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Burning Books for Consumer Safety? Really?

the_ant_and_the_grasshopperThis morning I was pointed to this on line article by Tee Morris, who got the link from Neil Gaiman, and I got really angry:

The New Book Banning

This is what we’ve come to?  I understand the concern and the outrage over the discovery that a great number of toys from overseas still contained lead in their paint.  I understand this is a threat, and probably has been.  I also understand there is a difference between an intelligent reaction and a witch hunt.

I guess, if every old book was preserved in some way, and if every old book was available in a new form for the children, and if any thought whatsoever had gone into the consequences of this stupid glitch in Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (CPSIA), passed by Congress last summer, I might be convinced that they had thought this through.  I don’t know if the proper people just haven’t become aware, or congressional leaders are afraid to be the one to pop up and say something, or if they seriously don’t understand what the implications of destroying and burning hundreds of years of children’s literature will be on our society.  In point of fact, I don’t care which it is…they need to fix it, stop it, cease – desist.

THE HAVE GOT TO BE FREAKING KIDDING!

Under this law, which is eloquently explained in the above article, very strict testing is imposed on every children’s book published before 1985 (It really did start in 1984 Mr. Orwell…right after) – so strict that Thrift Stores around the country have actually begun destroying and throwing away all children’s books written before 1985.   209 years of children’s story magic, the illustrations of Wyeth, Winnie the Pooh, The Hardy Boys and Nancy Drew, The Wind in the Willows and Charlotte’s Web.

Apparently the regulations that kept lead out of the ink used in illustrations was written long after those denying that same use in paint for toys.

They are getting ready to burn the magic.  They are getting ready to destroy something that means more than we can probably even conceive at this early point in the game.  There is only one group that can stop them, and we are it.

I’m not sure what to suggest yet, but I’m going to start with a letter to my own representatives in congress, and I suggest anyone concerned do the same.  This can’t be the intent of this new law, but if it IS the intent, it goes from a safety regulation to evil in the blink of an eye for me.

We can’t let them burn the books.

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6 comments to Burning Books for Consumer Safety? Really?

  • Marie Angell

    It is a tragic shame and makes no sense. The worst consequence is the reaction of those who are destroying the books out of fear of the heavy hand of the government, when this regulation is almost certainly is either a misunderstanding or will be withdrawn.

  • Thanks for writing about this issue and alerting me to it. I had missed the original news. This is really quite sad and needs action.

  • I'm really upset too.

    They already passed it, and it's already begun. From what I understand, it's illegal to give or sell them, so we can't start a drive.

    Argghh!

  • Thank-you for addressing this issue. Some of us have been crying out about this since we heard of it in January, and we feel like voices calling in the wilderness.
    Sadly, It is not a 'misunderstanding' and Congress has no intention of withdrawing it. Commissioner Moore of the CPSC called for libraries to 'sequester' older books for children 12 and under, and since the law calls for the banning of any children's product which contains lead without any consideration for risk assessment, the CPSC has little option- and they very specifically stated that they would not fine or arrest anybody for selling books printed AFTER 1985. The worst consequence is NOT the reaction of those who have read the law and listened to their legal counsel and paid attention to what Congress stubbornly refuses to do (call a meeting and pass the reform bills before them)- the worst consequence is the bill itself and all the good things it destroys without any corresponding increase in safety. The law calls for the destruction (as toxic waste) of all products found to have lead in them over the ridiculously low levels of 300 ppm (as of August)- *regardless* of whether the lead has ever poisoned a child or could poison a child, and tragically, that includes children's books printed before 1985.
    And the testing? What if a pre-1985 book tests are free of lead? It's a moot point for most second hand booksellers, as the third party testing required by law generally destroys the product- irrelevant if you are a maker of 10,000 duplicate plastic bathtub books. But if you are the seller of one copy of a pre-1985 edition of Taran Wanderer, or Miss Suzie, The King with Six Friends, or Arthur Ransome's Russian Fairy Tales, or one of the Green Knowe books- you cannot afford to test it because you can't recoup the cost of testing, and you would destroy the book anyway in the process of the wet testing required by law.

    Sequestering the books. Disposing of them as 'toxic waste.' This is madness, and every week something new comes out and I learn it's even worse than I thought. Last week the Commission posted a pdf file of a power point presentation for training- and on the sixth page without explanation they dismissed concerns about books by stating they had no useful life after 20 years anyway.

  • Join us in Washington DC on April 1st to show our congressmen what fools they've been! There will be a large rally from 9-5 on Capitol Hill with representatives and speakers from many of the businesses and organizations affected by this law, as well as a number of congressmen who support our efforts. I'm trying to organize a massive vintage book story time as part of the festivities – it's BYOB (as in book, not booze, though I do feel like turning to drink when I contemplate the impact of this law).

    Deputy Headmistress is right about the reluctance of Congress to change this law in any way (and CPSC is equally adamant they cannot grant exemptions for pre-1985 books without changes in the wording of the law). I have made numerous calls to both my senators and my congressman, as well as to various members of the commerce committees that control bills to amend the CPSIA. So far, every staffer I've spoken with has been quite clear that there is tremendous opposition in Congress to any attempts to "dilute" the law, and they don't think the amendment bills will get out of committee.

    It's true that the old books have no existing organization to support them. I'm doing my best to get the word out and ask everyone who sees this to spread the word.

    By the way, it's not just the older books that have to be tested. It's also novelty books like pop-ups and touch and feel books (think Pat the Bunny) that are defined as playthings rather than reading material. And books with spiral or plastic comb bindings. And, very importantly, the stapled paperback picture books that school book clubs sell and early literacy programs distribute for free.

    This law will set back literacy efforts in this country tremendously. Please come rally with us, blog, tell your neighbors, talk to your librarians and your kids' teachers.

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