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Wednesday, May 13, 2020

Hodedah Recalls 26500 Dressers Due to Tip-Over Danger - ConsumerReports.org

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The CPSC declined to comment on the recall and Hodedah did not respond to CR's request for comment. 

The recall involves all Hodedah HI4DR four-drawer dressers, which were sold in beech, mahogany, chocolate, cherry, white, and black colors. They measure about 40 inches tall, weigh about 84 pounds, and were sold online at stores including Wayfair, Walmart, Amazon, and HomeDepot from July 2017 through April 2020.

There are no reported incidents associated with this dresser model, but the risks of tip-overs involving unstable dressers that are not properly anchored to the wall can be severe. One person is injured about every 20 minutes—and one child dies about every two weeks—when a piece of furniture, an appliance, or a television falls on them, according to the CPSC. Each year, thousands of those incidents involve dressers.

If you own one of the recalled dressers, CR advises that you immediately stop using it and place it in an area that children can’t access. Then contact Hodedah—at 855-463-3324, Recalls@Hodedah.com, or through the company’s website—and ask for a full refund.

That's an option CR's Wallace was glad to see as part of the recall and says should be standard.

Hodedah is offering prepaid shipping labels so that customers can remove the dresser’s drawer slides and send them to the manufacturer without having to leave their homes during the coronavirus pandemic. Consumers should then discard the rest of the dresser, if possible.

Alternatively, Hodedah is offering to send consumers free anti-tip anchoring kits to attach the dressers to the wall. But CR does not recommend that solution because it does not ensure that the tip-over hazard is removed from the home. There is no way to guarantee the dresser won’t be moved at a later date and used without a wall anchor.

This recall follows several other dresser recalls announced by the CPSC over the past months, after the agency tested more than 150 dressers and other clothing storage units to see whether they complied with the industry’s voluntary stability standard, with the aim of getting unsafe dressers off the market.

Currently, the U.S. Senate is also considering legislation, which was passed by the House of Representatives, called the Stop Tip-overs of Unstable, Risky Dressers on Youth (STURDY) Act. The bill would require the CPSC to create a mandatory federal rule for dressers that’s tougher than the industry’s current voluntary standard.

To report a dangerous product or product-related injury, go to saferproducts.gov.

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Hodedah Recalls 26500 Dressers Due to Tip-Over Danger - ConsumerReports.org
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