Jewelry in major stores flunks state lead test

<http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/12/10/BUKT14KQ9N.DTL>http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/12/10/BUKT14KQ9N.DTL
 


<mailto:[email protected]>Victoria Colliver, Chronicle Staff Writer

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

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(12-09) 19:37 PST -- Toys aren't the only gift this season that could 
contain dangerous amounts of lead.

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Jewelry purchased at major retailers, including Wal-Mart and Banana 
Republic stores, violated California laws controlling lead content, 
the nonprofit Center for Environmental Health in Oakland said Tuesday.

Jewelry with excessive lead content also was found at Lane Bryant, 
Express, Anchor Blue, Abercrombie & Fitch and Longs Drug Stores. The 
state attorney general has contacted several of the retailers.

The center tested 400 jewelry pieces from 32 retailers and found that 
21 pieces from seven retailers - or about 5 percent of all the 
jewelry tested - had lead content that exceeded the state's 
Proposition 65 anti-toxics laws. The jewelry was purchased in stores 
in the Bay Area and Los Angeles areas in September through November.

"The good news is when we started testing jewelry five years ago, it 
was relatively easy for us to find high level of lead," said Charles 
Margulis, spokesman for the center, adding that 20 to 30 percent of 
jewelry tested was not in compliance.

Margulis said the companies may have improved but should not be 
selling jewelry that has too much lead. "It's still much too high," 
he said. "There is a law about this, and the industry needs to clean up."

The amount of lead in the coating of children's jewelry must be 
limited to 600 parts per million, according to a state law that went 
into effect in September 2007.

Lead is known to cause cancer and reproductive problems, as well as 
mental and physical retardation.

A surface coating on a frog charm on a Wal-Mart brand child's 
necklace contained 37 percent lead, or more than 600 times the legal 
limit. A Wal-Mart spokeswoman said the company directed stores in 
California to remove this item from shelves and blocked its sale at 
registers as it investigates further.

The 2007 law, which phases in lead content levels for adult jewelry, 
followed a consent agreement signed a year earlier by 70 retailers to 
settle a lawsuit over lead content in children's costume jewelry. 
Different limits are set for adult jewelry and various jewelry parts.

According to the test results, 14 of the 21 pieces with high lead 
content had metal pieces that contained more than 50 percent lead.

Longs, the Walnut Creek chain recently bought by CVS/Caremark Corp. 
in Woonsocket, R.I., was the worst offender, selling 13 of the 14 
highest lead content products at the stores. A CVS spokesman said the 
company removed all the products by November.

A spokeswoman for Gap Inc., the San Francisco parent company of 
Banana Republic, said the retailer has been directed to remove the 
product in question pending further investigation.

Express and Abercrombie & Fitch Co., based in New Albany, Ohio, 
disputed the center's findings.

Abercrombie's general counsel, David Cupps, said the company sent 
five items from each of the three styles found to be out of 
compliance for independent testing. He said all items were within 
legal limits. "It seems to indicate the center's results are in 
error," Cupps said.

A spokeswoman for Express, in Columbus, Ohio, said the company also 
did its own tests but decided to remove the products from stores, 
even though they fell within the limits.

Officials from the Center for Environmental Health said the group's 
lawyers will speak with the retailers, but it stands behind its testing.


Getting the lead out

-- It's difficult to determine whether metal jewelry pieces or 
coatings contain lead. Suspicious products include dull-looking 
metals, coated fake pearls, and plastic or vinyl cords.

-- Avoid giving small children jewelry, especially pieces with metal 
parts and fake pearls. Safer products for older children and adults 
include silver, leather and some ceramic beads.

-- The Center for Environmental Health is hosting several toy-testing 
events throughout the Bay Area, where people can go to get jewelry 
tested. For more information, go to <http://www.cehca.org>www.cehca.org.

Source: Center for Environmental Health

E-mail Victoria Colliver at 
<mailto:[email protected]>[email protected].

This article appeared on page C - 1 of the San Francisco Chronicle

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<http://www.halfthekingdom.org/>Kingdom!<*}}}><

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with Your help,
so that all our prayers and works may begin in You and by You be happily ended.
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Amen.


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