Federal government relaunches consumer product safety bill - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 11:20 AM | Calgary | -11.9°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
News

Federal government relaunches consumer product safety bill

The federal government has reintroduced a bill that would give it more power to take action against unsafe products, including fines of up to $5 million for some offences.

The federal government has reintroduced a bill that would give it more power to take action against unsafe products, including fines of up to $5 million for some offences.

The fines, however, would only follow asuccessful criminal prosecution.

The fine approachwould bethe most extreme of a four-level enforcement system, andwould start with a voluntary request for compliance, then a government order to recall a product, an administrative penalty and finally criminal prosecution.

The Canada consumer product safety act, in passed,would "modernize and strengthen product safety laws by overhauling existing rules," Health Canada said in anews release.

The government decided to update the legislation because of the large number of high-profile recalls, the age of the existing act it dates from 1969 and a need to be in step with trading partners.

"It strengthens compliance promotion and enforcement activities through increased fines up to $5 millionfor some offences, and fines that are left to the discretion of the courts where the offence is committed with knowledge or recklessly," the department said.

Fines now can range up to $250,000.

Abill of the same name died last fall when the election was called, but it may have been changed, a department spokesman said.The former billhadreceivedsecond reading and been referred to committee.

The bill does not cover food, drugs, natural health products andcosmetics, which fall under the Food and Drug Act.

Itaims to:

  • Catch problems before they start.
  • Target the highest risks.
  • Move quickly when a problem occurs.

The act forbids the manufacture, import, advertisement or sale of consumer products that pose an "unreasonable danger" to human health or safety.

Suppliers would have to report serious product-related incidentsand companies would have to keep accurate records so products can be easily traced, especially when they're recalled, the release said.

Suppliers would have to"identify and systematically assess safety risks, develop standards and share best practices."

The department said it wouldmonitor products that may pose a risk in the future, and the ministercouldorder suppliers to dosafety tests ifthere are indications of a problem.

Health Canada said it would provide consumers more information, such as material on the selection and safe use of products, choosing age-appropriate toys andunderstanding product labels.

It might also double the number of product safety inspectors over the next five years.

Product recalls worry consumers, and the number of children's products recalled last year rose about 40 per cent, despite assurances from Ottawa that it was addressing the problem.