Hugh Hewitt

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Voting to kill and injure kids: A congressional CYA endangers children

By: Hugh Hewitt
Examiner Columnist
April 5, 2009

Thousands of children 12 and younger ride motorcycles, ATVs and snowmobiles, which is why a lot of effort and time has gone into designing vehicles made for smaller folks. On Friday, The Wall Street Journal noted a study by the Motorcycle Industry Council that concluded "90% of the youth fatalities and injuries on motorcycles occur when kids ride adult vehicles."
On Thursday of last week, the Senate of the United States voted 58 to 39 to reject an amendment to the budget bill designed to keep kids on bikes designed for them and thus off adult vehicles. The reason the amendment was offered by South Carolina's Jim DeMint is because the 2008 "Consumer Products Safety Improvement Act" mandates that products containing even trace amounts of lead --trace amounts highly unlikely to ever come in contact with a child's digestion system-- were banned from sale to children 12 and under.
The law took effect in February an instantly made it illegal to sell the kid-sized vehicles because of nearly undetectabl amounts of lead in tire valves, brakes, batteries etc. Replacement parts for vehicles for kids are similarly interdicted.
The Journal quoted Ken Luttrell, a Democratic state house member from Oklahoma as noting the obvious: "With these new regulations, Washington has only succeeded in making biking much more dangerous for kids."
There isn't any debate about the impact of the law on the ATV industry. Nor is there much debate about the insanely expensive toll the CPSIA is taking on the children's toy business, children's shoes, children's clothing, resale and thrift shops and on and on.
Whenever I report on the law on air my e-mail box fills up with small business owners who cannot cope with the expensive (and in some instances impossible to comply with) mandates of the law. Follow a blog like Overlawyered.com that chronicles the chaos, and the picture of an extraordinary blunder by Congress emerges. 
Billions lost and who knows how many jobs disappeared is a scandal in good times and an unpardonable one in a severe recession, but the idea of a measure intended to increase child safety resulting quite directly in the death and injury of children really does set a new low mark for Congress.
I interviewed Consumer Products Safety Commission Chair Nancy Nord on my radio show on March 15 and pressed her on this issue. "I am so concerned about this problem," she replied. "The last thing we want is for young children to end up on adult ATV’s, and this is a really, really perverse consequence of this law."
Aware of the absurdity, Commission staff issued a ruling last week that doubled down on the ban. Commissioner Nord then issued a statement saying that while she agreed with the staff's analysis of the clear intent of the law, she was directing a year-long delay in enforcement of the absurdity.
Gary Wolensky, a lawyer with the Irvine, California firm of Snell & Wilmer who represents many impacted businesses and who first brought the law to my attention, in an e-mail response to my question about what all this means, wrote that it might allow "ATV manufacturers time to sell or export their inventory and develop new ATV's with component parts that either meet the lead content limit or are inaccessible."
"It also give Congress an opportunity to fix what is a well-intentioned but very flawed law," Wolensky continued. "Without Nord's action the Motorcycle Industry would be left with hundreds of millions of dollars in unusable inventory. Nord has taken a common sense approach and now we'll see if [Commissioner]Thomas Moore joins Nord as well as how the Attorneys General from California, Illinois, New York, and Connecticut respond."
Nord seems to be doing everything she can to keep kids off of vehicles which are much more dangerous to them than the lead content in the kids' machines. But what was the Senate thinking when it rejected the DeMint amendment? The problems with CPSIA run deep and it is so obviously flawed that immediate action is necessary on a number of fronts, but Congress is fiddling while many businesses burn down and kids go off on the wrong bikes.
It is embarrassing to admit that such a well-intentioned law has gone so badly wrong, but is wounded pride enough to keep Nancy Pelosi --a grandmother-- from acting to stop a real threat of real injury and death to children? 
Apparently so. The reluctance of Congress to do a small but urgently necessary correction to an overbroad law is a warning of what to expect when its massively much more complicated "health care reform" kicks in and the law of unintended consequences begins to roll forward.
Examiner columnist Hugh Hewitt is a law professor at Chapman University Law School and a nationally syndicated radio talk show host who blogs daily at HughHewitt.com.



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Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

John Tripp

Apr 6, 2009

This is S.O.P. for Democrats. Another classic case of people without clues do things to payback favors, is the airlines laws making it illegal for a mother to carry her child with her. She had to purchase the extra seat. This led to thousands more children killed in traffic accidents because the family could not afford another ticket and had to drive, and we all know the ratio of airline deaths to auto accident deaths.

 

Saomom

Apr 6, 2009

Talk about frustrating. My daughter has outgrown her motorcycle and we were looking forward to selling it in order for us to buy her a new one. Now I am stuck with a $1200 motorcycle that I cannot resell. Thanks Congress! With reference to the lead, what kid who can ride a motorcycle is going to gnaw on the handle bars or tires? Good Heavens, how stupid does the government think we are?

 

Charli

Apr 6, 2009

We need to remember that the Bush administration are the ones responsible for passing such vague legislation and they did so only to hurry it through before his term ended. As bad as this law is written, the motorcycle and ATV industry should have to follow the law until it is fixed. Why should they be any different than anyone else. This isn't going to "create" more deaths and injuries to children. That is just an excuse the users and dealers are using as a scare tactic. There have been children seriously injured and dying for the many years yet no one has made any "common sense" laws to stop it from happening so far. Stop using this lead law as the excuse when in reality the only people this law is hurting are the "users, dealers and industry." Maybe now we will see a decrease in child fatalities and injuries!

 

cmmjaime

Apr 6, 2009

Thank you for a well-written article on this poorly written law! No, Charli, the Bush Administration isn't responsible for this law -- it was a bi-partisan attempt to please the Consumer Union folks and the Public Citizen folks, and the likes of them. Democrats and Republicans alike voted for this horrible law. And no, "'...in reality the only people this law is hurting are the 'users, dealers and industry.'" Excuse me. It is hurting families (who can no longer find inexpensive used clothes and books for their children). It is hurting crafters who have been making a living making specialty items for children (items that have NEVER been accused of being unsafe, but will now be illegal because of this law). It is hurting those who buy and sell used books --- because now we can no longer buy or sell used children's books printed before 1986 (books that again have never been a source of injury). And that's just the tip of the iceberg! This law is bad, bad, bad.

 

Kim C

Apr 6, 2009

Hugh, Those of us who ride and have children that ride truly appreciate your attention to this very badly thought out law. We will continue to do our part in helping get this law changed. Keep the heat 'em Hugh.

 

DocForesight

Apr 6, 2009

Charli: what "common sense" law could possibly be enacted to eliminate "children [being] seriously injured and dying" while engaged in activities involving ATV's, motorcycles and other motorsports? You can't be serious - and no one takes you as such.

 

Charli

Apr 6, 2009

Docforesight, the common sense laws would be to keep children under the age of 16 off ATV's which are motorized vehicles just like cars and should be treated as such! This would prevent children from being injured and killed and the huge amount of taxpayer dollars wasted because of these accidents. And to cmmjamie, Alaska Senator Ted Stevens throw in the ATV's and motorcycles saying it was a "Safety" bill for these machines when in reality it had nothing to do with REAL safety. Remember, this article is about ATV's and motorcycles even though the law involves a much broader catagory of "toys,clothes etc.."

 

Richard C

Apr 7, 2009

This is why Congress should mandate RESULTS, not MEANS. Congress does not understand science better than scientists, ATV's better than offroad enthusiasts, etc. Just mandate what you want to have done and let each community figure out how. In this case, just impose jailtime on a CEO whose company allows lead to poison a child, whether it's a pencil or an ATV they make. No need to specify how, they will figure it out.

 

bluefire317

Apr 8, 2009

How did you have a show on March 15? That was a Sunday... nitpicky, I know...

 

Lauranina

Oct 4, 2009

Children below 16 shouldn't ride a motorcycle . That is illegal in my country. Just dangerous for them and other road-users, you know.. classified ads |job listings |bathroom furniture

 

corporate intranet

Oct 9, 2009

I don't support that a child should use a motor cycle.Its our duty to beware of this incidence.

 

dog breeders

Oct 10, 2009

This would prevent children from being injured and killed and the huge amount of taxpayer dollars wasted because of these accidents.


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dog breeders

Oct 16, 2009

Police should not allow child to ride motor bike in the road. It is very dangerous and big accident may happen any time.

dog breeders

 

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Oct 30, 2009



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Lisa

Nov 17, 2009

16 year old kids can barely drive cars let alone motor cycles.

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