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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Sunday, September 9, 2007

Safe (even organic!) toys just a click away

By Hannah Schardt
Washington Post

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

With recent recalls of millions of Chinese-made toys, parents may want to substitute playthings with safer options made elsewhere.

PAUL SAKUMA | Associated Press

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WASHINGTON — All 6-year-old Audrey Ashdown wanted for Christmas was an Easy-Bake Oven. She used the toy exactly once — to bake a little cake — before Hasbro recalled about 1 million of the ovens manufactured since May 2006.

In the months leading up to the recall, 77 children were burned, including one burn so serious it resulted in the partial amputation of a 5-year-old's finger. Audrey's mother, Washington, D.C., resident Jill Cashen, took away the oven as soon as she heard about the recall. A few months later, Cashen found herself once again playing the anti-Santa: Audrey's favorite birthday gift, a collection of Mattel's Polly Pocket dolls, was recalled for posing a choking hazard.

"She had been asking for them forever," says Cashen, who went to the Mattel Web site to see whether the exact Polly Pocket dolls in her daughter's room were recalled. Some were; some were not. "But I felt like we couldn't really be sure, so we took them all away," she says. "As a parent, it's really frustrating and scary."

Fortunately, Cashen didn't have any Thomas the Tank Engine wooden trains (recalled in June because of lead paint) or Fisher-Price Sesame Street and Dora the Explorer figurines (recalled in August, also for lead). But millions of parents are scrambling to check whether any of the toys in their overflowing living rooms or playrooms could burn, choke or poison their kids. And once the dust (lead or otherwise) settles from this extraordinary round of recalls, some parents are bound to ask themselves: What can I do to avoid this in the future?

"It's very difficult to do, but for the time being I'd encourage parents to look for alternatives to toys made in China," says Sally Greenberg, senior product safety counsel for Consumers Union, the nonprofit organization that publishes Consumer Reports magazine.

All of the recently recalled toys were manufactured in China, as are 80 percent of the toys sold in this country. Many China-made playthings may be perfectly safe, but for jittery parents, Consumers Union advises an excess of caution: Along with removing the recalled products and testing the lead levels of kids who may have been chewing on lead paint, parents should substitute any questionable toys with books, unpainted toys and other safer alternatives.

So where to find such things? Some retailers have made a point of knowing where their toys are made — and what they're made of.

Another option is online retailers. Several small-scale, European or made-in-the-U.S. toy companies have found a market for handmade trains, wooden rattles and organic stuffed animals on the Internet, including:

  • Elves and Angels (www.elvesandangels.com): handmade wooden toy kitchens (from $169.90) and accessories such as enamel kettles ($23.90) and colorful wood vegetables ($36.90), built on a farm in Maine.

  • Holgate Toys (www.holgatetoy.com): classic wooden toys such as stacking rings on a cone ($18) and a pounding board with pegs and hammer ($26).

  • Maple Landmark Woodcraft (www.maplelandmark.com): a slick Web site with a variety of toys, including baby rattles (from $8.50), ABC blocks ($50), Midget Railway train cars ($6.40) and jigsaw puzzles ($18.50).

  • Oompa Toys (www.oompa.com): This large selection of European-made toys includes organic cloth stuffed animals suitable for infants, such as the Lana chicken ($35.99), a catch-and-run Dancing Eggs game by Haba ($14.99) and sleek dollhouses you can furnish with such sets as the Ambiente Playroom by Selecta ($44.99), so they'll look as if they're right out of Dwell magazine.

  • Stack & Stick (www.stackandstick.com): wooden building toys that look like Legos for the Ingalls family, including the Grande Villa 99-piece set ($87).