Consumer Product Safety
Commission Set To Vote by Friday
To Postpone Enforcement of Lead
Law Provisions for Youth-Model
Motorcycles and ATVs
PICKERINGTON,
Ohio --
Acting Chairwoman Nancy Nord and
Commissioner Thomas Moore, the
two members of the Consumer
Product Safety Commission (CPSC),
are scheduled to vote by Friday,
May 1, on whether to delay
enforcement of a lead law that
currently bans the sale of
youth-model motorcycles and
ATVs, the American Motorcyclist
Association (AMA) reports.
Specific details of the ballot
have not yet been released.
The two commissioners voted
earlier this month to deny a
petition to exclude youth-model
motorcycles and ATVs from the
Consumer Product Safety
Improvement Act (CPSIA).
However, the commissioners
indicated their desire to enact
a stay of enforcement that would
give the motorcycle industry and
Congress time to pass
legislation exempting these
vehicles from the law as it is
currently written.
"The effect of denying the
petition is to make Section
101(e) of the CPSIA, which
limits the commission's
authority to stay enforcement
during rulemaking, no longer
applicable," said Nord on April
3 in her statement on the
request for exclusion from lead
content limits of the CPSIA of
2008.
"Therefore, during the
pendency of a stay of
enforcement, ATVs and motorized
bikes appropriately sized for
children 12 and younger can
again be available and the
Commission will not seek
penalties for violation of
Section 101 and related
provisions of the CPSIA against
those who sell them. I hope that
the state attorneys general will
follow the lead of the agency on
this matter."
On April 17, commission filings
in preparation for the vote
indicated a stay could be as
long as two years, possibly
expiring May 1, 2011.
Despite Nord's statement, it is
unclear whether state attorneys
general will also decline to
enforce the CPSIA. The sale of
youth-model motorcycles and ATVs
is still technically illegal.
Even though a stay means that
dealers would not be subject to
fines or penalties imposed by
the CPSC, state attorneys
general would still be able to
prosecute violators if they
chose to do so.
"Even if the CPSC commissioners
do approve a stay, the vote
won't solve the bigger problem,"
said Ed Moreland, AMA vice
president for government
relations.
"Youth-model
motorcycles and ATVs should be
exempt from the law, and
Congress needs to act to make
that happen. We will continue to
work with our partners in the
industry and our friends in
Congress to make certain that it
does."
About the
American Motorcyclist
Association
Since 1924,
the AMA has promoted and
protected the motorcycling
lifestyle. AMA members come
from all walks of life and
they navigate many different
routes on their journey to
the same destination:
freedom on two wheels. As
the world's largest
motorcycle organization with
nearly 300,000 members, the
AMA advocates for
motorcyclists' interests in
the halls of local, state
and federal government, the
committees of international
governing organizations and
the court of public opinion.
Through member clubs,
promoters and partners, the
AMA sanctions more
motorsports competition
events than any other
organization in the world.
Through its Motorcycle Hall
of Fame Museum, the AMA
preserves the heritage of
motorcycling for future
generations.
For more
information, visit
www.AmericanMotorcyclist.com.