There are various government agencies involved in setting rules and 
regulations.  I believe that the USDA has jurisdiction over meat.
Stan Doore

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Carleton MacDonald 
  To: U.S. Metric Association 
  Sent: Thursday, May 10, 2007 9:17 PM
  Subject: [USMA:38650] RE: EU metric plus-labelling


  What about things like meat, which seems to be outside the law, and allows 
only colonial units?  Example - The prepackaged sausage at Costco.  (Not the 
sausage in the butcher department, but in the deli, made by an outside company.)

   

  I also saw some Carr crackers last week at Costco, from England, with the 
royal warrant, even - and in lbs/oz only - no SI at all.  The box was probably 
illegal.

   

  Carleton

   


------------------------------------------------------------------------------

  From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Bill Hooper
  Sent: Thursday, May 10, 2007 10:38
  To: U.S. Metric Association
  Subject: [USMA:38643] RE: EU metric plus-labelling

   

   

  On 2007 May 10 , at 8:40 AM, Mike Millet wrote:

    ... if the EU allows dual labels, does this mean that the companies could 
use a metric content description (500g weight etc) but continue to use 
Farenheit and the calorie on cooking instructions etc? 

   

  No, it's my understanding that dual labeling means that every measure must be 
in both SI as well as the old, non-SI units. So the labeling on the product you 
refer to (above) would need to report the temperature in Celsius as well as 
Fahrenheit and the energy content in kilojoules as well as calories, in 
addition to the mass in grams along with ounces.

   

  I'm not sure if they could report some things in SI-only while reporting 
other things in dual (SI and non-SI). If the law would say you can do either, 
does it require an all or nothing package design, where everything must be in 
dual or everything must be in SI only, or can they mix? It is clear they cannot 
use non-SI only for any part of the packaging (if the law allows only dual or 
metric only labeling).

   

   

  Regards,

  Bill Hooper

  Fernandina Beach, Florida, USA

   

  ==========================

  Make It Simple; Make It Metric!

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