IQAir Files Complaint With FTC Against Consumer Reports Magazine
Monday September 29, 3:18 pm ET
Watch Dog Agency May Be Doing Consumers More Harm Than Good
SANTA FE SPRINGS, Calif., Sept. 29 /PRNewswire/ -- IQAir North
America announced today that it has filed a complaint with the
Federal Trade Commission (FTC) against Consumer Reports Magazine and
its parent company, Consumer Union, charging that the consumer
watchdog organization actually harms consumers and businesses with
inadequate investigative techniques and a biased selection process
that ignores quality manufacturers in place of mass market
distributors.
IQAir is the top rated room air cleaner according to Test
(Stiftung Warentest), the prestigious German government funded
testing agency, but since IQAir's inception they have been
unable to get their product reviewed by the popular Consumer
Reports organization. This month the October issue of Consumer
Reports Magazine hit the newsstands with a much publicized
article that blasted the Sharper Image's top selling Ionic
Breeze as "poor" in most categories and bestowed top honors on
Friedrich's electrostatic precipitator, a unit known to produce
charged particles and that may produce the lung irritant ozone.
IQAir was again not able to get their home HealthPro series
tested for the article even though many consumer advocacy groups
and specialty retailers consider them the best product in the
category, including Consumer Review, The Allergy Buyers Club,
Air-Purifiers-America.com and many other groups that support
allergy and asthma sufferers. The Hong Kong Hospital Authority
this month tested IQAir as the only room air cleaner effective
enough to be used in the fight against SARS.
Consumer Reports Magazine has often been accused of using
market share to choose its test products. Specialty retailers
who frequently deal with a higher quality of merchandise than
mass retailers have long decried this practice since major
brands like Honeywell, Hunter, and Friedrich are included, but
smaller manufacturers who strive for a higher manufacturing
standard are excluded simply because they don't sell as many
units.
"Consumer Reports does a disservice to consumers," states IQAir
President Frank Hammes. "Three and a half million room air
cleaners were sold in America last year. Over the past two
years, the nation has seen air cleaners move from a pure allergy
and asthma control product to a tool that also helps victims of
terrorist attacks cope with the aftermath of airborne pollution.
They've become an integral part of the nation's homeland defense
strategy. This is not a time for Consumer Reports to use
outdated selection methods. They are keeping the best products
from being tested."
At the heart of IQAir's complaint against Consumer Reports is
not just their selection process, but also how the air purifier
units are being tested. Consumer Reports adopted a testing
procedure developed and promoted by the Association of Home
Appliance Manufacturers (AHAM) for most of their air cleaner
evaluation.
"AHAM is in their own words an advocacy group for
manufacturers, "explains Hammes. "They represent big industry
interest and not that of consumers."
AHAM promotes a marketing program in which they certify the
performance of room air cleaners of their members. According to
insider information, the Consumer Reports tests were carried out
by the same contract test laboratory that carries out all AHAM
certification testing. The Consumer Reports test, like the AHAM
test, is considered flawed by many industry experts, and most
quality air purifier manufacturers do not sign up for AHAM
certification because of the test flaws.
"Consumer Reports uses a biased selection process to choose
which products to test," said Hammes. "Then when it does test
the units it uses the AHAM test procedure which was designed by
big business manufacturers to support the often inferior
products they were trying to sell. The Consumer Reports test
results confuse consumers rather than provide them with clear
and accurate information. Parents with children who suffer from
allergies and asthma will be guided to buy inferior quality room
air cleaners because they put their trust in Consumer Reports."
IQAir North America, Inc. is a member of the Swiss-based IQAir
Group that develops, manufactures and markets innovative air
quality products for indoor environments. IQAir products are
used worldwide by hospitals and other critical environments.
They also manufacture home air cleaning units for allergy and
asthma sufferers and individuals with chemical sensitivities.
IQAir is a registered trademark of the IQAir Group.
For more information please contact: Kirk Sullivan, APR of
IQAir North America, Inc., +1-562-903-7600, ext. 110, or cell,
+1-562-318-4776,
ksullivan@iqair.com
.
Source: IQAir North America, Inc.
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