Government
May 8, 2017
California's next act on chemical product disclosure
Senate Bill 258, the Cleaning Product Right to Know Act of 2017, would require that chemicals used in everyday cleaning products be disclosed to California consumers and employees.





Joshua A. Bloom
Principal
Meyers Nave Riback Silver & Wilson PLC
environmental law
555 12th St Ste 1500
Oakland , CA 94607
Phone: (800) 464-3559
Fax: (510) 444-1108
Email: jbloom@meyersnave.com
University of San Francisco School of Law
Joshua is in the firm's Land Use and Environmental Law Practice Groups. With more than 25 years of experience, he specializes in all areas of state and federal environmental and natural resources law, including complex environmental litigation, brownfields, environmental aspects of transactional matters, and compliance counseling, representing both public and private clients.
Senate Bill 258, the Cleaning Product Right to Know Act of 2017, would require that chemicals used in everyday cleaning products be disclosed to California consumers and employees. As SB 258 wends its way through the legislature, California continues to secure its traditional role of being at the forefront of the regulation and disclosure of chemicals in consumer products. California already regulates chemicals in various consumer products, such as lead in jewelry, chemicals in cosmetics a...
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