Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
National

Parents Left To Their Own Best Guesses After Canadian Toy Testing Council Closes Doors After 63 Year

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Apr, 2015 09:23 PM
    OTTAWA — A volunteer organization that for decades has given countless parents independent advice on which toys are the best for their children is closing its doors.
     
    The Canadian Toy Testing Council says it will no longer operate, effective the end of June.
     
    For decades, the council has issued an annual Toy Report, ranking playthings and books by age group for their durability, safety and ability to capture a child's imagination.
     
    The CTTC enlisted volunteer families each year to test hundreds of items, from traditional board games to electronic toys.
     
    Under the program, children would take the toys into their homes for six to 12 weeks.
     
    The toys were then rated based on safety, durability, design, function and play value.
     
    Under financial pressure for years, the council's board of directors voted last month to cease operations following an exhaustive, but vain, search for new sponsors.
     
    "Over the past year, as part of our efforts to secure operational funding, we engaged an experienced funding consultant who conducted an exhaustive search of opportunities for funding, partnership and support," the group's board of directors wrote on its website.
     
    "Members of the board and other CTTC supporters also pounded the pavement in search of backing that would enable us to keep our doors open and our program running," the statement said.
     
    "Unfortunately, our efforts were not successful."
     
    The CTTC has been in operation since 1952, counting on donors, corporate sponsors and volunteers to fund its testing programs.
     
    Supporters of the organization were quick to react to the announced closure on the council's Facebook page.
     
    "Very sad news for the Canadian Toy Industry Association and Canadian consumers," wrote Kirsten Anderson-Pochodaj of Coquitlam, B.C.
     
    "Back in the 1990's when the CTTC book hit newsstands with the gold star winners it was such a big deal."
     
    The council said it will hold a sale at its Ottawa headquarters on April 18 to dispose of the toys and books it accumulated over the years.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Britain's Celebrity Chef Jamie Oliver Expands Food Crusade To G20, Cites Diet Problems In Canada

    Britain's Celebrity Chef Jamie Oliver Expands Food Crusade To G20, Cites Diet Problems In Canada
    OTTAWA — Jamie Oliver, Britain's celebrity chef, has thrown down the gauntlet — or maybe it's an oven mitt — to Canadian politicians to join his international campaign for mandatory diet education in rich countries.

    Britain's Celebrity Chef Jamie Oliver Expands Food Crusade To G20, Cites Diet Problems In Canada

    Commons Committee Report Calls For A Better Strategy To Combat ISIL

    Commons Committee Report Calls For A Better Strategy To Combat ISIL
    OTTAWA — As Canada prepares its next forays in the fight against ISIL, the Conservative-dominated foreign affairs committee is calling on the government to develop a strategy that goes beyond the military campaign.

    Commons Committee Report Calls For A Better Strategy To Combat ISIL

    Corporate Profit Margins At 27-year High Amid Falling Loonie, Labour Costs: CIBC

    Corporate Profit Margins At 27-year High Amid Falling Loonie, Labour Costs: CIBC
    TORONTO — CIBC World Markets says corporate profit margins hit a 27-year high in the fourth quarter and are likely to remain strong despite the recent softening in the economy due to the oil price shock.

    Corporate Profit Margins At 27-year High Amid Falling Loonie, Labour Costs: CIBC

    New Brunswick Forecasts $477m Deficit, Hikes Gas Taxes, Cuts Teaching Jobs

    New Brunswick Forecasts $477m Deficit, Hikes Gas Taxes, Cuts Teaching Jobs
    FREDERICTON — New Brunswick's Liberal government has introduced an $8.6-billion budget that increases taxes for the wealthy, bumps up the price of fuel, promises to close some courthouses and cut nearly 250 teaching jobs.

    New Brunswick Forecasts $477m Deficit, Hikes Gas Taxes, Cuts Teaching Jobs

    Bring All Branches Of Government Under Information Law, Watchdog Urges

    Bring All Branches Of Government Under Information Law, Watchdog Urges
    OTTAWA — A federal watchdog says the Access to Information Act should be extended to all branches of government — including the offices that support Parliament and the courts.

    Bring All Branches Of Government Under Information Law, Watchdog Urges

    Tender Call Finally Issued In Decade-long Plan To Replace Military Search Planes

    Tender Call Finally Issued In Decade-long Plan To Replace Military Search Planes
    OTTAWA — The Harper government has issued a long-awaited call for tenders to replace Canada's aging fixed-wing search planes, more than a decade after the project was first proposed.

    Tender Call Finally Issued In Decade-long Plan To Replace Military Search Planes