Youth Poisoning Protection Act
Summary
The Youth Poisoning Protection Act would classify consumer products with a concentration of sodium nitrite at 10% or greater as banned hazardous products. This restriction is designed to protect children from accidental poisoning through consumer goods. The bill includes exceptions for specified drugs, medical devices, cosmetics, and food products, meaning these categories would not be subject to the ban even if they contain sodium nitrite at the specified concentration levels.
The bill has passed committee review by the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation and is now eligible for a floor vote in the Senate. If enacted, this legislation would require manufacturers and retailers to remove or reformulate affected consumer products to comply with the new safety standard. The practical impact would be that certain household or retail products containing high concentrations of sodium nitrite would no longer be legally available for sale to consumers.
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