[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 16, Volume 2]
[Revised as of January 1, 2003]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 16CFR1303.5]

[Page 378-380]
 
                     TITLE 16--COMMERCIAL PRACTICES
 
             CHAPTER II--CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY COMMISSION
 
PART 1303--BAN OF LEAD-CONTAINING PAINT AND CERTAIN CONSUMER PRODUCTS BEARING LEAD-CONTAINING PAINT--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1303.5  Findings.

    (a) The degree and nature of the risk of injury. (1) The Commission 
finds that the risk of injury which this regulation is designed to 
eliminate or reduce is lead poisoning in children. The adverse effects 
of this poisoning in children can cause a range of disorders such as 
hyperactivity, slowed learning ability, withdrawal, blindness, and even 
death. The final Environmental Impact Statement on Lead in Paint which 
is on file with the President's Council on Environmental Quality (and 
available for inspection in the Office of the Secretary) contains in 
appendix A a detailed discussion of the health effects of lead in paint. 
These effects will only be summarized here.
    (2) Lead is a cumulative toxic heavy metal which, in humans, exerts 
its effects on the renal, hematopoietic, and nervous systems. Newer 
concepts indicate that there are three stages to childhood lead 
poisoning. The adverse health effects in the first stage are not 
clinically present but metabolic changes can be observed. During the 
second stage or symptomatic stage such symptoms as loss of appetite, 
vomiting, apathy, drowsiness, and inability to coordinate voluntary 
muscle movements occur. The after effects of this stage include seizure 
disorders as well as various behavioral and functional disorders which 
are often included under the heading of minimal brain dysfunction. 
Studies suggest that this syndrome may include hyperactivity, impulsive 
behavior, prolonged reaction time, perceptual disorders and slowed 
learning ability. The adverse health effects of the third stage may be 
permanent and can include blindness, mental retardation, behavior 
disorders, and death.
    (3) The Commission notes that children with pica are of special 
concern with regard to lead poisoning. Pica, the repetitive ingestion of 
nonfood substances, occurs in 50 percent of children between the ages of 
one and three, and studies indicate that at this age lead is absorbed 
more rapidly than lead is absorbed in adults. Pica for paint is believed 
to be episodic and can occur 2 to 3 times a week.
    (4) The Commission also notes that there are no reports of injuries 
caused by lead paint poisoning in the Commission's National Electronic 
Injury Surveillance System (NEISS) data, which reflect hospital 
emergency room treatment. Lead paint poisonings result from a chronic 
hazard rather than from an acute hazard of the type generally treated in 
emergency rooms; and NEISS reporting, therefore, does not reflect this 
type of chronic hazard or injuries.
    (5) Former U.S. Surgeon-General Jesse L. Steinfeld, however, 
estimated in 1971 that 400,000 pre-school American

[[Page 379]]

children have elevated body lead burdens. The National Bureau of 
Standards in 1972 estimated that 600,000 young children have unduly high 
lead blood content.
    (b) Products subject to this ban. (1) The products banned by this 
rule are listed in Sec. 1303.4.
    (2) The term paint comprises a variety of coating materials such as 
interior and exterior household paints, varnishes, lacquers, stains, 
enamels, primers, and similar coatings formulated for use on various 
surfaces. Based on 1976 data, the Commission estimates that over 400 
million gallons of paint a year valued at approximately $2.5 billion 
could potentially be subject to this rule.
    (3) All products commonly known as toys and other articles intended 
for the use of children are subject to this rule. The categories of 
products within this classification are numerous and include items and 
equipment for play, amusement, education, physical fitness, and care of 
children. Retail sales in 1976 of products considered to be toys or 
other articles intended for use of children are estimated at around $4 
billion.
    (4) For the purposes of this rule, furniture articles are certain 
movable articles used to support people or things or other functional or 
decorative furniture articles such as couches, beds, tables, chairs, 
chests, and the like. Appliances and similar equipment, household 
fixtures, and certain other household items such as window shades, 
blinds, wall hangings, and the like are not included within the 
definition of furniture. The regulation applies to furniture for use in 
households, schools, in recreation, or otherwise. In 1972, the value of 
shipments of items of furniture such as those named above was as 
follows: wood household furniture $2,716 million; metal household 
furniture $859 million; wood television and radio cabinets $293 million; 
and $190 million for other household furniture made of plastic, reed and 
rattan. (Not included in the above are some $2 billion worth of 
upholstered furniture and $300 million in convertible sofas, chair beds 
and studio couches.)
    (c) Need of the public for the products and effects of the rule on 
their utility, cost, and availability. (1) The public need for paints of 
various types and for furniture and other articles is substantial and 
well established. The Commission finds that the need of the public for 
paint containing more than 0.06 percent lead or for the affected 
products that are coated with materials containing more than 0.06 
percent lead is limited. The Commission has determined that there are 
products containing more than the 0.06 percent level of lead which meet 
a public need and for which substitutes are either not available or are 
not sufficiently effective and to which access by children to the 
coatings or the surfaces to which they are applied is unlikely. 
Accordingly, these products have been specifically exempted from the 
scope of the regulation in Sec. 1303.3.
    (2) The Commission finds that the effects of this rule on the cost, 
utility, and availability of paints and painted articles will be small. 
The Commission notes that over 95 percent of latex-based and nearly 70 
percent of oil-based paints have lead levels at or below the level set 
by part 1303.
    (i) Costs. The Commission estimates that the added costs to the 
consumer for paints affected by this rule will not exceed 5 to 10 cents 
per gallon. Costs to consumers for furniture and for toys and other 
articles intended for the use of children are not expected to increase 
as the result of compliance with the regulation.
    (ii) Utility. The Commission finds that for water-based or latex 
paints and coatings subject to this rule, reducing the amount of 
allowable lead to 0.06 percent will not have adverse effects on their 
utility. For certain solvent-thinned coatings, however, lead driers will 
have to be replaced by non-lead driers such as zirconium to comply with 
the 0.06 percent level (Driers are not used in latex paints). An impact 
on the paint industry may result because current nonlead driers may not 
dry satisfactorily in low temperatures or high humidity conditions, and 
so the painting industry in some areas at certain times of the year may 
suffer a reduction of effective painting time.
    (iii) Availability. Substitutes at comparable prices are available 
for paints and for products banned by this rule.

[[Page 380]]

The Commission believes that the reduction of lead to a level of 0.06 
percent will not affect the availabilty of water-based or latex paints. 
Sales of such coatings currently exceed sales of solvent-based coatings, 
and because of the drying problem mentioned above, the trend toward 
increased use of water-based paints may be accelerated somewhat by the 
effects of the ban.
    (d) Alternatives. (1) The Commission has considered other means of 
achieving the objective of this rule, but has found none that would 
cause less disruption or dislocation of manufacturing and other 
commercial practices, consistent with public health and safety.
    (2) The Commission estimates that this ban may, because of testing 
costs and the necessity for improved housekeeping practices in the 
manufacture of paint and similar surface-coating materials to prevent 
lead contaimination, have some relatively minor adverse effect on 
individual firms within some markets.
    (3) The Commission, however, finds that competition will not be 
adversely affected by this rule. Although costs of reformulation and 
testing may be relatively higher for small manufacturers than large 
manufacturers, these costs are not so onerous as to lead to greater 
concentration in the industry. The period of time before the effective 
date is sufficient to minimize problems of compliance with the rule.
    (4) The reduction of the permissible level of lead in paint will 
affect paint manufacturers, raw materials suppliers, professional and 
non-professional painters, and manufacturers of furniture and children's 
articles. For those producers of paint which are already subject to the 
regulations under the Federal Hazardous Substances Act (FHSA), the 
impact of this CPSA ban will involve only a change to non-lead driers 
since lead pigments are precluded from practical use under the 0.5 
percent lead restriction now in effect under the FHSA (16 CFR 
1500.17(a)(6)). The manufacturers of some painted furniture who were not 
affected by the 0.5 percent limit under the FHSA may now be, if they use 
lead pigments or driers. Producers of children's articles who were 
subject to the 0.5 percent FHSA limit will have to ensure that the paint 
they use conforms to the 0.06 percent level.
    (e) Conclusion. The Commission finds that this rule, including its 
effective date, is reasonably necessary to eliminate or reduce the 
unreasonable risk of lead poisoning of young children that is associated 
with the banned products which are described in Sec. 1303.4 and that 
promulgation of the rule is in the public interest.