Additives Bill Ready - C&EN Global Enterprise (ACS Publications)

Nov 6, 2010 - THE HOUSE has a promising food additives bill ready for floor action. If passed, H.R. 13254 will be a feather in the cap of the 85th Con...
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atomic energy laws. A snag could appear in t h e Senate, w h e r e some opposition has been voiced. T h e Bureau of the Budget, too, opposes the bill. • Renegotiation. T h e Renegotiation Act of 1 9 5 1 , aimed a t guaranteeing minimum costs in defense buying, expires Dec. 3 1 , 1958. Industry opposes extension, saying it is n o longer necessary. T h e White House wants it renewed. So far, only t h e House Ways and Means Committee has held hearings.

Additives Bill Ready Solid support behind latest f o o d a d d i t i v e s bill could run it through Congress this session X iiK H O U S E has a promising food additives bill ready for floor action. If passed, H.R. 13254 will be a feather in t h e c a p of the 85th Congress. After 10 years of congressional mulling over additives, t h e House Commerce Committee finally approved H.R. 13254 unanimously. A t the same time, the Manufacturing Chemists' Association shifted policies, urged Congress to pass it (C&EN, Aug. 4, page 17 ). This surprise move consolidated support for the bill. I t brought together the Food and D r u g Administration, Congress, and the chemical industry—all working for passage of H.R. 13254. Its backers now hope for a time break to get the bill through House a n d Senate before Congress adjourns. Rep. John Bell Williams (D.-Miss.) and his Health a n d Science Subcommittee drafted the latest additives law, proposed in H.R. 13254. Sen. Lister Hill (D.-Ala.) introduced an identical bill in t h e Senate. T h e bills set food additives rules under a licensing concept: • Makers of additives must petition F D A for advance rulings on how additives may b e used. • Petitioners must prove an additive safe for h u m a n consumption in its proposed use. • Safety requires proof, through pretesting, that n o harm will result from a proposed use. It does not require "proof beyond d o u b t " that no harm will result from use of the additive under any condition. Written out of the new bill: Need to show functional value of additives

and routine review of adverse decisions by a scientific panel prior to an industry appeal. Industry objected to these provisions in an earlier bill (C&EN, A.pril 28, page 3 8 ) . • MCA Changes Stance. Before MCA switched its position to support H.R. 13254, it had recommended that FDA act through t h e courts agixinst any additives producer whose product was not fully pretested for safety. Now, Gen. John E . Hull, MCA president, says the revised law would protect the public under a system the chemical industry can accept. Gen. Hull told R e p . Oren Harris, head of the House Commerce Committee, that the ehernical industry fitvors immediate action on II.R. 13254. He emphasizes: • It is in t h e public interest to clear u p existing regulations as · soon as possible.

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Postscripts

• MCA hits o u t at a bill to require allowance of functional discounts hy manufacturers. Chemicals producer-sellers usually make several products, use discounts for one product, and single price systems for others. H . R . 10304 would eliminate this choice, says MCA, force price discrimination upon the manufacturer. It's paradoxical and unsound, says M C A , to îcq/une price discrimination under the Robinson-Patinan Act, a law designed to prevent this. • Changes i n minerals

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