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New law tries to wake up sleepy commission

When is a regulatory agency not a regulatory agency?

One answer is, when, for example, it is armed with powers it never uses. Another is, when it lacks powers to use in the first place.

Today, we will look at the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission. It’s an example of a regulatory agency that has powers it doesn’t much use, that doesn’t have all the powers one might expect, and, according to Congress and other critics, has lost its way, protecting businesses instead of consumers.

Certainly, a regulatory agency that overdoes the power trip, or has too much power, is its own kind of problem, bad for business and bad for America. And sometimes it might be best not to have any regulatory agency at all. But those are subjects for another day.

Trying to describe the CPSC lately gives you the opportunity to haul out the valuable Scrabble words, like ‘moribund’, or ‘listless.’ The commission came under intense fire last year when it appeared not to act quickly and effectively in a series of toy recalls (remember all the reports about lead found in toys, for example?), and some in Congress called for acting chair Nancy Nord to resign.

Well, reasonably quickly, Congress and the President have taken remedial steps. In August, Congress passed and President Bush signed a new law aimed at strengthening the sleepy commission. The Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 does a bunch of different things. It gives CPSC some additional money; sets new standards and testing and certification requirements for children’s toys (to get the lead out, phthalates too); adds a whole range of new requirements for all-terrain vehicles; sets up a database for consumer complaints; and increases civil penalties against violators.

To understand how this changes CPSC, you have to first know who they are and how they are supposed to do what they do.

CPSC, created in 1972, is an independent federal agency that is intended to reduce the number of deaths and injuries caused by consumer products. It has power over more than 15,000 consumer products, though it doesn’t deal with items regulated by other agencies, such as foods, drugs, medical devices and cosmetics, which FDA and USDA handle primarily, or pesticides, which EPA regulates. CPSC also does not deal with automobiles, tires, boats, alcohol, or tobacco.

The names of some of the laws that the commission administers give a hint as to what they cover: the Federal Hazardous Substances Act; the Poison Prevention Packaging Act (the source of child-resistant special packaging requirements); the Flammable Fabrics Act; and the Refrigerator Safety Act.

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