Labeling Requirement for Toy and Game Advertisements, 58063-58070 [E8-23543]
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58063
Proposed Rules
Federal Register
Vol. 73, No. 194
Monday, October 6, 2008
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER
contains notices to the public of the proposed
issuance of rules and regulations. The
purpose of these notices is to give interested
persons an opportunity to participate in the
rule making prior to the adoption of the final
rules.
NUCLEAR REGULATORY
COMMISSION
10 CFR Part 35
[NRC–2008–0071]
RIN 3150–AI26
Medical Use of Byproduct Material—
Amendments/Medical Event
Definitions; Extension of Comment
Period
Nuclear Regulatory
Commission.
ACTION: Proposed rule: Extension of
comment period.
AGENCY:
On August 6, 2008 (73 FR
45635), the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission (NRC) published for public
comment a proposed rule that would
amend its regulations in 10 CFR Part 35,
‘‘Medical Use of Byproduct Material’’ to
change medical event definitions. The
public comment period for this
proposed rule was to have expired on
October 20, 2008.
By letter dated September 16, 2008,
the NRC’s Advisory Committee on the
Medical Use of Isotopes (ACMUI)
requested an extension to November 7,
2008. As explained in the letter, the fall
meeting of the ACMUI is scheduled for
October 27 and 28, 2008, and the subject
matter in the proposed rule is on the
agenda for discussion at this public
meeting. ACMUI believes that it will be
able to provide better comment on the
proposed rule following this discussion.
Due to the complex nature of the
proposed medical rule and the high
public interest of the medical
community, the NRC has decided to
extend the comment period until
November 7, 2008.
DATES: The comment period has been
extended and now expires on November
7, 2008. Comments received after this
date will be considered if it is practical
to do so, but the NRC is able to assure
consideration only for comments
received on or before this date.
ADDRESSES: Please include the following
number RIN 3150–AI26 in the subject
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SUMMARY:
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line of your comments. Comments on
rulemakings submitted in writing or in
electronic form will be made available
to the public in their entirety on the
NRC’s Web site in the Agencywide
Documents Access and Management
System (ADAMS) and at https://
www.regulations.gov. Personal
information, such as your name,
address, telephone number, e-mail
address, etc., will not be removed from
your submission. You may submit
comments by any one of the following
methods.
Electronically: Via the Federal
eRulemaking Portal (Docket ID NRC–
2008–0071) and follow instructions for
submitting comments. Address
questions about this docket to Carol
Gallagher 301–415–5905; e-mail
Carol.Gallagher@nrc.gov.
Mail comments to: Secretary, U.S.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission,
Washington, DC 20555–0001, ATTN:
Rulemakings and Adjudications Staff.
E-mail comments to: Rulemaking.
Comments@nrc.gov. If you do not
receive a reply e-mail confirming that
we have received your comments,
contact us directly at 301–415–1966.
Hand deliver comments to: 11555
Rockville Pike, Rockville, Maryland
20852, between 7:30 a.m. and 4:15 p.m.
Federal workdays. (Telephone 301–415–
1966).
Fax comments to: Secretary, U.S.
Nuclear Regulatory Commission at 301–
415–1101.
You may submit comments on the
information collections by the methods
indicated in the Paperwork Reduction
Act Statement.
Publicly available documents related
to this rulemaking may be viewed
electronically on the public computers
located at the NRC’s Public Document
Room (PDR), Room O–1 F21, One White
Flint North, 11555 Rockville Pike,
Rockville, Maryland. The PDR
reproduction contractor will copy
documents for a fee.
Publicly available documents created
or received at the NRC after November
1, 1999, are available electronically at
the NRC’s Electronic Reading Room at
https://www.nrc.gov/reading-rm/
adams.html. From this site, the public
can gain entry into ADAMS, which
provides text and image files of NRC’s
public documents. If you do not have
access to ADAMS or if there are
problems in accessing the documents
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located in ADAMS, contact the PDR
Reference staff at 1–800–397–4209, 301–
415–4737 or by e-mail to
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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Edward M. Lohr, Office of Federal and
State Materials and Environmental
Management Programs, U.S. Nuclear
Regulatory Commission, Washington,
DC 20555–0001, telephone 301–415–
0253, e-mail, Edward.Lohr@nrc.gov.
Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this 30th day
of September 2008.
For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Annette Vietti-Cook,
Secretary of the Commission.
[FR Doc. E8–23534 Filed 10–3–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7590–01–P
CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY
COMMISSION
16 CFR Part 1500
Labeling Requirement for Toy and
Game Advertisements
Consumer Product Safety
Commission.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: Section 105 of the Consumer
Product Safety Improvement Act of
2008, (‘‘CPSIA’’), directs the
Commission to promulgate regulations
to effectuate this section with respect to
advertising for certain toys and games in
catalogues and other printed materials
not later than 90 days after enactment.
The Commission invites public
comment on this proposal.
DATES: Written comments concerning
the advertisement requirements with
respect to catalogues and other printed
materials must be received by October
20, 2008. Written comments concerning
the requirements with respect to
Internet advertisements must be
received by November 20, 2008.
ADDRESSES: Comments should be emailed to cpsc-os@cpsc.gov, and should
be captioned ‘‘ADVERTISING
REQUIREMENTS NPR.’’ Comments may
also be mailed, preferably in five copies,
to the Office of the Secretary, Consumer
Product Safety Commission, Room 502,
4330 East-West Highway, Bethesda,
Maryland 20814, or delivered to the
same address (telephone (301) 504–
0800). Comments also may be filed by
facsimile to (301) 504–0127.
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 194 / Monday, October 6, 2008 / Proposed Rules
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
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Barbara E. Parisi, Project Manager,
Office of General Counsel, Consumer
Product Safety Commission, 4330 EastWest Highway, Bethesda, Maryland;
telephone (301) 504–7879 or e-mail:
bparisi@cpsc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
A. Background
Section 24(a) of the Federal
Hazardous Substances Act (FHSA)
prescribes cautionary labeling
requirements for toys or games that are
intended for use by children from 3 to
6 years old and contain small parts. The
cautionary statement warns potential
purchasers that these products are not
for children under 3 years old due to
choking hazards. Section 24(b) of the
FHSA prescribes similar requirements
for balloons, small balls, and marbles
intended for children 3 years and older,
or any toy or game which contains such
a balloon, small ball, or marble.
Section 105 of the CPSIA, Public Law
110–314, 122 Stat. 3016 (August 14,
2008), amends section 24 of the FHSA
to require that, when a product’s
packaging requires a cautionary
statement, advertising for the product
that provides a direct means for
purchase or order of the product
(including catalogues, other printed
materials, and Internet Web sites) must
bear the same cautionary statement.
Section 105 provides some guidelines
on the format of the cautionary
statement. Specifically, it must be
prominently displayed in the primary
language used in the advertisement, in
conspicuous and legible type in contrast
by typography, layout, or color with
other material printed or displayed in
the advertisement, and in a manner
consistent with 16 CFR part 1500.
Section 105 of the CPSIA also allows
the Commission to provide a grace
period of no more than 180 days for
catalogues and other printed material
printed prior to the effective date. In
addition, the Commission is directed to
determine the applicability of the
requirements to catalogues and other
printed material distributed solely
between businesses and not to
individual consumers.
Section 105(2) of the CPSIA exempts
the Commission from conducting a
Regulatory Flexibility Act and
Paperwork Reduction Act analysis for
this rulemaking.
B. Proposed Regulation
Following is a brief description of the
principal provisions of the
Commission’s proposed regulation.
The CPSIA directs that the cautionary
statements required by section 105 of
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the CPSIA be prominently displayed in
a manner consistent with 16 CFR part
1500. The CPSIA also provides the
Commission with the authority to
promulgate a regulation concerning the
size and placement of the required
cautionary statements. The Commission
believes that the requirements in 16 CFR
1500.121 are consistent with commonly
accepted hazard-labeling guidelines and
are appropriate as guidelines for the
cautionary statements in the advertising,
with a few modifications, as described
below.
1. Minimum Type Size for
Advertisements in Catalogues and Other
Printed Material.
The minimum type-size requirements
specified in 16 CFR 1500.121 are based
on the area of the principal display
panel of a hazardous substance. For
purposes of labeling advertisements in
catalogues or other printed materials,
these type-size requirements would be
determined based on the size of the
advertisement for the specific toy or
game to which it applies. For small
advertisements-ones no more than 2
square inches-16 CFR 1500.121 would
permit signal words and hazard
statements with letter heights as small
as 3⁄64 inch, or less than 5 points; the
letter heights of other cautionary
material in the label could be as small
as 1⁄32 inch, or about 3 points.
The Commission has preliminarily
determined, based on research, that
such small or fine-print risk disclosures
in product advertising would be
ineffective because people are unlikely
to read them. Based on research
regarding the legibility and readability
of text and numerals, the Commission
has preliminarily determined that the
proposed rule should refer to the
minimum type sizes specified in 16 CFR
1500.121, but include the requirement
that the sizes employed cannot be
smaller than 0.08 inches, or about 5/64
inch.
ANSI 2535.6 (2006), the primary U.S.
voluntary consensus standard on
product safety information in product
manuals, instructions, and other
collateral materials, specifies that safety
message text be no smaller than the
majority of other non-safety text, other
than headings, immediately
surrounding it. The Commission agrees
with this specification and has applied
this general principle to the cautionary
labeling of advertisements in catalogues
or other printed materials by requiring
cautionary statements to be the larger of
(1) a certain minimum type size based
on the size of the advertisement (but no
smaller than 0.08 inches), or (2) the size
of the largest text in the advertisement
that describes the function, use, or
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characteristics of the toy or game being
advertised.
2. Abbreviated Warnings for
Catalogues and Other Printed Materials.
The Commission recognizes that it
may be difficult to include the full
cautionary statements as spelled out in
sections 24(a) and (b) of the FHSA next
to each product in a catalogue or other
printed material requiring a cautionary
statement. ANSI Z535.6 (2006) allows
for the use of section safety messages in
product manuals, instructions, and
other collateral materials. Although
advertising and promotional materials
are not included within the scope of
ANSI Z535.6, this voluntary standard
appears to be the most relevant to these
materials. Section safety messages are
those that apply to entire sections,
subsections, or multiple paragraphs or
procedures within a document, and
typically appear at the beginning of the
section to which they apply. One of the
intended functions of section safety
messages is to avoid the unnecessary
repetition of safety information while
allowing users to access the other
information more easily and efficiently.
If this concept were applied directly to
advertisements in catalogues or other
printed materials, a single version of a
cautionary statement could be placed at
the beginning of a page or section of
advertised products that includes only
toys and games that would require the
same cautionary statements. This might
be difficult to implement, however, in
those cases in which a toy or game
requires multiple cautionary statements.
Additionally, research has shown that
warnings generally should be located
where consumers are likely to be
looking when the information is needed,
and a single relevant cautionary
message at the beginning of a multi-page
section could be missed easily. To
address these concerns, the Commission
proposes that shorthand, or abbreviated,
versions of the required warnings be
permitted in each product
advertisement, provided that these are
defined with the full warning at the
bottom or top of each page—or
extending across two facing pages if
both pages contain products to which
the warnings apply—of the catalogues.
The bottom or top of each page or twopage spread must provide the definition,
or full cautionary statement, for each
abbreviated warning on that page. The
proposed text of the rule contains the
abbreviated statements appropriate for
each cautionary statement.
3. Internet Warnings.
Section 105 of the CPSIA stipulates
that the Commission shall promulgate a
final rule ‘‘with respect to catalogues
and other printed material’’ by
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November 12, 2008. The CPSIA does not
mandate that the Commission
promulgate a final rule with regard to
requirements for Internet advertising.
Nonetheless, the Commission has
proposed requirements for Internet
advertising, as detailed below and
included in the proposed rule.
The comment period with respect to
requirements for Internet advertising is
longer than that for requirements for
catalogues and other printed materials.
Comments on Internet advertising
requirements must be received by
November 20, 2008. Regardless of
whether and when the Commission
issues a final rule on the Internet
advertising requirements, the
requirements for Internet
advertisements as implemented by
Section 105 of the CPSIA will go into
effect on December 12, 2008. As with
catalogues and other printed materials,
most of the requirements specified in 16
CFR 1500.121 may be applied to the
cautionary labeling of advertisements on
Internet Web sites. The minimum typesize requirements specified in 16 CFR
1500.121, however, cannot be applied
readily since they are based on the area
of the principal display panel, and the
analogous area for an Internet
advertisement could be limited by the
size of the consumer’s Internet browser
application window or by the computer
monitor or display area which could
vary considerably. The Commission
proposes that the type size of the
cautionary statements must be at least
equal to the size of the largest text in the
advertisement that describes the
function, use, or characteristics of the
toy or game advertised (for example, the
product description).
Research has found that risk
information that is placed below the
page scroll of a Web site is unlikely to
be seen. To reduce the likelihood of this
occurring, the Commission is proposing
that the required cautionary statement
be located immediately before any other
statements in the advertisement that
describes the function, use, or
characteristics of the toy or game being
advertised. Further, the Commission
preliminarily finds that the use of
abbreviated warnings in place of full
text warnings is neither necessary nor
desirable for Internet advertisements.
4. Business to Business Catalogues.
The CPSIA directs the Commission to
determine the applicability of the
advertising requirements to catalogues
and other printed materials that are
distributed solely among businesses.
The Commission has analyzed the
benefits and costs associated with
having the advertising requirements
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applicable to business to business
catalogues.
Some retailers that specialize in
products for young children might be
wary of carrying products that contain
small parts or balloons. These retailers
might value being provided cautionary
statements before they order the product
from their suppliers. However, Section
105 of the CPSIA already requires
manufacturers, importers and other
suppliers to inform retailers of any
cautionary statements that are required
to be included in catalogues and other
printed advertisements for the products
they supply. Specifying just how this
information must be supplied (e.g. ,
through a catalogue), would reduce the
flexibility of manufacturers and other
suppliers in determining how best to
supply the required information. If the
requirements were not applied to
catalogues distributed solely between
businesses, the manufacturers and other
suppliers would have the flexibility to
develop less costly means of providing
the information to their retailers.
Moreover, because retailers typically do
not provide young children with direct
access to the products, it is likely that
applying these requirements to
catalogues distributed solely among
businesses would prevent very few
injuries, if any. This would reduce the
value of applying the requirements to
catalogues distributed solely to retailers
and similar businesses relative to the
value of including them in catalogues
distributed to consumers. There would
be some costs associated with applying
the advertising requirements to business
to business catalogues, including costs
associated with changing the page
layouts to include cautionary
statements. It will require some time
and effort by the publishers to
determine how the cautionary
statements can best be added to their
catalogues and then to proof the copy
once the changes are made.
If an exemption were included for
business to business catalogues and
cautionary statements were not
included in catalogues that were
distributed to organizations or
establishments such as schools, day care
centers, churches, and recreational
facilities as a result of the exemption,
the intent of section 105 of the CPSIA
could be thwarted. This is because such
organizations often act as ‘‘ultimate
consumers,’’ purchasing the toys and
games for the use of children and not for
resale. Thus, any exemption provided
would need to distinguish between
catalogues distributed solely between
businesses and those intended for final
distribution to ultimate consumers,
which may include institutions such as
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schools, day care centers, churches, and
recreational facilities.
The Commission seeks further input
on whether advertising requirements for
catalogues and other printed materials
should also apply to materials
distributed solely between businesses
and not to ultimate consumers, and if
not, how the Commission can
distinguish catalogues distributed solely
between businesses from those intended
for final distribution to ultimate
consumers, which may include
institutions such as schools and day
care centers.
C. Effective Date
Section 105 of the CPSIA provides
that the requirements for Internet
advertising shall take effect December
12, 2008. It provides that the
requirements will apply to catalogues
and other printed materials published or
distributed on or after February 10,
2009. This includes catalogues that were
printed prior to February 10, 2009 but
not distributed until after February 10,
2009. The CPSIA authorizes the
Commission to provide a grace period of
not more than 180 days for catalogues
and other printed material printed prior
to February 10, 2009, during which time
distribution of such catalogues and
other printed materials shall not be
considered a violation of the standard.
The Commission staff has determined
that there can be relatively long lead
times for developing and printing
catalogues, and some publishers expect
to distribute catalogues for as long as
two years after printing. Thus, it is
likely that there are catalogues in
circulation now, or that have been
printed, or will be printed over the next
several weeks, that do not contain the
cautionary statements, but that are
intended for distribution after February
10, 2009. If the Commission did not
provide for a grace period, the retailers,
manufacturers, and importers who
published the catalogues would have to
stop distributing them on February 10,
2009. The catalogues still in stock
would have to be discarded and
replacement catalogues would have to
be printed, a cost to the publishers both
in terms of discarding of the catalogues
and in the possible loss in sales if the
business experienced delays in
obtaining reprinted catalogues.
The cost of providing a grace period—
that some consumers may purchase
games or toys from catalogues that they
would not have purchased had they
seen the cautionary labeling—though
difficult to quantify, is likely to be
small. The same cautionary statements
are required on the products’ packaging,
and a parent could return or keep the
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product out of reach until the children
are older if need be.
Even with a grace period of 180 days,
all catalogues distributed after August 9,
2009, which includes all catalogues
distributed in anticipation of the 2009
holiday shopping season, will have to
contain the required cautionary
statements.
Because of the significant lead time
involved in printing catalogues and the
relatively small cost of providing a grace
period of 180 days, the Commission
preliminarily finds that a grace period of
180 days is warranted.
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D. Environmental Considerations
As a labeling rule, the proposed rule
falls within the provisions of 16 CFR
1021.5(c) which designates categories of
actions conducted by the Consumer
Product Safety Commission that
normally have little or no potential for
affecting the human environment. It is
true that, if no grace period were
provided, the requirements in Section
105 of the CPSIA would apply to all
catalogues or other printed materials
distributed after February 10, 2009, so
that materials printed prior to this date
that did not have the cautionary
statements could not be distributed and
would have to be discarded. This would
increase the volume of material entering
the waste stream. However, the increase
would be small relative to the total
volume of materials that enter the waste
stream each year. Providing a grace
period would further reduce this
impact. Based on this, the Commission
preliminarily finds that neither an
environmental assessment nor an
environmental impact statement is
required.
E. Request for Information and
Comments
Interested persons are invited to
submit comments regarding this
proposal. The Commission specifically
seeks comments on the following:
1. The abbreviated versions and the
minimum type-size and placement
requirements of the cautionary
statements as proposed in this rule;
2. The impact of the proposals on
minimum type-size and placement in
catalogues and other printed materials
on businesses;
3. How often catalogues or other
written materials are published and how
much lead time is required to prepare
these materials for publication;
4. The cost of publishing new
catalogues to meet these requirements
without the 180 day grace period;
5. Whether the advertising
requirements for catalogues and other
printed materials should also apply to
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materials distributed solely between
businesses and not to ultimate
consumers, and, if not, how the
Commission can distinguish catalogues
distributed solely between businesses
from those intended for final
distribution to ultimate consumers,
which may include institutions such as
schools, churches, day care centers, and
recreational facilities.
Comments should be e-mailed to
cpsc-os@cpsc.gov and should be
captioned ‘‘ADVERTISING
REQUIREMENTS NPR.’’ Comments may
also be mailed, preferably in five copies,
to the Office of the Secretary, Consumer
Product Safety Commission, Room 502,
4330 East-West Highway, Bethesda, MD
20814, or delivered to the same address
(telephone (301) 504–0800). Comments
also may be filed by telefacsimile to
(301) 504–0127. All comments and
submissions should be received no later
than October 20, 2008.
List of Subjects in 16 CFR Part 1500
Consumer protection, labeling.
Conclusion
Under authority of section 3 and
section 105 of the Consumer Product
Safety Improvement Act, Public Law
110—314, 122 Stat. 3016 (August 14,
2008), the Commission proposes to
amend Title 16, Chapter II, Subchapter
C, Part 1500 as set forth below.
PART 1500—HAZARDOUS
SUBSTANCES AND ARTICLES;
ADMINISTRATION AND
ENFORCEMENT REGULATIONS
1. The authority citation for part 1500
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 1261–1278.
2. Section 1500.20 is added to read as
follows:
§ 1500.20 Labeling requirement for
advertising toys and games.
(a) Scope. This section applies to
advertisements (including catalogues,
other printed materials, and Internet
Web sites), which provide a direct
means of purchase or order of products
requiring cautionary labeling under
sections 24(a) and (b) of the FHSA.
(b) Effective Date. The effective date
of this standard with respect to
catalogues and other printed materials is
February 10, 2009. The Commission is
providing a grace period of 180 days, or
until August 9, 2009, during which
catalogues and other printed materials
printed prior to February 10, 2009 may
be distributed. All catalogues and other
printed materials distributed on or after
August 9, 2009 must comply with the
standard, regardless of when they were
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printed. The effective date of this
standard with respect to Internet Web
sites is December 12, 2008.
(c) Definitions. For the purposes of
this section, the following definitions
shall apply.
(1) Ball means a spherical, ovoid, or
ellipsoidal object that is designed or
intended to be thrown, hit, kicked,
rolled, dropped, or bounced. The term
‘‘ball’’ includes any spherical, ovoid, or
ellipsoidal object that is attached to a
toy or article by means of a string,
elastic cord, or similar tether. The term
‘‘ball’’ also includes a multi-sided object
formed by connecting planes into a
generally spherical, ovoid, or ellipsoidal
shape that is designated or intended to
be used as a ball, and any novelty item
of a generally spherical, ovoid, or
ellipsoidal shape that is designated or
intended to be used as a ball. The term
‘‘ball’’ does not include dice, or balls
permanently enclosed inside pinball
machines, mazes, or similar other
containers. A ball is permanently
enclosed if, when tested in accordance
with 16 CFR 1500.53, it is not removed
from the outer container.
(2) Small ball means a ball that, under
the influence of its own weight, passes
in any orientation, entirely through a
circular hole with a diameter of 1.75
inches (44.4 mm) in a rigid template
1⁄4 inches (6 mm) thick. In testing to
evaluate compliance with this
regulation, the diameter of opening in
the Commission’s test template shall be
no greater than 1.75 inches (44.4 mm).
(3) Latex balloon means a toy or
decorative item consisting of a latex bag
that is designed to be inflated by air or
gas. The term does not include
inflatable children’s toys that are used
in aquatic activities such as rafts, water
wings, swim rings, or other similar
items.
(4) Marble means a ball made of hard
material, such as glass, agate, marble, or
plastic, that is used in various children’s
games, generally as a playing piece or
marker. The term ‘‘marble’’ does not
include a marble permanently enclosed
in a toy or game. A marble is
permanently enclosed if, when tested in
accordance with 16 CFR 1500.53, it is
not removed from the toy or game.
(5) Small part means any object
which, when tested in accordance with
the procedures contained in 16 CFR
1501.4(a) and 1501.4(b)(1), fits entirely
within the cylinder shown in Figure 1
appended to 16 CFR part 1501. The use
and abuse testing provisions of 16 CFR
1500.51 through 1500.53 and
1501.4(b)(2) do not apply to this
definition.
(6) Direct means of purchase or order
means any method of purchase that
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latex balloon, shall bear the following
cautionary statement:
(3)(i) The advertising for any small
ball intended for children three years of
age or older shall bear the following
cautionary statement:
(ii) The advertising for any toy or
game intended for children who are at
least three years old but less than eight
years of age that contains a small ball
direct means for the consumer to
purchase or order the product.
(1) The advertising for any article that
is a toy or game intended for use by
children who are at least three years old
but less than six years of age shall bear
or contain the following cautionary
statement if the toy or game includes a
small part:
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shall bear the following cautionary
statement:
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EP06OC08.073
product online or through the use of a
telephone number or fax number
provided on the Internet Web site.
(d) Advertising requirements. Any toy
or game that requires a cautionary
statement about the choking hazard
associated with small parts, balloons,
small balls, or marbles must bear that
cautionary statement in the product’s
advertising if the advertising provides a
(2) The advertising for any latex
balloon, or toy or game that contains a
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with PROPOSALS
allows consumers to order the product
without being in the physical presence
of the product. Advertising that
provides a direct means of purchase or
order of a product would include
catalogues or other printed advertising
material that contain order blanks,
telephone numbers or fax numbers for
placing orders, and Internet Web sites
that enable consumers to purchase a
58067
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 194 / Monday, October 6, 2008 / Proposed Rules
years of age that contains a marble shall
bear the following cautionary statement:
full cautionary statements at the bottom
or top of each catalogue page (or
extending across the bottom or top of
two facing catalogue pages if both pages
contain products available for
purchase).
(1) If abbreviated cautionary
statements are used in each individual
product advertisement, the following
cautionary statements shall be used:
(i) For any article that would require
the cautionary statement specified in 16
CFR 1500.20(d)(1):
(ii) For any article that would require
the cautionary statement specified in 16
CFR 1500.20(d)(2):
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16:47 Oct 03, 2008
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EP06OC08.074 EP06OC08.075
EP06OC08.076
(e) Abbreviated warnings for
catalogues and other printed materials.
Abbreviated versions of the required
cautionary statements are permitted in
each individual product advertisement,
provided that these abbreviated
cautionary statements are defined with
EP06OC08.077
or older shall bear the following
cautionary statement:
(ii) The advertising for any toy or
game intended for children who are at
least three years old but less than eight
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with PROPOSALS
(4)(i) The advertising for any marble
intended for children three years of age
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 194 / Monday, October 6, 2008 / Proposed Rules
58069
(iii) For any article that would require
the cautionary statement specified in 16
CFR 1500.20(d)(3)(i) or (ii):
(iv) For any article that would require
the cautionary statement specified in 16
CFR 1500.20(d)(4)(i) or (ii):
(2) If abbreviated cautionary
statements are used in each individual
product advertisement, the following
definitions shall appear at the bottom or
top of each catalogue page (or extending
across the bottom or top of two facing
catalogue pages if both pages contain
products available for purchase) that
includes the abbreviated cautionary
statement:
(i) For any article that would require
the cautionary statement specified in 16
CFR 1500.20(d)(1):
EP06OC08.080
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16:47 Oct 03, 2008
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06OCP1
EP06OC08.078 EP06OC08.079
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with PROPOSALS
EP06OC08.081
EP06OC08.082
(ii) For any article that would require
the cautionary statement specified in 16
CFR 1500.20(d)(2):
58070
Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 194 / Monday, October 6, 2008 / Proposed Rules
(iii) For any article that would require
the cautionary statement specified in 16
CFR 1500.20(d)(3)(i) or (ii):
(f) Prominence and conspicuousness
of labeling statements. The requirements
of 16 CFR 1500.121 relating to the
prominence and conspicuousness of
precautionary labeling statements for
hazardous substances shall apply to any
labeling statement required under 16
CFR 1500.20(d) and (e), with the
following clarifications and
modifications.
(1) Catalogues and other printed
materials.
(i) All labeling statements shall be
printed in type that is not smaller than
0.08 inches.
(ii) All labeling statements shall be
printed in type that is not smaller than
the largest of any other statements or
text, other than the product or article
name, in the individual and adjacent
product advertisements.
(2) Internet Web sites.
(i) All labeling statements shall be
printed in type that is not smaller than
the largest of any other statements or
text, other than the product or article
name, in the advertisement.
(ii) All labeling statements shall be
located immediately before any other
statements or text in the advertisement
that describes the function, use, or
characteristics of the article being
advertised (for example, the product
description).
(3) Safety Alert Symbol. Any safety
alert symbol required by this section
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16:47 Oct 03, 2008
Jkt 217001
shall be an equilateral triangle. The
height of the safety alert symbol shall be
equal to or exceed the height of the
letters of the signal word ‘‘WARNING’’.
The height of the exclamation point
inside the triangle shall be at least half
the height of the triangle, and the
exclamation point shall be centered
vertically in the triangle. The safety alert
symbol shall be separated from the
signal word by a distance no larger than
the space occupied by the first letter of
the signal word. In all other respects,
the safety alert symbol shall conform
generally to the provisions of 16 CFR
1500.121 relating to signal words.
Note: The following appendix will not
appear in the Code of Federal
Regulations:
List of Relevant Documents
1. Memorandum from Robert
Franklin, Directorate for Economic
Analysis, to Barbara E. Parisi, Attorney,
Office of General Counsel, ‘‘Economic
Issues Associated with Section 105 of
the Consumer Product Safety
Improvements Act of 2008 (Concerning
the inclusion of Cautionary Labeling for
Toys and Games in Catalogs and Other
Printed Materials),’’ September 16,
2008.
2. Memorandum from Timothy P.
Smith, Engineering Psychologist,
Division of Human Factors, Directorate
for Engineering Sciences, to Barbara
PO 00000
Frm 00008
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
Parisi, Regulatory Affairs Attorney,
Office of the General Counsel, ‘‘Size and
Placement of Cautionary Statements
Specified in Section 105, Labeling
Requirement for Advertising Toys and
Games, of the Consumer Product Safety
Improvement Act of 2008,’’ September
15, 2008.
Dated: September 30, 2008.
Todd A. Stevenson,
Secretary, Consumer Product Safety
Commission.
[FR Doc. E8–23543 Filed 10–3–08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6355–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Coast Guard
33 CFR Part 117
[USCG–2008–0995]
RIN 1625–AA09
Drawbridge Operation Regulations;
Intracoastal Waterway (ICW) Beach
Thorofare, Atlantic City, NJ
Coast Guard, DHS.
Notice of proposed rulemaking.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
SUMMARY: The Coast Guard proposes to
change the drawbridge operation
regulations of the Route 30 Bridge, at
E:\FR\FM\06OCP1.SGM
06OCP1
EP06OC08.083 EP06OC08.014
mstockstill on PROD1PC66 with PROPOSALS
(iv) For any article that would require
the cautionary statement specified in 16
CFR 1500.20(d)(4)(i) or (ii):
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 194 (Monday, October 6, 2008)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 58063-58070]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-23543]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY COMMISSION
16 CFR Part 1500
Labeling Requirement for Toy and Game Advertisements
AGENCY: Consumer Product Safety Commission.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: Section 105 of the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of
2008, (``CPSIA''), directs the Commission to promulgate regulations to
effectuate this section with respect to advertising for certain toys
and games in catalogues and other printed materials not later than 90
days after enactment. The Commission invites public comment on this
proposal.
DATES: Written comments concerning the advertisement requirements with
respect to catalogues and other printed materials must be received by
October 20, 2008. Written comments concerning the requirements with
respect to Internet advertisements must be received by November 20,
2008.
ADDRESSES: Comments should be e-mailed to cpsc-os@cpsc.gov, and should
be captioned ``ADVERTISING REQUIREMENTS NPR.'' Comments may also be
mailed, preferably in five copies, to the Office of the Secretary,
Consumer Product Safety Commission, Room 502, 4330 East-West Highway,
Bethesda, Maryland 20814, or delivered to the same address (telephone
(301) 504-0800). Comments also may be filed by facsimile to (301) 504-
0127.
[[Page 58064]]
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Barbara E. Parisi, Project Manager,
Office of General Counsel, Consumer Product Safety Commission, 4330
East-West Highway, Bethesda, Maryland; telephone (301) 504-7879 or e-
mail: bparisi@cpsc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
A. Background
Section 24(a) of the Federal Hazardous Substances Act (FHSA)
prescribes cautionary labeling requirements for toys or games that are
intended for use by children from 3 to 6 years old and contain small
parts. The cautionary statement warns potential purchasers that these
products are not for children under 3 years old due to choking hazards.
Section 24(b) of the FHSA prescribes similar requirements for balloons,
small balls, and marbles intended for children 3 years and older, or
any toy or game which contains such a balloon, small ball, or marble.
Section 105 of the CPSIA, Public Law 110-314, 122 Stat. 3016
(August 14, 2008), amends section 24 of the FHSA to require that, when
a product's packaging requires a cautionary statement, advertising for
the product that provides a direct means for purchase or order of the
product (including catalogues, other printed materials, and Internet
Web sites) must bear the same cautionary statement. Section 105
provides some guidelines on the format of the cautionary statement.
Specifically, it must be prominently displayed in the primary language
used in the advertisement, in conspicuous and legible type in contrast
by typography, layout, or color with other material printed or
displayed in the advertisement, and in a manner consistent with 16 CFR
part 1500.
Section 105 of the CPSIA also allows the Commission to provide a
grace period of no more than 180 days for catalogues and other printed
material printed prior to the effective date. In addition, the
Commission is directed to determine the applicability of the
requirements to catalogues and other printed material distributed
solely between businesses and not to individual consumers.
Section 105(2) of the CPSIA exempts the Commission from conducting
a Regulatory Flexibility Act and Paperwork Reduction Act analysis for
this rulemaking.
B. Proposed Regulation
Following is a brief description of the principal provisions of the
Commission's proposed regulation.
The CPSIA directs that the cautionary statements required by
section 105 of the CPSIA be prominently displayed in a manner
consistent with 16 CFR part 1500. The CPSIA also provides the
Commission with the authority to promulgate a regulation concerning the
size and placement of the required cautionary statements. The
Commission believes that the requirements in 16 CFR 1500.121 are
consistent with commonly accepted hazard-labeling guidelines and are
appropriate as guidelines for the cautionary statements in the
advertising, with a few modifications, as described below.
1. Minimum Type Size for Advertisements in Catalogues and Other
Printed Material.
The minimum type-size requirements specified in 16 CFR 1500.121 are
based on the area of the principal display panel of a hazardous
substance. For purposes of labeling advertisements in catalogues or
other printed materials, these type-size requirements would be
determined based on the size of the advertisement for the specific toy
or game to which it applies. For small advertisements-ones no more than
2 square inches-16 CFR 1500.121 would permit signal words and hazard
statements with letter heights as small as \3/64\ inch, or less than 5
points; the letter heights of other cautionary material in the label
could be as small as \1/32\ inch, or about 3 points.
The Commission has preliminarily determined, based on research,
that such small or fine-print risk disclosures in product advertising
would be ineffective because people are unlikely to read them. Based on
research regarding the legibility and readability of text and numerals,
the Commission has preliminarily determined that the proposed rule
should refer to the minimum type sizes specified in 16 CFR 1500.121,
but include the requirement that the sizes employed cannot be smaller
than 0.08 inches, or about 5/64 inch.
ANSI 2535.6 (2006), the primary U.S. voluntary consensus standard
on product safety information in product manuals, instructions, and
other collateral materials, specifies that safety message text be no
smaller than the majority of other non-safety text, other than
headings, immediately surrounding it. The Commission agrees with this
specification and has applied this general principle to the cautionary
labeling of advertisements in catalogues or other printed materials by
requiring cautionary statements to be the larger of (1) a certain
minimum type size based on the size of the advertisement (but no
smaller than 0.08 inches), or (2) the size of the largest text in the
advertisement that describes the function, use, or characteristics of
the toy or game being advertised.
2. Abbreviated Warnings for Catalogues and Other Printed Materials.
The Commission recognizes that it may be difficult to include the
full cautionary statements as spelled out in sections 24(a) and (b) of
the FHSA next to each product in a catalogue or other printed material
requiring a cautionary statement. ANSI Z535.6 (2006) allows for the use
of section safety messages in product manuals, instructions, and other
collateral materials. Although advertising and promotional materials
are not included within the scope of ANSI Z535.6, this voluntary
standard appears to be the most relevant to these materials. Section
safety messages are those that apply to entire sections, subsections,
or multiple paragraphs or procedures within a document, and typically
appear at the beginning of the section to which they apply. One of the
intended functions of section safety messages is to avoid the
unnecessary repetition of safety information while allowing users to
access the other information more easily and efficiently. If this
concept were applied directly to advertisements in catalogues or other
printed materials, a single version of a cautionary statement could be
placed at the beginning of a page or section of advertised products
that includes only toys and games that would require the same
cautionary statements. This might be difficult to implement, however,
in those cases in which a toy or game requires multiple cautionary
statements. Additionally, research has shown that warnings generally
should be located where consumers are likely to be looking when the
information is needed, and a single relevant cautionary message at the
beginning of a multi-page section could be missed easily. To address
these concerns, the Commission proposes that shorthand, or abbreviated,
versions of the required warnings be permitted in each product
advertisement, provided that these are defined with the full warning at
the bottom or top of each page--or extending across two facing pages if
both pages contain products to which the warnings apply--of the
catalogues. The bottom or top of each page or two-page spread must
provide the definition, or full cautionary statement, for each
abbreviated warning on that page. The proposed text of the rule
contains the abbreviated statements appropriate for each cautionary
statement.
3. Internet Warnings.
Section 105 of the CPSIA stipulates that the Commission shall
promulgate a final rule ``with respect to catalogues and other printed
material'' by
[[Page 58065]]
November 12, 2008. The CPSIA does not mandate that the Commission
promulgate a final rule with regard to requirements for Internet
advertising. Nonetheless, the Commission has proposed requirements for
Internet advertising, as detailed below and included in the proposed
rule.
The comment period with respect to requirements for Internet
advertising is longer than that for requirements for catalogues and
other printed materials. Comments on Internet advertising requirements
must be received by November 20, 2008. Regardless of whether and when
the Commission issues a final rule on the Internet advertising
requirements, the requirements for Internet advertisements as
implemented by Section 105 of the CPSIA will go into effect on December
12, 2008. As with catalogues and other printed materials, most of the
requirements specified in 16 CFR 1500.121 may be applied to the
cautionary labeling of advertisements on Internet Web sites. The
minimum type-size requirements specified in 16 CFR 1500.121, however,
cannot be applied readily since they are based on the area of the
principal display panel, and the analogous area for an Internet
advertisement could be limited by the size of the consumer's Internet
browser application window or by the computer monitor or display area
which could vary considerably. The Commission proposes that the type
size of the cautionary statements must be at least equal to the size of
the largest text in the advertisement that describes the function, use,
or characteristics of the toy or game advertised (for example, the
product description).
Research has found that risk information that is placed below the
page scroll of a Web site is unlikely to be seen. To reduce the
likelihood of this occurring, the Commission is proposing that the
required cautionary statement be located immediately before any other
statements in the advertisement that describes the function, use, or
characteristics of the toy or game being advertised. Further, the
Commission preliminarily finds that the use of abbreviated warnings in
place of full text warnings is neither necessary nor desirable for
Internet advertisements.
4. Business to Business Catalogues. The CPSIA directs the
Commission to determine the applicability of the advertising
requirements to catalogues and other printed materials that are
distributed solely among businesses. The Commission has analyzed the
benefits and costs associated with having the advertising requirements
applicable to business to business catalogues.
Some retailers that specialize in products for young children might
be wary of carrying products that contain small parts or balloons.
These retailers might value being provided cautionary statements before
they order the product from their suppliers. However, Section 105 of
the CPSIA already requires manufacturers, importers and other suppliers
to inform retailers of any cautionary statements that are required to
be included in catalogues and other printed advertisements for the
products they supply. Specifying just how this information must be
supplied (e.g. , through a catalogue), would reduce the flexibility of
manufacturers and other suppliers in determining how best to supply the
required information. If the requirements were not applied to
catalogues distributed solely between businesses, the manufacturers and
other suppliers would have the flexibility to develop less costly means
of providing the information to their retailers. Moreover, because
retailers typically do not provide young children with direct access to
the products, it is likely that applying these requirements to
catalogues distributed solely among businesses would prevent very few
injuries, if any. This would reduce the value of applying the
requirements to catalogues distributed solely to retailers and similar
businesses relative to the value of including them in catalogues
distributed to consumers. There would be some costs associated with
applying the advertising requirements to business to business
catalogues, including costs associated with changing the page layouts
to include cautionary statements. It will require some time and effort
by the publishers to determine how the cautionary statements can best
be added to their catalogues and then to proof the copy once the
changes are made.
If an exemption were included for business to business catalogues
and cautionary statements were not included in catalogues that were
distributed to organizations or establishments such as schools, day
care centers, churches, and recreational facilities as a result of the
exemption, the intent of section 105 of the CPSIA could be thwarted.
This is because such organizations often act as ``ultimate consumers,''
purchasing the toys and games for the use of children and not for
resale. Thus, any exemption provided would need to distinguish between
catalogues distributed solely between businesses and those intended for
final distribution to ultimate consumers, which may include
institutions such as schools, day care centers, churches, and
recreational facilities.
The Commission seeks further input on whether advertising
requirements for catalogues and other printed materials should also
apply to materials distributed solely between businesses and not to
ultimate consumers, and if not, how the Commission can distinguish
catalogues distributed solely between businesses from those intended
for final distribution to ultimate consumers, which may include
institutions such as schools and day care centers.
C. Effective Date
Section 105 of the CPSIA provides that the requirements for
Internet advertising shall take effect December 12, 2008. It provides
that the requirements will apply to catalogues and other printed
materials published or distributed on or after February 10, 2009. This
includes catalogues that were printed prior to February 10, 2009 but
not distributed until after February 10, 2009. The CPSIA authorizes the
Commission to provide a grace period of not more than 180 days for
catalogues and other printed material printed prior to February 10,
2009, during which time distribution of such catalogues and other
printed materials shall not be considered a violation of the standard.
The Commission staff has determined that there can be relatively
long lead times for developing and printing catalogues, and some
publishers expect to distribute catalogues for as long as two years
after printing. Thus, it is likely that there are catalogues in
circulation now, or that have been printed, or will be printed over the
next several weeks, that do not contain the cautionary statements, but
that are intended for distribution after February 10, 2009. If the
Commission did not provide for a grace period, the retailers,
manufacturers, and importers who published the catalogues would have to
stop distributing them on February 10, 2009. The catalogues still in
stock would have to be discarded and replacement catalogues would have
to be printed, a cost to the publishers both in terms of discarding of
the catalogues and in the possible loss in sales if the business
experienced delays in obtaining reprinted catalogues.
The cost of providing a grace period--that some consumers may
purchase games or toys from catalogues that they would not have
purchased had they seen the cautionary labeling--though difficult to
quantify, is likely to be small. The same cautionary statements are
required on the products' packaging, and a parent could return or keep
the
[[Page 58066]]
product out of reach until the children are older if need be.
Even with a grace period of 180 days, all catalogues distributed
after August 9, 2009, which includes all catalogues distributed in
anticipation of the 2009 holiday shopping season, will have to contain
the required cautionary statements.
Because of the significant lead time involved in printing
catalogues and the relatively small cost of providing a grace period of
180 days, the Commission preliminarily finds that a grace period of 180
days is warranted.
D. Environmental Considerations
As a labeling rule, the proposed rule falls within the provisions
of 16 CFR 1021.5(c) which designates categories of actions conducted by
the Consumer Product Safety Commission that normally have little or no
potential for affecting the human environment. It is true that, if no
grace period were provided, the requirements in Section 105 of the
CPSIA would apply to all catalogues or other printed materials
distributed after February 10, 2009, so that materials printed prior to
this date that did not have the cautionary statements could not be
distributed and would have to be discarded. This would increase the
volume of material entering the waste stream. However, the increase
would be small relative to the total volume of materials that enter the
waste stream each year. Providing a grace period would further reduce
this impact. Based on this, the Commission preliminarily finds that
neither an environmental assessment nor an environmental impact
statement is required.
E. Request for Information and Comments
Interested persons are invited to submit comments regarding this
proposal. The Commission specifically seeks comments on the following:
1. The abbreviated versions and the minimum type-size and placement
requirements of the cautionary statements as proposed in this rule;
2. The impact of the proposals on minimum type-size and placement
in catalogues and other printed materials on businesses;
3. How often catalogues or other written materials are published
and how much lead time is required to prepare these materials for
publication;
4. The cost of publishing new catalogues to meet these requirements
without the 180 day grace period;
5. Whether the advertising requirements for catalogues and other
printed materials should also apply to materials distributed solely
between businesses and not to ultimate consumers, and, if not, how the
Commission can distinguish catalogues distributed solely between
businesses from those intended for final distribution to ultimate
consumers, which may include institutions such as schools, churches,
day care centers, and recreational facilities.
Comments should be e-mailed to cpsc-os@cpsc.gov and should be
captioned ``ADVERTISING REQUIREMENTS NPR.'' Comments may also be
mailed, preferably in five copies, to the Office of the Secretary,
Consumer Product Safety Commission, Room 502, 4330 East-West Highway,
Bethesda, MD 20814, or delivered to the same address (telephone (301)
504-0800). Comments also may be filed by telefacsimile to (301) 504-
0127. All comments and submissions should be received no later than
October 20, 2008.
List of Subjects in 16 CFR Part 1500
Consumer protection, labeling.
Conclusion
Under authority of section 3 and section 105 of the Consumer
Product Safety Improvement Act, Public Law 110--314, 122 Stat. 3016
(August 14, 2008), the Commission proposes to amend Title 16, Chapter
II, Subchapter C, Part 1500 as set forth below.
PART 1500--HAZARDOUS SUBSTANCES AND ARTICLES; ADMINISTRATION AND
ENFORCEMENT REGULATIONS
1. The authority citation for part 1500 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 1261-1278.
2. Section 1500.20 is added to read as follows:
Sec. 1500.20 Labeling requirement for advertising toys and games.
(a) Scope. This section applies to advertisements (including
catalogues, other printed materials, and Internet Web sites), which
provide a direct means of purchase or order of products requiring
cautionary labeling under sections 24(a) and (b) of the FHSA.
(b) Effective Date. The effective date of this standard with
respect to catalogues and other printed materials is February 10, 2009.
The Commission is providing a grace period of 180 days, or until August
9, 2009, during which catalogues and other printed materials printed
prior to February 10, 2009 may be distributed. All catalogues and other
printed materials distributed on or after August 9, 2009 must comply
with the standard, regardless of when they were printed. The effective
date of this standard with respect to Internet Web sites is December
12, 2008.
(c) Definitions. For the purposes of this section, the following
definitions shall apply.
(1) Ball means a spherical, ovoid, or ellipsoidal object that is
designed or intended to be thrown, hit, kicked, rolled, dropped, or
bounced. The term ``ball'' includes any spherical, ovoid, or
ellipsoidal object that is attached to a toy or article by means of a
string, elastic cord, or similar tether. The term ``ball'' also
includes a multi-sided object formed by connecting planes into a
generally spherical, ovoid, or ellipsoidal shape that is designated or
intended to be used as a ball, and any novelty item of a generally
spherical, ovoid, or ellipsoidal shape that is designated or intended
to be used as a ball. The term ``ball'' does not include dice, or balls
permanently enclosed inside pinball machines, mazes, or similar other
containers. A ball is permanently enclosed if, when tested in
accordance with 16 CFR 1500.53, it is not removed from the outer
container.
(2) Small ball means a ball that, under the influence of its own
weight, passes in any orientation, entirely through a circular hole
with a diameter of 1.75 inches (44.4 mm) in a rigid template \1/4\
inches (6 mm) thick. In testing to evaluate compliance with this
regulation, the diameter of opening in the Commission's test template
shall be no greater than 1.75 inches (44.4 mm).
(3) Latex balloon means a toy or decorative item consisting of a
latex bag that is designed to be inflated by air or gas. The term does
not include inflatable children's toys that are used in aquatic
activities such as rafts, water wings, swim rings, or other similar
items.
(4) Marble means a ball made of hard material, such as glass,
agate, marble, or plastic, that is used in various children's games,
generally as a playing piece or marker. The term ``marble'' does not
include a marble permanently enclosed in a toy or game. A marble is
permanently enclosed if, when tested in accordance with 16 CFR 1500.53,
it is not removed from the toy or game.
(5) Small part means any object which, when tested in accordance
with the procedures contained in 16 CFR 1501.4(a) and 1501.4(b)(1),
fits entirely within the cylinder shown in Figure 1 appended to 16 CFR
part 1501. The use and abuse testing provisions of 16 CFR 1500.51
through 1500.53 and 1501.4(b)(2) do not apply to this definition.
(6) Direct means of purchase or order means any method of purchase
that
[[Page 58067]]
allows consumers to order the product without being in the physical
presence of the product. Advertising that provides a direct means of
purchase or order of a product would include catalogues or other
printed advertising material that contain order blanks, telephone
numbers or fax numbers for placing orders, and Internet Web sites that
enable consumers to purchase a product online or through the use of a
telephone number or fax number provided on the Internet Web site.
(d) Advertising requirements. Any toy or game that requires a
cautionary statement about the choking hazard associated with small
parts, balloons, small balls, or marbles must bear that cautionary
statement in the product's advertising if the advertising provides a
direct means for the consumer to purchase or order the product.
(1) The advertising for any article that is a toy or game intended
for use by children who are at least three years old but less than six
years of age shall bear or contain the following cautionary statement
if the toy or game includes a small part:
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP06OC08.071
(2) The advertising for any latex balloon, or toy or game that
contains a latex balloon, shall bear the following cautionary
statement:
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP06OC08.072
(3)(i) The advertising for any small ball intended for children
three years of age or older shall bear the following cautionary
statement:
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP06OC08.073
(ii) The advertising for any toy or game intended for children who
are at least three years old but less than eight years of age that
contains a small ball shall bear the following cautionary statement:
[[Page 58068]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP06OC08.074
(4)(i) The advertising for any marble intended for children three
years of age or older shall bear the following cautionary statement:
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP06OC08.075
(ii) The advertising for any toy or game intended for children who
are at least three years old but less than eight years of age that
contains a marble shall bear the following cautionary statement:
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP06OC08.076
(e) Abbreviated warnings for catalogues and other printed
materials. Abbreviated versions of the required cautionary statements
are permitted in each individual product advertisement, provided that
these abbreviated cautionary statements are defined with full
cautionary statements at the bottom or top of each catalogue page (or
extending across the bottom or top of two facing catalogue pages if
both pages contain products available for purchase).
(1) If abbreviated cautionary statements are used in each
individual product advertisement, the following cautionary statements
shall be used:
(i) For any article that would require the cautionary statement
specified in 16 CFR 1500.20(d)(1):
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP06OC08.077
(ii) For any article that would require the cautionary statement
specified in 16 CFR 1500.20(d)(2):
[[Page 58069]]
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(iii) For any article that would require the cautionary statement
specified in 16 CFR 1500.20(d)(3)(i) or (ii):
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP06OC08.079
(iv) For any article that would require the cautionary statement
specified in 16 CFR 1500.20(d)(4)(i) or (ii):
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(2) If abbreviated cautionary statements are used in each
individual product advertisement, the following definitions shall
appear at the bottom or top of each catalogue page (or extending across
the bottom or top of two facing catalogue pages if both pages contain
products available for purchase) that includes the abbreviated
cautionary statement:
(i) For any article that would require the cautionary statement
specified in 16 CFR 1500.20(d)(1):
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP06OC08.081
(ii) For any article that would require the cautionary statement
specified in 16 CFR 1500.20(d)(2):
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP06OC08.082
[[Page 58070]]
(iii) For any article that would require the cautionary statement
specified in 16 CFR 1500.20(d)(3)(i) or (ii):
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP06OC08.083
(iv) For any article that would require the cautionary statement
specified in 16 CFR 1500.20(d)(4)(i) or (ii):
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(f) Prominence and conspicuousness of labeling statements. The
requirements of 16 CFR 1500.121 relating to the prominence and
conspicuousness of precautionary labeling statements for hazardous
substances shall apply to any labeling statement required under 16 CFR
1500.20(d) and (e), with the following clarifications and
modifications.
(1) Catalogues and other printed materials.
(i) All labeling statements shall be printed in type that is not
smaller than 0.08 inches.
(ii) All labeling statements shall be printed in type that is not
smaller than the largest of any other statements or text, other than
the product or article name, in the individual and adjacent product
advertisements.
(2) Internet Web sites.
(i) All labeling statements shall be printed in type that is not
smaller than the largest of any other statements or text, other than
the product or article name, in the advertisement.
(ii) All labeling statements shall be located immediately before
any other statements or text in the advertisement that describes the
function, use, or characteristics of the article being advertised (for
example, the product description).
(3) Safety Alert Symbol. Any safety alert symbol required by this
section shall be an equilateral triangle. The height of the safety
alert symbol shall be equal to or exceed the height of the letters of
the signal word ``WARNING''. The height of the exclamation point inside
the triangle shall be at least half the height of the triangle, and the
exclamation point shall be centered vertically in the triangle. The
safety alert symbol shall be separated from the signal word by a
distance no larger than the space occupied by the first letter of the
signal word. In all other respects, the safety alert symbol shall
conform generally to the provisions of 16 CFR 1500.121 relating to
signal words.
Note: The following appendix will not appear in the Code of Federal
Regulations:
List of Relevant Documents
1. Memorandum from Robert Franklin, Directorate for Economic
Analysis, to Barbara E. Parisi, Attorney, Office of General Counsel,
``Economic Issues Associated with Section 105 of the Consumer Product
Safety Improvements Act of 2008 (Concerning the inclusion of Cautionary
Labeling for Toys and Games in Catalogs and Other Printed Materials),''
September 16, 2008.
2. Memorandum from Timothy P. Smith, Engineering Psychologist,
Division of Human Factors, Directorate for Engineering Sciences, to
Barbara Parisi, Regulatory Affairs Attorney, Office of the General
Counsel, ``Size and Placement of Cautionary Statements Specified in
Section 105, Labeling Requirement for Advertising Toys and Games, of
the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008,'' September 15,
2008.
Dated: September 30, 2008.
Todd A. Stevenson,
Secretary, Consumer Product Safety Commission.
[FR Doc. E8-23543 Filed 10-3-08; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6355-01-P