The phrase "fails the Corded Window Coverings Regulations" reads like a technical compliance note. It is not. The regulations exist because window-covering cords can kill children in a matter of minutes, and Canadian incident data has driven a tightening of design standards. According to Health Canada's window covering safety guidance, only 22 centimetres of cord — or a loop of 44 centimetres — is enough to strangle a child, potentially causing unconsciousness in 15 seconds, brain damage in 4 minutes, and death in 6 minutes. The agency's blunt conclusion is that the safest window coverings are ones without long accessible cords, and it recommends removing window coverings with long accessible cords starting with those in children's rooms and play spaces.
The Corded Window Coverings Regulations translate that risk into hard design limits. A federal factsheet on blind and window-covering safety explains that the regulations came into effect in 2021, that Canada's requirements are among the strictest in the world, and that products with long accessible cords are no longer permitted for sale online or in retail. Health Canada's industry guidance on the regulations adds the precise design thresholds: any reachable cord must be too short to wrap around a one-year-old child's neck — not more than 22 cm — or to form a loop more than 44 cm in perimeter when pulled with a force of up to 35 N. Compliant low-cord and cordless options are available across all window sizes, which is why "replace it with cordless" is now a realistic recommendation rather than a niche one.
Canadian injury-prevention organization Parachute frames the broader picture. The group reports that breathing emergencies such as suffocation, strangulation, and entrapment are a leading cause of injury-related death among Canadian children, with roughly 40 children aged 14 and under dying each year from choking, suffocation, and strangulation and about 800 more hospitalized. Strangulation by items such as ropes or blind cords is identified as a major threat for young children, and the recommended solution is direct: use cordless window coverings — drapes without cords, cordless roller blinds — and modify or discard older corded products. Parachute's safe-sleep guidance specifically advises keeping cribs away from windows and from curtain or blind cords. The nursery layout is part of the safety system.