Organic Mom: Why The Ban on Phthalates Matters

It won't come in time for this year's holiday shopping, but it's pretty encouraging to see our Congress take a stand against the toxic chemicals in so many plastic kid toys (the same chemicals that have been obsolete in the EU for years). California led the way last year, the first state to baneven trace amounts of the plastic softening chemical in toys that's been proven responsible for reproductive problems in boys and girls. According to the Washington Post, the growing scientific evidencethat chewing on a plastic toy that includes a hormone-mimicking phthalate can cause problems was at last convincing enough to spur some legislative change.

President Bush opposed the ban, but as of January 2009 the shelves of Wal-Mart, Toys R Us and Babies R Us will be phthalate-free. According to the Washington Post story: House and Senate lawmakers agreed to permanently ban three types of phthalates from children's toys and to outlaw three other phthalates from products pending an extensive study of their health effects in children and pregnant women.

I have an eight-month old daughter and everything goes in her mouth. I've never figured out the evolutionary purpose behind this, but am constantly replacing paper, wallets, keys and whatever else she swipes with things like wooden spoons and damp facecloths (sounds gross, but it's been great for teething).

To keep the girls busy in the tub and kiddie pool I usually give them whatever I can find around the house -- metal coffee cups, whisks, rolling pins, BPA-free cups and bowls, etc. My mother made a necklace out of wooden thread spools, which seemed beyond the call of grandmotherly duty, but which they love. The name of the game with toys seems to be change it up, and I'm always surprised what will occupy them for big chunks of time. Right now Saoirse is trying to stuff the hemp into the pocket of a clean pink polka-dotted cloth diaper. Yesterday she found a collection of DVD's and started organizing them in piles and rows with peculiar focus. She spent an afternoon last week moving soup cans (piled in the dining room for a story I'm writing) from the dining room to the living room. You get the idea.

If you want to have a toy tested or to send government officials a letter urging them to introduce different bills or investigate different chemicals, check out HealthyToys.org Take Action Page.

And if you just want to know what's going on, check out the US Consumer Product Safety Commissionfor general info on the products you buy and wonder about.


posted by Deirdre


Related links from the Daily Green:

The Dirty Dozen: Top 12 Foods to Eat Organic
30 Days to a Greener Diet
5 Eco-Friendly Wines For Under $25
The Zen Cleaner: How to Green-Clean Anything
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