A New 'Must-Do' for Children's Products Importers and Domestic Manufacturers: A CPSC-Compliant Product Testing and Certification Program


Since the 2008 passage of the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act, importers and domestic manufacturers of children’s products (a consumer product designed or intended primarily for children 12 or under) have been required to issue a certificate of compliance (known as a “General Conformity Certificate” or "GCC”) stating that the product is compliant with all U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (“CPSC”) mandated product safety rules. Now, however, children’s products importers and domestic manufacturers will be required to do more. Last year the CPSC issued regulations that require importers and domestic manufacturers to also develop and implement by February 8, 2013 their own Product Testing and Certification Program.

This new Product Testing and Certification Program, previously called a “Reasonable Testing Program,” must include specified elements, the implementation of which will, according to the CPSC’s regulations, provide the issuer of a new type of GCC (a “Children’s Product Certificate”) a “high degree of assurance” that all of its children’s products, not just the products that were tested, are compliant with applicable CPSC product safety rules.

The good news is that developing and implementing the new Product Testing and Certification Program will increase the likelihood that a company’s children’s products are in compliance with applicable CPSC product safety rules. Thus, it will help to protect the company’s brands from adverse publicity and avoid commercial disruption from goods being detained at a port or recalled by the CPSC.

A Company’s CPSC-Compliant Product Testing and Certification Program Must Include and/or Address:

A CPSC-Compliant Product Testing and Certification Program May Include and/or Address:


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National Law Review, Volume II, Number 171