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4. Coffee blend of Hawaii-grown coffees with coffee not grown in Hawaii: The identity statement shall consist of the per cent coffee by weight of one of the Hawaii-grown coffees in the blend, followed by the geographic origin of that Hawaii-grown coffee, and the term “coffee blend” as follows:
Example: 20% OAHU COFFEE BLEND
NY Times today reports the following:
"The Food and Drug Administration on Wednesday released 17 warning letters to food manufacturers, making good on a vow to crack down on misleading labels on food packages....“The F.D.A. is not merely firing a shot across the bow; it is declaring war on misleading food labeling,” said Bruce A. Silverglade, director of legal affairs of the Center for Science in the Public Interest, an advocacy group that had pushed for stricter rules...
...The warning letters followed commitments last fall by the F.D.A. commissioner, Margaret A. Hamburg, who has made a priority of improving information for consumers on food packages...
...The F.D.A. said that the labels of some Nestlé Juicy Juice products implied they were primarily made of a single juice, like orange or tangerine, rather than a flavored blend of juices."
So the Feds seem to be on target, while the State of Hawaii is not.
NY Times today reports the following:
"The Food and Drug Administration on Wednesday released 17 warning letters to food manufacturers, making good on a vow to crack down on misleading labels on food packages....“The F.D.A. is not merely firing a shot across the bow; it is declaring war on misleading food labeling,” said Bruce A. Silverglade, director of legal affairs of the Center for Science in the Public Interest, an advocacy group that had pushed for stricter rules...
...The warning letters followed commitments last fall by the F.D.A. commissioner, Margaret A. Hamburg, who has made a priority of improving information for consumers on food packages...
...The F.D.A. said that the labels of some Nestlé Juicy Juice products implied they were primarily made of a single juice, like orange or tangerine, rather than a flavored blend of juices."
So the Feds seem to be on target, while the State of Hawaii is not.
BS, the State of Hawaii is very on target with the FDA labeling. I'll quote the pertinant Hawaiian law again:
4. Coffee blend of Hawaii-grown coffees with coffee not grown in Hawaii: The identity statement shall consist of the per cent coffee by weight of one of the Hawaii-grown coffees in the blend, followed by the geographic origin of that Hawaii-grown coffee, and the term “coffee blend” as follows:
Example: 20% OAHU COFFEE BLEND
Joachim Oster said:NY Times today reports the following:
"The Food and Drug Administration on Wednesday released 17 warning letters to food manufacturers, making good on a vow to crack down on misleading labels on food packages....“The F.D.A. is not merely firing a shot across the bow; it is declaring war on misleading food labeling,” said Bruce A. Silverglade, director of legal affairs of the Center for Science in the Public Interest, an advocacy group that had pushed for stricter rules...
...The warning letters followed commitments last fall by the F.D.A. commissioner, Margaret A. Hamburg, who has made a priority of improving information for consumers on food packages...
...The F.D.A. said that the labels of some Nestlé Juicy Juice products implied they were primarily made of a single juice, like orange or tangerine, rather than a flavored blend of juices."
So the Feds seem to be on target, while the State of Hawaii is not.
Using the word "illegal" implies government intervention. I strongly oppose this. Products should find their price and quality niche in an open market. This benefits everyone. When the demand for high quality coffee is high, such as it is today, it has a positive affect on price for the growers. Grower organizations in Hawaii have the right to establish standards which I think is a good thing. To say that Kona should be treated differently than African, South American or any other area's coffees is ridiculous. Frankly I have never understood the big deal about Kona coffee compared to Ethiopian, Kenyan and South American. I wouldn't buy it for myself. Just my take.
Mike, it's not the first time that a state law doesn't comply with federal law. Case with e.g. 20% Oahu Coffee Blend: The customer has no way of finding out what 80% else is in the bag. Coffee maybe? Maybe not? That's consumers deception, plain and simple. And that's what the FDA is now going after. The difference that the blend lobby in the state got away with it, is because the FDA didn't do anything on that scale since 1990 (around the time when the HAwaii coffee blend laws were imperfectly installed). It is not of importance for educated consumers or business insiders like you and me - its about naive, uninformed consumer protection.
miKe mcKoffee aka Mike McGinness said:
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