Lead Poisoning Hazard for Young Children on
Public Playground Equipment
NEWS from CPSC
U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission
Office of Information and Public Affairs
Washington, DC 20207
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT:
October 1, 1996
(301) 504-7908
Release # 97-001
CPSC Finds Lead Poisoning Hazard for Young Children on
Public Playground Equipment
WASHINGTON, D.C. The U.S. Consumer Product Safety
Commission (CPSC) today released the results of a report
indicating that public playground equipment could have
chipping and peeling lead paint, which is a potential lead
poisoning hazard primarily for children six years old and
younger.
Children six years old and younger could ingest lead
by getting paint chips or dust on their hands and then
putting their hands in their mouths. Older children and
adults are less likely to be at risk because they generally
do not exhibit this same behavior.
CPSC tested and analyzed paint from 26 playgrounds in
13 cities. Of those, 16 playgrounds in 11 cities had levels
of lead found in the paint on playground equipment that
are high enough to be recognized as a federal priority for
lead hazard control measures.
In addition to collecting its own data, CPSC also
received reports from local communities of lead paint on 125
playgrounds in 11 additional cities. Several of these cities
have already begun addressing the lead paint hazard from
their playgrounds.
While deteriorating lead paint in homes is the leading
cause of lead poisoning in children, the effects of
ingesting lead are cumulative. Therefore, exposure to lead
paint from playground equipment can contribute to the lead
poisoning hazard.
CPSC does not consider playground equipment with lead
paint that is intact and in good condition a hazard.
However, paint will deteriorate from exposure to sunlight,
heat, moisture, and normal wear and tear to form chips and
dust. If that paint contains lead, it does present a hazard
once it deteriorates.
The 1992 Residential Lead-Based Paint Hazard Reduction
Act sets 0.5 percent lead by weight as the level of lead in
paint that should be targeted for lead hazard control. In
accordance with this law, CPSC is recommending that local
and state jurisdictions give high priority to controlling
the lead paint hazard from playground equipment with
chipping and peeling paint containing lead at or above the
0.5 percent level.
Lead poisoning in children is associated with
behavioral problems, learning disabilities, hearing
problems, and stunted growth. CPSC found that in some of the
paint chips from playground equipment, the levels of lead
were high enough that a child ingesting a paint chip
one-tenth of a square inch -- about the size that could fit
on the tip of a pencil eraser -- each day for about 15 to 30
days could have blood lead levels at or above the 10
microgram per deciliter amount considered dangerous for
children especially those six years old and younger.
In addition to its investigation of older playground
equipment, CPSC is testing the paint on recently
manufactured equipment. CPSC is making sure that these
products are in compliance with the agency's requirements
for painted playground equipment.
In the report released today, CPSC is providing
information for cities and states to use in addressing the
lead hazard on playground equipment on a case-by-case basis.
CPSC recommends that individual cities take measures to
address the lead hazard in playgrounds based on a variety of
factors. These factors include: condition of the paint;
percent of lead in the paint; age of the playground
equipment; location, use and overall safety of the
equipment; the financial resources available to address this
and other lead paint hazards; the relative costs of control
measures; and regulatory requirements pertinent to the
local or state jurisdictions.
If states, cities, or local communities suspect they
may have playground equipment painted with lead paint, CPSC
recommends they test the equipment using an accredited
laboratory. CPSC does not recommend using lead test kits on
playground equipment since CPSC, HUD, and EPA have found
these test kits unreliable.
Parents concerned about this hazard can look for
deteriorating paint on playground equipment. If they find
deteriorating paint, they should contact the playground's
owner or local officials and ask them to test the paint.
Parents should also make sure that children do not put their
hands in their mouths while playing on equipment with
deteriorating paint and wash their hands thoroughly
afterward.
If your child's playground is found to have high levels
of lead, community, city, state, or school officials should
take appropriate control measures. Parents who are concerned
about whether their child has lead poisoning should consult
with the child's physician. CPSC has no reports of children
with lead poisoning from paint on playground equipment.
For questions about lead on playground equipment that
are not about the status of individual playgrounds,
consumers can call CPSC's toll-free hotline at (800)
638-2772 Ext.274.