, along with the
dollhouse furniture.
The list of Melissa & Doug items that tested poorly is
upsettingly long (high lead in the blackboard of their table top
easel, medium lead in many other dollhouse furniture sets, medium
hazard PVC levels in a train kids can decorate, and in their First
Play Candy Jar Fill and Spill, and other plush toys, including
their First Play Soft ABC Blocks, which also has high hazard levels
of bromine).
Log on for the other details as HealthyToys.org tested a lot of
Melissa & Doug this season -- 173 items to be exact. This is
actually the most HealthyToys sampled from any one company, by
nearly 70 items. Maybe because M&D's whole thing is that
they're parents and what they have a to offer is not only safe
(they say they test their stuff often) and affordable (the toys are
cheap!)? Both are really important to me as an organic mom. I do
not believe you have to spend more money to live green.
[***IMPORTANT UPDATE: Since I wrote this post, and before these HealthyToysresults were made public, Melissa & Doug supplied HealthyToys/TheEcology Center with results of their own thorough third party testing,and The Ecology Center took down some of their high hazard rankings.They are currently comparing test results to resolve what the levels inthe toys actually are. By all accounts, the Melissa & Doug testsare thorough and based on regulatory structure. Which might be part ofthe problem -- The Ecology Center (and this mom) thinks currentregulatory levels aren't always strict enough. I plan to update againas soon as they've resolved their discussion. Here's hoping I did tosssome perfectly good toys. We're all on the same side here.]
Haba, Alex and Corolle products tested positiveToys from other companies I like also tested poorly. There were
medium levels of chlorine in bath toys from Haba, plus high hazard
arsenic levels in the red rattle in their first blocks set (which
we own - bye bye red rattle!). Particularly upsetting in the Haba
samples tested was medium hazard levels of bromine, arsenic, tin
and antimony in some of their rattles and clutching toys -- the
very things designed for the smallest people.
And they detected the following in Alex toys: high levels of
mercury in twist up crayons as well as colored chalk, plus high
arsenic in you-paint ceramic beads. What the heck are these
chemicals doing in there? I'm so intensely disturbed. Oh, and
the plastic dolls from Corolle that are widely reported in green
mothering circles (mainly online) to be PVC free? HealthyToys found
PVC in all that they tested, enough to list them as medium
concerns. Argh!
Before going postal, I called Jeff Gearhart from the Ecology
Center. He thinks it's important to look at the big picture
here, especially as toys are made batch by batch. The actual
harmonica we own might not be one of the ones they tested, and so
might actually be safe. No way of knowing. So looking at a
company's overall performance is one way to attempt to shop
safely in this murky realm.
If you look at the numbers by manufacturer, 74 percent of the Haba
(Habermass) toys tested and 70 percent of Melissa and Doug tested
low hazard while only 25 percent of Mattel toys tested similarly.
Hasbro was similarly problematic, with only 44 percent low hazard.
Mattel is the largest company here, and is among the worst. Hasbro
is the second largest and fares significantly better.
"One message is we do find things get through the cracks, but
some brands are testing consistently better," says
Gearhart.
Even mainstream brands like Gund tested well - 84 percent low
hazard for the plush toy giant.
"Legos for instance is a huge brand and everything we have
tested has been great, it's plastic that doesn't typically
have a lot of additives, not a lot of heavy metals in the
pigments," he says, by way of being encouraging.
Plan Toys, an eco-friendly brand, tested really well - 96 percent
of the 53 products they tested came back low hazard (the hazardous
culprit in one toy was a hat worn by an otherwise safe wooden
person). We have some of their toys, and this season it looks like
we'll be getting some more. We'll also be buying from very
small local companies where I can grill and re-grill the people
making the toys until I feel ok about them.
One green mom friend of mine says she's only ever going to buy
things - like lovely wool felted balls and dolls -- she commissions
on Etsy.com from
here on out. But more than that, we'll just do less toys.
We're not big on toys anyway. Theatre and museum tickets are
inherently nontoxic and environmentally low impact. So are (organic
cotton) aprons and I-owe-you baking lessons from yours truly.
Meanwhile, it's crucial to understand that none of us can
XRF-test or shop or avoidance-bake our way out of this problem.
Toxic toys are a political issue. Parents and other concerned
people need to be mobilized and push as hard as we can for real toy
regulation. Tired parents can sign internet petitions (it does
help). HealthyToys.org is working now to make it easier for
people in whatever state in the country to contact their reps
asking them to get behind the
Kids Safe Chemical Act.
Yes we can (play with safe toys). And for once, it appears we have
just elected who will listen.
posted by Alexandra
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