California Bill to Ban Sale of Animal-Tested Cosmetics Goes to Governor

0
86
(Kira Garmashova/Dreamstime/TNS)

California Bill to Ban Sale of Animal-Tested Cosmetics Goes to Governor

Sunday, September 2, 2018 at 12:53 pm

 

Los Angeles Times/TNS) – A proposal that passed the California Legislature Friday would impose the nation’s strictest laws on animal testing for cosmetics.

The bill would make California the first state to outlaw the sale of cosmetics tested on animals. The ban applies to animal testing of a cosmetic or its ingredients conducted after 2019, but would allow exceptions to comply with Food and Drug Administration or foreign agency requirements.

Subcribe to The Jewish Link Eblast

Legislators had amended the bill to narrow the ban’s scope, focusing on animal testing conducted by the cosmetic manufacturer or suppliers. The earlier version, which met significant opposition, applied even when the group conducting the animal testing was unrelated to the cosmetics company. That version would have prevented companies from using ingredients where animal tests were required for non-cosmetic reasons, including testing to ensure that a chemical does not cause cancer.

“The supply-chain focus has helped to remove the majority of significant opposition,” said the bill’s author, Democratic state Sen. Cathleen Galgiani.

Lawmakers also removed a provision that would have put a 2023 expiration date on the foreign regulations exemption.

Central to the debate was China, where imported cosmetics are tested on animals. Opponents of the bill said it would prompt companies to move manufacturing to China, eliminating American jobs.

The bill’s new language would keep the foreign regulations exemption in place indefinitely, as long as the manufacturer does not use animal testing evidence to guarantee the product’s safety in California. After the changes were made, the Personal Care Products Council, which opposed the previous version, expressed its support.

Other backers included animal rights groups, celebrities and more than 6,500 Californians who wrote to legislators praising the bill. Several dozen cosmetics companies who supported the bill said that their alternative testing methods were cheaper and faster than traditional animal testing.

“We don’t have to test on animals to make sure my mascara stays on all day,” Democratic Assemblywoman Lorena Gonzalez Fletcher said.

 

Source: Hamodia

 

 

 

 

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here