John,

Thanks for the summary of the laws or regulations on Pricing or Unit Pricing 
(if any) from all the States as of 2009.

With focus on the ten jurisdictions mandating Unit Pricing, I am preparing to 
sent the following letter:

"Dear _____, Director of Legal Metrology in the State of _____, I am a member 
of a NIST Working Group which is developing a 'Best Practice Guide for Unit 
Pricing.'

Please send me ([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>) the URL 
where I can read the actual current legislation which mandates Unit Pricing in 
your State.

My personal objective is to see that the Unit Pricing Guide conforms with the 
three federal public laws which declare the SI to be the preferred system of 
units of measurement for trade and commerce in the United States."

Eugene.

On Apr 23, 2014, at 1:56 PM, John M. Steele 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

Eugene,
This NIST reference is a little dated but gives a summary by State.  MOST 
States that list unit pricing detail require Customary.
http://www.nist.gov/pml/wmd/metric/upload/US-Pricing-Laws-All-States_2.pdf

Exceptions:
*New York is mostly written around Customary but has a metric afterthought 
similar to Maryland
*Colorado allows metric or Customary
*Montana adopts in its entirety H130 UUPR (which would permit metric or 
Customary)

There is no evidence of metric being the preferred system of measure for 
commerce at the state regulation level.  It would be interesting to know if any 
grocer in the States of Colorado, Maryland, or Montana actually uses metric 
unit pricing.

>From a USMA perspective, we need to recognize that Federal acceptance of 
>metric in the UUPR simply does NOT generally carry over to state law and this 
>is a "50 States = 50 Ways" issue.  Out of "50 Ways" a few isolated laws 
>permitting metric exist.  Many States have no law at all so I guess metric 
>wouldn't be illegal there.  However, I doubt it is used.

________________________________
From: "mechtly, eugene a" <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
To: U.S. Metric Association <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Cc: U.S. Metric Association <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>; 
Kenneth Butcher <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>; 
"[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>" 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Sent: Wednesday, April 23, 2014 12:55 PM
Subject: [USMA:53750] Re: What do they Mandate?

John,

I already have a hard (printed) copy of HB 130 and know the voluntary users of 
the UUPR.

However, I do not yet know the wording of the ten mandatory laws or regulations 
*requiring* Unit Pricing.

The actual wording of those ten laws or regulations are the focus of my search!

Can you help?  I know that you have great skill in searching the Internet.

Eugene.

On Apr 23, 2014, at 10:21 AM, John M. Steele 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

Eugene,

May I suggest an alternate approach?  Many States also allow/encourage it on a 
voluntary basis.  In any State in which it is commonly used, it would be nice 
to know if the standard is that of the UUPR (Uniform Unit Pricing Regulation) 
contained in Handbook 130, or the State has established exceptions either  
tighter or looser than H130.  Cutting and Pasting applicable sections of UUPR 
from 2014 H130:
Section 2. Terms for Unit Pricing
The declaration of the unit price of a particular commodity in all package 
sizes offered for sale in a retail establishment shall be uniformly and 
consistently expressed in terms of:
(a) Price per kilogram or 100 g, or price per pound or ounce, if the net 
quantity of contents of the commodity is in terms of weight.
(b) Price per liter or 100 mL, or price per dry quart or dry pint, if the net 
quantity of contents of the commodity is in terms of dry measure or volume.
(c) Price per liter or 100 mL, or price per gallon, quart, pint, or fluid 
ounce, if the net quantity of contents of the commodity is in terms of liquid 
volume.
(d) Price per individual unit or multiple units if the net quantity of contents 
of the commodity is in terms of count.
(e) Price per square meter, square decimeter, or square centimeter, or price 
per square yard, square foot, or square inch, if the net quantity of contents 
of the commodity is in terms of area.

Section 4. Pricing
(a) The unit price shall be to the nearest cent when a dollar or more.
(b) If the unit price is under a dollar, it shall be listed:
(1) to the tenth of a cent; or
(2) to the whole cent.
The retail establishment shall have the option of using (b)(1) or (b)(2), but 
shall not implement both
methods.
The retail establishment shall accurately and consistently use the same method 
of rounding up or down to compute the price to the whole cent.
Section 6. Uniformity
(a) If different brands or package sizes of the same consumer commodity are 
expressed in more than one unit of measure (e.g., soft drinks are offered for 
sale in 2 L bottles and 12 fl oz cans), the retail establishment shall unit 
price the items consistently.
(b) When metric units appear on the consumer commodity in addition to other 
units of measure, the retail establishment may include both units of measure on 
any stamps, tags, labels, signs, or lists.
On Wednesday, April 23, 2014 10:33 AM, "mechtly, eugene a" 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Unit Pricing is mandated in nine States (+DC).

If "Unit Price" is defined as Dollars (or cents) per unit of measurement, in 
retail marketplaces,

what are the units of measurement prescribed, or limited to, or allowed, if 
any, in each of these ten jurisdictions, respectively?

Answers to that question requires the searching of various laws and regulations.

Who is willing to help search any of these ten jurisdictions?

Eugene Mechtly







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