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Yeni Zelanda, çocukları korumak için kordonlu perdelerde güvenlik standardını zorunlu kılıyor

Summary · AI generated

Yeni Zelanda hükümeti, yeni kordonlu perdelerin tanınmış güvenlik standartlarını karşılamasını zorunlu hale getirerek küçük çocukları korumayı amaçlayan bir adım attı. Ticaret ve Tüketici İşleri Bakanı Cameron Brewer, 2008 yılından bu yana sekiz çocuğun pencere kaplamalarının kordonlarına dolanarak hayatını kaybettiğini belirtti. Düzenleme, ülkede satılacak yeni kordonlu perdelerin belirli güvenlik kriterlerine uymasını gerektirecek. Bakan Brewer, bu tür ölümlerin aileler için yıkıcı olduğunu ve önlenebilir nitelik taşıdığını vurguladı. Söz konusu karar, çocuk güvenliğini artırmaya yönelik küresel eğilimlerle örtüşürken, Yeni Zelanda'daki tüketici ürünleri mevzuatında da bir sıkılaşmayı yansıtıyor. Uygulamanın ne zaman başlayacağına dair ayrıntılı takvim henüz paylaşılmadı.

This summary is currently in Turkish; automated English translation is coming soon.

Started 30 Jun, 00:04 2 events Updated 5d ago
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latest: 5d ago
  1. Diplomatic30 Jun, 00:04

    Corded blinds to be made safer for children

    The Government is moving to protect young children by making it mandatory for new corded blinds sold in New Zealand to meet recognised safety standards, Commerce and Consumer Affairs Minister Cameron Brewer says. "Since 2008, eight young children have died in New Zealand after becoming entangled in the cords of window coverings. It's a parent's worst nightmare, and behind every one of those numbers is a family that lost a child to something preventable. New Zealand families deserve to know the products they buy for their homes are safe," Mr Brewer says. "Between 2021 and 2026, three coroners recommended improvements to the safety of corded blinds. "That's why we are making it mandatory for new corded window coverings to meet internationally recognised safety standards, including those used in Australia, Canada, Europe and the United States. It's a practical, sensible fix that brings us into line with international best practice and makes these products safer for children." Once the standards are in place, new corded blinds will need to remove or reduce cord hazards through shorter cords, clearer warning labels, or safety devices supplied with the item so parents can fix loose cords out of a child's reach. "Many corded blinds sold here, particularly pre-made products from major retailers, already meet a safety standard. So this targets the higher-risk products that don't, while keeping compliance costs limited for businesses already doing the right thing," Mr Brewer says. "New standards only apply to new products, so for the blinds already in homes, awareness matters just as much. I'd urge any parent with corded window coverings to visit MBIE's Product Safety website for advice on replacing them or keeping cords out of reach. "As a parent myself, I want every mum and dad to have confidence that their home is a safe place for their kids. No family should lose a child to something this preventable, and putting these standards in place is the right thing to do."

  2. Diplomatic01 Jul, 00:58

    Common-sense fix eases costs for toy importers

    This Government will recognise the toy standards of the United States and the European Union, so toys that meet those standards will be compliant in New Zealand too, Commerce and Consumer Affairs Minister Cameron Brewer and Regulation Minister David Seymour say. "When a parent buys a toy for their child, they should be able to trust that it is safe. That's the bottom line, and it isn't changing," Mr Brewer says. "But the rules we use to guarantee that safety are stuck in 2002. They've been overtaken by newer, modern standards several times over, and they've left New Zealand lagging behind Australia. "That mismatch is hurting Kiwi importers and retailers. We've heard they're retesting toys against our outdated standard even when those toys already meet a comparable international one. That's wasted time, wasted money, and it can mean fewer products on our shelves and less choice for families," Mr Brewer says. "The Ministry for Regulation found that aligning with Australia would reduce compliance costs for suppliers and make New Zealand a more attractive market. So that's what we're doing. This change is expected to have a net benefit of $6.8 million over 10 years" Mr Seymour says. “Following a submission to the Red Tape Tipline we will be making it easier for businesses to put their toys on New Zealand shelves. "Under the current rules Kiwi toy suppliers are forced front the costs of getting a toy compliant with New Zealand standards. This can cost between $3,500 and $5,000, per toy. Under the new rules, if a toy is compliant in the US or the EU, it’s compliant in New Zealand, at no additional cost to Kiwi businesses. “This change is expected to have a net benefit of up to $6.8 million over 10 years. Opening the doors to competition will also drive prices down at the checkout, making more toys more affordable to more kiwi families. "This is good news for importers. Although most toys are compliant with the average toy standards, this change means reputable brands such as Hauck, Happy Horse, Jellycat, Douglas, Little Dutch and Yolline will become more commercially viable to import. “This is one more problem fixed by the Tipline that Kiwis face, and the bureaucracy won’t touch. The Ministry for Regulation really is the gift that keeps on giving.” "Parents will be pleased to know that once these changes are in place, toys sold here for young children will need to meet one of three internationally recognised safety standards, each offering the same level of protection for children," Mr Brewer says. "This is the Government fixing the basics by cutting needless costs for business and giving Kiwi parents better value, without ever compromising on the safety of their kids," Mr Brewer says. An exposure draft of the updated regulations will be released for consultation. Subject to final decisions, suppliers will then be given a six-month transition period to move to the updated requirements.

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