Ban of Inclined Sleepers for Infants

Citation88 FR 55554
Published date16 August 2023
Record Number2023-17350
CourtConsumer Product Safety Commission
SectionRules and Regulations
Federal Register, Volume 88 Issue 157 (Wednesday, August 16, 2023)
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 157 (Wednesday, August 16, 2023)]
                [Rules and Regulations]
                [Pages 55554-55559]
                From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
                [FR Doc No: 2023-17350]
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                CONSUMER PRODUCT SAFETY COMMISSION
                16 CFR Part 1310
                [CPSC Docket No. 2022-0025]
                Ban of Inclined Sleepers for Infants
                AGENCY: Consumer Product Safety Commission.
                ACTION: Final rule.
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                SUMMARY: The Consumer Product Safety Commission is issuing this final
                rule to codify in its regulations the ban of inclined sleepers for
                infants pursuant to the Safe Sleep for Babies Act of 2021, which
                requires that inclined sleepers for infants, regardless of the date of
                manufacture, shall be considered a banned hazardous product under the
                Consumer Product Safety Act.
                DATES: This rule is effective on September 15, 2023.
                FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Will Cusey, Small Business Ombudsman,
                U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, 4330 East West Highway,
                Bethesda, MD 20814; telephone (301) 504-7945 or (888) 531-9070; email:
                [email protected].
                SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Pursuant to section 2 of the Safe Sleep for
                Babies Act of 2021 (SSBA), 15 U.S.C. 2057d, the Consumer Product Safety
                Commission (Commission or CPSC) is issuing this final rule to reflect,
                in the Code of Federal Regulations, the statutory ban of inclined
                sleepers for infants that took effect by operation of law on November
                12, 2022.
                I. Background and Statutory Authority
                 On May 3, 2022, Congress passed the Safe Sleep for Babies Act of
                2021, H.R. 3182, Public Law 117-126, which the President signed on May
                16, 2022. Section 2(a) of the SSBA requires that, not later than 180
                days after enactment of that law, ``inclined sleepers for infants,
                regardless of the date of manufacture, shall be considered a banned
                hazardous product under section 8 of the Consumer Product Safety Act
                (15 U.S.C. 2057).'' 15 U.S.C. 2057d(a). The SSBA defines inclined
                sleepers for infants as ``product[s] with an inclined sleep surface
                greater than ten degrees that [are] intended, marketed, or designed to
                provide sleeping accommodations for an infant up to 1 year old.'' 15
                U.S.C. 2057d(b). The SSBA went into effect as a ban enforced by the
                Commission on November 12, 2022, which was the 180th day after its
                enactment, making it unlawful for any person to sell, offer for sale,
                manufacture for sale, distribute in
                [[Page 55555]]
                commerce, or import inclined sleepers for infants as of that date. See
                15 U.S.C. 2068(a)(1).
                 On July 26, 2022, CPSC published a notice of proposed rulemaking
                (NPR) stating the Commission's intention to codify in its regulations
                the language in the SSBA requiring that inclined sleepers for infants
                be considered a banned hazardous product under section 8 of the
                Consumer Product Safety Act (CPSA). 87 FR 44309. CPSC requested and
                received comments from the public on the proposed rule. Specifically,
                CPSC requested comments regarding the effective date, interpretation of
                the SSBA language, and whether testing and certification to the ban
                should be required for sleep products for infants up to 1 year old.
                CPSC received a total of 67 comments from medical professionals,
                academic researchers, safety advocates, a children's products design
                facility, and a trade association for children's products. Those
                comments are summarized below in Section III.
                II. Overview of the Final Rule Banning Inclined Sleepers for Infants
                 The Commission issues this final rule \1\ to codify the ban of
                inclined sleepers for infants pursuant to the SSBA as proposed, with a
                clarification in the purpose and scope section of the ban to make clear
                that the rule prohibits not only the sale of inclined sleepers for
                infants but also the offer for sale, manufacture for sale, distribution
                in commerce, or importation into the United States, of these products.
                The final rule codifies the definition of ``inclined sleeper for
                infants'' as a product with an inclined sleep surface greater than ten
                degrees that is intended, marketed, or designed to provide sleeping
                accommodations for an infant up to 1 year old. The final rule also
                affirms that, regardless of the date of manufacture, inclined sleepers
                for infants are banned hazardous products as of November 12, 2022. The
                final rule is further discussed in the Staff Briefing Package: Ban of
                Inclined Sleepers for Infants Under the Safe Sleep for Babies Act.\2\
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                 \1\ The Commission voted 4-0 to publish this final rule. Chair
                Hoehn-Saric and Commissioners Feldman and Trumka issued statements
                in connection with their votes.
                 \2\ Staff Briefing Package: Ban of Inclined Sleepers for Infants
                Under the Safe Sleep for Babies Act, available at https://www.cpsc.gov/s3fs-public/Draft-Final-Rule-Ban-of-Inclined-Sleepers-for-Infants.pdf?VersionId=t7I_9B_J3r1aXJ2Epbm0PabWOWg2k2T7.
                _____________________________________-
                III. Response to Comments
                 Of the 67 comments received by CPSC in response to the NPR, 55 were
                from medical professionals including doctors, pediatricians, nurses,
                academic researchers, and infant safety advocates who provided
                substantially similar comments expressing general support for the
                proposed rule. The comments are viewable online at www.regulations.gov
                under docket number CPSC-2022-0025.\3\
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                 \3\ The Commission also received comments beyond the scope of
                this final rule. Those comments are summarized in the Staff Briefing
                Package and available at www.regulations.gov. Many of the commenters
                provided context for the SSBA, sharing data on the extent of Sudden
                Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) in the U.S. over various time periods.
                The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), for example, provided data
                that shows SIDS deaths since 2000 in the U.S. have not declined,
                despite extensive outreach and education campaigns on safe sleep
                practices for babies. Several commenters referred to an AAP report
                on SIDS/SUID (Sudden Unexpected Infant Death) that estimated 3,500
                infant deaths per year. March of Dimes noted that ``Rates of preterm
                birth are increasing . . . [with] disparities in birth outcomes
                between women and infants of color and their White peers. An
                estimated 700 women [die] from complications related to pregnancy
                each year and more than 22,000 babies die before their first
                birthday each year.''
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                A. Effective Date
                 Comment A.1: The majority of commenters supported setting an
                effective date as soon as possible, but not later than the statutory
                effective date of November 12, 2022. No commenters advocated for a
                later date.
                 Response A.1: The SSBA's statutory ban of inclined sleepers for
                infants went into effect on November 12, 2022, and CPSC has been
                enforcing it since that time. Accordingly, the final rule will have an
                effective date 30 days after publication, which is the minimum period
                provided in the Administrative Procedure Act (APA). 5 U.S.C. 553(d).
                This effective date for the rule does not change the fact that inclined
                sleepers for infants have been banned pursuant to the SSBA as of
                November 12, 2022.
                B. Interpretation
                 Congress enacted the SSBA after the Commission had implemented its
                Safety Standard for Infant Sleep Products (ISP Rule; 16 CFR part 1236).
                The ISP Rule became effective on June 23, 2022, and applies to products
                ``marketed or intended to provide a sleeping accommodation for an
                infant up to 5 months of age'' that are not subject to another CPSC
                sleep standard.\4\ The ISP Rule requires that the seat back or sleep
                surface angle for these products be 10 degrees or less from horizontal
                when measured as specified in part 1236. 86 FR 33022, 33060-61 (June
                23, 2021). The SSBA, by its terms, applies to ``inclined sleepers for
                infants,'' defined as ``a product with an inclined sleep surface
                greater than ten degrees that is intended, marketed, or designed to
                provide sleeping accommodations for an infant up to 1 year old.'' 15
                U.S.C. 2057d(b). Because the SSBA and the ISP Rule overlap but are not
                identical, the Commission sought comment on the following questions in
                particular:
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                 \4\ The other sleep standards currently are 16 CFR part 1218
                (bassinets and cradles); 16 CFR part 1219 (full-size cribs); 16 CFR
                part 1220 (non-full-size cribs); 16 CFR part 1221 (play yards); and
                16 CFR part 1222 (bedside sleepers).
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                1. How should the Commission interpret and implement the phrase
                ``sleeping accommodations'' for purposes of the SSBA ban?
                 Comment B.1: Several commenters (children's product design facility
                Iron Mountains, the Juvenile Products Manufacturers Association (JPMA),
                and consumer advocacy groups Kids in Danger (KID) and Consumer
                Federation of America (CFA)) stated that CPSC should use the ISP Rule's
                definition of ``sleeping accommodations'' to interpret the same
                language in the SSBA.
                 Commenters including KID, AAP, U.S. Public Interest Research Group
                (PIRG), Consumer Reports, CFA, March of Dimes, and Public Citizen,
                stated that ``sleeping accommodations'' should apply to products
                marketed for any kind of sleep, including napping or resting. KID
                stated that words such as ``rest'' or ``nap,'' or statements such as
                ``not for overnight, unattended or extended sleep,'' should not exclude
                a product from being considered a sleep product. PIRG suggested that
                while many infants can and do fall asleep anywhere, regardless of
                comfort, noise level or darkness, CPSC should define ``sleeping
                accommodations'' as products in which parents or caregivers believe an
                infant can sleep and stay unattended because of the way the product is
                designed, intended, or marketed. Consumer Reports stated that the term
                should apply broadly to include products remarketed as soothers or
                loungers.
                 The March of Dimes stated that CPSC should consider ``sleeping
                accommodations'' to be any product that is designed, intended,
                marketed, or commonly used by consumers for the purpose of putting a
                child to sleep, particularly if the sleep is unattended by an adult.
                 KID stated that the definition should include not just self-
                contained products, but also inclined sleep positioners, accessory
                products, and wedges that are used in the sleep environment.
                 Response B.1: The SSBA does not define ``sleeping accommodations.''
                In the preamble to the ISP Rule, the Commission explained that sleeping
                accommodations are ``products that are
                [[Page 55556]]
                marketed or intended for both extended, unattended sleep, and also
                napping, snoozing, and other types of sleep in which a parent may or
                may not be present, awake, and attentive.'' 86 FR 33047. The Commission
                agrees with commenters that ``sleeping accommodations'' should refer to
                products in which infants are placed for the purpose of napping or
                overnight sleep regardless of whether the sleep is ``attended or
                supervised,'' and that utilizing the same interpretation of sleeping
                accommodations in these overlapping rules will reduce confusion for the
                public and industry. Therefore, the Commission interprets the phrase
                ``sleeping accommodations'' in the SSBA consistent with the term as
                used in the ISP Rule. See 86 FR 33025-26.
                2. What, if any, effect should inclusion of the term ``designed'' in
                the SSBA have on the Commission's interpretation and implementation of
                the SSBA as compared to the ISP Rule?
                 Comment B.2: Comments from pediatricians and other medical
                professionals, as well as from AAP, stated that CPSC should be alert to
                changes to product marketing or categorization that could be cited as
                justification for the continued sale of dangerous products.
                 Multiple commenters, including KID, March of Dimes, CFA, Consumer
                Reports, and AAP, stated that by including the term ``designed'' in the
                statutory text, Congress sought to comprehensively ban all inclined
                sleep products and prohibit rebranding or reclassification of products
                to evade regulatory attention. These commenters stated that use of the
                word ``designed'' signals Congress's intent to ban products that
                caregivers would reasonably see as suitable for sleep, regardless of
                how they are marketed.
                 One doctor (Hauck) advocated removing inclined products from the
                market, regardless of whether they are marketed for sleeping or awake
                infants, stating that ``manufacturers will attempt to market these
                items for infants who are not shown to be sleeping . . . [but] infants
                placed in these products will fall asleep and then be at risk for dying
                in them.'' The AAP stated although caregivers may believe inclined
                sleep products aid with gastroesophageal reflux, research shows that
                placing infants on their backs on inclined surfaces is ineffective in
                reducing gastroesophageal reflux and may result in the infant sliding
                into a position that could compromise breathing.
                 PIRG and Public Citizen asserted that the addition of the word
                ``designed'' will allow CPSC to review the design as well as the
                marketing of inclined sleep products. These commenters stated that
                focusing on the manufacturer's stated intent or consumer-facing
                marketing would enable manufacturers to argue that a product is not
                meant for sleep, when common sense dictates otherwise based on the
                design. These commenters urged the Commission to consider a product's
                design, in addition to the company's stated intention or marketing.
                Several commenters stated that if the product is not designed for any
                other purpose, then a logical conclusion is that the product is
                designed for sleep.
                 A children's product design facility (Iron Mountains) stated that
                caregivers need products that restrain supervised, awake infants so
                that they can complete daily tasks and that swings, rockers, and
                bouncers are intended for such situations, and are the only alternative
                to the sofa or other unsafe surfaces. JPMA asserted that ``infant
                rockers, swings, and bouncers are not designed to provide children with
                a place to sleep'' and that any decision to include in the scope of the
                ban products that are not designed for sleep would misinterpret
                Congressional intent. JPMA further stated that if Congress had intended
                to include rockers, swings, and bouncers in the SSBA, it would have
                explicitly done so.
                 Response B.2: The Commission agrees that to give effect to the word
                ``designed'' within the definition of ``inclined sleeper for infants''
                in the SSBA, the Commission should interpret that word as supplementing
                the accompanying words ``intended'' and ``marketed.'' In the ISP Rule,
                the Commission identified characteristics to be considered in
                evaluating whether a product is intended for sleep, including product
                packaging, marketing materials, instructions, product design, and
                pictures of consumer usage. See, e.g., 86 FR 33048, https://www.cpsc.gov/Business--Manufacturing/Business-Education/Business-Guidance/Infant-Sleep-Products-Business-Guidance-and-Small-Entity-Compliance-Guide. To assess product design, the Commission will
                consider a number of factors, including those set forth in Response B.3
                below.
                 In the absence of otherwise conclusive evidence regarding design,
                previous marketing for sleep, while not dispositive, will be persuasive
                evidence that an inclined product was designed to provide sleeping
                accommodations. Similarly, if an inclined product's design is
                materially the same as another product that is an inclined sleeper for
                infants, that would be persuasive, though not dispositive, evidence
                that the product is designed to provide sleeping accommodations.
                Products that are designed to provide sleeping accommodations but also
                for one or more other purpose(s) likewise are covered by the language
                of the statutory ban, despite having the other, non-sleep use(s).
                3. In the SSBA, what product characteristics, if any, demonstrate that
                a product is ``designed'' for sleep?
                 Comment B.3: Commenters from consumer safety advocacy groups, such
                as AAP, KID, PIRG, Consumer Reports, Public Citizen, and CFA, suggested
                product features they consider indicative of a product ``designed'' for
                sleep, including: padded sides; excess padding or pillow-like items;
                soothing sounds, lights, or vibrations; a nest-like appearance; muted
                color schemes, nighttime themes; illustrations of sleeping animals or
                closed eyes; warning labels that fail to warn against infant sleep
                generally and warn only against specific types of sleep, such as
                ``prolonged,'' ``unattended,'' or ``overnight'' sleep; and no features
                for another primary purpose, such as feeding or transportation of the
                child. The March of Dimes identified the following factors that it
                views as indicators a product is designed for sleep: a focus on
                comforting an infant to a point it could easily fall asleep in the
                product; nothing designed to stimulate an infant or prevent a child
                from sleeping; an absence of non-sleep related purposes, such as
                feeding or transportation; emphasis on the ability to leave a child
                unattended, where it may fall asleep.
                 Several commenters, including AAP, PIRG, Consumer Reports, and CFA,
                also stated that a product is designed for sleep if the purpose is to
                position an infant at an angle with the intent of leaving the infant in
                the product unattended during routine sleep, or if the product is
                intended to relax an infant in a way that it is reasonably expected the
                infant will fall asleep and be left unattended. PIRG gave examples of
                products with other primary purposes that involve supervised use,
                including high chairs, which are designed for feeding; car seats, which
                are designed for travel in a motor vehicle; and strollers, which are
                designed to contain a child being pushed on a walk.
                 JPMA stated that a ``product designed for sleep would be
                constructed with features that are specifically intended to accommodate
                an unattended sleeping infant.'' Iron Mountains stated that sleep
                products generally have ``flat, horizontal occupant surfaces with no
                contour, shaping, or restraint'' and are generally
                [[Page 55557]]
                larger than ``awake time'' products. Iron Mountains further stated that
                a product is designed, intended, and marketed for sleep if it is
                visually very similar to a play yard, bassinet, crib, or bedside
                sleeper, and features include some of or all of the following: vertical
                side-walls, high side-walls indicating containment, typically a
                distinct angle between the occupant surface and the side walls,
                generally large size, flat and horizontal sleep surface with little or
                no contouring, and lack of a restraint.
                 Response B.3: The Commission agrees with commenters' identification
                of characteristics that could be relevant to distinguishing whether
                products are designed for infant sleep for purposes of the SSBA,
                including, but not limited to: padded sides; excess padding or pillow-
                like items; soothing sounds, motions, lights, or vibrations; nighttime
                themes; and labels that warn only against specific types of sleep and
                not sleep generally.
                4. How should the Commission interpret and implement the terms
                ``marketed'' and ``intended'' as a sleeping accommodation in the SSBA?
                Should these terms be interpreted and implemented the same as in the
                ISP Rule? Why or why not?
                 Comment B.4: JPMA, AAP, PIRG, Consumer Reports, CFA, and KID stated
                that the terms ``marketed'' and ``intended'' should be interpreted and
                implemented under the SSBA consistent with how they are discussed in
                the preamble to the ISP Rule. AAP added that evaluation of marketing
                and intent should include assessment of marketing and promotional
                materials, audience targeting (including algorithms), the firm's public
                and private communications about a product, and the firm's foreseeable
                awareness about a product (including images, consumer comments, and
                discussion on social media and product review pages regarding the use
                of the product for routine sleep). KID added that while the terms
                ``marketed'' and ``intended'' overlap, together they ``paint a line
                between infant products that have other purposes such as play,
                interaction, transport or feeding and those products [for which] . . .
                sleep is clearly an intended purpose.''
                 Response B.4: In the preamble of the ISP Rule, the Commission
                stated that ``if a product's packaging, marketing materials, inserts,
                or instructions indicate that the product is for sleep, or includes
                pictures of sleeping infants, then CPSC will consider the product to be
                marketed for sleep.'' 86 FR 33063. The Commission also stated that
                staff will consider a ``[m]anufacturer's intent, which can be evaluated
                through stated warning messages, marketing photos, product instructions
                and other factors.'' Id. at 33051. Consistent with the comments
                received in response to the NPR for this final rule, and to promote
                ease of administration and clarity for regulated parties, the
                Commission adopts for administration of the SSBA and this final rule
                the same interpretation of ``marketed'' and ``intended'' as exists for
                the ISP Rule. Therefore, for example, if a manufacturer or importer
                markets a product as a space for infant sleep, the product will fall
                within the scope of the SSBA and this final rule and must meet the
                requirement to have a sleep surface angle of not greater than ten
                degrees.
                5. What is the significance of the age distinction between the ISP Rule
                and the SSBA's ban? How might this difference bear on implementation of
                the SSBA as compared to the ISP Rule, including with respect to
                developmental differences between a newborn to 5 month old as
                identified in the ISP Rule, versus a newborn to 1 year old as
                identified in the SSBA?
                 Comment B.5: JPMA stated that while most sleep products within the
                scope of the SSBA already fall within the scope of the ISP Rule because
                they are marketed for children 5 months or younger, the broader age
                range in the SSBA could prevent ``bad actors'' from re-marketing such
                products for infants 6 months to a year in an attempt to evade the ISP
                Rule.
                 AAP and Consumer Reports commented that important differences exist
                in the hazards for younger versus older infants, because there are
                significant developmental differences between infants who are newborn
                to 5 months old and those between 5 months and 1 year of age. AAP
                identified the following differences between older and younger infants:
                 Older infants have greater arm strength and the ability to
                roll and change body positions, including from supine to prone;
                 Older infants have increased head and neck muscle
                strength;
                 Older infants generally have the ability to lift and hold
                up their heads;
                 Older infants have more mature brain development, which
                enables regulation of autonomic nervous functions, including breathing;
                 Older infants in the 9-to-12-month range tend to face more
                danger from strangulation from straps, restraints, and other loose
                hazards on sleep products; and
                 Younger infants are at greater risk of positional asphyxia
                and the other biomechanical hazards.
                 Public Citizen recommended that the Commission address the
                differences in hazard patterns by age group and make sure products for
                children up to 1 year of age are included in the scope of the final
                rule. KID stated that the risk to infants over 5 months is important
                and noted they had recommended expanding the age range in response to
                the NPR for the ISP Rule. KID emphasized that the SSBA will prevent new
                inclined sleep products marketed for 6 months and older from entering
                the marketplace, deter remarketing of existing products, and provide
                CPSC with the authority to remove all inclined sleepers marketed for
                children up to 1 year from the marketplace.
                 CFA stated that the SSBA, by including infants up to 1 year,
                broadens CPSC's authority to include inclined sleep products for
                infants over 5 months. CFA also noted that the expanded age range
                prevents suppliers from remarketing infant products to an older age
                group to evade the ISP Rule, when those products are not suitable for
                an older child.
                 Response B.5: As commenters note, AAP's safe sleep guidance states
                that infants less than 1 year old should sleep on a firm, flat,
                surface, such as a crib, bassinet, play yard, or bedside sleeper.\5\
                Consistent with that guidance, the SSBA and this final rule prohibit
                inclined sleeping accommodations with an incline of greater than 10
                degrees for all children from birth up to 1 year of age.
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                 \5\ ``Place infants on their backs for sleep in their own sleep
                space with no other people. Use a crib, bassinet, or portable play
                yard with a firm, flat mattress and a fitted sheet. Avoid sleep on a
                couch or armchair or in a seating device, like a swing or car safety
                seat (except while riding in the car).'' www.aap.org/en/patient-care/safe-sleep/.
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                6. How, if at all, should the SSBA's ban of inclined sleepers for
                infants affect the ISP Rule or the Commission's application of it?
                 Comment B.6: Commenters largely expressed support for the continued
                implementation and enforcement of the ISP Rule, without change. AAP and
                Consumer Reports stated that the SSBA should build upon the successful
                foundation of the ISP Rule to offer clarity on the importance of
                banning all inclined infant sleep products, such as by including more
                extensive examination of products to ensure that if a product is not
                intended for another purpose (such as travel or eating) and can be used
                for routine sleep, it does not have an incline greater than 10 degrees.
                [[Page 55558]]
                 Response B.6: Although the ISP Rule and the SSBA differ somewhat,
                commenters did not identify any conflict between them. Therefore, the
                Commission finds no reason to propose changes to the ISP Rule.
                7. To the extent inclined sleepers remain on the market that are not
                banned by this rule, and that are not regulated under the ISP Rule,
                should CPSC require testing and certification to this ban, to
                demonstrate that a product is not within the scope of the ban?
                 Comment B.7: Commenters differed as to whether testing and
                certification under the SSBA are needed and what such testing would
                achieve. JPMA opposed testing and certification to demonstrate that
                inclined sleep products are not banned products pursuant to the SSBA.
                JPMA further stated that a product with an incline of less than 10
                degrees would not meet the definition of an ``inclined sleeper for
                infants'' in the SSBA.
                 Consumer groups supported SSBA testing and certification. AAP
                stated that CPSC should use its authority to require testing and
                certification to ensure that noncompliant products are not sold. KID
                and Consumer Reports supported testing and certification to demonstrate
                which products are out of scope of the ban and thus allowed for sale,
                stating that testing and certification could demonstrate that an
                inclined sleep product either for older children or with an incline
                under 10 degrees is not within the scope of the ban. Consumer Reports
                stated that testing and certification would help to eliminate potential
                loopholes and avoid muddling the longstanding ``bare is best''
                messaging for safe infant sleep. CFA also supported testing, urging the
                CPSC to use all of its authority, including enforcement, testing, and
                certification, to protect infant sleep environments.
                 Response B.7: The NPR noted that when a ban does not remove all
                products in a product category from the market, CPSC may require
                testing and certification to demonstrate that a product is not within
                the scope of the ban. Few bans completely remove all products in a
                specific category from the market, instead removing a subset of
                products with hazardous characteristics, while allowing sale of other
                products in the category subject to regulation. The Commission has
                previously stated that manufacturers of products in a category where a
                subset of the products are subject to a ban must issue certificates. 28
                FR 28079, 28082 (May 13, 2013). Moreover, section 14(a)(1) of the CPSA
                requires that products subject to a rule, ban, standard, or regulation,
                be tested and certified as compliant. 15 U.S.C. 2063(a)(1).
                 Congress did not prohibit all inclined sleepers for infants in the
                SSBA--only those intended, marketed, or designed for infants from birth
                to 1 year that have an incline greater than ten degrees. Therefore,
                products may remain in the marketplace that could be subject to
                regulation. Though the Commission is not implementing a testing and
                certification program at this time, it may consider testing,
                certification, and registration requirements in the future, based on
                additional information collected by the agency.
                IV. Changes Included in the Final Rule
                 The final rule contains three changes from the NPR: the effective
                date and two minor technical or clarifying revisions.
                A. Effective Date
                 The APA generally requires that the effective date of a rule be at
                least 30 days after publication of the final rule. 5 U.S.C. 553(d). The
                NPR proposed an effective date of November 12, 2022, which was the date
                that the SSBA took effect. Because that date has passed, and because
                commenters supported CPSC implementing the rule expeditiously, the
                Commission is finalizing this rule with a 30-day effective date, the
                minimum permitted under the APA, and has revised 16 CFR 1310.4
                accordingly. Section 1310.4 was further revised to clarify that the ban
                of inclined sleepers for infants was effective as of November 12, 2022,
                pursuant to the SSBA, but that the final rule is effective as of
                September 15, 2023. The promulgation of this final rule does not change
                the fact that inclined sleepers have been banned pursuant to the SSBA
                since November 12, 2022.
                B. Technical and Clarifying Revisions
                 For the final rule, the Commission has updated the language
                proposed in the NPR by replacing the public law citation for the SSBA
                (Pub. L. 117-126) with the newer U.S. Code citation (15 U.S.C. 2057d).
                 The Commission also revised proposed 16 CFR 1310.1, Purpose and
                scope, to more fully describe the substantive effect of Congress's
                classification of inclined sleepers for infants as banned hazardous
                products. Section 1310.1 of the final rule makes clear that the rule
                prohibits not only the sale of inclined sleepers for infants but also,
                in accordance with section 19(a)(1) of the CPSA, the offer for sale,
                manufacture for sale, distribution in commerce, or importation into the
                United States, of these products. 15 U.S.C. 2068(a)(1).
                V. Preemption
                 Section 3(b)(2)(A) of Executive Order 12988, Civil Justice Reform
                (Feb. 5, 1996), directs agencies to specify the preemptive effect of
                any rule. 61 FR 4729 (Feb. 7, 1996). Because the SSBA states that
                inclined sleepers for infants are banned hazardous products, any state
                performance standards allowing the sale of inclined sleepers for
                infants, as those products are defined in the SSBA and this rule, would
                be inconsistent with Federal law and therefore preempted by this ban.
                VI. Regulatory Flexibility Act
                 The Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601-612, requires that
                agencies review proposed and final rules for their potential economic
                impact on small entities, including small businesses, and identify
                alternatives that may reduce such impact, unless the agency certifies
                that the rule will not, if promulgated, have a significant economic
                impact on a substantial number of small entities. In the NPR, the
                Commission certified that the rule will not have a significant economic
                impact on substantial number of small entities and received no comment
                on that issue. 87 FR 44309.
                VII. Environmental Considerations
                 The Commission's regulations at 16 CFR part 1021 address whether
                the agency must prepare an environmental assessment or an environmental
                impact statement. Under those regulations, certain categories of CPSC
                actions that have ``little or no potential for affecting the human
                environment'' do not require an environmental assessment or an
                environmental impact statement. 16 CFR 1021.5(c). This final rule
                codifying section 2 of the SSBA falls within the categorical exclusion,
                so no environmental assessment or environmental impact statement is
                required.
                VIII. Paperwork Reduction Act
                 This final rule contains no information collection requirements
                that are subject to public comment and review by the Office of
                Management and Budget (OMB) under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
                (PRA; 44 U.S.C. 3501-3521).
                IX. Congressional Review Act
                 The Congressional Review Act (CRA; 5 U.S.C. 801-808) states that,
                before a rule can take effect, the agency issuing the rule must submit
                the rule and certain related information to each House of Congress and
                the Comptroller
                [[Page 55559]]
                General, 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1), and indicate whether the rule is a ``major
                rule'' as defined in 5 U.S.C. 804(2). The CRA further states that the
                Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) determines whether
                a rule qualifies as a ``major rule.'' OIRA has determined that this
                rule is not a ``major rule'' under the CRA. To comply with the CRA, the
                Commission will submit the required information to each House of
                Congress and the Comptroller General.
                List of Subjects in 16 CFR Part 1310
                 Administrative practice and procedure, Consumer protection, Infants
                and children.
                0
                For the reasons stated in the preamble, the Commission adds part 1310
                to title 16 of the Code of Federal Regulations as follows:
                PART 1310--BAN OF INCLINED SLEEPERS FOR INFANTS
                Sec.
                1310.1 Purpose and Scope.
                1310.2 Definition.
                1310.3 Banned Hazardous Product.
                1310.4 Effective Date.
                 Authority: 15 U.S.C. 2057d.
                Sec. 1310.1 Purpose and Scope.
                 The purpose of this rule is to prohibit the sale, offer for sale,
                manufacture for sale, distribution in commerce, or importation into the
                United States, of any inclined sleepers for infants, as defined in part
                1310.2 and as set forth in the Safe Sleep for Babies Act of 2021 (15.
                U.S.C. 2057d).
                Sec. 1310.2 Definition.
                 Inclined sleeper for infants means a product with an inclined sleep
                surface greater than ten degrees that is intended, marketed, or
                designed to provide sleeping accommodations for an infant up to 1 year
                old.
                Sec. 1310.3 Banned Hazardous Product.
                 Any inclined sleeper for infants, as defined in section 1310.2,
                regardless of the date of manufacture, is a banned hazardous product
                under section 8 of the Consumer Product Safety Act (15 U.S.C. 2057).
                Sec. 1310.4 Effective Date.
                 By statute, the effective date of this ban is November 12, 2022.
                The effective date of this rule is September 15, 2023.
                Alberta E. Mills,
                Secretary, Consumer Product Safety Commission.
                [FR Doc. 2023-17350 Filed 8-15-23; 8:45 am]
                BILLING CODE 6355-01-P
                

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