WARNING: OEHHA amends California Proposition 65 requirements for "clear and reasonable warnings": next steps
14 September 2016, by George Gigounas, Nelson Lam
14 September 2016, by George Gigounas, Nelson Lam
The California Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment (OEHHA) has introduced the final amendments to the "clear and reasonable warnings" Â required by Proposition 65. This unique California law, in relevant part, purports to protect Californians from "exposure" without "warning" to a list of over 900 chemicals that the state has identified as causing cancer and/or reproductive harm. Proposition 65 does not prohibit the use of any particular chemical, but rather requires a warning before exposure.
Following the amendments, businesses that sell products in California will have to revamp their Proposition 65 warnings and provide more detail to consumers than before. For instance, warnings must specifically identify at least one toxic chemical, hyperlink to OEHHA's new website, and use specific language that differs between consumer products, food, alcohol, and many other categories. These far-reaching changes have been in the works since 2014, undergoing minor revisions throughout (see prior client alerts here and here detailing the changes).
Although the new warning requirements will not take effect until August 30, 2018, businesses would be smart to update their labelling and packaging sooner rather than later.
Looking ahead, companies that do business in California should assess the impact of the new regulations and develop an implementation strategy. Slapping on a general Proposition 65 warning will no longer cut it. Instead, products must undergo detailed testing and analysis and be labelled with tailor-made warnings.
In addition, companies should keep detailed, verifiable, and readily accessible records on dates of manufacture of products containing the old warning language to ward off any unmerited Proposition 65 Notices.
Proposition 65 is already a beacon for litigation; these changes will most likely generate even more lawsuits. Don't get caught out of compliance.
For more information please contact either of the authors.
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