CPSC Chairman Ann Brown Awards Safety Commendations to Small
Business
NEWS from CPSC
U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission
Office of Information and Public Affairs
Washington, DC 20207
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT:
June 11, 1996
(301) 504-7908
Release # 96-144
CPSC Chairman Ann Brown Awards Safety Commendations to Small
Business
NEW YORK, N.Y. U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission
Chairman Ann Brown awarded the "Chairman's Commendation"
today at CPSC's small business conference at the
World Trade Center in New York to three small businesses for
their successful safety innovations.
"I think these awards show clearly that any business,
whatever its size, can contribute to making our world a
little safer," said Chairman Brown. "A good idea that
promotes safety can make a successful small business."
Lorine Caveness, president of Face Guards Inc. of
Roanoke, Va., received the first award for her invention of
a face guard that attaches to a batting helmet. As a sixth
grade teacher and mother of five, Caveness first developed
the face guard when a student was injured batting a baseball
and when she saw that other children including one of her
own were afraid to bat. As a participant on the conference's
women's panel, Caveness will talk about her 25-year effort
to market protective equipment for batters.
CPSC recently released a study on the ability of
protective equipment to reduce injuries to children who play
baseball. The study found that face guards on batting
helmets could reduce 3,900 hospital emergency-room-treated
injuries each year to children at bat. In 1995, the Dixie
Baseball League, the second largest baseball organization
for young children operating in 11 Southern states, mandated
face guards on batting helmets.
Chairman Brown gave the second award to Roger Hall,
president of Rogers Sports Corp. of Elizabethtown, Pa., for
his invention of the Rogers Break Away Base. As head
baseball coach at Elizabethtown College, Hall saw that
base-sliding injuries occurred to players at all levels from
children to professionals. When he could not interest
sporting goods manufacturers in making a safer base, he
developed one himself.
CPSC's baseball study found that safety release bases,
such as the Rogers Break Away Base, could reduce 6,600
base-contact sliding injuries to children occurring in
organized play. Currently, Little League baseball uses
Hall's bases during its world series and, for the first
time this year, softball played at the Olympics will use
these safety bases.
Chairman Brown awarded the final commendation to the
Safe Strap Company of Tappan, N.J., which was accepted by
Paul Giampavolo, president of the company. Safe Strap
makes seat belts for shopping carts to prevent children from
falling out of shopping cart seats.
CPSC estimates that each year almost 12,000 young
children are treated in hospital emergency rooms for
shopping cart injuries. Giampavolo, who began his business
in 1983 with $300 and has since sold 15 million seat belts,
says he was inspired by a CPSC alert on these injuries he
saw on television. In addition to the seat belts, Safe Strap
founded a national supermarket child-safety committee to
make consumers aware of the need to use seat belts.
In addition to these three businesses, the CPSC
Chairman's Commendation has been awarded to: Toys "R" Us;
Procter & Gamble; Sunbeam Plastics;Playskool, a division of
Hasbro Inc.; Rollerblade Inc.; the International Inline
Skating Association; the Whirlpool Corporation; and the
American Furniture Manufacturers Association.
Chairman Brown initiated the commendation program to
recognize substantial contributions to product safety by
individuals, companies, or groups for one-time, ongoing, or
multiple actions. Nominees for the award, which is given
periodically, may be brought to the Chairman's attention.
Chairman Brown will consider the following factors in
choosing award recipients:
Actions that contribute to reducing hazards to children
and other vulnerable populations;
Voluntary actions that are not mandated by government
regulations, that anticipate government regulation, or that
go beyond what the government requires;
Developments that affect the safety of large numbers of
individuals;
Innovations or improvements to existing products; and
Safety devices, packaging, warnings, or products which
enhance consumer safety.