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The blind and shade manufacturing industry reported an estimated $2.5 billion in revenue last year, according to industry research firm IBISWorld. "The voluntary standard route is really the way to go" because the products aren't dangerous for everyone, said Ralph Vasami, executive director of the Window Covering Manufacturers Association, a group of manufacturers, including Hunter Douglas Inc. and Springs Window Fashions. Vasami said there is no danger in homes without young children. Kelly Horvath, a stay-at-home mom in Painesville, Ohio, sued Wal-Mart, a manufacturer and others and agreed to a high-priced settlement after her son strangled on a window shade cord, according to court records. Jim Onder, a St. Louis lawyer who has represented families against manufacturers and retailers in lawsuits, has argued that these companies are slow to act. Despite reports of deaths since the 1970s, the industry and the CPSC didn't agree to eliminate loops at the end of pull cords until the mid-1990s. Roughly five years later, they revised standards to eliminate another problem
-- cord loops that could form between blind slats. More recently, the industry voluntarily recalled more than 50 million Roman shades and roll-up blinds in December
-- about three years after the CPSC received reports of Roman shades strangling small children. ___ On the Net: Consumer Product Safety Commission: http://www.cpsc.gov/ Parents for Window Blind Safety:
http://www.windowblindskillchildren.org/
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