This website uses cookies to improve your experience.

Please enable cookies to ensure you get the best experience on our website

Sign the petition

to call for a

Convention of States!

signatures
Columns Default Settings

Feds to regulate Christmas lights

Published in Blog on July 17, 2017 by Convention Of States Project

The following excerpt is from an article by Elizabeth Harrington and published on The Washington Free Beacon.

The Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) issued a regulation for Christmas lights, deeming some holiday decorations a "substantial product hazard."

"The Consumer Product Safety Commission ... is issuing a final rule to specify that seasonal and decorative lighting products that do not contain any one of three readily observable characteristics (minimum wire size, sufficient strain relief, or overcurrent protection), as addressed in a voluntary standard, are deemed a substantial product hazard under the Consumer Product Safety Act ("CPSA")," the final rule said. 

The ruling applies to a variety of Christmas decorations, including "stars, wreathes, candles without shades, light sculptures, blow-molded (plastic) figures, and animated figures." 

However, "solar-powered products" are exempt. 

The CPSC said the regulation is necessary because Christmas lights can be dangerous. 

"A lighting string provided with decorative covers over the lamps is a decorative outfit," the final rule said. "If not constructed properly, lighting powered by 120 volts can be damaged easily and can pose a risk of electrical shock or fire." 

The CPSC said there have been 258 deaths associated with Christmas lights between 1980 and 2013. However, fatal incidents have been on the decline, with an average of less than one fatal (0.9) incident a year since 2008. The number of people who die of alcohol poisoning in California every year is greater than the number of Americans who have been killed by Christmas lights in the past three decades. 

Click for more from The Washington Free Beacon.

It's one thing to regulate a serious hazard to American lives -- it's something else to regulate a problem that doesn't exist.

Our federal agencies regulate not because there's a need, but simply because they can. It's time to place limits on their power, and the best way to do that is through a Convention of States. 

Click here to learn more.

Click here to get involved!
Convention of states action

Are you sure you don't want emailed updates on our progress and local events? We respect your privacy, but we don't want you to feel left out!

Processing...