Making News

Valentine's Day Toys Found with High Levels of Lead

Jan 30, 2009

Valentine's Day Toys Found with High Levels of Lead

Contact: Caroline Cox, 510-655-3900 x308, 541-654-2626 (cell); Charles Margulis, 510-697-0615 (cell); for the California Attorney General's office, contact Press Secretary Abraham Arredondo, 510-622-2040.

Oakland, CA- Valentine's Day stuffed animal toys sold by national retailers including Rite Aid and Longs (owned by CVS Stores) have been found to contain high levels of lead, according to testing by the Center for Environmental Health (CEH). The toys contain lead at levels that violate the new national standards for children's products, slated to come into force on February 10. The lead levels found in one of the stuffed animal toys was more than fifteen times higher than the new federal limit.

"A Valentine's Day toy that could be harmful to your kids just doesn't say "love," said CEH Research Director Caroline Cox. "Parents need to know that these toys are a lead poisoning threat."

The stuffed animal toys are "sing and dance" animals holding red plastic guitars. In each case, the plastic guitar was found to contain high amounts of lead. CEH has previously found high lead levels in plastic baby bibs, lunchboxes, rain ponchos and other children's products, and has forced producers to reformulate their products to eliminate these lead threats to children.

Last year, the Center's work in exposing lead threats to children from toys and other children's products helped prompt Congress to enact the first-ever comprehensive national standards for lead in children's products. CEH has recently held numerous toy testing events throughout the Bay Area, and the nonprofit's work in identifying and testing lead-tainted toys that are still being sold was featured last month in the Wall Street Journal (http://sec.online.wsj.com/article/SB122938878154208997.html?mod=article-outset-box <http://sec.online.wsj.com/article/SB122938878154208997.html?mod=article-outset-box>    ) and other national media.

The stuffed animal toys are made by a Chinese company, Dan Dee International Limited, which has its U.S. headquarters in Jersey City, NJ. Dan Dee calls itself "one of the largest manufacturers in China in the product categories [it] participate[s] in." In addition to Rite Aid and Longs, Dan Dee states that it manufactures products for Wal-Mart, Kmart, ShopKo, Sears, Walgreens, JoAnns, Michaels, Costco and other retailers.

CEH has notified Dan Dee and reported its findings to the California Attorney General's office, which is alerting the retailers today. In December, the Attorney General reached a legal agreement with several toy makers who agreed to adopt the new federal standards immediately (see http://ag.ca.gov/newsalerts/release.php?id=1636  ) . CEH received a grant to conduct toy testing from the Toy Testing and Outreach Fund that was established by the AG's toy settlement within the Public Health Trust.


Photographs of the toxic toys:

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Exposing the Toxic Threat from Children's Jewelry (2003-06)

A Center for Environmental Health investigation exposed the threat of lead in children's jewelry. Our lawsuit spurred the largest product recall in U.S. history and led to a landmark agreement with Macy's, Disney, Target, Wal-Mart and over 80 other companies to protect children from unsafe and potentially fatal exposures to lead. 

See what else we've accomplished.

Meet the Experts

Michael Green

Michael Green
Executive Director
o 510.655.3900 x302
m 510.378.7333
michael@ceh.org

 
Charles Margulis

Charles Margulis
Communications Director
o 510.655.3900 x305
charles@ceh.org

 
Caroline Cox

Caroline Cox
Research Director
o 510.655.3900 x308
caroline@ceh.org

 
Sue Chiang

Sue Chiang
Pollution Prevention Program Director
o 510.655.3900 x311
sue@ceh.org

 
charlie50

Charlie Pizarro
Associate Director
o 510.655.3900 x304
charlie@ceh.org

 
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Ansje Miller
Policy Director
o 510.655.3900 x315
ansje@ceh.org