Author Topic: California's taxpayer-funded "healthy lunch" lunchbags contaminated with lead  (Read 758 times)

Manedwolf

  • friend
  • Senior Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 14,516
IRONY  grin

Quote
California's 'Healthy Lunchbox' Promotion Backfires
State now urges parents to toss the Chinese-made lunchboxes because of a lead hazard
   
By Truman Lewis
ConsumerAffairs.Com

September 21, 2007

It wasn't long ago that California public health officials distributed 350,000 Chinese-made canvas lunchboxes to promote healthy eating by school children.

Now the state is asking parents to discard the lunchboxes after tests found "significant" levels of lead in some of the canvas bags. The lead was found in only three of the bags tested but officials said they didn't want to take any chances.

State bureaucrats are also dealing with charges that they waited too long to notify parents of the hazard.

Press reports said that state health officials learned in July that the Sacramento County Public Health Department had found lead in the lunchboxes through a swab test.

"It certainly is unfortunate that an item we're using to promote healthy behavior is discovered to be in itself a health hazard," said Mark Horton, director of the Department of Public Health. "We will be reassessing our policy on the distribution of our promotional products."

No big rush

Horton insisted he had acted properly. He said the department stopped ordering the lunchboxes in July and notified local agencies.

But Horton's department didn't notify parents until this week.

"It wasn't until we got more confirmation tests," Horton told the San Jose Mercury-News, "that we decided to take more aggressive action."

"The kind of material we were dealing with required sophisticated testing to determine if there was lead" and if it was a dangerous level, he said. "It took several weeks to conduct the testing."

The lunchboxes carry a logo saying "eat fruits and vegetables and be active." They were given out at health fairs and similar events.

The lunchboxes were imported from China by T-A Creations, a Los Angeles company. They were then sold to a second company, You Name It Promotions of Oakland, which sold them to the state.

No surprise

It's hardly a sedcret that vinyl and canvas lunchboxes contain lead. New York City and the state of Connecticut have ordered recalls of similar items in recent years and Target and Wal-Mart have pulled some lunchboxes from their shelves.

Earlier this year, the Associated Press reported that the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) was remiss in not discovering the problems that prompted New York and Connecticut to act.

The AP story suggested that the CPSC may have hidden the true levels of lead found in the lunch boxes, a charge the agency denied.

The CPSC currently portrays itself as short on funds and personnel because of budget cuts by the Bush administration.

None of that mollifies California parents and consumer advocates.

"It's their mission to prevent illness in children," said Manju Kulkarni, staff attorney for the National Health Law, which works with the California Health Consumer Alliance, "but, instead, they're potentially poisoning them by distributing these lunch bags," the Mercury-News reported.

Paddy

  • Guest
Quote
The CPSC currently portrays itself as short on funds and personnel because of budget cuts by the Bush administration.

Just as I thought. There's the culprit.

Is lead really a 'health hazard' if you don't eat or inhale it?

Standing Wolf

  • friend
  • Senior Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 2,978
So much for the free lunch.
No tyrant should ever be allowed to die of natural causes.

tyme

  • expat
  • friend
  • Senior Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 1,056
  • Did you know that dolphins are just gay sharks?
    • TFL Library
Anyone recall the episode of Angel where Lindsey gets a new hand?  And he's in a meeting with some guy who sold (was it chocolates?) in tins contaminated with lead?  He blames the Chinese who made the tins, but Lindsey assures him that some shell company will appear to have put the food in the tins, and, whoops, that company went of business.

Life imitating art?
Support Range Voting.
End Software Patents

"Four people are dead.  There isn't time to talk to the police."  --Sherlock (BBC)