Pro-Corporation Bush Holdover Rankles Consumer Product Safety Commission

Sunday, April 01, 2012
A holdover from the George W. Bush administration, Nancy Nord has been a constant thorn in the sides of Democrats on the Consumer Products Safety Commission (CPSC) and consumer advocates. She has been criticized for repeatedly fighting against increasing the budget of the CPSC and other reforms advocated by those on the left.
 
In the fall of 2007, Congress was prepared to expand the powers and size of the commission following a rash of high-profile failures by the CPSC to protect the public from dangerous toys and other products. But Nord, then acting head of the commission, rejected plans by lawmakers to more than double the CPSC’s budget and expand its staff to help it better perform its job.
 
Nord also opposed provisions that would increase the maximum penalties for safety violations and make it easier for the government to make public reports of faulty products, protect industry whistle-blowers and prosecute executives of companies that willfully violate laws. She also was critical of a provision to ban lead from all toys, saying it was not practical. She said that the proposal to raise the potential penalty to $100 million “may have the undesired consequence of firms, as a precautionary measure, flooding the agency with virtually every consumer complaint and incident.”
 
Following the election of Barack Obama to the White House, Nord again fought against Congress’ attempt to increase the CPSC’s budget.
 
In 2009, Democrats called for Nord to be kicked off the commission. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi publicly asked Nord to resign, saying the commissioner was “an employee of the Bush administration” and that toy and product safety was not a priority of hers.
 
Nord refused to heed Pelosi’s call. Pelosi then asked President Obama to demand that she leave. Obama remained neutral and Nord remained on the commission.  A few months later in 2009, Sen. Bill Nelson (D-Florida) also called on Obama to fire Nord. And again, Obama left her alone.
 
Nord seems intent on serving out her full term, which expires in October 2012.
-Noel Brinkerhoff
 
To Learn More:
Who Is Nancy Nord? (by Thomas Francis, Broward-Palm Beach New Times)

Bigger Budget? No, Responds Safety Agency (by Stephen Labaton, New York Times) 

Comments

Commissioner Nancy Nord 12 years ago
is your recent article an april fool’s joke? ("pro-corporation bush holdover rankles consumer product safety commission", april 1, 2012). if not, then it is misleading and better research would show the facts. since you wish to dredge up old history, back in 2007 i specifically asked for new authorities and increased penalties but expressed my reservations over legislative proposals that i believed to be unwise or which were not supported by increased budgets. i believe that is my responsibility as a public servant. i am proud of my record here at the commission. i began our current program to increase our compliance presence in the ports to catch faulty consumer products before they are distributed to u.s. consumers. i initiated the rulemaking that ultimately resulted in improving crib safety. i took the lead in pursing new rules on drawstrings on children's clothing, pressing the agency for months to bring it to a vote. these are just some of my record of principled and sensible consumer protection. my insistence on collaborative, participatory, democratic government seeks to use our limited resources to address the greatest risks to consumers, particularly children. if that 'rankles' someone, let the day's celebration focus on them. for more information, see www.nancynord.net.
L. Wilson 12 years ago
commissioner nancy nord is an authority on product safety issues, and an advocate for safer consumer products. your biased commentary does not reflect the leadership and insight she offers. commissioner nord provides a balanced perspective between business, safety, and regulatory law. we need more commissioners who are sensitive to budgetary considerations! regulations must be considered pragmatically, and what the impact is to all stakeholders. the present commission is frequently in a haste to regulate, without the necessary due diligence. thank goodness for commission nancy nord. she's not a holdover. she's just not a pushover.

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