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Feds need teeth to recall dangerous products: expert

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CTV National News: Rob Brown on the recall
Health Canada followed America's lead Tuesday by releasing details on the largest voluntary crib recall in Canadian history. Now, a B.C. company caught in the spotlight is on the defensive.
CTV British Columbia: Leah Hendry with reaction
Parents reacted swiftly Tuesday to a massive crib recall announced by a B.C. company.
CTV British Columbia: Chris Olsen on accountability
Olsen explores who should be held accountable in the crib recall.
CTV Edmonton: Laura Tupper on affected cribs
Parents from across North American have been scrambling Tuesday after being told to stop using more than two million cribs immediately after reports of injuries and deaths have surfaced.
CTV Winnipeg: Eleanor Coopsammy on the recall
Close to one million drop-side cribs are being recalled in Canada because of safety concerns.
CTV Toronto: Tom Hayes on the massive recall
Parents of infants and toddlers are checking their children's cribs after an unprecedented recall. Tom Hayes reports.
CTV News Channel: Bruce Cran, CAC president
The president of the Consumers' Association of Canada suggests parents immediately stop using the cribs, and says the manufacturer's voluntary corrective measures are 'not enough.'
CTV News Channel: Nychelle Fleming, CPSC, U.S.
A representative with the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission says the recall is very serious and urges people who have the crib to stop using it immediately. She also says the crib is repairable and parent should go with the repair kit rather than discard the item all together.
Canada AM: Mel Fruitman, Consumers' Association
A B.C. company is under fire after the U.S. consumer product safety commission issued the largest recall of baby cribs in North America. A representative with the Consumers Association of Canada discusses the recall and the issue of product safety legislation.
Canada AM: BNN's Michael Kane on the recall
The voluntary recall of a series of baby cribs made in British Columbia is the largest in North American history. The company will hold a new conference to explain the details of the recall.

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CTV.ca News Staff

Date: Tue. Nov. 24 2009 10:40 AM ET

A top Canadian consumer advocate says the federal government needs to have the authority to pull a potentially dangerous product from the market, just as a B.C. company issues the largest-ever recall of cribs in North America on reports of injuries and deaths.

Mel Fruitman, head of the Consumers' Association of Canada, says that while the United States government has the power to demand that a product be removed from the shelves, legislation that would give the Canadian government the same power is stalled in the Senate.

In the meantime, Stork Craft Manufacturing Inc.'s recall of more than two million drop-side cribs, which have been linked to more than 100 injuries and four deaths, is purely voluntary.

"Until this new bill comes in, the Canadian government does not have recall capability. They've got to say to the manufacturer, 'Would you please take that off the shelves because it's killing people?'" Fruitman told CTV's Canada AM on Tuesday.

"And if the manufacturer says, 'Stuff it', there's nothing they can do about it. That's why it's so important to see this bill get out of Senate, brush aside all of the special interest groups that are holding it up, and make sure it passes, so that Canadians finally have the protection they need."

According to Fruitman, the bill sets out a procedure for investigating injuries or deaths to determine if they are related to a specific product and if a recall is warranted. It would also allow the government to pull products from the shelves if manufacturers didn't comply with recall orders.

While the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) announced the crib recall late Monday, Health Canada did not issue its own statement. The agency is expected to comment on the issue at some point Tuesday.

The CPSC said the cribs' drop-side plastic hardware can break or deform, or parts can go missing. There are also reports that the drop-side itself is being installed upside-down, which can cause it to detach and leave a space in which a baby can become trapped and suffocate.

The CPSC is urging parents to stop using the cribs immediately and either obtain a repair kit from the company or find an alternative sleeping environment for their baby.

Customers who want a repair kit can call the company's recall hotline at: (877) 274-0277

Fruitman said if consumers are putting together the cribs incorrectly, then asking them to repair the cribs themselves may not fix the problem.

"How much confidence do we have in consumers being able to fix it themselves?" Fruitman said. "And the onus shouldn't be on the consumer to fix it themselves. The manufacturer should be putting something in place to make that fix."

While Stork Craft has so far not commented on the recall, the head of the CPSC said Tuesday that the agency "hasn't been acting as quickly as it should" on crib safety issues.

Consumer advocates have complained for years about the hazards of drop-side cribs, but they are still a common crib design that's sold across North America.

CPSC chairman Inez Tenenbaum said the agency will enforce a law passed by Congress last year that gives the agency greater authority to crack down on manufacturers.

"The commission will write regulations in the next few months and we will look at this issue about drop-sides," Tenenbaum said, according to The Associated Press. "But I don't think drop-sides will be a part of cribs in the future."

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