Many of the packages that have grams as the secondary unit put the grams in 
decimal form instead of rounding to the nearest whole number.  I've seen 14 oz 
of product labeled precisely as 396.9 g instead of 397 g or even upped to 400 
g.  I believe the FPLA rule which requires the use of metric on labels should 
also require sensible use of metric units.  The rules for significant digits 
should apply.  If a package contains consistently over 400 g then it should be 
labeled as 400 g.  


I don't mind seeing English units on packages but I don't like them stated 
twice as it then becomes clutter.  The labeling rules need to be changed to 
require one metric unit and one English unit only if a company decides to use 
both.  If the rules are ever changed to allow metric only, then the number of 
English units becomes moot.  

The rules can also be changed to require sensible metric labeling.  This is not 
the same as forced rounding to whole numbers, like forcing 454 g to become 500 
g, but it would require that there is no 396.9 g unless that degree of 
precision can be proved.

Writing to companies to change their labels won't work if they don't understand 
what you are asking them.  However, you may be able to effect change if you can 
show them that their labels are incorrect per the law should the law ever be 
changed.  Getting the law changed must be the first step.

Jerry




________________________________
From: Pierre Abbat <[email protected]>
To: U.S. Metric Association <[email protected]>
Sent: Friday, March 6, 2009 9:55:38 PM
Subject: [USMA:43392] Re: Contacted an FMI member


On Friday 06 March 2009 18:52:08 Jeremiah MacGregor wrote:
> And I doubt you will.  Whoever would have received the response would not
> understand what you are on about.  They would not have a clue what 454 g or
> 500 g mean.  Now if you told them that the package was marked as containing
> one pound (=16 ounces) and you found it to weigh more then 17 ounces and it
> should be labeled as such then you might have received a response.

I did, but it was after I posted here. It's a boilerplate "We apologize for 
the experience you have had with the Trader Joe's Grape Tomatoes."

> Do you know if Trader Joe exports any of his products?  Is it possible that
> the product is an import?  In markets where 500 g is a standard size, it
> may be marked that way and marked as 1 pound 454 g in the US. 

It's domestic. It's some tiny tomatoes packed in a clamshell package.

> Can you post here what you wrote to them?  Have you ever thought of calling
> them on the phone and then asking someone in person for an answer?  It is
> difficult to ignore someone over the phone without hanging up.  I doubt
> they would do that for fear of ticking off a good customer.

Here it is:
I bought a box of grape tomatoes labeled 454 g and weighed them when I got 
home. The gross is 558 g; a previous empty container is 30 g, so the net is 
528 g. 28 g is 3 to 6 tomatoes. If the net is consistently above 500 grams, 
could you label the packages as such so that we know more accurately how much 
we're getting?

I'm not that good at calling strangers on the phone and trying to explain 
something. I tend to get protocol mismatches. It's easier for me to write an 
email.

Pierre


      

Reply via email to