Several weeks ago I ( a Marine Safety Consultant ) noticed products being sold in Super Value Athlone as " Life Jackets ". When I explained to the store manager and also alerted their suppliers Musgraves in Cork by phone that these were not in fact Life Jackets they were removed from sale nation wide.
Sad to say that these items are again for sale in Super Value in Athlone and are being sold and labeled as "Life Jackets".
I presume that they are again being sold nationwide by other Super Value shops.
They are not life jackets. They are buoyancy aids.
The buoyancy aids themselves bear no CE or any other marking at all, but do carry a cardboard tag quoting CE PPE compliance Directive 89/686/EEC.
See http://www.dti.gov.uk/innovation/strd/ecdirect/page12571.html
Life jackets are designed to save lives. Buoyancy aids assist competent swimmers to swim. A child who does not know how to swim may drown if they fall into a pool or from a boat while only wearing a buoyancy aid.
Life jackets and buoyancy aids have completely different construction.
I feel that the sale of these products as “Life Jackets poses a significant risk to children who’s parents may unwittingly trust the product as a life saving device.
I am heading abroad to work for the next two weeks but wanted to publiscise this before I go. I have also alerted the Irish water Safety Association. I have also posted on my own forums
Very disappointed with Super Value and their Cork based suppliers, Musgraves, who I alerted about this a few weeks ago.
Kind regards,
Stuart
Sad to say that these items are again for sale in Super Value in Athlone and are being sold and labeled as "Life Jackets".
I presume that they are again being sold nationwide by other Super Value shops.
They are not life jackets. They are buoyancy aids.
The buoyancy aids themselves bear no CE or any other marking at all, but do carry a cardboard tag quoting CE PPE compliance Directive 89/686/EEC.
See http://www.dti.gov.uk/innovation/strd/ecdirect/page12571.html
Life jackets are designed to save lives. Buoyancy aids assist competent swimmers to swim. A child who does not know how to swim may drown if they fall into a pool or from a boat while only wearing a buoyancy aid.
Life jackets and buoyancy aids have completely different construction.
I feel that the sale of these products as “Life Jackets poses a significant risk to children who’s parents may unwittingly trust the product as a life saving device.
I am heading abroad to work for the next two weeks but wanted to publiscise this before I go. I have also alerted the Irish water Safety Association. I have also posted on my own forums
Very disappointed with Super Value and their Cork based suppliers, Musgraves, who I alerted about this a few weeks ago.
Kind regards,
Stuart