Bush wants to kill your kids

Oh, what's a little lead in your sandwich anyway? You'd think the Bush Administration only appoints industry insiders to high level governmental posts like the CPSC. Errr, well.

Data on lead levels not used in report

In 2005, when government scientists tested 60 soft, vinyl lunch boxes, they found that 1 in 5 contained amounts of lead that medical specialists consider unsafe -- and several had more than 10 times the hazardous levels.

But that's not what they told the public.

Instead, the Consumer Product Safety Commission released a statement that it found “no instances of hazardous levels.” And it refused to release its test results, citing regulations that protect manufacturers from having their information released to the public.

That data were not made public until the Associated Press received a box of about 1,500 pages of laboratory reports, in-house e-mails, and other records in response to a Freedom of Information Act request filed a year ago.

The documents describe two types of tests. One involves cutting a chunk of vinyl off the bag, dissolving it, and then analyzing how much lead is in the solution; the second test involves swiping the surface of a bag and then determining how much lead has rubbed off.

The results of the first type of test, looking for the lead content of the vinyl, showed that 20 percent of the bags had more than 600 parts per million of lead -- the federal safe level for paint and other products. The highest level was 9,600 parts per million , more than 16 times the federal standard. But the safety commission did not use those results.

...the safety commission focused exclusively on how much lead came off the surface of a lunch box when lab workers swiped them.

For the swipe tests, the results were lower, especially after the researchers changed their testing protocol.
After a handful of tests, they increased the number of times they swiped each bag, again and again on the same spot, resulting in lower average results.

“We thought more wipes was closer to reflecting how you would interact with your lunch box. It was more realistic,” Vallese said.

The test results also show that many lunch boxes were tested only on the outside, which is unlikely to be in contact with food. Vallese said this was because children handle their lunch boxes from the outside.

Of course, when outside scientists examined the results, they were not so sanguine.

“They found levels that we consider very high,” said Alexa Engelman, a researcher at the Center for Environmental Health in Oakland, Calif., which has filed legal complaints about lead in lunchboxes

Tags: , /

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by Seth A. published on February 19, 2007 10:32 AM.

links for 2007-02-19 was the previous entry in this blog.

so fracking annoying is the next entry in this blog.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.

Pages

Powered by Movable Type 4.37