Well summarized, Paul! 

Given the pivotal role New York State now plays in both completing coverage in 
the USA of the UPLR and providing a springboard for passing the permissive 
metric-only amendment to the FPLA, can you tell us where things stand regarding 
New York amending their state law to allow metric-only labeling per the UPLR? 


thanks! 
Ezra 

----- Original Message -----
From: "Paul Trusten" <[email protected]> 
To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[email protected]> 
Cc: "U.S. Metric Association" <[email protected]> 
Sent: Friday, September 13, 2013 9:23:52 PM 
Subject: [USMA:53247] Re: metric only labeling vs legacy measures labeling 
requirements 


Parker, 


The state-level permissive metric-only labeling regulation is a part of the 
Uniform Packaging and Labeling Regulation (UPLR) as written by the National 
Conference on Weights and Measures. As of now, we are down to only one U.S. 
jurisdiction that has not adopted the UPLR amendment, and that is New York 
State. The UPLR amendment affects only those products whose labeling is not 
regulated by federal law. 


That federal law is the Fair Packaging and Labeling Act (FPLA), which still 
requires that both metric and legacy units be included on the labels it 
regulates. But a unanimous stand on UPLR among the states, DC, and territories 
would make a similar amendment to the FPLA much more arguable if not 
inevitable. 

Paul Trusten, Registered Pharmacist 
Vice President and Public Relations Director 

U.S. Metric Association, Inc. 
Midland, Texas, USA 
+1(432)528-7724 
www.metric.org 
[email protected] 




On Sep 13, 2013, at 17:30, "Parker Willey Jr." < [email protected] > wrote: 






Hi 



I remember reading about the FPLA and that metric only labeling is permitted in 
all but if I remember correctly, 2 states, Alabama and New York. 


On the shelf of stores there is supposed to be a label (sometimes missing) that 
shows the price of the item. If the shelf label which is printed probably 
weekly by some store computer due to price changes, can show the price and any 
missing legacy measures and / or SI metric measures, and the label on the jar 
or package only shows metric sizes, would the shelf label satisfy the 
requirement for legacy measures in Alabama and New York? 


I am just trying to come up with creative ways to get around the regulations to 
advance metric use. 


....Parker Willey Jr. 
San Jose, CA 



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