Posts Tagged ‘Shoppers’


S.C. Defective Products Lawyer at Joye Law Firm Encourages Holiday Shoppers to Check Safety of Toys and Other Gifts

Friday, January 4th, 2013


North Charleston, S.C. (PRWEB) December 20, 2012

With the Christmas season in full swing, Charleston defective products lawyer Mark Joye today urged consumers to make sure the toys they buy children during the holiday season are safe.

?Too many dangerous toys and other products are making their way into our children?s playrooms and homes, posing a threat to people of all ages,? said Joye, a partner with the Joye Law Firm, a personal injury firm with offices in Charleston and Myrtle Beach. ?It?s important for shoppers to be vigilant about the safety of the toys and other gifts they purchase this time of year. These dangerous toys should never reach store shelves in the first place.?

A number of organizations are working to keep children safe from dangerous and defective products, and Joye said that he endorses their efforts.

Prevent Blindness America has declared December ?Safe Toys and Gifts Awareness Month.? The group has provided a list of tips to help shoppers choose safe gifts for children. Meanwhile, the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) has teamed with the U.S. Customs and Border Protection to prevent imports of unsafe toys, having already seized more than 2 million dangerous toys and other children?s products this year.

?Joye Law Firm commends these organizations for their work to keep dangerous toys out of the country and away from children,? Joye said. ?It?s good for parents to have resources like these to make sure safety remains a priority in the hustle and bustle of the holiday season.?

The U.S. CPSC estimated that 251,700 toy-related injuries sent people to hospital emergency rooms across the country in 2011. Nearly three quarters of those injuries were to those under the age of 15.

The Prevent Blindness America campaign provides gift-giving tips to all those planning to purchase a gift for a child this year. Tips include inspecting toys before buying, avoiding toys with small magnets for younger children and inspecting toys for sturdiness.

?Our firm supports all efforts to draw attention to keeping children out of harm?s way,? Joye said. ?The tips from Prevent Blindness America offer concrete, useful guidelines for anyone buying products and toys for children.?

The partnership between the U.S. CPSC and U.S. Customs has CPSC investigators and Customs inspectors working together at ports across the country to keep families safe. In the last four years, the two organizations have stopped more than 8.5 million units of about 2,400 different toys and children’s products from entering the country due to safety hazards or the failure to meet federal safety standards. The CPSC also recalled 38 toys in fiscal year 2012, three of which involved a lead violation, according to an announcement the organizations issued.

?It?s important to make sure no dangerous toys are sold in South Carolina or anywhere in the United States,? Joye said. ?Our firm praises these and all efforts that stop these products from reaching consumers.?

Unfortunately, some dangerous toys do make it into stores and into children?s toy boxes. Joye encouraged people who believe their child has been harmed by a defective or dangerous product to seek help from a qualified South Carolina products liability lawyer like those at Joye Law Firm.

?An experienced defective products lawyer can evaluate your case and investigate the product that caused harm and help you get the compensation you deserve,? he said.

About Joye Law Firm

Since 1968, Joye Law Firm has been fighting to help people throughout South Carolina with their legal challenges in a broad range of practice areas, including personal injury, car accidents, birth injury, brain injury, defective products, drug injury, motorcycle accidents, nursing home abuse, Social Security disability, spinal cord injury, traffic tickets, truck accidents, workers? compensation and wrongful death. The South Carolina law firm has offices in Charleston and Myrtle Beach and assists clients in areas that include Florence, Richland County, Orangeburg, Columbia, North Charleston, Mount Pleasant, Summerville and the Horry County communities of Conway and North Myrtle Beach. The firm?s Charleston-area office is located at Northgate Office Building, 5861 Rivers Avenue, North Charleston, SC 29406 (local phone (843) 554-3100), and its Myrtle Beach office is located at 8703 Highway 17 Bypass, Unit H, Myrtle Beach, SC 29575 (local phone (843) 215-3100). Contact Joye Law Firm by calling (888) 324-3100 or by filling out its online form.







New Partnership To Support Youth Education in Africa Encourages Holiday Shoppers to Buy a T-shirt that will Help Build A School

Saturday, December 10th, 2011


Toronto, Ontario (PRWEB) December 08, 2011

In an innovative new collaboration, Roots Canada and two leading Toronto-based organizations are raising funds to provide education for youth in Africa. On Thursday, December 8, Roots Canada will begin selling specially designed T-shirts to support the official launch of the ?This Shirt Built a School in Africa? initiative. In a three-way partnership involving Roots, the Michael ?Pinball? Clemons Foundation (MPCF) and the Academy of Lions, the project focuses on raising funds to support the building of schools in Sierra Leone and Kenya, providing marginalized youth with much-needed educational opportunities.

Dubbing the day of the launch as ?Build A School Day,? the aim is to sell at least 500 shirts on the first day, the proceeds of which represent the amount needed to build one school. To help achieve this goal, Toronto Argonauts Vice-Chair and MPCF Co-Founder Michael ?Pinball? Clemons has enlisted the involvement of media and sports organizations and plans to have various prominent figures wear This Shirt in public in support of the cause.

?The commitment to build schools in Africa is only possible through the bounty of great, caring, compassionate Canadians,? says ?Pinball.? ?We hope many people will wear ?This Shirt? because it can help change lives forever in such a positive way. We owe special thanks to community builder and visionary of ?This Shirt? The Academy of Lions and to our friend and champion, the incomparable Bob McCown of Fan 590 Radio, for using his platform to ultimately give birth to This Shirt.?

Supporters are asked to direct all social media activities toward the project by changing their Facebook profile pictures to the image of This Shirt, and using the #ThisShirtBuildASchool hashtag on Twitter.

To track the initiative?s progress, ThisShirt.com will be updated regularly to provide information on where schools are being built, and how many have been constructed to date.

Retailing at $ 29.95 each, the 100% cotton T-shirts are designed by The Academy of Lions and made in Canada. They will be available in both men and women?s styles, and are offered in black with the project name printed in large white lettering. The shirts can be purchased online at roots.com with free shipping across Canada and the United States and at select Roots locations in Toronto, Vancouver and Ottawa. All net proceeds will be donated to the MPCF.

The MPCF has committed to building 131 schools in seven countries in Africa through Free The Children?s Adopt A Village program for which it has raised two-thirds of the funding. Proceeds from ?This Shirt Built A School in Africa? will go toward creating schools specifically in Sierra Leone and Kenya.

About MPCF

The mission of the Michael ?Pinball? Clemons Foundation is to inspire hope through philanthropy and to empower the disengaged while being a conduit for accountability. The MPCF aims to develop academic excellence, infuse depth of character, promote health and vitality, and inspire generosity in our youth.

The MPCF believes that character is the foundation of good citizenship, education is the catalyst of success and progress, and health is the foundation of vitality.

About The Academy of Lions

As a collective of organizations and projects, The Academy of Lions builds functional communities locally and beyond. Located in downtown Toronto, the academy provides a diversity of services such as athletics, health, fitness and nutrition. The non-profit division, called the Academy of Lions Foundation, offers health, lifestyle and entrepreneurial skills to urban, at-risk and homeless youth. Ultimately, the Academy of Lions aims to “help youth help themselves to help others.”

About Roots

Established in Toronto in 1973, Roots has evolved into an internationally celebrated lifestyle brand known for its quality leather goods, athletic apparel, accessories and home furnishings. From a small store selling a single product (Roots negative-heel shoe), Roots now has 125 stores in Canada and the United States and more than 45 stores in Asia. A privately held company, Roots has state-of-the-art manufacturing and design facilities in Toronto.

For more information, please contact:

Jennifer Branco

Executive Director

Michael ‘Pinball’ Clemons Foundation

Tel: 416-735-4040

jennifer(at)mpcf(dot)ca

http://www.mpcf.ca

Dhani Oaks

Director

Academy of Lions/The Shirt Project

Tel: 416-557-2997

dhani(at)academyoflions(dot)com

http://www.academyoflions/thisshirt

Robert Sarner

Director of Communication and Public Affairs

Roots Canada

Tel: 416.781.3574, ext. 4280

rsarner(at)roots(dot)com

http://www.roots.com

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