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Aug 08

Thomas and Friends' toys withdrawn due to high lead content

Around 1.5 million Thomas & Friends Wooden Railway toys have been recalled from the stores because of high amounts of lead in the paint the toys are coated with, which could be harmful for children’s health if taken in by them, as announced by The US Consumer Product Safety Commission and toy company RC2 Corp on Wednesday.

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Around 1.5 million Thomas & Friends Wooden Railway toys have been recalled from the stores because of high amounts of lead in the paint the toys are coated with, which could be harmful for children’s health if taken in by them, as announced by The US Consumer Product Safety Commission and toy company RC2 Corp on Wednesday.

The authorities are suggesting that the toys, including 90,000 in Canada, should not be used and be returned to the company for replacement. The announcement specifically mentions toys marked with manufacturing codes WJ or AZ, which can be located on the bottom of the product or inside the battery cover, do not fall under the banned category. Only the wooden vehicles, buildings and other parts for the Thomas and Friends train set which has the logo "Thomas & Friends Wooden Railway" in the top left hand corner of the package made in China and sold during January 2005 to June 2007 for amounts between $10 and $70 US at various places in Canada and US are a part of this recall.

The complete list of the RC2 recall includes the following products:

• Red James Engine & Red James' #5 Coal Tender.
• Red Lights & Sounds James Engine & Red James' #5 Lights & Sounds Coal
Tender.
• James with Team Colors Engine & James with Team Colors #5 Coal Tender.
• Red Skarloey Engine.
• Brown & Yellow Old Slow Coach.
• Red Hook & Ladder Truck & Red Water Tanker Truck.
• Red Musical Caboose.
• Red Sodor Line Caboose.
• Red Coal Car labelled "2006 Day Out With Thomas" on the Side.
• Red Baggage Car.
• Red Holiday Caboose.
• Red "Sodor Mail" Car.
• Red Fire Brigade Truck.
• Red Fire Brigade Train.
• Deluxe Sodor Fire Station.
• Red Coal Car.
• Yellow Box Car.
• Red Stop Sign.
• Yellow Railroad Crossing Sign.
• Yellow "Sodor Cargo Company" Cargo Piece.
• Smelting Yard.
• Ice Cream Factory.

Although no injuries have been reported so far, the step taken is a precautionary measure taken in light of previous similar instances. Other China made products, including pet food contaminated with melamine and toothpaste contaminated with DEG are some of the health scares currently faced by Canada. Since last year six other toys, including bracelets, charms and army toy sets, have been removed from Canadian stores.

The recall Hotline numbers where the buyers of these toys can ask for a replacement are:
(US numbers): Firm's Recall Hotline: (866) 725-4407; CPSC Recall Hotline: (800) 638-2772.

Lead poisoning levels are higher in children as compared to adults because babies and young children often put their hands and other objects in their mouths and these objects can have lead dust on them. They also absorb it more easily. Lead is also capable of causing brain damage. According to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, nearly 1 million US children under 5 have high levels of lead in their blood, and more than 20 per cent of African American children living in old houses built before 1946 have high levels of lead in their blood.

In the US lead poisoning is formally defined as having at least 10micrograms of lead per deciliter of blood. (The average level of lead, for people ages 1 to 70, is 2.3 micrograms). Last year, Health Canada set limits for lead content in children's products at less than 600 milligrams of lead per kilogram of metal.

The lead may come from lead-containing paint, leaded gasoline, some types of batteries, water pipes, and pottery glazes etc. Lead was used in household paints until 1978. Lead exposure in homes can also occur through water, food, household dust and soil.

Exposure to high levels can cause vomiting, diarrhea, convulsions, coma or death. Symptoms include anemia, appetite loss, abdominal pain, constipation, fatigue, sleeplessness, irritability and headaches.

It can be diagnosed by blood tests where a Blood lead level of 10 ug/dL or greater are dangerous to children, even if the person has no apparent symptoms.

A high iron and calcium diet can help protect people against absorbing lead. It can be treated by the chelation therapy in the hospital. The treatment only prevents further damage to the brain but does not repair the injury already caused.

One must be very cautious about the presence of Lead in their surroundings. If you feel that your home is exposed to high levels of lead then you must take the following precautions:

• Even if your children seem healthy, have them tested for lead.
• Wash children’s hands, toys, bottles etc. very often.
• Include low-fat, healthy foods in your children’s meals.
• Get your home checked for lead hazards and clean floors, window sills etc
regularly.
• Do not stand peeling wall surfaces.
• Always dust off soil from your shoes before entering the house.

As they say, prevention is better than Cure.

buffy's picture
Tomas the Train Toys

What about those toys sold in South Africa? My 4 yo son has JUST got the Red James (today!) and the Tomas Wooden Train set for Xmas and his birthday. What do we do with our stuff? Will any recall benefit us? What do we do with our contaminated toys?

ironchef's picture
People, relax. They will

People, relax. They will REPLACE suspected trains! You don't have to lose anything AND you get brand new ones made in the USofA (or the USofChina) with lead-free paint! Tell your kids you will be sending them to the station to get cleaned! :) My 2yo and 4yo boys will be losing about 30 total trains but they'll get new ones in return. Sure my boys have stripped the lead-based paint off the ones they have and long since have digested that lead, but at least they'll have new trains (just kidding, paint still intact on trains).

I agree with poster 2 posts up that we should penalize China for their unethical and standards-free production of much of the world's imports (toys especially) but who's gonna do it, the government? The government doesn't have the right to do anything regarding this, it's all corporate power. With corporate globalization taking over much of the standards of individual nations (AKA "WTO"), we can count on more shoddy imports from China and other outsourced trash we give our kids. http://www.contracostatimes.com/ci_6168712

Alan Stromberg's picture
Thomas & Friends recall

Maybe it's time for Congress to get really tough and pass a law that jails the CEO of a company that imports a product found to be dangerous. Fining them doesn't do anything — the company just views the fine as a cost of doing business. As it is very unlikely that we'll ever get China to police its manufacturers, maybe the answer is to deal with the demand side of the equation.

Spud's picture
Not just the toy maker at fault....

Everything you buy now has the "Made In China" stamp on it. Not only do you have to penalize the toy maker, but also the paint supplier. It is high time we either create stiffer guide lines for imports or start opening products at our boarders and have them tested. I would much rather have someone tell me this product has been open at the port to test for contamination and know the product is safe than to gamble with my life and the life of my family members with a product made in China. As much as we hear people say they are going to stop buying products made there, most of us can't afford it. Thus we are stuck in a catch 22, but no matter how cheap, no toy is worth a childs life.

I was exposed to mercury as a small child and now at 22 I suffer from more health and neurological than most people my age. Mine was because of faulty medical equipment which isnt right, but it would be even harder for my parents if it had of been a toy they bought. My heart goes out to the parents that have this eating at them until they see their GP. Good luck.

Erin B's picture
Read the Fine Print

Read closer, everyone. You can exchange tainted toys for safe ones:

The recall Hotline numbers where the buyers of these toys can ask for a replacement are:
(US numbers): Firm's Recall Hotline: (866) 725-4407; CPSC Recall Hotline: (800) 638-2772.

Dave's picture
Thomas Toy Train

You can't penalize Communist Red China. They've got every politician in the United States in their back pocket. We're getting poison pet food, poison toothpaste and now poison toy trains, along with all the other junk crap they're sending over here. And the contamination doesn't stop at your trash can either. It finds it's way into landfills and water supplies. Buying a product that was made in China as an investment is the dumbest thing I've ever heard. It's just a piece of junk. Here's what you do next time, look for the "Made in China" label and the throw the piece of crap back on the shelf. This is a problem that only the American people can fix.

Community Energy Project's picture
A few extra points to add to this article...

It's nice to see some news articles discussing the actual affects of lead - but I wanted to point out a couple of extra things:

One is that you cannot cure lead poisoning. Even with treatments to remove lead from the blood, once a child has been exposed the damage is permanent. This makes prevention essential, and if a child has been exposed it means stopping the exposure immediately.

Two is that while toys can be a problem, and this is a large example of that - the number one cause of lead poisoning is from remodeling homes older than 1978, when residential paint was banned. Sanding and dry scraping creates lead dust, which is inhaled by entire families or settles on toys, or where children put their hands.

The third is that this article mentions the side-effects of SEVERE poisoning - but I would like to stress that a child without fatal levels of lead can show no immediate symptoms at all. If you think your child HAS been exposed, you should take them in to have their blood tested. You can do this with a little pinprick or capillary test to find out for sure if exposure has occurred.

~Sherrie

Perry's picture
Read closely

Nice post Sherrie but if you read closely the article does mention that chelation can prevent further harm (questionable) and that the harm already done is permanent. Good article in that it does go the extra mile to talk about lead issues in more detail. People should take this seriously and stop bashing China just because you see an opening. Be smart consumers!

Yanick's picture
thomas train recall

this is the article i told you about.

Toys R US Kid's picture
Penialize the country of origin...

This latest recall has my children loosing eight cherished pieces from their Thomas collection and leaves me trying to explain the situation to a crying four year old.

Recalls are only part of the solution...

With an ever increasing tide of tainted goods being shipped from China and other asian nations isn't it time that more companies look to protect their so called good names by looking first to protect their customers by seeking alternate production facilities?

If government can only another nation to step up or make more rigorous its inspections knowing that such activity would at most be a token endevour why don't they hold the companies commissioning the production accountable?

The public should demand that companies take tighter hold of their overseas production and be held accountable for lacking quality that affects the health and well being of their patrons.

Mary Props's picture
Thomas & Friends Wooden Railway toys recall...

Regarding the Thomas & Friends Wooden Railway toys recall, what do I do with the hundreds of dollars worth of Thomas & Friends Wooden Railway toys that I've purchased for my now 5-1/2 year old grandson? I can't in good conscience sell them or even give them away. Now that I've lost what I had hoped to be an investment for other grandchildren, what do I do with the toys? Is there any way to recover all the money I've spent?

I do intend to strongly suggest that my daughter take my grandson to his doctor to be checked for lead poisoning.

This is awful!

G money's picture
Thomas the train

Well...That explains my nephews behavior!!!

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