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A Consumer Guide to Product Safety Recalls
CPSC Hotline Information
For Immediate Release;
Contact: Yolanda Fultz-Morris
(301) 504-0580 Ext. 1219
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WASHINGTON, D.C. - The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC)
reminds consumers to practice safety and common sense when working in their
yards and gardens this summer. About 230,000 people each year are treated in
hospital emergency rooms for injuries relating to various lawn and garden tools.
Each year, about 75 people are killed and about 20,000 are injured on
or near riding lawnmowers and garden tractors. One out of every five deaths
involves a child. CPSC estimates that most of the deaths to children
occurred
when a child was in the path of a moving mower.
"No parent wants their child to be one of these statistics," said CPSC
Chairman Ann Brown. "Young children move quickly and are attracted to
mowing
activity, but they don't understand the dangers it poses. Parents should
keep young children away from any outdoor power equipment."
The CPSC safety standard for walk-behind mowers has substantially
reduced
the number of mower injuries. In addition, CPSC has worked with industry
on a
standard for riding mowers to stop the blade if the rider gets off or
falls off
the seat.
CPSC advises consumers to learn about the hazards of each piece of
equipment, and take the following precautions to prevent injuries to
children
and themselves from lawn and garden equipment:
- Children should never be in the yard while you're mowing, and they
should
never ride on the mower. More than 800 young children get run over or
backed
over by riding mowers each year. This happens when children fall while
being
given rides, or when they approach the operating mower.
- Never assume children will remain where you last saw them. Be alert
and turn
off the mower if children enter the mowing area. Use extra care when
backing up
or going around corners, shrubs, trees or other obstacles.
-
Many children suffer serious burns to their hands and arms when they
touch the
hot muffler of running or recently running engines. Keep children away
from
power equipment.
-
Be sure you know how to operate the equipment. Know where the controls
are and
what they do. Make sure the equipment is in proper operating condition
and
guards or other safety devices have not been removed or disabled.
-
Dress appropriately for the job. This includes: sturdy shoes with
slip-
resistant rubber soles, long pants and long-sleeved shirts,
close-fitting
clothes, eye protection, heavy gloves, hearing protection when needed,
and no
jewelry, which can get caught in moving parts.
-
Before mowing, walk around the area in which you will be working to
remove
any objects like sticks, glass, metal, wire, stones and string that
could cause
injury or damage equipment. Nails and wire are the most hazardous
objects thrown
by mowers, capable of killing bystanders.
-
Never work with electric power tools in wet or damp conditions. For
protection against electrocution, use a ground fault circuit interrupter
(GFCI).
GFCIs come in several models, including portable plug-in types and as
part of
some extension cords.
-
Be sure that extension cords are in good condition, are rated for
outdoor
use, and are the proper gauge for the electrical current capacity of the
tool.
-
Before making adjustments or clearing jams near moving parts, unplug
electric tools and disconnect spark plug wires on gasoline-powered
tools.
-
Be sure that power tools are turned off and made inoperable if they
must be
left unattended. This will help prevent use by children.
-
Handle gasoline carefully. Remember never to fill gas tanks while
machinery
is operating or when equipment is still hot. Do not fuel equipment
indoors. Wipe
up spills. Store gas in an approved container away from the house.
- Finally,
never smoke or use any type of flame around gasoline.
The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission protects the public from
unreasonable risks of injury or death from 15,000 types of consumer
products under the agency's jurisdiction. To report a dangerous product
or a product-related injury, call CPSC's hotline at (800) 638-2772 or
CPSC's teletypewriter at (800) 638-8270, or visit CPSC's web site at
http://www.cpsc.gov/talk.html. For information on CPSC's fax-on-demand
service, call the above numbers or visit the web site at
http://cpsc.gov/about/who.html. To order a press release through
fax-on-demand, call (301) 504-0051 from the handset of your fax machine
and enter the release number. Consumers can obtain this release and
recall information at CPSC's web site at http://www.cpsc.gov.
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