The following information was taken from Handmade Toy Alliance.
On February 10th, 2009, the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act (CPSIA)
will go into effect. Among other things, the CPSIA bans lead and
phthalates in toys, mandates third-party testing and certification for
all toys and requires toy makers to permanently label each toy with a
date and batch number.
All of these changes will be fairly easy
for large, multinational toy manufacturers to comply with. Large
manufacturers who make thousands of units of each toy have very little
incremental cost to pay for testing and update their molds to include
batch labels.
For small American, Canadian, and European
toymakers and manufacturers of children's products, however, the costs
of mandatory testing will likely drive them out of business.
- A
toymaker, for example, who makes wooden cars in his garage in Maine to
supplement his income cannot afford the $4,000 fee per toy that testing
labs are charging to assure compliance with the CPSIA.
- A
work at home mom in Minnesota who makes cloth diapers to sell online
must choose either to violate the law or cease operations.
A
small toy retailer in Vermont who imports wooden toys from Europe,
which has long had stringent toy safety standards, must now pay for
testing on every toy they import.
And even the handful of
larger toy makers who still employ workers in the United States face
increased costs to comply with the CPSIA, even though American-made
toys had nothing to do with the toy safety problems of 2007.
The
CPSIA simply forgot to exclude the class of children's goods that have
earned and kept the public's trust: Toys, clothes, and accessories made
in the US, Canada, and Europe. The result, unless the law is modified,
is that handmade children's products will no longer be legal in the US.
Here's how you can help (information courtesy of Cool Mom Picks):

Click here to go to the Cool Mom Picks website and find more article links to know more.