"Just for the record, it's not Civil Servants who make decisions such as this. It's politicians. The role of Civil Servants is the serve the government of the day - and enact their decisions. If you're going to rant, best direct your ranting at the right people."
Sorry, I forgot to address that myth to begin with. Yes, of course ministers sign off decisions but they are advised, briefed and steered by civil servants who on the whole are in possession of a whole lot more knowledge than the minister. They are also in constant touch with industry who have their own interests.
Besides, in this case, the minister actually decided to go ahead with the change. The resulting consultation drew more positive responses than negative. The negatives were from the chemical industry, who were going to lose a lot of money from it, who then worked on the civil servants. If you think I'm ranting, check out the consultation returns - they're online. You'll see that there was not one piece of evidence produced to show the new test wouldn't work. Don't take my word for it, a whole group of anti-chemical lobbyists - including Breast Cancer UK, Cancer Prevention Society, CHEM Trust and Greenpeace wrote to the minister to support this move to reduce flame retardants, backed up by research, scientific evidence, etc. But your civil servants who apparently have no power, made sure she never saw the letter; answered it themselves.
And, as said, the fact BEIS has just re-proposed the new test exactly as it was before is clear evidence, I suggest, that they misled their minister when they told her more work needed doing on it following the consultation. No more work was ever done on it, and that was down to civil servants, not ministers.
In the USA, the very powerful flame retardant industry bought officials; and if you think that can't happen here, all I can say is you're possibly suffering from the British delusion of believing that our chaps just wouldn't do that. And again, all this (the US situation) is checkable on line; you don't have to take my word for it.
While you're telling me I'm ranting, just bear in mind that your sofas will remain stuffed with flame retardants that wear off very easily and get into your blood. Babies and young children are of course particularly vulnerable to these kinds of chemicals, because their systems are still forming up.
Second hand furniture may have lost quite a lot of its FR content, but it still has it. That, and much less resistance to fire, of course.
Yes, it was me who posted about John Lewis sofas. I don't have a thing about JL, only that that have been worse than most in pretending they're not selling unsafe sofas. CHEM Trust wrote to them to ask what they planned to do about it - JL took months to reply then just said they comply with the law. Which may actually not be true anyway but even if it is, they know that in this case the law doesn't work; and they could re-structure their sofas in order to make them safe, within the current law. But they choose not to, presumably because cost would be involved.
I appreciate that my style may not be to your liking. However, it's a shame that the UK public, on this thread at least, seems to want to ignore what is actually a massive health threat.
By the way, you don't need to lick your sofa while breast-feeding, because just the act of sitting on it releases FR-laden dust which you then breathe in, which gets into your blood and, well, you can work out the rest if you're so inclined.
If you want to avoid the worst FRs/dust, then buy leather or a company that uses interliners, such as IKEA (no, I don't work for them).