Sentences with phrase «government labelling laws»

Not exact matches

A law - abiding taxpayer can not, therefore, be labelled a tax cheat a few years later, when a new government wants to change the law.
«There is enough grey in grey marketing law and the lack of federal government enforcement of labelling and packaging laws to prevent the characterization of the defendants» conduct as sufficiently egregious to attract further condemnation from the court,» Myers wrote.
The closest counterpart is the Competition Bureau, an independent law - enforcement agency that applies the government's Competition Act on behalf of consumers to everything from bogus telemarketing prize schemes to corporate mergers to the regulation of clothing labels.
The Australian government has amended Australia's new Country of Origin Labelling laws just months after they came into operation.
HR 1599 protects the consumer from a costly and confusing 50 state patchwork of labeling laws by ensuring that the federal government retains its authority at the top of America's food safety pyramid.
In the absence of clear imported food labelling requirements in Australia, Australian Organic Ltd has lobbied for truth in labelling for years, including a submission to the Council of Australian Governments» (COAG) review of food labelling law and policy, headed by Dr Neal Blewett, in 2009.
In May 2016, ACO changed the requirements for the use of the «Australian Certified Organic» logo based on the Federal Government's announced changes to Country of Origin labelling laws, which commenced operation on 1 July 2016.
In line with the Australian Governments food labelling law changes, ACO implemented the «ACO» logo which is to be used on all products which are imported or contain imported ingredients.
In India, Nestlé has had formula seized for breaking labelling laws and its attempts to sponsor health workers have been described as illegal by government authorities under the terms of the Infant Milk Substitutes Act.
Just as pet food makers are governed by both federal and state laws and regulations, the labels that go on these products are also regulated by these government entities.
During the decades of the 1960s through the 1990s, the internationalists muted their calls for world government, preferring fuzzier labels, such as «international law,» «the rule of law,» and «interdependence» to avoid generating the popular alarm that a transparent attempt to subject U.S. citizens to UN rule would engender.
We are not talking in the Lola case or in family law generally of nationalizing the means of production, or having the government prescribe the details of family relationships — which would not necessarily be «socialist», it would just be interventionist, possibly heavy - handed — that's a debate we can have without misleading labels that are probably not as emotionally potent among Slaw readers as they are among the rabble that can be roused by their use (and we're not aiming at an emotional debate here, are we?)
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