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Recalled equipment: what Alaska requires

Alaska does not require a recall check

We read Alaska’s licensing rules in full. They contain no requirement for licensed providers to monitor or document product recalls. We are telling you this even though it means you have less reason to pay us, because a page that invents a rule to sell a subscription is worth nothing to you and would deserve nothing from you.

What the rules do say

We read 7 AAC 57 AND 7 AAC 10 in full: “recall” and “CPSC” return zero hits in both. A structural trap — 7 AAC 57.610 is only a POINTER, and the operative equipment and hazard rules live in a different chapter entirely, so an analyst reading 7 AAC 57 alone would miss them. Alaska reaches CPSC standards only indirectly, by adopting the federal crib rules by reference.

Recalled children’s gear is still dangerous, and a recalled crib in your care is still a liability whether or not a form asks about it. The free screening below works regardless.

7 AAC 57 (Child Care Facilities Licensing); operative equipment rules at 7 AAC 10.1035

This page summarises publicly available licensing rules. It is not legal advice, and rules change. Always verify against your state’s current licensing authority.