[Home]
[Up]

TOXIC TRADE POISONS

Back to Women Of Steel  
Here is a list of Recalled Items from a governmental source.... Don't buy these items.... if you have - return them!.. click here Toxic Toys, Toxic Toys...Make them go away .....see the video!
 

New food and product safety legislation necessary but fails to address root cause of toxic imports - Steelworkers


4/10/2008

TORONTO - United Steelworkers' (USW) National Director Ken Neumann said Tuesday that proposed federal legislation to protect consumers contains necessary steps to address recalls, fines and inspections but fails to adequately address the need to stop dangerous products before they get close to the Canadian marketplace.

"The USW campaign to Stop Toxic Imports made headlines during the fall when thousands of recalls happened," said Neumann. "The key word is 'imports'. Recalls and fines all happen after the fact. Canada needs a strategy that repairs the kind of trade deals that have led to toxic imports crossing our border in the first place."

Neumann added that neither the amendments to the Food and Drugs Act nor the new Canada Consumer Product Safety Act carry an outright ban on carcinogens or other toxic chemicals in consumer products. Nor do the changes create a mandatory testing or labelling scheme.

"We believe that in Canada there needs to be a specific toxic import protection act, which includes mandatory testing funded by a 'service charge' at the border, before products are marketed in this country."

The USW conducted a North America campaign last fall, holding in-home lead-testing sessions and offering lead-testing kits on a special website, www.stoptoxicimports.org.

"Exporting Canadian manufacturing jobs overseas has reaped a dangerous harvest of everything from children's products containing lead to toxic pet food and food for humans that has misleading labelling about country of origin and content," Neumann said. "For years, we have been told unregulated trade solves all problems. But with hundreds of thousands of manufacturing jobs gone and millions of items recalled, it is clear we have only added more problems that need to be solved now."

Neumann urged all political parties to take the next step and support banning toxic imports outright.

The USW is Canada's most diverse union, representing more than 280,000 men and women working in every sector of Canada's economy.

USW Local 959 Crusades Against Toxic Trade Hosts Session to Demonstrate Testing Products for Lead

By United Steelworkers (USW)

The United Steelworkers (USW) Local 959 is hosting a lead screening session to educate families in Fayetteville about potentially toxic products and the bad trade policies that are allowing them into our homes. The product screenings at the local union hall is part of the USW's international "Protect Our Kids - Stop Toxic Imports" campaign.

Members of the community are invited to bring toys and other imported items to the local union hall, where they will be screened for lead and where the USW will provide safety and educational material.

"I've been scared to death for my grandchildren after hearing about lead on toys like Thomas the Tank Engine, Barbie, Dora the Explorer, Big Bird -- and on baby bibs, too," said Wilma Liles, a member of the USW's Women of Steel, who are conducting the lead-screening tests here and across the United States and Canada.

"I've thought, 'Oh, my God! My grandkids could be getting poisoned from the things I bought them!' We're hoping our campaign helps find poisoned products so we can get them out of our homes, but we also want to draw attention to the root of the problem -- bad trade deals," she said.

The union is calling upon Congress to support the U.S. Food and Product Responsibility Act, introduced in the Senate by Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, and in the House by Rep. Pete Visclosky, D-Ind. This legislation would safeguard Americans against toxic food and products by requiring companies producing the goods and importers importing them to take responsibility.

"Each week brings a new recall or warning about toys, tires, toothpaste or other dangerous imports," said Mary Sparks, a local union activist trained by the USW Health, Safety and Environment Department to assist with lead screening demonstrations. "These cheap goods from countries like China have an expensive price that is threatening the health and safety of our children and families."

Over the past few months, the USW Women of Steel have conducted lead screening tests similar to the Fayetteville event in more than 25 cities across North America to educate families about this threat of lead contaminated toys and other products.

"Products we made safe through regulation of U.S. manufacturers are coming in poisonous through a back door in trade policy," said Dr. Herbert Needleman, a University of Pittsburgh professor who pioneered lead research and treatments 30 years ago. Dr. Needleman said he was deeply disappointed that "decades of progress through research have been reversed."

USW President Leo W. Gerard has spearheaded the second Steelworkers "Get the Lead Out" campaign. "The USW has a strong legacy of fighting to protect American families, playing a key role to 'get the lead out' of most products and goods by the end of the 1970s," Gerard recalled. "Our nation is at another crossroads right now and it is time to change course and reverse the influx of toxic goods finding their way onto our store shelves."

More information about the union's project can be found at www.stoptoxicimports.org. The Web site provides information and tools to deal with failed trade and inadequate regulatory policies that allow dangerous products to threaten our children and jobs.

"This threat to the health of our children and families is a direct result of unregulated trade and it will continue to grow until these flawed trade policies are addressed," Gerard said.

The Steelworkers' campaign is supported by a broad array of consumer and environmental organizations, including the Blue-Green Alliance (www.bluegreenalliance.org), the Public Health Institute and the Center for Environmental Health (http://www.cehca.org).

Beginning with the recall of 1.5 million Thomas the Tank Engine toys in June last year, more than 6 million toys have been recalled for high levels of lead. Lead can cause a variety of health problems, including learning disabilities, stunted growth, kidney damage and even death. Other dangerous imports include faulty medicine, steel, and tires, and toxic lipstick, toothpaste, seafood, children's lunchboxes and pet food.

The USW represents 850,000 workers in the United States and Canada employed in the industries of metals, rubber, chemicals, paper, oil refining and the service sector. For more information: www.usw.org/.

SOURCE United Steelworkers (USW)

 

 
USW Local 608 & 712  visited with local Us political representative offices on January 16th to inform, educate and request support of an upcoming House Bill 2081 that will help ensure imported products will be safe for all Americans.100_0745.jpg (1242996 bytes)

Some Lewiston USW Members
visited with representatives/assistants
of 3 US Congressmen/Senators on 
the morning of January 16th to discuss
issues concern job lose due to out-

100_0746.jpg (1071212 bytes)US Congressman's Staff Rep. Tony Snoderly welcomed our group and our message of Safe import porducts and the need to keep American jobs in America.

sourcing with the return of not so safe
and possibly, not so "regulated" products.
 
We asked them why we should be putting
our selves and families at risk of illness
Jim Kidder (Local 712) speaks to Tony Snoderly of Congressman Bill Sali's Office regarding the safety of this states citizens from imported products.100_0749.jpg (1145432 bytes) or death just so those companies can rake
in a larger profits.  Should not these 
companies follow the same safety and 
environmental regulation in relation to
the production of their product as any US
US Congressman 100_0752.jpg (1260888 bytes)Bill Sali's office.

 

manufacturer?
 
We will be keeping in touch with these
elected officials to keep the lines of
communications open for the pending 
USW Local 608's Recording Secretary spoke with Jeff Sayer, Regional Director 100_0754.jpg (1070508 bytes)for Senator Larry Craig.  He was very receptive to our group and said he would send our thoughts and concerns to Washington D.C. and give us the Senators response. house bill: "U.S. Food and Product 
Responsibility Act (S.2081)"
 
Across the US and Canada Union
members asked their representatives in
Congress to take immediate action to protect 

Rounding out the visitation, we entered the local office of US Senator Mike Crapo.  Staff Assistant, Peter D. Stegner100_0756.jpg (1111240 bytes) listened intently to our presentation of facts and desires.  The promise of passing the packet of info to his boss, Senator Crapo.

Barb Fazenbaker, USW Local 608 election committee chairperson, listens 100_0757.jpg (1060876 bytes)intently as Peter relays that Senator Crapo would get back to us as quick as he could in reply to our concerns and requests of his support for this Bill. Click on a photo to enlarge it for better detail. Americans from the dangerous threat posed 
by the millions of lead-laced toys and other 
unsafe products infiltrating our country and 
by passing the U.S. Food and Product 
Responsibility Act (S.2081) and fixing broken
trade policies.

Thousands of Steelworkers.  One hundred congressional offices.  One union.  One day.

 

On Wednesday, Jan. 16, members of the United Steelworkers and its allies will take its “Stop Toxic Imports” campaign to the nation’s policymakers. In this National Day of Action, the union will demand that Congress take immediate action to protect Americans from the dangerous threat posed by the millions of lead-laced toys and other unsafe products infiltrating our country.

The USW will be joined by dozens of allied community, environmental and health organizations from across the country, as well as the AFL-CIO and other labor groups.

“The massive toy recalls this holiday season drew attention to the much larger problem of the countless dangerous imports – tires, toothpaste, fake drugs, pet food – making their way on to U.S. store shelves,” said USW President Leo W. Gerard, who has spearheaded the USW “Protect Our Kids – Stop Toxic Imports” campaign. “People are starting to realize that we’re paying the price for cheap, imported goods so corporations can make bigger profits. It’s time for our policymakers to fix this broken trade system, repair our regulatory agencies and protect our jobs and families.”

The USW is calling for support for the U.S. Food and Product Responsibility Act, introduced in the Senate by Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, and in the House by Rep. Pete Visclosky, D-Ind. This legislation would safeguard Americans against toxic food and products by shifting the responsibility on to the backs of the companies producing the goods and the importers importing them.

The USW is not alone in demanding change. Check out this “Sound Off” video where consumers give policymakers a piece of their minds when it comes to the toxic trade crisis.

 

How About Law and Order on the Trade Front?

Posted January 18, 2008 | 03:54 PM (EST)


stumbleupon :How About Law and Order on the Trade Front?   digg: How About Law and Order on the Trade Front?   reddit: How About Law and Order on the Trade Front?   del.icio.us: How About Law and Order on the Trade Front?

San Francisco, CA -- If I hire a couple of guys with automatic weapons, break into a garden in San Francisco, and take, at gun-point, fifty prize roses, I have committed a crime. If I drive those roses across the Bay Bridge to Oakland and sell them to Ace lumber, Ace lumber doesn't own them, and if it sells them suspecting I stole them, Ace lumber has also committed a crime.

If a logging contractor does the same thing in Sumatra, or Peru, and gets the wood to the US, they're home free. Same thing if they sell the logs in China and the mahogany ends up in furniture in Wal-Mart. Illegal trade is one of the huge stories being ignored by the mainstream media. More than half of all tropical deforestation is estimated to be the result of illegal logging (pdf), and deforestation is causing 20% of total global CO2 emissions.

But logs are not the only illegally traded goods. This Christmas we became aware that huge numbers of toys brought into the United States violated American and Chinese laws governing lead content. Imported pet food was also found to be adulterated, seafood was contaminated with illegal drugs, and people died from contaminated toothpaste. The problem, let's be clear, isn't China -- it's a business model in which importers seek to drive prices down to ever lower levels, and bear no responsibility for the safety of the resulting production processes, either in terms of environmental harm or health risks.

The Sierra Club's first response to this threat was to bring suit in California under one of the many laws these toxic imports violated: California's Prop 65. Now, in further response to this problem, the Sierra Club and United Steelworkers Blue-Green Alliance joined this week in a National Day of Action on Toxic Trade, in over 100 cities, calling for support of the U.S. Food and Product Responsibility Act. Introduced in the Senate by Sen.
Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) and in the House by Rep. Pete Visclosky (D-Ind.), this legislation would safeguard Americans against toxic food and products
by shifting the responsibility on to the backs of the companies producing
the goods and the importers importing them.

There's no reason that crossing an international border should turn theft into commerce, fencing into free trade. The courts have been our first line of defence so far -- next week the 9th Circuit will hear the appeal brought by the Sierra Club and the Teamsters of the Bush Administration's decision to allow trucks from Mexico to enter the US without complying with American clean air and safety standards. But it shouldn't just be up to the Courts; Congress can do something about this, and it ought to.

 

AFL-CIO Joins Steelworkers in National Day of Action to Expose Dangerous Threat Posed by Toxic Toys

Tagged:  •    •    •    •    •    •    •    •    •    •    •    •    •  

Activists at 100 Congressional Offices Nationwide to Demand Congress Protect Consumers

January 15, 2008 -- Thousands of activists from the United Steelworkers (USW) and other AFL-CIO unions will join community, environmental and health groups as part of a National Day of Action Wednesday to demand Congress takes immediate steps to stop the importation of dangerous lead-laced toys and other unsafe products into the U.S.

Activists will gather in front of 100 Congressional offices across the country to raise awareness about the serious threat posed by toxic goods and call for Congress to pass the U.S. Food and Product Responsibility Act, introduced in the Senate by Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) and in the House by Rep. Pete Visclosky (D-Ind.). This legislation would safeguard Americans against toxic imports by placing a greater burden on companies importing products into the U.S. to ensure they are safe.

“It’s appalling that unscrupulous corporations are importing unsafe products into our country which poison our children,” AFL-CIO President John Sweeney said. “Thousands of working people across America will send a clear message to Congress tomorrow – protecting the health and safety of our children should be the government’s top priority.”

The threat posed by unsafe levels of lead in toys is one of the most recent negative effects of the Bush Administration’s failed trade policy, Sweeney added. Since 2001, more than 3 million good, middle-class building manufacturing jobs have been lost in America, many due to wrongheaded trade deals like NAFTA.

Tomorrow’s nationwide action is part of the USW “Protect Our Kids – Stop Toxic Imports” campaign, which aims to reform a broken system that was responsible for allowing toxic imports to be shipped into our country unchecked by massive multinational corporations.

More than 6 million toys have been recalled for high levels of lead. Lead can cause a variety of health problems, including learning disabilities, stunted growth, kidney damage and even death. Other toxic imports include lipstick, toothpaste, seafood, children's lunchboxes and pet food.

Source: AFL-CIO

Steel Workers Take Toxic Trade Fight to Congress

Sheldon Dutes, Live 5 News

Kim Smith is the proud grandmother of a baby girl and she wants to make sure that her granddaughter stays healthy throughout her developmental years.

That's why she and several other United Steel Workers are demanding that Congress take immediate action to protect the American people from lead-laced products. "Somebody has to be responsible enough to say 'Hey, we've got to take a look at this and something's got to be done about it and people need to be held accountable’,” Smith said.

Moreover, Smith feels inexpensive imports from other countries are to blame, "They don't have the environmental regulations, they don't have safety regulations, people work in deplorable conditions and they make the products and ship them back to us and our children are literally dying from them,” she said.

Fed up with all of the recalls and the potential dangers of lead, Smith and other United Steel Workers took their toxic trade fight to Representative Brown's office.

However, the Congressman is in DC, but an aide told them she would let Brown know they came by. "Anytime you have to go through somebody else you hit a road block because you don't get to get the message directly to that person, they don't feel the passion,” Smith said.

Even Wednesday's frigid temperatures couldn't stop United Steel Workers from standing out in the cold and passing out flyers warning against the dangers of lead. "I think as they read that, I think it will give them a greater awareness of some of the things they're hearing a whole lot about,” one steel worker said.

Thousands of protesters gathered at similar demonstrations at 100 congressional offices across the country as part of National Day of Action on Toxic Trade.

Smith says she visits Congressman Brown's office frequently and says she will follow up with him about Wednesday's protest

The United Steel Workers union is also spear-heading a Get-The-Lead-Out campaign to create awareness about the dangers of lead. If you'd like to find out more information about that campaign or how you can get involved check out the USW website at http://www.usw.org/uswa/program/content/index.php

© 2008 WCSC, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Save a link to this article and return to it at www.savethis.comSave a link to this article and return to it at www.savethis.com  Email a link to this articleEmail a link to this article  Printer-friendly version of this articlePrinter-friendly version of this article  View a list of the most popular articles on our siteView a list of the most popular articles on our site  

 

WALL STREET JOURNAL -- Jan. 15, 2008

PAGE ONE

 

 

 

Toxic Factories Take Toll
On China 's Labor Force

By JANE SPENCER and JULIET YE
January 15, 2008; Page A1

Over the holidays, millions of American children received Chinese-made toys powered by cadmium batteries.

Cadmium batteries are safe to use. They are also cheap, saving American parents about $1.50 on the average toy, compared with pricier batteries.

But cadmium batteries can be hazardous to make. In southern China , Wang Fengping worked for years in plants that produced cadmium batteries for the likes of Mattel Inc., Toys "R" Us Inc. and Wal-Mart Stores Inc. Like hundreds of her colleagues, Ms. Wang regularly inhaled the toxic red cadmium dust that filled the air in the plant.

Now, at 45, Ms. Wang is often too weak to walk. Her kidneys have failed, and her doctors have identified cadmium poisoning as the likely culprit. About 400 other workers at her former employer, Hong Kong-based GP Batteries International Ltd., have been found to harbor unsafe levels of cadmium, a toxic metal like mercury and lead that can cause kidney failure, lung cancer and bone disease.

In recent months, Americans have discovered the dark side of their reliance on cheap Chinese goods. From lead-tainted toys to contaminated pet food, the safety of Chinese products is suddenly an American obsession.

But in China , workers making goods for American consumers have long borne the brunt of a global manufacturing system that puts cost cutting ahead of safety. The search for cheaper production means dirty industries are migrating to countries with few worker protections and lenient regulatory environments.

The nickel-cadmium battery illustrates this trend. Once widely manufactured in the West, the batteries are now largely made in China , where the industry is sickening workers and poisoning the soil and water.

Now, some regulators and companies are taking action. This year, the European Union is banning the sale of nearly all cadmium batteries. A few companies, including Hasbro Inc., are eschewing the battery.

Yet cadmium batteries, a technology dating back to 1899, continue to represent 3% of total battery sales, and are still widely used in toys, power tools, cordless phones and other gadgets sold in the U.S. Besides being inexpensive, they can provide a quick surge of power.

The near-disappearance of the American cadmium-battery industry can be understood from a visit to an overgrown field in Cold Spring , N.Y. Here, the Marathon Battery factory churned out nickel-cadmium batteries for the U.S. military for three decades. After the plant was shuttered in 1979, the cadmium-laden ground became one of the nation's highest-profile superfund sites, sparking a $130 million clean-up and a class-action lawsuit by nearby residents that was settled for millions of dollars in 1998.

POISONED WORDS

 

Edited excerpts from Ms. Wang's blog, written in Chinese and translated by The Wall Street Journal. Click on the image to go to the blog itself.

 From the blog's undated introduction
Hello friends! Do you want to know how Gold Peak Battery treats its cadmium-poisoned employees? Would you like to hear a personal account from a victim of workplace cadmium poisoning? Panasonic Battery and past and present battery factory workers, would you like to know more specific facts? Then please read my blog, and let's unite in concern for cadmium poisoning!

 Nov. 20, 2007 -- Global warming, colder heart
It was hard to get up to eat a bit of breakfast, my head hurt and my whole body felt discomfort, but finally I decided to go outside. Everyone is talking about global warming, temperatures are rising, but today I felt the wind was pretty strong and the temperature colder than yesterday. I felt as if I was sleepwalking through unfamiliar streets. After a while, I gathered my thoughts and returned home.

 Nov. 11, 2007 -- The visible and the invisible
Our society is full of love; if a person gets into trouble, others will help. But when it comes to occupational diseases -- a hidden killer -- that cannot be seen, I'm afraid that it's very difficult for those without personal experience to understand. Most workers have limited knowledge, ultimately you don't know how many hidden killers are in your workplace. The boss knows, but he won't tell you!

 Nov. 11, 2007 -- First application for an occupational illness diagnosis
My name is Wang Fengping. I am an engineer in the engineering department of the Gold Peak Battery Factory in Huizhou city, Guandong province. I was born in May 1962 and began work at Gold Peak on August 1, 1995. From that date until December 2005, I was continuously engaged in the production and follow-up design of manufacturing equipment and machinery. This entry includes an account of all of Ms. Wang's jobs, workplaces, names of co-workers, and whether those employees had symptoms similar to Ms. Wang's.

 Nov, 7, 2007 -- Poem, in Chinese and English
"It is my prayer, it is my longing, that we may pass from this life together / a longing which shall never perish from the earth, / but shall have place in the heart of every wife that loves, / until the end of the time; and it shall be called by my name."

As the U.S. and other Western nations tightened their regulation of cadmium, production of nickel-cadmium batteries moved to less-developed countries, most of it eventually winding up in China . "Everything was transferred to China because no one wanted to deal with the waste from cadmium," says Josef Daniel-Ivad, vice president for research and development at Pure Energy Visions, an Ontario battery company.

Today, only two American companies still make cadmium batteries, and they specialize in high-end batteries for use in equipment such as aircraft engines. U.S. laws require them to follow strict guidelines on worker safety and environmental protection.

In China , government standards on cadmium exposure are in line with those endorsed by the World Health Organization. And without question, there are safe cadmium plants in China .

But having rules and enforcing them are two different things. China has dozens of so-called "hot spots" where the cadmium contamination is similar to levels at U.S. superfund sites. More that 10% of China 's arable land is contaminated with heavy metals such as cadmium, according to the State Environmental Protection Agency, and the metals are entering China 's food supply. At least a dozen academic studies in the past two years have found unsafe levels of cadmium in fruit and vegetables grown in Chinese soil. In a study published last year, researchers at the Guangdong Institute of Ecology found excessive levels of cadmium in Chinese cabbage grown in Foshan. The battery industry isn't the only source of environmental cadmium contamination in China , but it is a major contributor.

Often, these risks extend to workers. Last year, at least 20 workers at a Panasonic Corp. cadmium-battery plant in Wuxi were found to have elevated levels of the toxin, and two were diagnosed as poisoned. In 2005, 1,000 workers at Huanyu Power Source Co., based in Xinxiang , Henan , were also found with cadmium exposure. Both Panasonic and Huanyu say they have taken care of the affected workers, providing health care and compensation exceeding the requirements of Chinese law.

Yet these findings didn't necessarily result from corporate or government vigilance. The Panasonic-plant contamination, for instance, came to light after some workers watched a television show about cadmium poisoning -- and got themselves tested.

Protest about contamination at the GP plants has persisted in part because of the determination of Ms. Wang, a GP engineer, to publicize the matter.

Born into a relatively well-off family, Ms. Wang attended university and obtained an engineering degree before hiring on at a newly opened GP factory in the southern Chinese city of Huizhou , a fast-growing center of China 's electronics industry. The year was 1995, and GP Batteries, a Singapore-listed unit of Hong Kong-listed Gold Peak Industries (Holdings) Ltd. Huizhou, was a prestigious employer, eventually becoming one of the largest makers of nickel-cadmium batteries in China .

As a machine designer, Ms. Wang worked in the management offices of a walled compound of pink-tiled buildings where some 1,500 women in matching blue smocks worked 12-hour days assembling nickel-cadmium battery packs for toys and other products. GP's clients eventually came to include dozens of U.S. companies including Energizer Battery Co., Proctor & Gamble Co.'s Duracell, Spectrum Brands Inc.'s Ray-O-Vac, Hasbro, Mattel, Wal-Mart and Toys "R" Us.

For years, factory workers complained about illnesses -- nausea, hair loss and exhaustion, for instance. But GP management says it wasn't aware of the extent of the cadmium danger. "We knew it was dangerous, but we thought that if it was handled in a reasonable manner you should be OK," says Henry Leung, chief operating officer of GP Batteries. "This is all new for China ."

At the factory, Ms. Wang spent the bulk of her time in an office, quietly sketching machine designs. But between 2002 and 2004, she spent long hours in production areas, inhaling cadmium dust, according to a lawsuit filed by Ms. Wang against the factory.

In 2003, some sick workers paid for their own tests at an occupational-disease hospital and learned they had elevated cadmium levels. The news touched off panic on the factory floor, and workers demanded the company pay for cadmium tests. Hundreds of workers eventually went on strike.

GP says it began paying for cadmium checkups in mid-2004, as soon as the region set up facilities that could handle large volumes of cadmium testing. In the initial tests, 177 workers showed levels of cadmium above China 's safe-exposure limit, and two qualified as poisoned. Dozens were immediately hospitalized.

Cadmium affects people in radically different ways, so many GP workers with elevated levels aren't sick, but may become so in the years ahead.

Roughly 900 workers quit their jobs, and GP offered cadmium-affected workers one-time exit compensation starting at about $500. GP says the average package was $2,100. Many workers say the compensation failed to cover their medical bills.

GP says it has paid out more than $1 million in compensation and medical care for affected workers and has exceeded the legal requirements. "We want to take care of workers," says GP's Mr. Leung, but he says some workers are feigning sickness to obtain money. "They want to be recorded as poisoned, so people will keep giving them compensation," he says.

Ms. Wang watched on the sidelines as the bitter saga unfolded at her factory. During her nine years at the factory, she rarely had contact with rank-and-file workers, and her $540 weekly salary was nearly triple what they earned. While other workers ate in a cafeteria, Ms. Wang sat in a manager's dining room with table cloths and porcelain dishes.

But in October of 2004, when GP first paid for companywide cadmium tests, Ms. Wang's result came back showing cadmium levels above the safe-exposure limit set by the Chinese government. However, to qualify for continuing monitoring, China 's occupational-disease laws require two consecutive positive tests. A second test showed Ms. Wang's cadmium level in the normal range, disqualifying her for assistance.

Three occupational-medicine doctors -- in London , Sweden and the U.S. -- who reviewed Ms. Wang's medical records for The Wall Street Journal say her initial test showed clear indications of kidney damage, a marker of possible cadmium poisoning.

"There's no doubt that in 2004, she had smoking-gun-type indicators of kidney damage, and in a person who works with cadmium, that should not be ignored," says Dr. Arch Carson, an expert in occupational medicine and environmental sciences at the University of Texas School of Public Health.

GP says it relies on medical experts at government-run occupational-disease hospitals in the nearby city of Guangzhou to determine if workers required monitoring.

Having no symptoms, Ms. Wang continued playing badminton and jogging. But in early 2006, she began to feel extremely weak, and suffered headaches. Her skin began to age rapidly, and her eyes became sunken hollows. In November 2006, Ms. Wang was diagnosed at a local hospital with chronic renal failure that doctors said would likely shorten her life.

On Dec. 25, 2006, Ms. Wang approached GP management with news of her diagnosis. She requested that GP send her to the occupational-disease hospital in Guangzhou , which has facilities for treating cadmium exposure.

[Cadmium Caution]A stalemate ensued. The company says it was willing to help, but that Ms. Wang refused to follow local legal procedures. Local laws required that Ms. Wang visit a local hospital first, in order to be referred to the main occupational-disease hospital in Guangzhou . The company says Ms. Wang demanded they send her directly to the Guangzhou hospital, in violation of regulations.

In May, Ms. Wang sued the factory for $400,000 in compensation and medical care. To build her case, Ms. Wang used her access to company computers to download files that showed other workers in her department were exposed to cadmium. GP says there is no evidence that Ms. Wang's illness is related to cadmium, and doctors at the Guangzhou Occupational Disease Hospital say her kidney failure doesn't meet the criteria for occupational disease.

By last summer, Ms. Wang's health was failing. According to medical records from a hospital in Nanjing , she was admitted with a fever and a respiratory infection. Doctors there treated her for chronic renal failure, and listed "long-term exposure to cadmium-containing substances" as a possible cause, according to her medical records.

As workers, including Ms. Wang, sought to bring attention to the issue, a public-relations battle erupted. In 2005, GP filed a lawsuit against labor-rights groups representing the workers, charging libel. The case is moving through Hong Kong courts.

On their way to an interview with a Wall Street Journal reporter in August, Ms. Wang and several colleagues were pulled over by police and detained for nearly 13 hours in a Huizhou police station, according to several sources familiar with the incident. A person present at the Huizhou police station says the workers were told they would be charged with treason if they spoke to the media again. The Huizhou government says its police detained no battery workers.

Ms. Wang stopped answering her cellphone after the incident with the Huizhou police. But she began writing a blog to advise victims of cadmium poisoning. A recent post, in Chinese, said, "Basically, occupational disease could be prevented but it costs money. Money is the gold of bosses. And for them, the lives of workers are worthless."

After revelations of its cadmium-battery problems arose, GP quit making them at its plants, and now outsources that production to independent factories in China .

In America , five years after Hasbro stopped using nickel-cadmium batteries, Mattel and Toys "R" Us are yet to follow suit, but say they are exploring alternatives. Wal-Mart no longer purchases cadmium batteries from GP but declined to comment on whether it still uses them in its products.

Mattel says cadmium batteries have some performance advantages over alternatives, such as a better ability to retain a charge when not used for long periods.