CPSC, McDonald's Corp. Announce Agreement for Firm to Pay $4 Million Damage Settlement
NEWS from CPSC
U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission
Office of Information and Public Affairs
Washington, DC 20207
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 29, 1999
Release # 99-130
CPSC Consumer Hotline: (800) 638-2772
CPSC Media Contact: Ken Giles, (301) 504-7052
CPSC, McDonald's Corp. Announce Agreement for Firm to Pay $4 Million Damage Settlement
WASHINGTON, D.C. - The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) and
McDonald's Corp. today announced that the restaurant chain has agreed to pay the
government $4 million in damages for failing to inform CPSC of playground
injuries at some of its restaurants. The settlement resolves a dispute arising
from enforcement of a 1995 Playground Equipment Reporting Agreement between
McDonald's and the government. The cooperative agreement announced today also
establishes important new playground facility reporting and safety guidelines.
The injuries involve the "Big Mac Climber," a metal platform resembling a
hamburger, that is no longer in any McDonald's playgrounds. According to CPSC,
from the 1970s through the 1980s, more than 400 children were injured on Big Mac
Climbers, mostly in falls, including nearly 20 who suffered concussions or skull
fractures and 80 who suffered broken bones. Injuries declined significantly in
the 1990s as McDonald's began removing the climbers. All the climbers have now
been removed and scrapped.
According to the CPSC, today's settlement marks the second time that
McDonald's has failed to report dangerous playground equipment to CPSC. The
first violation involved numerous injuries, including broken bones, suffered by
children who played on "Tug-N-Turn" merry-go-round rides, another old piece of
equipment that no longer exists at McDonald's. In 1995, McDonald's settled that
case by agreeing to develop, execute and finance a $5 million children's safety
campaign with CPSC. Additionally, McDonald's agreed to report other dangerous
playground equipment to CPSC, and pay up to $5 million if it failed to do so.
The new agreement resolves the issues based on McDonald's failure to
inform CPSC about risks associated with the Big Mac Climber. In an effort to
resolve the dispute amicably, to clarify McDonald's reporting duties so that
similar disputes do not arise in the future, and to avoid the cost of taking the
dispute to court, McDonald's has agreed to the $4 million settlement announced
today.
McDonald's maintains that it has fully complied with the letter and spirit
of the reporting requirements of the 1995 Agreement.
"McDonald's is pleased to settle old issues about equipment that is no
longer in our system. We've resolved our dispute over the Big Mac Climber and
we're moving on cooperatively," said Joe Beckwith, McDonald's Corporation Senior
Vice President and Corporate Safety Officer. "We regard this settlement as an
investment in safety because it establishes important new safety guidelines. We
want to add that this resolution has nothing to do with the safety of our
current play facilities, nor with making them safe -- they already are."
CPSC Chairman Ann Brown stated, "Companies that make commitments to CPSC,
as McDonald's did in 1995, must keep them. Because McDonald's received a second
chance in 1995, we were particularly disturbed that it failed to adhere to the
agreement by not telling CPSC about another unsafe piece of playground
equipment. The terms of this settlement show that CPSC takes playground safety
very seriously and that we will not tolerate the failure of any company to
report dangerous products to us. This issue has now been resolved and I'm
pleased that McDonald's is working with us to keep kids safer."
David W. Ogden, Acting Assistant Attorney General of the Civil Division,
commented, "I commend the CPSC and McDonald's for resolving their differences
without additional litigation. The Playground Equipment Reporting Agreement
negotiated in 1995 between McDonald's, the CPSC and the Justice Department, and
supplemented today, established an excellent framework for protecting children
who play at McDonald's playgrounds."