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California's new law is not as harsh as some in other states, such as Pennsylvania's milk labeling law, which requires the "sell by" date to be no more than 17 days after the product is pasteurized.
The state Senate and Assembly recently passed a law that will make expiration dates clearer for products sold in California. California’s new law is set to take effect in July 2026.
California will ban sell-by dates on food packaging as of July 2026. Terms like "best if used by" or "use by" may be used instead. The goal of this bill is to address the fact that confusing food ...
The legislature of California declared that "proliferation and use" of .50 BMG rifles posed a terrorist threat, as well as a threat to the "health, safety, and security of all residents" of California. [1] The act required existing .50 BMG rifles to be registered with the state and prohibited the sale of any rifle after the ban went into effect.
In late September, California Gov. Gavin Newsom signed legislation banning the use of “sell-by” dates in the state, instead requiring standardized language for date labels.
After that date, the only way to ban specific non-AR/AK semiautomatic firearms as 'assault weapons' by make/model listing is via creation & passage of new legislation. [No such new legislation has been created; the SB23 (as amended) features ban is the primary method of restricting 'assault weapons' in California.]
Governor Gavin Newsom signed legislation in hopes to combat food waste.
According to The National Resource Defense Council, the 'sell by' dates do not indicate whether foods are safe to eat — it simply predicts how long an item should be kept in stock.