[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 16, Volume 2]
[Revised as of January 1, 2007]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 16CFR1513.6]

[Page 580-587]
 
                     TITLE 16--COMMERCIAL PRACTICES
 
             CHAPTER II--CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY COMMISSION
 
PART 1513_REQUIREMENTS FOR BUNK BEDS--Table of Contents
 
Sec.  1513.6  Instructions

    Instructions shall accompany each bunk bed set, and shall include 
the following information.
    (a) Size of mattress and foundation. The length and width of the 
intended mattress and foundation shall be clearly stated, either 
numerically or in conventional terms such as twin size, twin extra-long, 
etc. In addition, the maximum thickness of the mattress and foundation 
required for compliance with Sec.  1513.3 (a)(5) and (b)(1) of this part 
shall be stated.
    (b) Safety warnings. The instructions shall provide the following 
safety warnings:
    (1) Do not allow children under 6 years of age to use the upper 
bunk.
    (2) Use guardrails on both sides of the upper bunk.
    (3) Prohibit horseplay on or under beds.
    (4) Prohibit more than one person on upper bunk.
    (5) Use ladder for entering or leaving upper bunk.
    (6) If the bunk bed will be placed next to a wall, the guardrail 
that runs the full length of the bed should be placed against the wall 
to prevent entrapment between the bed and the wall. (This applies only 
to bunk beds without two full-length guardrails.)

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 Figure 1 to Part 1513--Wedge Block for Tests in Sec.  1513.4 (a), (b), 
                                 and (c)
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR22DE99.002


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          Figure 2 to Part 1513--Test Probe for Neck Entrapment
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR22DE99.008


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  Figure 3 to Part 1513--Motion of Test Probe Arrested by Simultaneous 
  Contact With Both Sides of ``A'' Section of Probe and Boundaries of 
                                 Opening
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR22DE99.009


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  Figure 4 to Part 1513--Neck Portion of ``B'' Section of Probe Enters 
                         Completely Into Opening
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR22DE99.010

 Appendix to Part 1513--Findings Under the Federal Hazardous Substances 
                                   Act

    The Federal Hazardous Substances Act (FHSA) requires that the 
Commission, in order to issue part 1513, make the following findings and 
include them in the rule. 15 U.S.C. 1261(s), 1262(i). Because of this, 
the facts and determinations in these findings apply as of the date the 
rule was issued, December 22, 1999.
    A. Bunk beds present a mechanical hazard. Section 2(s) of the FHSA 
states that an ``article may be determined to present a mechanical 
hazard if, in normal use or when subjected to reasonably foreseeable 
damage or abuse, its design or manufacture presents an unreasonable risk 
of personal injury or illness * * * (3 from * * * surfaces, edges, 
openings, or closures * * * , or (9) because of any other aspect of the 
articles design or manufacture.'' 15 U.S.C. 1261(s).
    2. For a recent 9.6-year period, the CPSC received reports of 57 
deaths of children under age 15 who died when they were trapped between 
the upper bunk of a bunk bed and the wall or when they were trapped in 
openings in the bed's structure. Over 96% of those who died in 
entrapment incidents were age 3 or younger. On average, averting these 
deaths is expected to produce a benefit to society with a present value 
of about $175 to $350 for each bed that otherwise would not have 
complied with one or more of the rule's requirements.
    3. This increased safety will be achieved in three main ways. First, 
all bunk beds will be required to have a guardrail on both sides of the 
bed. If the bed is placed against a wall, the guardrail on that side is 
expected to prevent a child from being entrapped between the bed and the 
wall. The guardrail on the

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wall side of the bed must extend continuously from one end to the other. 
Second, the end structures of the bed must be constructed so that, if an 
opening in the end structure is large enough so a child can slip his or 
her body through it, it must be large enough that the child's head also 
can pass through. Third, this area must also be constructed so that a 
child cannot insert his or her head into an opening and move to another 
part of the opening where the head cannot be pulled out and the neck can 
become entrapped.
    4. For the reasons discussed in paragraph C of this Appendix, the 
benefits of the changes to bunk beds caused by this rule will have a 
reasonable relationship to the changes' costs. The rule addresses a risk 
of death, and applies primarily to a vulnerable population, children 
under age 3. The life-saving features required by the rule are cost-
effective and can be implemented without adversely affecting the 
performance and availability of the product. The effective date provides 
enough time so that production of bunk beds that do not already comply 
with the standard can easily be changed so that the beds comply. 
Accordingly, the Commission finds that there is an unreasonable risk of 
entrapment injury associated with bunk beds that do not comply with part 
1513.
    B. Where a voluntary standard has been adopted and implemented by 
the affected industry, that compliance with such voluntary standard is 
not likely to result in the elimination or adequate reduction of the 
risk of injury, or it is unlikely that there will be substantial 
compliance with such voluntary standard.
    1. Adequacy of the voluntary standard. In this instance, there is a 
voluntary standard addressing the risk of entrapment in bunk beds. 
However, the rule goes beyond the provisions of the voluntary standard. 
First, it eliminates the voluntary standard's option to have an opening 
of up to 15 inches at each end of the wall-side guardrail. Second, it 
requires more of the lower bunk end structures to have entrapment 
protection. The voluntary standard protects against entrapment only 
within the 9-inch space immediately above the upper surface of the lower 
bunk's mattress. The mandatory standard extends this area of protection 
upward to the level of the underside of the upper bunk foundation. Both 
of these provisions, which are in the rule but not in the voluntary 
standard, address fatalities and, as noted in this paragraph (a)(18), 
have benefits that bear a reasonable relationship to their costs.
    Therefore, the Commission finds that compliance with the voluntary 
standard is not likely to result in the elimination or adequate 
reduction of the risk of entrapment injury or death.
    2. Substantial compliance. i. The FHSA does not define ``substantial 
compliance.'' The March 3, 1999 Notice of Proposed Rulemaking summarized 
an interpretation of ``substantial compliance'' that the Office of 
General Counsel provided to the Commission. 64 FR 10245, 10248-49 (March 
3, 1999). The Commission specifically invited public comment on that 
interpretation from ``all persons who would be affected by such an 
interpretation.'' Id. at 10249. The Commission received more than 20 
comments on the interpretation.
    ii. Having now considered all the evidence that the staff has 
presented, the comments from the public, and the legal advice from the 
Office of General Counsel, the Commission concludes that there is not 
``substantial compliance'' with the ASTM voluntary standard for bunk 
beds within the meaning of the Consumer Product Safety Act and the 
Federal Hazardous Substances Act. See, e.g., 15 U.S.C. 
2058(f)(3)(D)(ii); 15 U.S.C. 1262(i)(2)(A)(ii). However, the Commission 
does not adopt a general interpretation of ``substantial compliance'' 
focusing on whether the level of compliance with a voluntary standard 
could be improved under a mandatory standard. Rather, the grounds for 
the Commission's decision focus on the specific facts of this rulemaking 
and are stated below.
    iii. The legislative history regarding the meaning of ``substantial 
compliance'' indicates that the Commission should consider whether 
compliance is sufficient to eliminate or adequately reduce the risk of 
injury in a timely fashion and that, generally, compliance should be 
measured in terms of the number of complying products, rather than the 
number of manufacturers who are in compliance. E.g., Senate Report No. 
97-102, p. 14 (May 15, 1981); House Report No. 97-158, p. 11 (June 19, 
1981); H. Conf. Rep. No. 97-208, 97th Cong., 1st Sess. 871, reprinted in 
1981 U.S. Code Cong. & Admin. News 1010, 1233.
    iv. Given this Congressional guidance, the Commission believes it 
appropriate to examine the number of conforming products as the starting 
point for analysis. However, the Commission does not believe that there 
is any single percentage of conforming products that can be used in all 
cases to define ``substantial compliance.'' Instead, the percentage must 
be viewed in the context of the hazard the product presents. Thus, the 
Commission must examine what constitutes substantial compliance with a 
voluntary standard in light of its obligation to safeguard the American 
consumer.
    v. There are certain factors the agency considers before it 
initiates regulatory action, such as the severity of the potential 
injury, whether there is a vulnerable population at risk, and the risk 
of injury. See 16 CFR 1009.8. These and other factors also appropriately 
inform the Commission's decision regarding whether a certain level of 
conformance with a voluntary standard is

[[Page 586]]

substantial. In the light of these factors, industry's compliance rate 
with the voluntary standard for bunk beds is not substantial.
    vi. In this case, the Commission deals with the most severe risk--
death--to one of the most vulnerable segments of our population--infants 
and young children. While the risk of death is not high, it exists 
whenever a young child is in a residence with a nonconforming bunk bed.
    vii. Additionally, some products, such as hairdryers without shock 
protection devices, require some intervening action (dropping the hair 
dryer into water) to create the hazard. By contrast, deaths in bunk beds 
occur during the intended use of the product--a child rolling over in 
bed or climbing in or out of it--without any intervening action.
    viii. The Commission must also consider that bunk beds have a very 
long product life, frequently being passed on to several families before 
being discarded. Thus, a number of children may be exposed to a bed 
during its useful life. Every noncomplying bed that poses an entrapment 
hazard presents the potential risk of death to any young child in the 
house. It is a risk that is hard for a parent to protect against, as 
children find their way onto these beds even if they are not put to 
sleep in them.
    ix. Bunk beds are products that can be made relatively easily by 
very small companies, or even by a single individual. The Office of 
Compliance believes smaller entities will always present a compliance 
problem, because new manufacturers can enter the marketplace relatively 
easily and need little expertise to make a wooden bunk bed. The evidence 
seems to support the view that there will always be an irreducible 
number of new, smaller bunk bed manufacturers who will not follow the 
voluntary standard.
    x. What constitutes substantial compliance is also a function of 
what point in time the issue is examined. In 1989, the Commission denied 
a petition for a mandatory bunk bed rule. At that time, industry was 
predicting that by April of 1989, 90% of all beds being manufactured 
would comply with the voluntary guidelines. But that was in the context 
of years of steadily increasing conformance and the hope that 
conformance would continue to grow and that deaths and near-misses would 
begin to decline. But the conformance level never grew beyond the 
projection for 1989 and deaths and near-misses have not dropped.
    xi. Even with the existing compliance rate, the Commission is 
contemplating the prospect of perhaps 50,000 nonconforming beds a year 
(or more) entering the marketplace, with many beds remaining in use for 
perhaps 20 years or longer. Under these circumstances, a 10% rate of 
noncompliance is too high.
    xii. It is now clear that the bunk bed voluntary standard has not 
achieved an adequate reduction of the unreasonable risk of death to 
infants and children in a timely fashion, and it is unlikely to do so. 
Accordingly, the Commission finds that substantial compliance with the 
voluntary standard for bunk beds is unlikely.
    xiii. Products that present some or all of the following factors 
might not be held to as strict a substantial compliance analysis. Those 
which:
--Rarely or never cause death;
--Cause only less severe injuries;
--Do not cause deaths or injuries principally to a vulnerable segment of 
the population;
--Are not intended for children and which have no special attraction for 
children;
--Have a relatively short life span;
--Are made by a few stable manufacturers or which can only be made by 
specialized manufacturers needing a significant manufacturing investment 
to produce the product;
--Are covered by a voluntary standard which continues to capture an 
increasing amount of noncomplying products; or
--Require some additional intervening action to be hazardous.
    xiv. And, in analyzing some other product, there could be other 
factors that would have to be taken into consideration in determining 
what level of compliance is adequate to protect the public. The 
tolerance for nonconformance levels has to bear some relationship to the 
magnitude and manageability of the hazard addressed.
    xv. The Commission emphasizes that its decision is not based on the 
argument that a mandatory rule provides more powerful enforcement tools. 
If this were sufficient rationale, mandatory rules could always displace 
voluntary standards, and this clearly was not Congress's intent. But, 
with a mandatory standard, the necessity of complying with a mandatory 
federal regulation will be understandable to small manufacturers. State 
and local governments will have no doubt about their ability to help us 
in our efforts to locate these manufacturers.
    C. The benefits expected from the rule bear a reasonable 
relationship to its costs.
    1. Bunk beds that do not comply with ASTM's requirements for 
guardrails. The cost of providing a second guardrail for bunk beds that 
do not have one is expected to be from $15-40 per otherwise noncomplying 
bed. If, as expected, the standard prevents virtually all of the deaths 
it addresses, the present value of the benefits of this modification are 
estimated to be from $175-350 per otherwise noncomplying bed. Thus, the 
benefit of this provision is about 4-23 times its cost.
    2. Bunk beds that comply with ASTM's requirements for guardrails. 
The voluntary standard allows up to a 15-inch gap in the coverage of the 
guardrail on the wall side of the upper bunk. Additional entrapment 
deaths are addressed by requiring that the

[[Page 587]]

wall-side guardrail be continuous from one end of the bed to the other. 
The estimated present value of the benefits of this requirement will be 
$2.40 to $3.50 per otherwise noncomplying bed. The Commission estimates 
that the materials cost to extend one guardrail an additional 30 inches 
(760 mm) will be less than the present value of the benefits of making 
the change. Further, the costs of any design changes can be amortized 
over the number of bunk beds produced after the design change is made. 
Thus, any design costs are nominal.
    3. Lower bunk end structures. The Commission is aware of a death, 
involving entrapment in the end structures of the lower bunk, occurring 
in a scenario not currently addressed by the voluntary standard. This 
death is addressed by extending the upper limit of the voluntary 
standard's lower bunk end structures entrapment provisions from 9 inches 
above the lower bunk's sleeping surface to the bottom of the upper bunk 
and by also including a test for neck entrapment in this area. The 
Commission expects the costs of this requirement to be design-related 
only, and small. Indeed, for some bunk beds, material costs may decrease 
since less material may be required to comply with these requirements 
than are currently being used. Again, the design costs for these 
modifications to the end structures can be amortized over the subsequent 
production run of the bed.
    4. Effect on market. The small additional costs from any wall-side 
guardrail and end-structure modifications are not expected to affect the 
market for bunk beds, either alone or added to the costs of compliance 
to ASTM's provisions.
    5. Conclusion. The Commission has no reason to conclude that any of 
the standard's requirements have costs that exceed the requirement's 
expected benefits. Further, the total effect of the rule is that the 
benefits of the rule will exceed its costs by about 4-23 times. 
Accordingly, the Commission concludes that the benefits expected from 
the rule will bear a reasonable relationship to its costs.
    D. The rule imposes the least burdensome requirement that prevents 
or adequately reduces the risk of injury for which the rule is being 
promulgated. 1. The Commission considered relying on the voluntary 
standard, either alone or combined with a third-party certification 
program. However, the Commission concludes that a mandatory program will 
be more effective in reducing these deaths, each of which is caused by 
an unreasonable risk of entrapment. Accordingly, these alternatives 
would not prevent or adequately reduce the risk of injury for which the 
rule is being promulgated.
    2. The Commission also considered a suggestion that bunk beds that 
conformed to the voluntary standard be so labeled. Consumers could then 
compare conforming and nonconforming beds at the point of purchase and 
make their purchase decisions with this safety information in mind. 
This, however, would not necessarily reduce injuries, because consumers 
likely would not know there is a voluntary standard and thus would not 
see any risk in purchasing a bed that was not labeled as conforming to 
the standard.

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