Third Party Testing for Certain Children's Products; Full-Size Baby Cribs and Non-Full-Size Baby Cribs: Requirements for Accreditation of Third Party Conformity Assessment Bodies, 81789-81792 [2010-32180]
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 248 / Tuesday, December 28, 2010 / Rules and Regulations
part of new consumer product safety
standards to be codified at 16 CFR parts
1219 and 1220.
C. Comment on the Proposal
In the Federal Register of July 23,
2010 (75 FR 43107), the Commission
published a notice of proposed
rulemaking proposing to revoke 16 CFR
parts 1508 and 1509. We received one
comment on the proposal. The comment
agreed with the proposed revocation,
stating: ‘‘The proposed new regulations
will be more thorough and
comprehensive than the old regulations.
It is simply logical to revoke the old
outdated 16 CFR parts 1508 and 1509.’’
We agree with the comment, and
therefore, we are revoking 16 CFR parts
1508 and 1509 entirely.
D. Paperwork Reduction Act
This rule would not impose any
information collection requirements.
Accordingly, this rule is not subject to
the Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C.
3501–3520.
E. Environmental Considerations
This rule falls within the scope of the
Commission’s environmental review
regulation at 16 CFR 1021.5(c)(1), which
provides a categorical exclusion from
any requirement for the agency to
prepare an environmental assessment or
environmental impact statement for
rules that revoke product safety
standards.
F. Effective Date
The final rule to revoke 16 CFR parts
1508 and 1509 becomes effective on
June 28, 2011. This date corresponds to
the effective date of the new mandatory
standards developed for full-size and
non-full-size cribs.
List of Subjects
16 CFR Part 1508
Consumer protection, Cribs and
bassinets, Infants and children,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
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16 CFR Part 1509
Consumer protection, Cribs and
bassinets, Infants and children,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
■ For the reasons stated above, and
under the authority of section 3 of the
CPSIA and 5 U.S.C. 553, the Consumer
Product Safety Commission removes 16
CFR parts 1508 and 1509 entirely.
PART 1508—[REMOVED]
1. Under authority of section 3 of the
CPSIA, part 1508 is removed.
■
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PART 1509—[REMOVED]
2. Under authority of section 3 of the
CPSIA, part 1509 is removed.
■
Dated: December 17, 2010.
Todd A. Stevenson,
Secretary, U.S. Consumer Product Safety
Commission.
[FR Doc. 2010–32179 Filed 12–27–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6355–01–P
CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY
COMMISSION
[CPSC Docket No. CPSC–2009–0064]
16 CFR Parts 1219 and 1220
Third Party Testing for Certain
Children’s Products; Full-Size Baby
Cribs and Non-Full-Size Baby Cribs:
Requirements for Accreditation of
Third Party Conformity Assessment
Bodies
Consumer Product Safety
Commission.
ACTION: Notice of requirements.
AGENCY:
The Consumer Product Safety
Commission (CPSC or Commission) is
issuing a notice of requirements that
provides the criteria and process for
Commission acceptance of accreditation
of third party conformity assessment
bodies for testing pursuant to specific
CPSC regulations relating to full-size
and non-full-size baby cribs. The
Commission is issuing this notice of
requirements pursuant to section
14(a)(3)(B)(vi) of the Consumer Product
Safety Act (CPSA) (15 U.S.C.
2063(a)(3)(B)(vi)).
SUMMARY:
Effective Date: The requirements
for accreditation of third party
conformity assessment bodies to assess
conformity with 16 CFR parts
1219 and/or 1220 are effective
December 28, 2010.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Robert ‘‘Jay’’ Howell, Assistant Executive
Director for Hazard Identification and
Reduction, U.S. Consumer Product
Safety Commission, 4330 East West
Highway, Bethesda, Maryland 20814; email rhowell@cpsc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
DATES:
I. Introduction
Section 14(a)(3)(B)(vi) of the CPSA, as
added by section 102(a)(2) of the
Consumer Product Safety Improvement
Act of 2008 (CPSIA), Public Law 110–
314, directs the CPSC to publish a
notice of requirements for accreditation
of third party conformity assessment
bodies to assess children’s products for
conformity with ‘‘other children’s
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81789
product safety rules.’’ Section 14(f)(1) of
the CPSA defines ‘‘children’s product
safety rule’’ as ‘‘a consumer product
safety rule under [the CPSA] or similar
rule, regulation, standard, or ban under
any other Act enforced by the
Commission, including a rule declaring
a consumer product to be a banned
hazardous product or substance.’’ Under
section 14(a)(3)(A) of the CPSA, each
manufacturer (including the importer)
or private labeler of products subject to
those regulations must have products
that are manufactured more than 90
days after the Federal Register
publication date of a notice of the
requirements for accreditation, tested by
a third party conformity assessment
body accredited to do so, and must issue
a certificate of compliance with the
applicable regulations based on that
testing. Section 14(a)(2) of the CPSA, as
added by section 102(a)(2) of the CPSIA,
requires that certification be based on
testing of sufficient samples of the
product, or samples that are identical in
all material respects to the product. The
Commission also emphasizes that,
irrespective of certification, the product
in question must comply with
applicable CPSC requirements (see, e.g.,
section 14(h) of the CPSA, as added by
section 102(b) of the CPSIA).
This notice provides the criteria and
process for Commission acceptance of
accreditation of third party conformity
assessment bodies for testing pursuant
to safety standards for full-size and nonfull-size baby cribs, which appears
elsewhere in this issue of the Federal
Register. The standards for full-size and
non-full-size baby cribs will be codified
at 16 CFR parts 1219 and 1220
respectively. The standards contain the
test methods that conformity assessment
bodies will use to assess full-size and
non-full-size baby cribs. The
Commission is recognizing limited
circumstances in which it will accept
certifications based on product testing
conducted before the full-size and nonfull-size baby crib standards become
effective in six months. The details
regarding those limited circumstances
can be found in part IV of this document
below.
Although section 14(a)(3)(B)(vi) of the
CPSA directs the CPSC to publish a
notice of requirements for accreditation
of third party conformity assessment
bodies to assess conformity with ‘‘all
other children’s product safety rules,’’
this notice of requirements is limited to
the test methods identified immediately
above.
The CPSC also recognizes that section
14(a)(3)(B)(vi) of the CPSA is captioned:
‘‘All Other Children’s Product Safety
Rules,’’ but the body of the statutory
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 248 / Tuesday, December 28, 2010 / Rules and Regulations
requirement refers only to ‘‘other
children’s product safety rules.’’
Nevertheless, section 14(a)(3)(B)(vi) of
the CPSA could be construed as
requiring a notice of requirements for
‘‘all’’ other children’s product safety
rules, rather than as a notice of
requirements for ‘‘some’’ or ‘‘certain’’
children’s product safety rules.
However, whether a particular rule
represents a ‘‘children’s product safety
rule’’ may be subject to interpretation,
and the Commission staff is continuing
to evaluate which rules, regulations,
standards, or bans are ‘‘children’s
product safety rules.’’ The CPSC intends
to issue additional notices of
requirements for other rules which the
Commission determines to be
‘‘children’s product safety rules.’’
This notice of requirements applies to
all third party conformity assessment
bodies as described in section 14(f)(2) of
the CPSA. Generally speaking, such
third party conformity assessment
bodies are: (1) Third party conformity
assessment bodies that are not owned,
managed, or controlled by a
manufacturer or private labeler of a
children’s product to be tested by the
third party conformity assessment body
for certification purposes; (2)
‘‘firewalled’’ conformity assessment
bodies (those that are owned, managed,
or controlled by a manufacturer or
private labeler of a children’s product to
be tested by the third party conformity
assessment body for certification
purposes and that seek accreditation
under the additional statutory criteria
for ‘‘firewalled’’ conformity assessment
bodies); and (3) third party conformity
assessment bodies owned or controlled,
in whole or in part, by a government.
The Commission requires baseline
accreditation of each category of third
party conformity assessment body to the
International Organization for
Standardization (ISO)/International
Electrotechnical Commission (IEC)
Standard 17025:2005, ‘‘General
Requirements for the Competence of
Testing and Calibration Laboratories.’’
The accreditation must be by an
accreditation body that is a signatory to
the International Laboratory
Accreditation Cooperation—Mutual
Recognition Arrangement (ILAC–MRA),
and the scope of the accreditation must
include testing for any of the test
methods identified earlier in part I of
this document for which the third party
conformity assessment body seeks to be
accredited.
(A description of the history and
content of the ILAC–MRA approach and
of the requirements of the ISO/IEC
17025:2005 laboratory accreditation
standard is provided in the CPSC staff
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briefing memorandum ‘‘Third Party
Conformity Assessment Body
Accreditation Requirements for Testing
Compliance With 16 CFR Part 1501
(Small Parts Regulations),’’ dated
November 2008 and available on the
CPSC’s Web site at https://www.cpsc.gov/
library/foia/foia09/brief/smallparts.pdf.)
The Commission has established an
electronic accreditation registration and
listing system that can be accessed via
its Web site at https://www.cpsc.gov/
about/cpsia/labaccred.html.
In the Federal Register of October 22,
2008 (73 FR 62965), the Commission
published a notice of requirements for
the accreditation of third party
conformity assessment bodies to test
children’s products for conformity with
the then-existing CPSC regulations for
full-size baby cribs at 16 CFR part 1508
and for non-full-size baby cribs at 16
CFR part 1509. Elsewhere in this issue
of the Federal Register, the Commission
is revoking 16 CFR parts 1508 and 1509,
so testing to those regulations will no
longer be required. The revocation of
those regulations will become effective
on June 28, 2011, and so, on that date,
we will no longer accept applications
from third party conformity assessment
bodies for CPSC acceptance to test for
conformity with 16 CFR parts 1508
and/or 1509.
As stated in part I of this document,
the Commission, elsewhere in this issue
of the Federal Register, is issuing new
standards for full-size and non-full-size
baby cribs that will be codified at 16
CFR parts 1219 and 1220, respectively.
This notice of requirements is effective
on December 28, 2010. The final rule
announcing the Safety Standards for
Full-Size Baby Cribs and Non-Full-Size
Baby Cribs is effective on June 28, 2011.
The effect of these twin publications is
that each manufacturer (including the
importer) or private labeler of a product
subject to 16 CFR parts 1219 or 1220
must have any such product
manufactured on or after June 28, 2011,
tested by a third party conformity
assessment body accredited to do so and
must issue a certificate of compliance
with 16 CFR parts 1219 or 1220 based
on that testing.
This notice of requirements is exempt
from the notice and comment
rulemaking requirements of the
Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C.
553 (see section 14(a)(3)(G) of the CPSA,
as added by section 102(a)(2) of the
CPSIA (15 U.S.C. 2063(a)(3)(G))).
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II. Accreditation Requirements
A. Baseline Third Party Conformity
Assessment Body Accreditation
Requirements
For a third party conformity
assessment body to be accredited to test
children’s products for conformity with
the test methods identified earlier in
part I of this document, it must be
accredited by an ILAC–MRA signatory
accrediting body, and the accreditation
must be registered with, and accepted
by, the Commission. A listing of ILAC–
MRA signatory accrediting bodies is
available on the Internet at https://
ilac.org/membersbycategory.html. The
accreditation must be to ISO Standard
ISO/IEC 17025:2005, ‘‘General
Requirements for the Competence of
Testing and Calibration Laboratories,’’
and the scope of the accreditation must
expressly include testing to the test
method for full-size and/or non-full-size
baby cribs included in 16 CFR parts
1219 and/or 1220, Safety Standards for
Full-Size Baby Cribs and Non-Full-Size
Baby Cribs. A true copy, in English, of
the accreditation and scope documents
demonstrating compliance with these
requirements must be registered with
the Commission electronically. The
additional requirements for
accreditation of firewalled and
governmental conformity assessment
bodies are described in parts II.B and
II.C of this document below.
The Commission will maintain on its
Web site an up-to-date listing of third
party conformity assessment bodies
whose accreditations it has accepted
and the scope of each accreditation.
Once the Commission adds a third party
conformity assessment body to that list,
the third party conformity assessment
body may commence testing of full-size
and/or non-full-size baby cribs to
support certification by the
manufacturer or private labeler of
compliance with the test methods
identified earlier in part I of this
document.
B. Additional Accreditation
Requirements for Firewalled Conformity
Assessment Bodies
In addition to the baseline
accreditation requirements in part II.A
of this document above, firewalled
conformity assessment bodies seeking
accredited status must submit to the
Commission copies, in English, of their
training documents showing how
employees are trained to notify the
Commission immediately and
confidentially of any attempt by the
manufacturer, private labeler, or other
interested party to hide or exert undue
influence over the third party
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conformity assessment body’s test
results. This additional requirement
applies to any third party conformity
assessment body in which a
manufacturer or private labeler of a
children’s product to be tested by the
third party conformity assessment body
owns an interest of ten percent or more.
While the Commission is not addressing
common parentage of a third party
conformity assessment body and a
children’s product manufacturer at this
time, it will be vigilant to see if this
issue needs to be addressed in the
future.
As required by section 14(f)(2)(D) of
the CPSA, the Commission must
formally accept, by order, the
accreditation application of a third party
conformity assessment body before the
third party conformity assessment body
can become an accredited firewalled
conformity assessment body. The
Commission’s order must also find that
accrediting the firewalled conformity
assessment body would provide equal
or greater consumer safety protection
than the manufacturer’s or private
labeler’s use of an independent
conformity assessment body.
C. Additional Accreditation
Requirements for Governmental
Conformity Assessment Bodies
In addition to the baseline
accreditation requirements of part II.A
of this document above, the CPSIA
permits accreditation of a third party
conformity assessment body owned or
controlled, in whole or in part, by a
government if:
• To the extent practicable,
manufacturers or private labelers
located in any nation are permitted to
choose conformity assessment bodies
that are not owned or controlled by the
government of that nation;
• The third party conformity
assessment body’s testing results are not
subject to undue influence by any other
person, including another governmental
entity;
• The third party conformity
assessment body is not accorded more
favorable treatment than other third
party conformity assessment bodies in
the same nation who have been
accredited;
• The third party conformity
assessment body’s testing results are
accorded no greater weight by other
governmental authorities than those of
other accredited third party conformity
assessment bodies; and
• The third party conformity
assessment body does not exercise
undue influence over other
governmental authorities on matters
affecting its operations or on decisions
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by other governmental authorities
controlling distribution of products
based on outcomes of the third party
conformity assessment body’s
conformity assessments.
The Commission will accept the
accreditation of a governmental third
party conformity assessment body if it
meets the baseline accreditation
requirements of part II.A of this
document above and meets the
additional conditions stated here. To
obtain this assurance, CPSC staff will
engage the governmental entities
relevant to the accreditation request.
conformity assessment body
electronically of acceptance of its
accreditation. All information to
support an accreditation acceptance
request must be provided in the English
language.
Once the Commission adds a third
party conformity assessment body to the
list, the third party conformity
assessment body may then begin testing
of children’s products to support
certification of compliance with the
regulations identified earlier in part I of
this document for which it has been
accredited.
III. How does a third party conformity
assessment body apply for acceptance
of its accreditation?
The Commission has established an
electronic accreditation acceptance and
registration system accessed via the
Commission’s Web site at https://
www.cpsc.gov/about/cpsia/
labaccred.html. The applicant provides,
in English, basic identifying information
concerning its location, the type of
accreditation it is seeking, and
electronic copies of its ILAC–MRA
accreditation certificate and scope
statement, and firewalled third party
conformity assessment body training
document(s), if relevant.
Commission staff will review the
submission for accuracy and
completeness. In the case of baseline
third party conformity assessment
bodies and government-owned or
government-operated conformity
assessment bodies, when that review
and any necessary discussions with the
applicant are satisfactorily completed,
the third party conformity assessment
body in question is added to the CPSC’s
list of accredited third party conformity
assessment bodies at https://
www.cpsc.gov/about/cpsia/
labaccred.html. In the case of a
firewalled conformity assessment body
seeking accredited status, when the
staff’s review is complete, the staff
transmits its recommendation on
accreditation to the Commission for
consideration. (A third party conformity
assessment body that ultimately may
seek acceptance as a firewalled third
party conformity assessment body may
initially request acceptance as a third
party conformity assessment body
accredited for testing of children’s
products other than those of its owners.)
If the Commission accepts a staff
recommendation to accredit a firewalled
conformity assessment body, the
firewalled conformity assessment body
then will be added to the CPSC’s list of
accredited third party conformity
assessment bodies. In each case, the
Commission will notify the third party
IV. Acceptance of Children’s Product
Certifications Based on Third Party
Conformity Assessment Body Testing to
the New Safety Standards for Full-Size
and Non-Full-Size Baby Cribs Prior to
Their Effective Date
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Elsewhere in this issue of the Federal
Register, the Commission is publishing
new safety standards for full-size and
non-full-size baby cribs, which will be
codified at 16 CFR parts 1219 and 1220,
respectively. The effect of this notice of
requirements and the final rule is that
each manufacturer (including the
importer) or private labeler of a product
subject to 16 CFR parts 1219 or 1220
must have any such product
manufactured on or after June 28, 2011
tested by a third party conformity
assessment body accredited to do so and
must issue a certificate of compliance
with 16 CFR parts 1219 or 1220 based
on that testing.
To ease the transition to the new
standards and avoid a ‘‘bottlenecking’’ of
products at conformity assessment
bodies at or near the effective date of 16
CFR parts 1219 and 1220, the
Commission will accept certifications
based on testing that occurred prior to
the effective date of the new standards
in certain prescribed circumstances.
However, any such testing must
comport with all CPSC requirements,
including:
1. At the time of product testing, the
product 1 was tested by a third party
conformity assessment body that was
ISO/IEC 17025 accredited by an ILAC–
MRA accreditation body at the time of
the test. For firewalled conformity
assessment bodies, the firewalled
conformity assessment body must be
one that the Commission has accredited
by order at or before the time the
product was tested, even if the order did
not include the test methods specified
in this notice. If the third party
1 The CPSIA requires that certification be based
on testing of sufficient samples of the product or
samples that are identical in all material respects to
the product.
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conformity assessment body has not
been accredited as a firewalled
conformity assessment body by a
Commission order, the Commission will
not accept a certificate of compliance
based on testing performed by the third
party conformity assessment body
before it is accredited, by Commission
order, as a firewalled conformity
assessment body;
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2. The third party conformity
assessment body’s application is
accepted by the CPSC by June 28, 2011,
as established by the Commission;
3. The test results show compliance
with 16 CFR part 1219 or 16 CFR part
1220;
4. The product was tested on or after
July 23, 2010 and before June 28, 2011;
and
5. The third party conformity
assessment body’s accreditation remains
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in effect through the effective date for
mandatory third party testing and
manufacturer/private labeler
certification for the subject products’
respective regulations.
Dated: December 17, 2010.
Todd A. Stevenson,
Secretary, Consumer Product Safety
Commission.
[FR Doc. 2010–32180 Filed 12–27–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6355–01–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 248 (Tuesday, December 28, 2010)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 81789-81792]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-32180]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY COMMISSION
[CPSC Docket No. CPSC-2009-0064]
16 CFR Parts 1219 and 1220
Third Party Testing for Certain Children's Products; Full-Size
Baby Cribs and Non-Full-Size Baby Cribs: Requirements for Accreditation
of Third Party Conformity Assessment Bodies
AGENCY: Consumer Product Safety Commission.
ACTION: Notice of requirements.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC or Commission) is
issuing a notice of requirements that provides the criteria and process
for Commission acceptance of accreditation of third party conformity
assessment bodies for testing pursuant to specific CPSC regulations
relating to full-size and non-full-size baby cribs. The Commission is
issuing this notice of requirements pursuant to section 14(a)(3)(B)(vi)
of the Consumer Product Safety Act (CPSA) (15 U.S.C.
2063(a)(3)(B)(vi)).
DATES: Effective Date: The requirements for accreditation of third
party conformity assessment bodies to assess conformity with 16 CFR
parts 1219 and/or 1220 are effective December 28, 2010.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Robert ``Jay'' Howell, Assistant
Executive Director for Hazard Identification and Reduction, U.S.
Consumer Product Safety Commission, 4330 East West Highway, Bethesda,
Maryland 20814; e-mail rhowell@cpsc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Introduction
Section 14(a)(3)(B)(vi) of the CPSA, as added by section 102(a)(2)
of the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (CPSIA), Public
Law 110-314, directs the CPSC to publish a notice of requirements for
accreditation of third party conformity assessment bodies to assess
children's products for conformity with ``other children's product
safety rules.'' Section 14(f)(1) of the CPSA defines ``children's
product safety rule'' as ``a consumer product safety rule under [the
CPSA] or similar rule, regulation, standard, or ban under any other Act
enforced by the Commission, including a rule declaring a consumer
product to be a banned hazardous product or substance.'' Under section
14(a)(3)(A) of the CPSA, each manufacturer (including the importer) or
private labeler of products subject to those regulations must have
products that are manufactured more than 90 days after the Federal
Register publication date of a notice of the requirements for
accreditation, tested by a third party conformity assessment body
accredited to do so, and must issue a certificate of compliance with
the applicable regulations based on that testing. Section 14(a)(2) of
the CPSA, as added by section 102(a)(2) of the CPSIA, requires that
certification be based on testing of sufficient samples of the product,
or samples that are identical in all material respects to the product.
The Commission also emphasizes that, irrespective of certification, the
product in question must comply with applicable CPSC requirements (see,
e.g., section 14(h) of the CPSA, as added by section 102(b) of the
CPSIA).
This notice provides the criteria and process for Commission
acceptance of accreditation of third party conformity assessment bodies
for testing pursuant to safety standards for full-size and non-full-
size baby cribs, which appears elsewhere in this issue of the Federal
Register. The standards for full-size and non-full-size baby cribs will
be codified at 16 CFR parts 1219 and 1220 respectively. The standards
contain the test methods that conformity assessment bodies will use to
assess full-size and non-full-size baby cribs. The Commission is
recognizing limited circumstances in which it will accept
certifications based on product testing conducted before the full-size
and non-full-size baby crib standards become effective in six months.
The details regarding those limited circumstances can be found in part
IV of this document below.
Although section 14(a)(3)(B)(vi) of the CPSA directs the CPSC to
publish a notice of requirements for accreditation of third party
conformity assessment bodies to assess conformity with ``all other
children's product safety rules,'' this notice of requirements is
limited to the test methods identified immediately above.
The CPSC also recognizes that section 14(a)(3)(B)(vi) of the CPSA
is captioned: ``All Other Children's Product Safety Rules,'' but the
body of the statutory
[[Page 81790]]
requirement refers only to ``other children's product safety rules.''
Nevertheless, section 14(a)(3)(B)(vi) of the CPSA could be construed as
requiring a notice of requirements for ``all'' other children's product
safety rules, rather than as a notice of requirements for ``some'' or
``certain'' children's product safety rules. However, whether a
particular rule represents a ``children's product safety rule'' may be
subject to interpretation, and the Commission staff is continuing to
evaluate which rules, regulations, standards, or bans are ``children's
product safety rules.'' The CPSC intends to issue additional notices of
requirements for other rules which the Commission determines to be
``children's product safety rules.''
This notice of requirements applies to all third party conformity
assessment bodies as described in section 14(f)(2) of the CPSA.
Generally speaking, such third party conformity assessment bodies are:
(1) Third party conformity assessment bodies that are not owned,
managed, or controlled by a manufacturer or private labeler of a
children's product to be tested by the third party conformity
assessment body for certification purposes; (2) ``firewalled''
conformity assessment bodies (those that are owned, managed, or
controlled by a manufacturer or private labeler of a children's product
to be tested by the third party conformity assessment body for
certification purposes and that seek accreditation under the additional
statutory criteria for ``firewalled'' conformity assessment bodies);
and (3) third party conformity assessment bodies owned or controlled,
in whole or in part, by a government.
The Commission requires baseline accreditation of each category of
third party conformity assessment body to the International
Organization for Standardization (ISO)/International Electrotechnical
Commission (IEC) Standard 17025:2005, ``General Requirements for the
Competence of Testing and Calibration Laboratories.'' The accreditation
must be by an accreditation body that is a signatory to the
International Laboratory Accreditation Cooperation--Mutual Recognition
Arrangement (ILAC-MRA), and the scope of the accreditation must include
testing for any of the test methods identified earlier in part I of
this document for which the third party conformity assessment body
seeks to be accredited.
(A description of the history and content of the ILAC-MRA approach
and of the requirements of the ISO/IEC 17025:2005 laboratory
accreditation standard is provided in the CPSC staff briefing
memorandum ``Third Party Conformity Assessment Body Accreditation
Requirements for Testing Compliance With 16 CFR Part 1501 (Small Parts
Regulations),'' dated November 2008 and available on the CPSC's Web
site at https://www.cpsc.gov/library/foia/foia09/brief/smallparts.pdf.)
The Commission has established an electronic accreditation
registration and listing system that can be accessed via its Web site
at https://www.cpsc.gov/about/cpsia/labaccred.html.
In the Federal Register of October 22, 2008 (73 FR 62965), the
Commission published a notice of requirements for the accreditation of
third party conformity assessment bodies to test children's products
for conformity with the then-existing CPSC regulations for full-size
baby cribs at 16 CFR part 1508 and for non-full-size baby cribs at 16
CFR part 1509. Elsewhere in this issue of the Federal Register, the
Commission is revoking 16 CFR parts 1508 and 1509, so testing to those
regulations will no longer be required. The revocation of those
regulations will become effective on June 28, 2011, and so, on that
date, we will no longer accept applications from third party conformity
assessment bodies for CPSC acceptance to test for conformity with 16
CFR parts 1508 and/or 1509.
As stated in part I of this document, the Commission, elsewhere in
this issue of the Federal Register, is issuing new standards for full-
size and non-full-size baby cribs that will be codified at 16 CFR parts
1219 and 1220, respectively. This notice of requirements is effective
on December 28, 2010. The final rule announcing the Safety Standards
for Full-Size Baby Cribs and Non-Full-Size Baby Cribs is effective on
June 28, 2011. The effect of these twin publications is that each
manufacturer (including the importer) or private labeler of a product
subject to 16 CFR parts 1219 or 1220 must have any such product
manufactured on or after June 28, 2011, tested by a third party
conformity assessment body accredited to do so and must issue a
certificate of compliance with 16 CFR parts 1219 or 1220 based on that
testing.
This notice of requirements is exempt from the notice and comment
rulemaking requirements of the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C.
553 (see section 14(a)(3)(G) of the CPSA, as added by section 102(a)(2)
of the CPSIA (15 U.S.C. 2063(a)(3)(G))).
II. Accreditation Requirements
A. Baseline Third Party Conformity Assessment Body Accreditation
Requirements
For a third party conformity assessment body to be accredited to
test children's products for conformity with the test methods
identified earlier in part I of this document, it must be accredited by
an ILAC-MRA signatory accrediting body, and the accreditation must be
registered with, and accepted by, the Commission. A listing of ILAC-MRA
signatory accrediting bodies is available on the Internet at https://ilac.org/membersbycategory.html. The accreditation must be to ISO
Standard ISO/IEC 17025:2005, ``General Requirements for the Competence
of Testing and Calibration Laboratories,'' and the scope of the
accreditation must expressly include testing to the test method for
full-size and/or non-full-size baby cribs included in 16 CFR parts 1219
and/or 1220, Safety Standards for Full-Size Baby Cribs and Non-Full-
Size Baby Cribs. A true copy, in English, of the accreditation and
scope documents demonstrating compliance with these requirements must
be registered with the Commission electronically. The additional
requirements for accreditation of firewalled and governmental
conformity assessment bodies are described in parts II.B and II.C of
this document below.
The Commission will maintain on its Web site an up-to-date listing
of third party conformity assessment bodies whose accreditations it has
accepted and the scope of each accreditation. Once the Commission adds
a third party conformity assessment body to that list, the third party
conformity assessment body may commence testing of full-size and/or
non-full-size baby cribs to support certification by the manufacturer
or private labeler of compliance with the test methods identified
earlier in part I of this document.
B. Additional Accreditation Requirements for Firewalled Conformity
Assessment Bodies
In addition to the baseline accreditation requirements in part II.A
of this document above, firewalled conformity assessment bodies seeking
accredited status must submit to the Commission copies, in English, of
their training documents showing how employees are trained to notify
the Commission immediately and confidentially of any attempt by the
manufacturer, private labeler, or other interested party to hide or
exert undue influence over the third party
[[Page 81791]]
conformity assessment body's test results. This additional requirement
applies to any third party conformity assessment body in which a
manufacturer or private labeler of a children's product to be tested by
the third party conformity assessment body owns an interest of ten
percent or more. While the Commission is not addressing common
parentage of a third party conformity assessment body and a children's
product manufacturer at this time, it will be vigilant to see if this
issue needs to be addressed in the future.
As required by section 14(f)(2)(D) of the CPSA, the Commission must
formally accept, by order, the accreditation application of a third
party conformity assessment body before the third party conformity
assessment body can become an accredited firewalled conformity
assessment body. The Commission's order must also find that accrediting
the firewalled conformity assessment body would provide equal or
greater consumer safety protection than the manufacturer's or private
labeler's use of an independent conformity assessment body.
C. Additional Accreditation Requirements for Governmental Conformity
Assessment Bodies
In addition to the baseline accreditation requirements of part II.A
of this document above, the CPSIA permits accreditation of a third
party conformity assessment body owned or controlled, in whole or in
part, by a government if:
To the extent practicable, manufacturers or private
labelers located in any nation are permitted to choose conformity
assessment bodies that are not owned or controlled by the government of
that nation;
The third party conformity assessment body's testing
results are not subject to undue influence by any other person,
including another governmental entity;
The third party conformity assessment body is not accorded
more favorable treatment than other third party conformity assessment
bodies in the same nation who have been accredited;
The third party conformity assessment body's testing
results are accorded no greater weight by other governmental
authorities than those of other accredited third party conformity
assessment bodies; and
The third party conformity assessment body does not
exercise undue influence over other governmental authorities on matters
affecting its operations or on decisions by other governmental
authorities controlling distribution of products based on outcomes of
the third party conformity assessment body's conformity assessments.
The Commission will accept the accreditation of a governmental
third party conformity assessment body if it meets the baseline
accreditation requirements of part II.A of this document above and
meets the additional conditions stated here. To obtain this assurance,
CPSC staff will engage the governmental entities relevant to the
accreditation request.
III. How does a third party conformity assessment body apply for
acceptance of its accreditation?
The Commission has established an electronic accreditation
acceptance and registration system accessed via the Commission's Web
site at https://www.cpsc.gov/about/cpsia/labaccred.html. The applicant
provides, in English, basic identifying information concerning its
location, the type of accreditation it is seeking, and electronic
copies of its ILAC-MRA accreditation certificate and scope statement,
and firewalled third party conformity assessment body training
document(s), if relevant.
Commission staff will review the submission for accuracy and
completeness. In the case of baseline third party conformity assessment
bodies and government-owned or government-operated conformity
assessment bodies, when that review and any necessary discussions with
the applicant are satisfactorily completed, the third party conformity
assessment body in question is added to the CPSC's list of accredited
third party conformity assessment bodies at https://www.cpsc.gov/about/cpsia/labaccred.html. In the case of a firewalled conformity assessment
body seeking accredited status, when the staff's review is complete,
the staff transmits its recommendation on accreditation to the
Commission for consideration. (A third party conformity assessment body
that ultimately may seek acceptance as a firewalled third party
conformity assessment body may initially request acceptance as a third
party conformity assessment body accredited for testing of children's
products other than those of its owners.) If the Commission accepts a
staff recommendation to accredit a firewalled conformity assessment
body, the firewalled conformity assessment body then will be added to
the CPSC's list of accredited third party conformity assessment bodies.
In each case, the Commission will notify the third party conformity
assessment body electronically of acceptance of its accreditation. All
information to support an accreditation acceptance request must be
provided in the English language.
Once the Commission adds a third party conformity assessment body
to the list, the third party conformity assessment body may then begin
testing of children's products to support certification of compliance
with the regulations identified earlier in part I of this document for
which it has been accredited.
IV. Acceptance of Children's Product Certifications Based on Third
Party Conformity Assessment Body Testing to the New Safety Standards
for Full-Size and Non-Full-Size Baby Cribs Prior to Their Effective
Date
Elsewhere in this issue of the Federal Register, the Commission is
publishing new safety standards for full-size and non-full-size baby
cribs, which will be codified at 16 CFR parts 1219 and 1220,
respectively. The effect of this notice of requirements and the final
rule is that each manufacturer (including the importer) or private
labeler of a product subject to 16 CFR parts 1219 or 1220 must have any
such product manufactured on or after June 28, 2011 tested by a third
party conformity assessment body accredited to do so and must issue a
certificate of compliance with 16 CFR parts 1219 or 1220 based on that
testing.
To ease the transition to the new standards and avoid a
``bottlenecking'' of products at conformity assessment bodies at or
near the effective date of 16 CFR parts 1219 and 1220, the Commission
will accept certifications based on testing that occurred prior to the
effective date of the new standards in certain prescribed
circumstances. However, any such testing must comport with all CPSC
requirements, including:
1. At the time of product testing, the product \1\ was tested by a
third party conformity assessment body that was ISO/IEC 17025
accredited by an ILAC-MRA accreditation body at the time of the test.
For firewalled conformity assessment bodies, the firewalled conformity
assessment body must be one that the Commission has accredited by order
at or before the time the product was tested, even if the order did not
include the test methods specified in this notice. If the third party
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conformity assessment body has not been accredited as a firewalled
conformity assessment body by a Commission order, the Commission will
not accept a certificate of compliance based on testing performed by
the third party conformity assessment body before it is accredited, by
Commission order, as a firewalled conformity assessment body;
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\1\ The CPSIA requires that certification be based on testing of
sufficient samples of the product or samples that are identical in
all material respects to the product.
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2. The third party conformity assessment body's application is
accepted by the CPSC by June 28, 2011, as established by the
Commission;
3. The test results show compliance with 16 CFR part 1219 or 16 CFR
part 1220;
4. The product was tested on or after July 23, 2010 and before June
28, 2011; and
5. The third party conformity assessment body's accreditation
remains in effect through the effective date for mandatory third party
testing and manufacturer/private labeler certification for the subject
products' respective regulations.
Dated: December 17, 2010.
Todd A. Stevenson,
Secretary, Consumer Product Safety Commission.
[FR Doc. 2010-32180 Filed 12-27-10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6355-01-P