46,000 – 4 Different Models of Bassinets Recalled by Kolcraft Due to Fall Hazard

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
May 9, 2012
Release #12-173
Firm‘s Recall Hotline: (888) 624-1908
CPSC Recall Hotline: (800) 638-2772
CPSC Media Contact: (301) 504-7908

WASHINGTON, D.C. – The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, in cooperation with the firm named below, today announced a voluntary recall of the following consumer product. Consumers should stop using recalled products immediately unless otherwise instructed. It is illegal to resell or attempt to resell a recalled consumer product.

Name of Product: Kolcraft Tender Vibes & Light Vibes bassinets

Units: About 46,000

Distributor/Manufacturer/Importer: Kolcraft Enterprises Inc., of Chicago, Ill.

Hazard: The latches that attach the bassinet base onto the metal frame can appear to be locked in place but still remain unlocked. This allows the bassinet to become detached from the metal frame, causing the bassinet to fall and the infant to be injured.

Incidents/Injuries: CPSC and Kolcraft have received seven reports of latches that detached from the bassinet frame. One infant received a bruised cheek when the bassinet detached from the metal frame and landed sideways on the floor with the infant inside.

Description: This recall includes Kolcraft Tender Vibes bassinets with model numbers KB021-ARC, KB022-VER, KB039-CMR1 and Light Vibes bassinet with model number KB043-BNT1. A label with the model/item number of the bassinet is located on one of the legs of the metal frame. The recalled bassinets were manufactured from July 2008 through May 2010. The words “Kolcraft Tender Vibes” or “Kolcraft Light Vibes” is located on the removable music box which is attached to the side of the bassinet.

Sold at: Mass market and independent juvenile specialty stores nationwide and online from July 2008 through May 2012 for between about $50 and $100.

Manufactured in: China

Remedy: Consumers should immediately stop using the recalled bassinets and contact the firm by phone or on-line to receive a repair kit and instructions for securing the latches to the metal frame. In the meantime, parents are urged to find an alternate, safe sleeping environment for the child, such as a crib that meets current safety standards or play yard depending on the child’s age.

Consumer Contact: For additional information, contact Kolcraft toll-free at (888) 624-1908 between 7 a.m. and 6 p.m. ET Monday through Friday or visit the firm’s website at www.kolcraft.com

Kolcraft models/items involved:

KB021-ARC- Tender Vibes Travel Bassinet (lime green cover)
KB022-VER- Tender Vibes Travel Bassinet
KB039-CMR1- Tender Vibes Deluxe Rocking Bassinet (polka dot cover)
KB043-BNT1- Light Vibes Deluxe Rocking Bassinet

To identify model/item # see label located on one of the metal legs

Repair kit includes 2 straps for latches

The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) is still interested in receiving incident or injury reports that are either directly related to this product recall or involve a different hazard with the same product. Please tell us about your experience with the product on SaferProducts.gov

CPSC is charged with protecting the public from unreasonable risks of injury or death associated with the use of the thousands of consumer products under the agency’s jurisdiction. Deaths, injuries, and property damage from consumer product incidents cost the nation more than $900 billion annually. CPSC is committed to protecting consumers and families from products that pose a fire, electrical, chemical, or mechanical hazard. CPSC’s work to ensure the safety of consumer products – such as toys, cribs, power tools, cigarette lighters, and household chemicals – contributed to a decline in the rate of deaths and injuries associated with consumer products over the past 30 years.

Under federal law, it is illegal to attempt to sell or resell this or any other recalled product.

To report a dangerous product or a product-related injury, go online to: SaferProducts.gov, call CPSC’s Hotline at (800) 638-2772 or teletypewriter at (301) 595-7054 for the hearing and speech impaired. Consumers can obtain this news release and product safety information at www.cpsc.gov. To join a free e-mail subscription list, please go to www.cpsc.gov/cpsclist.aspx.

City of Chicago Releases High-Rise Fire Safety Information

by Diane Pathieu, Jessica D’Onofrio
February 3, 2012 (CHICAGO) (WLS) — If you live in a Chicago high-rise apartment, you can find out if your building meets city fire safety standards.
The city’s move to post fire safety information online started Friday and follows a deadly fire last month in a high-rise on North Lake Shore Drive.
Residents can visit data.cityofchicago.org/Buildings/Life-Safety-Evaluations/qqqh-hgyw to search for specific buildings that are required to submit fire safety information, known as Life Safety Evaluation reports.

Related Content

Story: High-rise residential building safety info to be online
Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel said the website will increase transparency, and accountability, when it comes to building safety.
By city ordinance, over 600 high-rise residential buildings have to submit those reports, which are used to determine the current fires afety status of the building and maps out changes buildings need to make to meet codes.
The city told building owners that they had to update compliance progress by Feb. 10 and reminders have gone out this week.
“We just want to make it so the buildings are in compliance with the ordinance,” said Michael Merchant, commissioner, Chicago Department of Buildings.
“I know they have three years, but we just need them to start taking the steps to get there,” said Merchant. “Hopefully the building owners are going to start taking the necessary steps. It’s a lot of work that needs to go into the buildings to get them fully compliant with the ordinance.”
“I think it’s a good idea considering what happened to the high rise over here a few weeks back,” said Tom Donnelly. “I think it can’t hurt.”
The new resource comes after a fatal fire at 3130 North Lake Shore Drive, which happened on Jan. 8. Shantel McCoy was killed after she took an elevator up to a floor where a fire was burning.
The tragedy sparked community-wide anger over fire safety code requirement deadlines for older residential high-rises. Information on-line is available for buildings eight stories or higher.
Ald. Tom Tunney of the the 44th Ward said when people look up the safety status of their building, they should not panic.
“These buildings are safe,” Tunney said. “The city of Chicago would not let people reside in a building that’s not safe.”
More than 600 high-rises built before 1975 will have to keep their online safety progress report updated. Tunney believes that since the information will be easy to access, it will put more pressure on building owners and managers to come into compliance with the life safety ordinance sooner than the 2015 deadline.
“We cannot continue to extend the deadline,” Tunney said. “I think this effort is to really provide transparency for the tenants and the residents about where their building is at in terms of compliance with the life safety ordinance.”
(Copyright ©2012 WLS-TV/DT. All Rights Reserved.)

High-Rise Fire Citations Pit City of Chicago Vs. State of Illinois. Should the building where a fatal fire took place have had a sprinkler system? Depends who you ask.

As the state fire marshal cites the owners of a Lake Shore Drive high rise for multiple violations following last week’s fatal fire, a clash is shaping up between the State of Illinois and Chicago over whose fire laws should have applied.

An exploration of the laws shows that confusion reigns, and that in many cases, not everyone agrees on what those laws require.

Illinois Fire Marshall Larry Matkaitis cited the building’s owners, Planned Property Management, for more than a dozen violations, including lack of a sprinkler system, and lack of automatic recall systems on the building’s elevators.

The victim, Shantel McCoy, died when the elevator on which she was riding, opened on the fire floor, hitting her with a blast estimated at 1500 degrees. An automated return system would have locked that elevator down on the building’s first floor when smoke alarms activated, preventing McCoy from ever going upstairs.

Neither sprinklers nor automated return systems are currently required for pre-1975 residential high-rises in Chicago, which claims home rule authority in following its own fire codes, rather than adhering to the more stringent Illinois fire laws. The state contends their law should apply.

“Sprinklers have been required in all high rise residential buildings under State law since 2002,” Matkaitis said in a statement. “The State Fire Code is the minimum fire code that must be met by Illinois municipalities with concurrent jurisdictions, including Chicago.”

It has been an ongoing dispute. When six people died in a fire at County Administration Building at 69 West Washington in 2003, a state report faulted the City of Chicago for failure to follow the stricter state law. That building was not sprinklered, and the report found that the fire likely would have been extinguished in seconds if fire sprinklers had been in use.

“The City of Chicago promulgated a fire code that was less stringent than the requirements of the state fire code,” the report from James Lee Witt and Associates stated. “The City of Chicago should institute an annual review of its Municipal Code, to ensure its compliance with state law and regulations. The City of Chicago should require installation of automatic fire sprinkler systems in high rise buildings.”

But the authors of the report also faulted the state for failure to enforce its own laws.

“The Office of the State Fire Marshal did not effectively inform jurisdictions within the State of Illinois that changes were made to the State Fire Code in January 2002,” the authors wrote. “There is ambiguity within the Office of the State Fire Marshal, regarding the State’s authority to enforce state fire codes within home rule jurisdictions.”

Indeed, on Thursday, when asked about the continuing dispute between Chicago and the State of Illinois, the Chicago Law Department cited Chicago’s home rule powers.

“The city believes that our fire code is as strong, or in a lot of ways, stronger than the state’s code,” said Roderick Drew, a law department spokesman. “Home rule authority gives us the ability to enforce our code.”

Drew added that “both the City of Chicago and State Fire Marshal share the same important goal of ensuring that all buildings have adequate fire safety features.”

Chicago officials insist that in many ways their code is superior to the state’s laws. For example, the Chicago code requires individual apartments to be capable of containing a fire so it doesn’t spread to other units. Plus, they note the state code does not insist on sprinklers in all cases, but rather sprinklers or “an approved engineered life safety system.”

A city official speaking on background, noted that modifications which include either sprinklers or other safety devices is now on the books, and that building owners have been given until 2015 to complete retrofits.

Not all home rule communities share the opinion that following the state code is optional. Peoria, which has both home rule authority and high rises, follows the Illinois Fire Code.

“We don’t soften anything,” said Chief Melanie Anderson, adding that when it comes to sprinklers, “we’re up to snuff on anything that has residential in it.”

Anderson said she was shocked when she learned through news reports that a building resident had ridden an elevator to her death in the Lake Shore Drive high rise.

“When I read that I just cringed,” she said. “That’s not supposed to happen any more.”

Three years ago, Fire Marshal David Foreman wrote a letter to all mayors and managers across Illinois, informing them that they were expected to follow the law.

“The LSC applies to all localities, including home rule units,” Foreman wrote. “It is the responsibility and duty of the local governmental authority to ensure such standards are being followed, or to adopt a code that provides equivalent fire safety.”

High Rise Owner Cited for Fire Code Violations

 

Chicago’s Home Rule status complicates owners’ legal responsibility

Illinois‘ fire marshal on Wednesday cited the owners a high-rise building where a woman died in a fire earlier this month with more than a dozen fire code violations.

But Chicago’s Home Rule status complicates the owners’ legal responsibility.

State Fire Marshall Larry Matkaitis cited Planned Property Management, which owns the building at 3130 N. Lake Shore Drive, for 19 violations. Among them: not having an automatic elevator recall system, which would have grounded the elevators during a fire, or an automatic sprinkler system.

“Sprinklers have been required in all high rise residential buildings under State law since 2002,” Matkaitis said in a statement. “The State Fire Code is the minimum fire code that must be met by Illinois municipalities with concurrent jurisdictions, including Chicago.”

The building had neither system, but according to Chicago’s code, it wasn’t required to due to its age. Additionally, the building was not yet required to update its fire alarm system. An ordinance passed that required older high-rises to be retrofitted with a modern, connected system by this month was recently delayed. The new deadline is in 2015.

“There was neglect in that they were trying to use the Chicago code rather than the state code,” said Jim Schifiliti, a fire protection consultant, explaining the code enforcement system can be very confusing.

Chicago’s Home Rule means the city only enforces its own municipal standards, and those are less stringent than the standards the fire marshal used.

Shantel McCoy, 32, died in the Jan. 8th fire after the elevator in her building carried her right toward the intense heat and smoke from the 12th floor fire. It’s believed McCoy, who moved to Chicago less than a year ago from her native Philadelphia, died instantly when the doors opened.

“Maybe this person and this fire, they’ll finally start to address it and come up with their solutions,” said Schifiliti.

The fire also injured nine other people, including two firefighters.

McCoy’s mother has filed a lawsuit against Planned Property Management
Source: http://www.nbcchicago.com/news/local/3130-north-lake-shore-drive-fire-code-violations-home-rule-137641813.html#ixzz1kVkJeqpJ

 

National Fallen Firefighters Foundation and Chicago Fire Department Release New Everyone Goes Home® Safety Video

In an effort to make personal safety a top priority, the National Fallen Firefighters Foundation (NFFF) and the Chicago Fire Department (CFD) today released a new video, Chicago Fire Department – Everyone Goes Home®. Members of the CFD and families of fallen firefighters share their stories in this compelling and moving testimonial of the importance of adhering to safety standards and accepting personal responsibility for following procedures.

Chicago Fire Commissioner Robert Hoff was impressed by a video that the NFFF and the Fire Department of New York produced several years earlier to educate members about the importance of training and safety standards. The FDNY leadership had noticed behavioral improvement among its members following the release of their video. Hoff felt that the members of the CFD could benefit from hearing first-hand accounts of the lessons learned by their colleagues and invited the NFFF to collaborate on a video for Chicago.

“The culture of firefighting requires us to do everything we can to make sound decisions so we can be in a position to help the people we serve when they most need it,” said Ronald J. Siarnicki, executive director of the NFFF. “With this video the firefighters and leadership of the Chicago Fire Department are clearly showing the rest of the fire service you can still be a firefighter and at the same time do your best to make sure Everyone Goes Home®.”

More than two dozen survivors of fallen firefighters, including coworkers and family members, participated in the filming of Chicago Fire Department – Everyone Goes Home®. The video took nearly one year to complete and was produced and directed by Rob Maloney of Cool Water Multimedia.

All members of the Chicago Fire Department have had the opportunity to see Chicago Fire Department – Everyone Goes Home® and it is now available for the entire fire service. To see the video, it is posted above or go to www.youtube.com/watch?v=vODww1qwSuE.

FDA Shuts Down Chicago Sandwich Maker

By News Desk | Dec 23, 2011

A Chicago food maker agreed to stop making and distributing its sandwiches after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration filed a complaint in federal court describing chronic sanitation problems and Listeria contamination in its processing facility.

Triple A Services signed a consent decree that not only requires the company to halt production, but also to hire a sanitation expert to eliminate Listeria from its plant.

No illnesses have been reported in connection with the company’s sandwiches, but the government’s complaint describes Triple A’s “history of operating under unsanitary conditions and Listeria monocytogenes in the processing facility,” the FDA said in a news release. The complaint also outlines Triple A’s failure to comply with Current Good Manufacturing Practice and seafood Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Point regulations.

Triple A received warning letters from the FDA on April 20, 2011 and on Nov. 18, 2002 that detail FDA’s critical inspection reports.

“FDA took these aggressive actions because Triple A Services continued to violate current good manufacturing practice regulations and allow for conditions that could affect the health of consumers,” said Dara Corrigan, the FDA’s associate commissioner for regulatory affairs.

© Food Safety News