Summary
CPSC recall database expanded scope of a product safety recall instruction: the "New Instructions" section now includes a new recalled product (glasses with button cell batteries) with updated unit count (2,900 units, up from ~700 for the original ATV recall). The glasses recall specifies hazard type (battery ingestion risk to children), remediation steps (immediate discontinuation, battery disposal per local procedures), and return process (photo-documentation and email submission for refund via ABC Trading).
Why it matters
Sellers offering the recalled glasses product or similar button-cell-battery-equipped eyewear must immediately delist, cease fulfillment, and comply with documented disposal and refund procedures. This is a federal CPSC recall tied to Reese's Law battery-hazard enforcement, carrying potential legal liability for continued sale. The expanded unit count and specific remediation workflow signal active enforcement. Sellers not monitoring CPSC recalls risk selling prohibited-by-law products and face potential account penalties, legal action, and consumer harm liability.
Recommended action
Immediately cross-reference your product inventory against CPSC active recalls database (cpsc.gov/Recalls). If you sell glasses, eyewear, or products with button cell batteries, verify SKUs against recalled models. Halt all listings matching recalled items. Establish automated recall-monitoring workflow tied to CPSC updates. Document and execute remediation per federal guidance (refunds, disposal, customer notification). Audit similar products for battery-compartment accessibility and Reese's Law warning compliance.
The recalled youth ATVs violate the federal mandatory ATV safety standard, posing a risk of serious injury or death. The youth ATVs fail to meet mechanical suspension requirements, and the reverse indicator light fails to illuminate, posing a crash hazard. The parking brakes fail to hold, posing a collision hazard. Additionally, the surfaces near the footwell can reach high temperatures, posing a risk of severe burns.
The recalled glasses violate the mandatory standard for consumer products with button cell and coin batteries because the button cell batteries can be accessed easily by children, posing an ingestion hazard. Additionally, the packaging and product do not have the warnings required under Reese’s Law. When button cell or coin batteries are swallowed, the ingested batteries can cause serious injuries, internal chemical burns, and death.
Consumers should stop using the recalled glasses immediately, place them in an area where children cannot access them and properly dispose of the batteries. Contact ABC Trading for a full refund. Consumers will be asked to dispose of the glass and send a photo of the product in the trash and email to [email protected].
Note:
Button cell batteries are hazardous. Batteries should be disposed of or recycled by following local hazardous waste procedures.
About 2,900
The recalled youth ATVs violate the federal mandatory ATV safety standard, posing a risk of serious injury or death. The youth ATVs fail to meet mechanical suspension requirements, and the reverse indicator light fails to illuminate, posing a crash hazard. The parking brakes fail to hold, posing a collision hazard. Additionally, the surfaces near the footwell can reach high posing a risk of severe burns.
Affects: Seller, Listing