IKEA RECALLS 27 MILLION DRAWERS – RESPONSIBLE FOR TWO DEATHS

Having worked at IKEA for 14 years, I know everything there is to know about their inner workings. This recall is the result of gross negligence on the part of IKEA. I was there in the early 1990’s when the first death in the U.S. occurred. A young child opened the bottom drawers of an IKEA chest and it fell on him. He suffocated to death. My boss Mike McDonald, the CFO, met with the parents and negotiated the large payout to the family. This was over 20 years ago. From that moment forward the company vowed to include a wall anchoring kit with every bookcase and drawer unit. It was a nylon strap with screws and washers so you could attach one end to the furniture and one end into a stud in the wall.

I bought many pieces of IKEA furniture over the years. I had small children. I anchored all of my bookcases and storage units to the wall with these anchors. There is nothing new about this. Why didn’t the Malm dresser already have these wall anchors included? There is no excuse, considering it has been a standard for 20 years. If they were not included in order to save money or cut corners, then the blood of these children are on the hands of IKEA executives in the U.S. and Sweden. IKEA will try to spin this tragedy, but it sounds like corporate irresponsibility to me.

Ikea recalls 27 million chests, dressers after two deaths

Jayne O’Donnell, USA TODAY

Ikea is recalling about 27 million chests and dressers because they can tip over and crush children if they aren’t anchored to the wall, the retailer and the Consumer Product Safety Commission announced Wednesday.

Two children died after Ikea’s Malm chests fell on them in 2014. Ikea says it knows of reports of three additional deaths since 1989 from tip-overs involving other models of Ikea chests and dressers.

While Ikea’s new repair program is considered a recall, consumers aren’t supposed to return the furniture. Instead, they should order or pick up a new free wall anchoring kit for the affected chests and dressers. Consumers should move unanchored chests and dressers into storage or other areas where they cannot be accessed by children until the chests and dressers are properly anchored.

Patty Lobell, Ikea’s U.S. commercial manager, said in a statement that the company is “deeply saddened” by the deaths and hopes “our efforts prevent further tragedies.”

Furniture and TV tip-overs have been a top concern at CPSC for several years. A child dies every two weeks and one is injured every 24 minutes in the U.S. from furniture or TVs tipping over, according to CPSC data.

In an interview Wednesday, CPSC Chairman Elliot Kaye called on the entire industry to make more stable furniture — and for Ikea to lead the way considering their “big market share.”

“Today is a positive step, and I commend Ikea for taking that step,” Kaye said. “But they need to do more and to make more stable furniture and they need to help lead industry.”

Ikea is known for its low-priced, low-frills furniture. In Sweden, where it is based, Kaye says the company meets Europe’s more stringent voluntary safety standard, which states furniture units need to be anchored to walls.

CPSC did work with the U.S. standard-setting body in 2014 to update the furniture stability standard, but Kaye says it’s still “much fuzzier” than Europe’s.

It isn’t realistic to expect consumers with small children to anchor all large chests, in part because many can’t do it because they live in rental units or there are other issues with their walls, Kaye says. And “plenty of parents don’t know about the issue,” making it far more important for industry to make what could be very inexpensive design changes, he says.

Ikea spokeswoman Mona Liss said they company will “continue to collaborate with the CPSC to find solutions for more stable furniture.”

“We don’t know yet what those solutions will be, but we are committed to working in collaboration to try to find better solutions,” she said.

In February 2014, a 2-year-old boy from West Chester, Pa., died after a Malm six-drawer chest tipped over and fatally pinned him against his bed. A nearly 2-year-old child from Snohomish, Wash., died in June of last year after he became trapped beneath a three-drawer Malm chest that tipped. Neither chest was secured to the wall.

Ikea and CPSC also have 14 reports of tip-over incidents involving Malm chests that led to four injuries. Since 1989, Ikea is aware of three other reports of deaths from tip-overs involving other Ikea chests and dressers.

The American Home Furnishings Alliance, which represents more than 200 large furniture manufacturers and importers, has been active in efforts to improve safety measures to reduce the number of furniture tip-over accidents, says spokeswoman Jackie Hirschhaut.

“The AHFA, through the work of its members, is engaged in exploring improved product safety methods through innovations in materials and technology,” she says.

About 7 million Malm chests and 20 million other Ikea chests and dressers are part of this nationwide repair program.

The Malm chests were sold starting in 2002 and ranged from about $80 to $200.

To receive a free wall-anchoring kit, consumers can visit an Ikea store, register at www.IKEA-USA.com/saferhomestogether, or call toll-free at 888-966-4532.

Ikea’s Lobell said the retailer “is committed to helping raise the awareness of this serious home safety issue and to continue to provide consumers with the tools and knowledge they need to prevent these accidents.”

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11 Comments
Stucky
Stucky
July 23, 2015 11:03 am

Intentionally Killing Every American (IKEA) —– Sweden’s plan to fuck us over.

Wyoming Mike
Wyoming Mike
July 23, 2015 11:05 am

I’m sure this has nothing to do with pushing out most of their top employees in the name of diversity.

bb
bb
July 23, 2015 12:19 pm

You still refuse to see who behind at this ….diversity , multiculturalism and mass immigration.

Google Jewish elites and their quotes about immigration. I ‘ll sum it up for you Wyoming Mike.
Use mass immigration as a weapon to turn Europeans into minorities in their own countries in order to prevent any ethnically based challenge to Jewish power. Google it for yourself.

daddysteve
daddysteve
July 23, 2015 2:41 pm

I congratulate the other 26,999.998 parents who managed to avoid the fate of death by furniture.

Montefrío
Montefrío
July 23, 2015 2:51 pm

Beeb: “Mene, Mene, Tekel, Upharsin”, or if you prefer, “Mene, Mene, Tekel, Peres”.

And you’re reading! You might want to read Kevin MacDonald’s “Culture of Critique”: well researched, well written.

bb
bb
July 23, 2015 4:03 pm

Mongolia , I have seen that article. I will read it when I get some more time.On the road right now so little pressed for time.

backwardsevolution
backwardsevolution
July 23, 2015 4:56 pm

Yes, brackets should be included with these bookcases and dressers. It’s something I watched very closely when my children were small. I was I think in about Grade 4 when a classmate’s brother died from this very thing. It was so sad. The whole neighbourhood mourned the loss of this child. The sadness etched this danger into my mind.

People, if dressers and bookcases don’t come with brackets, get out your drill, screws, nails, hammer, a small piece of metal, rope (anything is better than nothing) and attach those suckers to the wall. They are very dangerous to children. It is just common sense. Think!

Westcoaster
Westcoaster
July 23, 2015 9:00 pm

This tragedy isn’t peculiar to IKEA, there are LOTS of other crushing/suffocating dangers to small children, including other dressers, TV’s on stands, artwork, plant stands….list is endless. I wish to hell there were more parenting classes for new parents, ’cause some just don’t get kidproofing the kid’s environment.

Stucky
Stucky
July 23, 2015 9:13 pm

Westcoaster

Fear-mongering. If I read your post before having kids, I might never have had them.

The only thing we “child-proofed” was storage and medicine cabinets. I’m surprised my two sons lived through my horrendous parenting.

Zarathustra
Zarathustra
July 23, 2015 9:42 pm

I’ve never heard of a chest of drawers falling over. Okay maybe if the top drawer was filled with rocks.
Fucking IKEA piece of shit is probably made from cardboard.