•  Summary 
  •  
  •  Actions 
  •  
  •  Committee Votes 
  •  
  •  Floor Votes 
  •  
  •  Memo 
  •  
  •  Text 
  •  
  •  LFIN 
  •  
  •  Chamber Video/Transcript 

A06969 Summary:

BILL NOA06969B
 
SAME ASSAME AS S04265-B
 
SPONSORGlick
 
COSPNSRLunsford, Rosenthal L, Colton, Steck, O'Donnell, Simone, Dickens, Gunther, Shimsky, Simon, Ramos, Taylor, Lee, Kelles, Dinowitz, Durso, Gandolfo, Novakhov, Thiele, Stern, Jacobson, Rozic, Rajkumar, McMahon, Anderson, Kim, Barrett, Santabarbara, Epstein, Clark, Ra, Forrest, Bichotte Hermelyn, Carroll, Paulin, Mamdani, Seawright, Shrestha, Lavine, Burgos, Slater, Cunningham, Eachus, Sayegh, Gallagher, Otis, Levenberg, Brown K, Reyes, Woerner, Hunter, Solages, Benedetto, Pretlow, Fahy, Meeks, Bronson, McDonald, Pheffer Amato, Manktelow, Jensen, Gallahan, Burdick, Ardila, Raga, Lupardo, Gonzalez-Rojas, Weprin, Simpson, Sillitti, Jean-Pierre, Bores, Bendett, DeStefano, McGowan, Hevesi, Flood, Blumencranz, Tapia
 
MLTSPNSR
 
Add Art 37 Title 12 §§37-1201 - 37-1207, amd §71-3703, En Con L
 
Enacts the "beauty justice act"; provides for the regulation of ingredients in personal care products and cosmetics; prohibits the sale of personal care products and cosmetic products containing certain restricted products.
Go to top

A06969 Text:



 
                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________
 
                                         6969--B
 
                               2023-2024 Regular Sessions
 
                   IN ASSEMBLY
 
                                       May 9, 2023
                                       ___________
 
        Introduced  by  M.  of  A. GLICK, LUNSFORD, L. ROSENTHAL, COLTON, STECK,
          O'DONNELL, SIMONE, DICKENS, GUNTHER, SHIMSKY,  SIMON,  RAMOS,  TAYLOR,
          LEE,  KELLES,  DINOWITZ,  DURSO,  GANDOLFO,  NOVAKHOV,  THIELE, STERN,
          JACOBSON, ROZIC, RAJKUMAR, McMAHON, ANDERSON, KIM, BARRETT,  SANTABAR-
          BARA, EPSTEIN, CLARK, RA, FORREST, BICHOTTE HERMELYN, CARROLL, PAULIN,
          MAMDANI,  SEAWRIGHT,  SHRESTHA,  LAVINE,  BURGOS,  SLATER, CUNNINGHAM,
          EACHUS, SAYEGH, GALLAGHER, OTIS, LEVENBERG, K. BROWN, REYES,  WOERNER,
          HUNTER,  SOLAGES,  BENEDETTO, PRETLOW, FAHY, MEEKS, BRONSON, McDONALD,
          PHEFFER AMATO, MANKTELOW, JENSEN,  GALLAHAN,  BURDICK,  ARDILA,  RAGA,
          LUPARDO,   GONZALEZ-ROJAS,  WEPRIN,  SIMPSON,  SILLITTI,  JEAN-PIERRE,
          BORES, BENDETT, DeSTEFANO, MCGOWAN, HEVESI -- read once  and  referred
          to  the  Committee  on  Environmental  Conservation  --  reported  and
          referred to the Committee on Codes -- reported  and  referred  to  the
          Committee  on  Ways  and Means -- recommitted to the Committee on Ways
          and Means in accordance with Assembly Rule  3,  sec.  2  --  committee
          discharged, bill amended, ordered reprinted as amended and recommitted
          to  said  committee  -- again reported from said committee with amend-
          ments, ordered reprinted as amended and recommitted to said committee
 
        AN ACT to amend the environmental conservation law, in relation  to  the
          regulation of ingredients in personal care products and cosmetics
 
          The  People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem-
        bly, do enact as follows:
 
     1    Section 1. Short title. This act shall be known and may  be  cited  as
     2  the "beauty justice act".
     3    § 2. Legislative findings and intent.  Thousands of chemicals are used
     4  in  cosmetics  and  personal  care products. Some of these chemicals are
     5  associated with asthma, allergies, hormone disruption,  neurodevelopmen-
     6  tal  problems,  infertility,  even cancer. Exposure to personal care and
     7  cosmetic products typically begins in infancy,  with  products  such  as
     8  baby  shampoo,  lotion, and diaper cream, and continues throughout their
     9  lifespan.  According to the Environmental Working  Group,  "on  average,
 
         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD07027-13-4

        A. 6969--B                          2
 
     1  women  use  12  personal care products a day, exposing themselves to 168
     2  chemical ingredients. Men use six,  exposing  themselves  to  85  unique
     3  chemicals."
     4    Further,  The  National Institutes of Health (NIH) conducted an eight-
     5  year study of over  46,000  women  who  used  permanent  hair  dyes  and
     6  straighteners.  They  found  that women of color who regularly used dyes
     7  and straighteners had a 45 percent  higher  breast  cancer  risk.  White
     8  women faced a 7 percent higher breast cancer risk.
     9    European  Union  countries  prohibit  (with few exceptions) substances
    10  classified as carcinogenic, mutagenic,  or  toxic  for  reproduction  in
    11  cosmetic  products. The Canadian government regularly updates a Cosmetic
    12  Ingredient Hotlist that includes hundreds of chemicals and  contaminants
    13  prohibited  and restricted from cosmetics, such as formaldehyde, triclo-
    14  san, and more. Furthermore, over 40 countries including Japan, Cambodia,
    15  and Vietnam, have stricter restrictions on chemicals  in  personal  care
    16  products than does the United States.
    17    Moreover,   regarding   the   safety  of using personal care products,
    18  the federal Modernization of Cosmetics Regulation Act  of  2022  is  the
    19  first  federal  law to significantly update the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic
    20  Act. However, the Act fails to meaningfully restrict the use of  harmful
    21  chemicals  in  personal  care/cosmetic  products,  and explicitly grants
    22  states the ability to enact such restrictions. For example, it failed to
    23  ban coal tar, a well known carcinogen.
    24    Therefore, the   legislature   finds   and   declares   that   federal
    25  restrictions of harmful chemicals in personal care and cosmetic products
    26  are  inadequate  to educate and protect consumers and salon workers, and
    27  that  it  shall  be the policy of the state to restrict  chemicals  that
    28  may  harm  the health of New Yorkers during production, use, or disposal
    29  of personal care products and cosmetic products.
    30    § 3. Article 37 of the environmental conservation law  is  amended  by
    31  adding a new title 12 to read as follows:
    32                                  TITLE XII
    33                             BEAUTY JUSTICE ACT
    34  Section 37-1201. Definitions.
    35          37-1203. Sales prohibition.
    36          37-1205. Identification of safer alternatives.
    37          37-1207. Regulations.
    38  § 37-1201. Definitions.
    39    As used in this title, unless the context requires otherwise:
    40    1.  "Cosmetic  product"  shall  mean  a cosmetic product as defined in
    41  section 37-0117 of this article.
    42    2. "Intentionally added ingredient" shall mean any element or compound
    43  that a manufacturer has intentionally added to a personal care  product,
    44  and  which has a functional or technical effect in the finished product,
    45  including, but not limited to, the  components  of  intentionally  added
    46  fragrance,  flavoring  and  colorants,  and  the  intentional  breakdown
    47  products of an added element or compound that also has a  functional  or
    48  technical effect on the finished product.
    49    3.  "Nonfunctional byproduct" shall mean any element or compound which
    50  has no functional or technical effect in the finished product which:
    51    (a) was intentionally added during the  manufacturing  process  for  a
    52  personal care product or cosmetic product at any point in a product's, a
    53  raw material's or ingredient's supply chain; or
    54    (b)  was  created  or  formed  during  the manufacturing process as an
    55  intentional or unintentional consequence of the manufacturing process at

        A. 6969--B                          3
 
     1  any point in a product's, a raw material's, or  an  ingredient's  supply
     2  chain.
     3    Nonfunctional  byproduct  shall  include,  but  is  not limited to, an
     4  unreacted raw material, a breakdown product of  an  intentionally  added
     5  ingredient, or a byproduct of the manufacturing process.
     6    4.  "Nonfunctional  contaminant"  shall  mean  any element or compound
     7  present in a personal care product as an  unintentional  consequence  of
     8  manufacturing  which  has  no  functional  or  technical  effect  in the
     9  finished product. Nonfunctional contaminants include, but are not limit-
    10  ed to, elements or compounds present in the environment as  contaminants
    11  which    were  introduced  into  a product, a raw material, or a product
    12  ingredient as a result of the use of an environmental medium, such as  a
    13  naturally  occurring  mineral,  air, soil or water, in the manufacturing
    14  process at any point in a product's, a raw material's,  or  an  ingredi-
    15  ent's supply chain.
    16    5.  "Manufacturer"  shall mean any person, firm, association, partner-
    17  ship,  limited    liability  company,  or  corporation  which  produces,
    18  prepares,  formulates,  or compounds a   personal care product, or whose
    19  brand name is affixed to such product. In the case of  a  personal  care
    20  product  imported  into the United States, "manufacturer" shall mean the
    21  importer or first domestic distributor of the product if the entity that
    22  manufactures the product or whose brand  name is affixed to the  product
    23  does not have a presence in the United States.
    24    6.  "Personal  care  product"  shall  mean  a personal care product as
    25  defined in section 37-0117 of this article.
    26    7. "Restricted substance" shall mean the following:
    27    (a) the following  heavy  metals  and  any  compounds  containing  the
    28  following   heavy  metals:     arsenic  (CAS  7440-38-2),  cadmium  (CAS
    29  7440-43-9), cadmium  compounds,  chromium  (CAS  7440-47-3),  lead  (CAS
    30  7439-92-1),  lead  compounds,  nickel  (CAS 7440-02-0) and selenium (CAS
    31  7782-49-2);
    32    (b) butyl- (CAS 94-26-8), ethyl- (CAS 120-47-8), isobutyl- (CAS  4247-
    33  02-3),  isopropyl-  (CAS  4191-73-5),  methyl- (CAS 99-76-3), and propyl
    34  paraben (CAS 94-13-3);
    35    (c) ortho-phthalates and their esters;
    36    (d) per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances,  as  defined  in  subdivision
    37  seven  of  section  37-0101  of  this article, detected by total organic
    38  fluorine analysis;
    39    (e) formaldehyde (CAS 50-00-0) and  formaldehyde  releasers  such  as:
    40  paraformaldehyde   (CAS  30525-89-4),  quaternium-15  (CAS  51229-78-8),
    41  diazolidinyl urea (CAS  78491-02-8),  dmdm  hydantoin  (CAS  6440-58-0),
    42  methylene  glycol  (CAS 463-57-0), imidazolidinyl urea (CAS 39236-46-9),
    43  and sodium hydroxymethylglycinate (CAS 70161-44-3), provided that in the
    44  case of any formaldehyde releaser, treatment as a  restricted  substance
    45  shall be subject to subdivision three of section 37-1203 of this title;
    46    (f) benzophenone (CAS 119-61-9), benzophenone-1 (CAS 131-56-6), benzo-
    47  phenone-2     (CAS    131-55-5),    benzophenone-3    (CAS    131-57-7),
    48  2,4-dihydroxybenzophenone (CAS 131-56-6), and resbenzophenone;
    49    (g) benzene (CAS 71-43-2), carbon black (CAS 1333-86-4), coal tar (CAS
    50  8007-45-2),  ethylene  oxide  (CAS  75-21-8),  toluene  (CAS  108-88-3),
    51  naphthalene  (CAS  91-20-3),  nickel (metallic) (CAS 7440-02-0), styrene
    52  (CAS 100-42-5), and xylene (CAS 1330-20-7);
    53    (h) asbestos (CAS 1332-21-4) and talc (CAS 14807-96-6);
    54    (i)  butylated  hydroxytoluene  (bht)  (CAS  128-37-0)  and  butylated
    55  hydroxyanisole (bha) (CAS 121-00-6);
    56    (j) cyclotetrasiloxane (CAS 556-67-2);

        A. 6969--B                          4

     1    (k)  m-phenylenediamine  (CAS  108-45-2)  and  o-phenylenediamine (CAS
     2  95-54-5);
     3    (l) triclosan (CAS 3380-34-5), triclocarban (CAS 101-20-2), and nonyl-
     4  phenol (CAS 68412-54-4); and
     5    (m) diethanolamine (CAS 111-42-2) and triethanolamine (CAS 102-71-6).
     6  § 37-1203. Sales prohibition.
     7    1. Effective January first, two thousand twenty-eight, no person shall
     8  sell or offer for sale in this state a personal care product or cosmetic
     9  product  containing  a  restricted  substance  as an intentionally added
    10  ingredient in any amount.
    11    2. In addition to the provisions of subdivision one of  this  section,
    12  two years after the department's adoption of the regulations required by
    13  section  37-1207  of  this  title,  such  product  shall  not  contain a
    14  restricted substance present as a nonfunctional  byproduct  or  nonfunc-
    15  tional  contaminant  in a cosmetic product or personal care product or a
    16  component thereof at or above a level that the department  shall  estab-
    17  lish  in  regulation  that  is  the  lowest  level  that can feasibly be
    18  achieved; provided, however, that the department shall review such level
    19  every five years to determine whether it should be lowered.
    20    3.  (a)  The  department's  determinations  regarding  chemicals  that
    21  release  formaldehyde, pursuant to paragraph (e) of subdivision seven of
    22  section 37-1201 of this title,  shall  be  adopted  by  regulation.  The
    23  department  shall identify a list of chemicals used in cosmetic products
    24  and personal care products that release formaldehyde that may be  deemed
    25  restricted substances and subject to  the sales restrictions of subdivi-
    26  sions  one  and  two  of  this  section.  In establishing such list, the
    27  department should consider: (i) estimated prevalence of use; (ii) poten-
    28  tial to reduce disproportionate exposure; and  (iii)  other  information
    29  deemed relevant by the department.
    30    (b)  The  department may identify for restriction an initial set of no
    31  more than ten of the listed chemicals used in personal care products and
    32  cosmetic products that release formaldehyde.  Any initial classification
    33  as restricted substances shall take effect one year  after  the  depart-
    34  ment's  adoption  of  regulations  required  by  this subdivision and be
    35  subject to the sales restrictions of subdivisions one and  two  of  this
    36  section.
    37    (c)  Classification  as  restricted substances on the remaining listed
    38  chemicals used in personal care  products  and  cosmetic  products  that
    39  release  formaldehyde  may  take effect two years after the department's
    40  adoption of regulations  required  by  this  subdivision  and  shall  be
    41  subject  to  the  sales restrictions of subdivisions one and two of this
    42  section.
    43    (d) The department may conduct  additional  rulemaking  activities  to
    44  develop  supplemental  lists  of chemicals that release formaldehyde and
    45  adopt additional restrictions necessary to protect the health and safety
    46  of product users.
    47    4. (a) No person that sells or offers for sale any personal care prod-
    48  uct or cosmetic product shall be held in violation of  this  section  if
    49  they can show that they relied in good faith on the written assurance of
    50  the  manufacturer  that  such  personal care product or cosmetic product
    51  meets the requirements of this title. Such written assurance shall  take
    52  the  form  of a certificate of compliance stating that the personal care
    53  product or cosmetic product is in compliance with  the  requirements  of
    54  this  title. The certificate of compliance shall be signed by an author-
    55  ized official of the manufacturer.

        A. 6969--B                          5
 
     1    (b) In addition to any other  applicable  penalties,  it  shall  be  a
     2  violation  of  this  section  to  provide a certificate of compliance as
     3  contemplated by this subdivision when the applicable personal care prod-
     4  uct or cosmetic product does not satisfy the limitations on the presence
     5  of restricted substances set forth in this title.
     6  § 37-1205. Identification of safer alternatives.
     7    By  January  first,  two  thousand  twenty-seven,  the  department, in
     8  consultation with the department of health, shall make use  of  existing
     9  information  to identify and assess the hazards of chemicals or chemical
    10  classes that can provide the same or similar function in  personal  care
    11  products  and  cosmetic  products  as  the chemicals or chemical classes
    12  listed in section 37-1201 of this title and that can  impact  vulnerable
    13  populations.    In  doing  so  they  may consult with the New York state
    14  pollution prevention institute and the  interstate  chemicals  clearing-
    15  house.  The department shall make such information publicly available.
    16  § 37-1207. Regulations.
    17    Within  one year of the effective date of this section, the department
    18  shall adopt rules and regulations necessary for  the  implementation  of
    19  this  title.    When adopting such rules and regulations, the department
    20  shall consider:
    21    (a) relevant research;
    22    (b) laws and policies in other states; and
    23    (c) whether the presence of a restricted substance as a  nonfunctional
    24  byproduct  or  nonfunctional  contaminant   has   been banned in another
    25  state or within the United States because of the health effects of  such
    26  substance.
    27    §  4. Section 71-3703 of the environmental conservation law is amended
    28  by adding a new subdivision 8 to read as follows:
    29    8. Any person who violates any of the provisions of, or who  fails  to
    30  perform  any  duty  imposed  by,  section 37-1203 of this chapter or any
    31  rule  or regulation promulgated  pursuant thereto, shall be liable for a
    32  civil penalty not to exceed one thousand dollars for each  day    during
    33  which  such   violation continues,   and   in   addition   thereto, such
    34  person may be enjoined from continuing such violation. Such person shall
    35  for a second violation  be liable   to the people of  the  state  for  a
    36  civil  penalty  not to exceed two thousand five hundred dollars for each
    37  day during which  such  violation continues.
    38    § 5. Severability. If any provision of this act, or any application of
    39  any provision of this act, is held to be invalid, or to  violate  or  be
    40  inconsistent  with  any federal law or regulation, that shall not affect
    41  the validity or effectiveness of any other provision of this act, or  of
    42  any  other  application of any provision of this act, which can be given
    43  effect without that provision or  application;  and  to  that  end,  the
    44  provisions and applications of this act are severable.
    45    §  6. This act shall take effect one year after it shall have become a
    46  law. Effective immediately, the addition, amendment and/or repeal of any
    47  rule or regulation necessary for the implementation of this act  on  its
    48  effective date are authorized to be made and completed on or before such
    49  effective date.
Go to top