Welcome to The Consumer
Product Safety Information Source
This is a privately run web site - not affiliated with the
U.S. Government - Offering easy to use links to various
U.S., State and other nations safety agencies. Many
States and Countries have their own consumer product
safety commissions. We are concerned about product testing,
compliance testing and certification, safety evaluation,
product and merchandise safety testing, government testing
and all other consumer product safety issues, including international
safety testing of products originating in nations thruout
the world.

Click on the U.S. Consumer Products Safety Commission
graphic for access to the official Consumer Product
Safety Commission website. A reason we offer this site
and link is due to the official United States Government
Website being difficult for most consumers and web-surfers
to easily locate. This is because the official government
web-site uses somewhat obscure abbreviations CPSC, rather
than the full name Consumer Product Safety Commission,
and also uses a .gov extension rather than the far better
known .com extension.
CPSC Issues New Back-To-School Safety Tips - Urges
Safety Checks for Bike Helmets, Playgrounds and Athletic
Fields
WASHINGTON, D.C. – With this year’s back
to school season in full swing, the U.S. Consumer Product
Safety Commission (CPSC) is urging parents, teachers
and school administrators to help prevent unnecessary
injuries this fall by conducting a series of safety
checks to identify hidden hazards in and around schools.
A CPSC Chairman says that taking a few,
simple steps, such as conducting safety checks on school
playgrounds, athletic fields, and inside the classroom
can help prevent children from serious injuries during
the school year. Parents should also make sure that
children riding bicycles or scooters to and from school
always wear a helmet and other appropriate safety gear.
“Parents, teachers and school administrators
each play a major role in promoting back-to-school safety,”
he said. “Conducting school safety checks for
hidden hazards will go a long way towards keeping kids
in the classroom and out of the emergency room.”
The CPSC is providing the following back-to-school
safety tips to help prevent injuries this fall:
GETTING TO SCHOOL SAFELY
Bicycle Helmets: 56 percent of last year’s nearly
535,000 bicycle-related injuries involved children.
- About 800 people, including about 200 children,
died in a recent year in bicycle-related incidents.
- Make sure children ALWAYS wear a bicycle helmet
when riding a bike or scooter, and use other appropriate
safety gear such as elbow pads and knee pads.
- Look for a label or sticker on the helmet indicating
it meets the CPSC standard.
- Wearing a helmet can reduce the risk of head injury
by up to 85 percent.
- Be aware of local laws pertaining to the use of
scooters. Many cities and communities have specific
areas where scooters are permissible; whereas other
communities prohibit entirely the riding of pocket
bikes or motorized scooters.
SAFETY ON PLAYGROUNDS AND ATHLETIC FIELDS
Playgrounds: each year, more than 200,000 children
are taken to hospital emergency rooms due to playground-related
injuries. Most injuries occur when a child falls onto
the playground surface.
- Check with your child’s school to make sure
there is at least nine inches of safe, shock absorbing
surface material, consisting of wood chips, mulch,
sand, pea gravel, or mats made of safety-tested rubber
or fiber material.
- Make sure there is no exposed hardware to catch
clothing and no free-hanging ropes attached to the
equipment.
Soccer Goals: Movable soccer goals
can fall over and kill or injure children who climb
on them or hang from the crossbar. Since 1979, CPSC
has reports of at least 28 deaths associated with soccer
goals.
- Make sure soccer goals are securely anchored when
in use.
- Never allow children to climb on the soccer net
or goal framework.
- When not in use anchor goals or chain them to a
nearby fence post or sturdy framework.
SAFETY WITHIN SCHOOLS
Art Supplies: CPSC has recalled a variety of art materials
over the years due to sharp tools; accessible lead in
crayons, chalk and paint; and other hazards.
- For elementary school age children only buy art
materials that do not contain any hazard warnings
and are labeled, “CONFORMS TO ASTM D-4236.”
Parents should talk to school officials to make sure
the school’s equipment complies with all federal,
state and local safety standards and product safety requirements.
In addition, CPSC urges parents and schools to check
for recalled children’s products by visiting www.cpsc.gov
or www.recalls.gov
Report Unsafe products to the Consumer Products Complaint.
|