California 2019-2020 Regular Session

California Senate Bill SB647 Compare Versions

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1-Senate Bill No. 647 CHAPTER 379 An act to amend Sections 25214.1, 25214.3.1, 25214.4, and 25214.4.1 of, and to amend, repeal, and add Section 25214.2 of, the Health and Safety Code, relating to hazardous substances. [ Approved by Governor September 27, 2019. Filed with Secretary of State September 27, 2019. ] LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 647, Mitchell. Hazardous substances: metal-containing jewelry.The hazardous waste control laws require the Department of Toxic Substances Control to regulate the handling and management of hazardous waste and hazardous materials. A violation of the hazardous waste control laws is a crime.Existing law, as part of the hazardous waste control laws, prohibits a person from manufacturing, shipping, selling, or offering for sale or promotional purposes jewelry, as defined, for retail sale in the state, unless the jewelry is made entirely from specified materials that do not exceed specified lead and cadmium content limits. Existing law provides that, for jewelry that is not childrens jewelry or body piercing jewelry, the content limits for electroplated metal, unplated metal, plastic or rubber, and dye or surface coating are 6%, 1.5%, 0.02%, and 0.06% of lead by weight, respectively. Existing law imposes separate content requirements for childrens jewelry, as provided. Existing law defines children for purposes of these provisions to mean children 6 years of age and younger. Existing law requires a manufacturer or supplier of jewelry that is sold, offered for sale, or offered for promotional purposes to prepare a certification that attests that the jewelry does not contain a level of lead or cadmium in excess of the provided limits. Existing law provides test methods and procedures for testing jewelry for purposes of these provisions.This bill would revise and recast the provisions relating to the materials authorized to be used to make jewelry and childrens jewelry, but with certain provisions not to become operative until June 1, 2020. The bill would, on and after June 1, 2020, reduce the lead content limits for electroplated metal, unplated metal, and a dye or surface coating to 0.05% of lead by weight, and would reduce the lead content limit for plastic or rubber to 0.02% of lead by weight. The bill would reduce the lead content limit for childrens jewelry to 0.009% of lead by weight for surface coatings and 0.01% of lead by weight for all other components, and would reduce the cadmium limit for surface coatings on childrens jewelry to 0.0075% of soluble cadmium by weight, as provided. The bill would revise the definition of children to mean persons under 15 years of age. The bill would require the manufacturer or supplier certification to include additional detail about the jewelry covered by the certification, including, among other things, the date or dates on which, and the location or locations where, the jewelry was tested for purposes of certification. Because a violation of these additional certification requirements would be a crime, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program. The bill would also authorize the use of additional specified test methods to determine compliance with the standards for lead in childrens jewelry.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. It is the intent of the Legislature that this act protect the public health, safety, and welfare of Californians by preventing lead and cadmium exposure from jewelry that is sold in the state.SEC. 2. Section 25214.1 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:25214.1. For purposes of this article, the following definitions shall apply:(a) Body piercing jewelry means any part of jewelry that is manufactured or sold for placement in a new piercing or a mucous membrane, but does not include any part of that jewelry that is not placed within a new piercing or a mucous membrane.(b) Children means persons under 15 years of age.(c) Childrens jewelry means jewelry that is made for, marketed for use by, or marketed to, children. For purposes of this article, childrens jewelry includes, but is not limited to, jewelry that meets any of the following conditions:(1) Represented in its packaging, display, or advertising, as appropriate for use by children.(2) Sold in conjunction with, attached to, or packaged together with other products that are packaged, displayed, or advertised as appropriate for use by children.(3) Sized for children and not intended for use by adults.(4) Sold in any of the following:(A) A vending machine.(B) Retail store, catalog, or online internet website, in which a person exclusively offers for sale products that are packaged, displayed, or advertised as appropriate for use by children.(C) A discrete portion of a retail store, catalog, or online internet website, in which a person offers for sale products that are packaged, displayed, or advertised as appropriate for use by children.(d) Component means any part of jewelry.(e) Inaccessible means not physically exposed by reason of a sealed covering or casing and does not become physically exposed through reasonably foreseeable use and abuse of the product, including swallowing, mouthing, breaking, or other childrens activities, and the aging of the product. For purposes of this article, paint, coatings, or electroplating do not render substrate material inaccessible to a child.(f) Jewelry means any of the following:(1) Any of the following ornaments worn by a person:(A) An anklet.(B) Arm cuff.(C) Bracelet.(D) Brooch.(E) Chain.(F) Crown.(G) Cuff link.(H) Hair accessory.(I) Earring.(J) Necklace.(K) Pin.(L) Ring.(M) Tie clip.(N) Body piercing jewelry.(O) Jewelry placed in the mouth for display or ornament.(2) Any bead, chain, link, pendant, or other component of an ornament specified in paragraph (1).(3) A charm, bead, chain, link, pendant, or other attachment to shoes or clothing that can be removed and may be used as a component of an ornament specified in paragraph (1).(4) A watch in which a timepiece is a component of an ornament specified in paragraph (1), excluding the timepiece itself if the timepiece can be removed from the ornament.(g) (1) Surface coating means a fluid, semifluid, or other material, with or without a suspension of finely divided coloring matter, that changes to a solid film when a thin layer is applied to a metal, wood, stone, paper, leather, cloth, plastic, or other surface.(2) Surface coating does not include a printing ink or a material that actually becomes a part of the substrate, including, but not limited to, pigment in a plastic article, or a material that is actually bonded to the substrate, such as by electroplating or ceramic glazing.SEC. 3. Section 25214.2 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:25214.2. (a) For jewelry that is not childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry is made entirely from one or more than one of the following materials:(1) Stainless or surgical steel.(2) Karat gold.(3) Sterling silver.(4) Platinum, palladium, iridium, ruthenium, rhodium, or osmium.(5) Natural or cultured pearls.(6) Glass, ceramic, or crystal decorative components, including cats eye, cubic zirconia, including cubic zirconium or CZ, rhinestones, and cloisonn.(7) A gemstone that is cut and polished for ornamental purposes, excluding aragonite, bayldonite, boleite, cerussite, crocoite, ekanite, linarite, mimetite, phosgenite, samarskite, vanadinite, and wulfenite.(8) Elastic, fabric, ribbon, rope, or string that does not contain intentionally added lead.(9) All natural decorative material, including amber, bone, coral, feathers, fur, horn, leather, shell, or wood, that is in its natural state and is not treated in a way that adds lead.(10) Adhesive.(11) Electroplated metal containing less than 6 percent (60,000 parts per million) lead by weight.(12) Unplated metal not otherwise listed containing less than 1.5 percent (15,000 parts per million) lead by weight.(13) Plastic or rubber, including acrylic, polystyrene, plastic beads and stones, and polyvinyl chloride (PVC) containing less than 0.02 percent (200 parts per million) lead by weight.(14) A dye or surface coating containing less than 0.06 percent (600 parts per million) lead by weight.(15) Any other material that contains less than 0.06 percent (600 parts per million) lead by weight.(b) For body piercing jewelry that is not childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry is made of one or more of the following materials:(1) Surgical implant stainless steel.(2) Surgical implant grade of titanium.(3) Niobium (Nb).(4) Solid 14 karat or higher white or yellow nickel-free gold.(5) Solid platinum.(6) A dense low-porosity plastic, including, but not limited to, Tygon or polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), if the plastic contains no intentionally added lead.(c) (1) For childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry meets all of the following requirements:(A) Every component of the jewelry contains no more than 0.01 percent (100 parts per million) lead by weight, excluding inaccessible component parts.(B) The jewelry has a surface coating that contains no more than 0.009 percent (90 parts per million) lead by weight.(2) The department may establish guidance on what component parts in childrens jewelry shall be considered to be inaccessible for purposes of paragraph (1). In the absence of that guidance from the department, a determination of whether a component part of childrens jewelry is inaccessible shall be made in accordance with Section 1500.87 of Title 16 of the Code of Federal Regulations, as it may be amended from time to time.(d) (1) For childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry that meets either of the following descriptions:(A) The jewelry contains a component or is made of a material that is more than 0.03 percent (300 parts per million) cadmium by weight.(B) The jewelry has a surface coating that contains more than 0.0075 percent (75 parts per million) soluble cadmium by weight.(2) This subdivision shall not apply to any toy regulated for cadmium exposure under the federal Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (Public Law 110-314).(e) The department may establish a standard for childrens jewelry or for a component of childrens jewelry that is more protective of public health, of sensitive subpopulations, or of the environment than the standards established pursuant to subdivisions (c) and (d).(f) This section shall become inoperative on June 1, 2020, and, as of January 1, 2021, is repealed.SEC. 4. Section 25214.2 is added to the Health and Safety Code, to read:25214.2. (a) For jewelry that is not childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry is made entirely from one or more than one of the following materials:(1) Stainless or surgical steel.(2) Karat gold.(3) Sterling silver.(4) Platinum, palladium, iridium, ruthenium, rhodium, or osmium.(5) Natural or cultured pearls.(6) Glass, ceramic, or crystal decorative components, including cats eye, cubic zirconia, including cubic zirconium or CZ, rhinestones, and cloisonn.(7) A gemstone that is cut and polished for ornamental purposes, excluding aragonite, bayldonite, boleite, cerussite, crocoite, ekanite, linarite, mimetite, phosgenite, samarskite, vanadinite, and wulfenite.(8) Elastic, fabric, ribbon, rope, or string that does not contain intentionally added lead.(9) All natural decorative material, including amber, bone, coral, feathers, fur, horn, leather, shell, or wood, that is in its natural state and is not treated in a way that adds lead.(10) Adhesive.(11) Electroplated metal containing less than 0.05 percent (500 parts per million) lead by weight.(12) Unplated metal not otherwise listed containing less than 0.05 percent (500 parts per million) lead by weight.(13) Plastic or rubber, including acrylic, polystyrene, plastic beads and stones, and polyvinyl chloride (PVC) containing less than 0.02 percent (200 parts per million) lead by weight.(14) A dye or surface coating containing less than 0.05 percent (500 parts per million) lead by weight.(15) Any other material that contains less than 0.05 percent (500 parts per million) lead by weight.(b) For body piercing jewelry that is not childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry is made of one or more of the following materials:(1) Surgical implant stainless steel.(2) Surgical implant grade of titanium.(3) Niobium (Nb).(4) Solid 14 karat or higher white or yellow nickel-free gold.(5) Solid platinum.(6) A dense low-porosity plastic, including, but not limited to, Tygon or polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), if the plastic contains no intentionally added lead.(c) (1) For childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry meets all of the following requirements:(A) Every component of the jewelry contains no more than 0.01 percent (100 parts per million) lead by weight, excluding inaccessible component parts.(B) The jewelry has a surface coating that contains no more than 0.009 percent (90 parts per million) lead by weight.(2) The department may establish guidance on what component parts in childrens jewelry shall be considered to be inaccessible for purposes of paragraph (1). In the absence of that guidance from the department, a determination of whether a component part of childrens jewelry is inaccessible shall be made in accordance with Section 1500.87 of Title 16 of the Code of Federal Regulations, as it may be amended from time to time.(d) (1) For childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry that meets either of the following descriptions:(A) The jewelry contains a component or is made of a material that is more than 0.03 percent (300 parts per million) cadmium by weight.(B) The jewelry has a surface coating that contains more than 0.0075 percent (75 parts per million) soluble cadmium by weight.(2) This subdivision shall not apply to any toy regulated for cadmium exposure under the federal Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (Public Law 110-314).(e) The department may establish a standard for childrens jewelry or for a component of childrens jewelry that is more protective of public health, of sensitive subpopulations, or of the environment than the standards established pursuant to subdivisions (c) and (d). (f) This section shall become operative on June 1, 2020.SEC. 5. Section 25214.3.1 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:25214.3.1. (a) A manufacturer or supplier of jewelry that is sold, offered for sale, or offered for promotional purposes shall prepare and, at the request of the department, submit to the department no more than 28 days after the date of the request, technical documentation or other information showing that the jewelry is in compliance with the requirements of this article.(b) A manufacturer or supplier of jewelry that is sold, offered for sale, or offered for promotional purposes shall prepare a certification. This certification shall attest that the jewelry does not contain a level of lead or cadmium that prohibits the jewelry from being sold or offered for sale pursuant to this article and shall do all of the following:(1) Identify the jewelry covered by the certificate, including a description of the jewelry that is sufficiently detailed to match the certificate to each product covered by the certificate and that could not be used to describe any jewelry that is not covered by the certificate.(2) Cite to each separate rule or standard for which the jewelry is being certified.(3) Identify the manufacturer or supplier certifying compliance of the jewelry, including the name, full mailing address, and telephone number of the manufacturer or supplier.(4) Include the contact information for the person maintaining records of the test results of jewelry tested for purposes of this article, including the name, full mailing address, email address, and telephone number of that person.(5) Include the date on which the jewelry was manufactured, including at least the month and year.(6) Include the location where the jewelry was manufactured, including at least the city or administrative region, state, if applicable, and country where the product was manufactured or finally assembled. If the same manufacturer operates more than one location in the same city, the street address of the factory shall be included.(7) Include the date or dates on which, and the location or locations where, the jewelry was tested for purposes of certification.(8) Identify any third-party laboratory that performed the testing for purposes of certification, including the name, full mailing address, and telephone number of the laboratory.(c) A manufacturer or supplier of jewelry sold or offered for promotional purposes in this state shall do either of the following:(1) Provide the certification required by subdivision (b) to a person who sells or offers for sale that manufacturers or suppliers jewelry.(2) Display the certification required by subdivision (b) prominently on the shipping container or on the packaging of jewelry.SEC. 6. Section 25214.4 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:25214.4. (a) The test methods for determining compliance with this article shall be conducted using the EPA reference methods 3050B, 3051A, or 3052, as specified in EPA Test Methods for Evaluating Solid Waste, Physical/Chemical Methods, SW-846 (Third Edition, or subsequent update, as applicable) for lead and cadmium in the material being tested, except as otherwise provided in subdivision (b) and Sections 24214.4.1 and 25214.4.2, and shall be conducted in accordance with all of the following procedures:(1) When preparing a sample, the laboratory shall make every effort to ensure that the sample removed from a jewelry piece is representative of the component to be tested, and is free of contamination from extraneous dirt and material not related to the jewelry component to be tested.(2) All jewelry component samples shall be washed prior to testing using standard laboratory detergent, rinsed with laboratory reagent grade deionized water, and dried in a clean ambient environment.(3) If a component is required to be cut or scraped to obtain a sample, the metal snips, scissors, or other cutting tools used for the cutting or scraping shall be made of stainless steel and washed and rinsed before each use and between samples.(4) A sample shall be digested in a container that is known to be free of lead and cadmium and with the use of an acid that is not contaminated by lead or cadmium, including analytical reagent grade digestion acids and reagent grade deionized water.(5) Method blanks, consisting of all reagents used in sample preparation handled, digested, and made to volume in the same exact manner and in the same container type as samples, shall be tested with each group of 20 or fewer samples tested.(6) The results for the method blanks shall be reported with each group of sample results, and shall be below the stated reporting limit for sample results to be considered valid.(7) Test methods selected shall be those that best demonstrate they can achieve total digestion of the sample material being analyzed. Test methods shall not be used if they are inconsistent with the specified application of the test method or do not demonstrate the best performance or proficiency for achieving total digestion of the sample material.(b) Notwithstanding subdivision (a) and Section 25214.4.1, test methods for determining compliance with the limits for lead in childrens jewelry in subdivision (c) of Section 25214.2 include those permissible to demonstrate compliance with the federal Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (Public Law 110-314). The test method for determining compliance with subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) of subdivision (d) of Section 25214.2 shall be the same test method used to demonstrate compliance with Section 2056b of Title 15 of the United States Code. (c) Digested samples shall be analyzed according to the specification of an approved and validated methodology using inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectroscopy. Other analytical methods, such as inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry, flame atomic absorption spectroscopy, graphite furnace atomic absorption spectroscopy, or other technology, may be used under appropriate conditions, using applicable, recognized analytical techniques for the alternative method to achieve a reported quantitation limit no greater than 0.001 percent (10 parts per million) for samples.(d) All testing for determining compliance with this article shall be performed by a laboratory that conforms to the requirements in Article 8.5 (commencing with Section 25198).SEC. 7. Section 25214.4.1 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:25214.4.1. In addition to the requirements of Section 25214.4, the following procedures shall be used for testing the following materials:(a) For testing a metal plated with suitable undercoats and finish coats, the following protocols shall be observed:(1) Digestion shall be conducted using hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.(2) The sample size shall be 0.050 gram to one gram.(3) The digested sample may require dilution prior to analysis.(4) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.(b) For testing unplated metal and metal substrates that are not a material listed in paragraphs (1) to (10), inclusive, of subdivision (a) of Section 25214.2, the following protocols shall be observed:(1) Digestion shall be conducted using hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.(2) The sample size shall be 0.050 gram to one gram.(3) The digested sample may require dilution prior to analysis.(4) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.(c) For testing polyvinyl chloride (PVC), the following protocols shall be observed:(1) The digestion shall be conducted using hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.(2) The sample size shall be a minimum of 0.05 gram if using microwave digestion or 0.5 gram if using hotplate digestion, and shall be chopped or comminuted prior to digestion.(3) Digested samples may require dilution prior to analysis.(4) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.(d) For testing plastic or rubber that is not polyvinyl chloride (PVC), including acrylic, polystyrene, plastic beads, or plastic stones, the following protocols shall be observed:(1) The digestion shall be conducted using hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.(2) The sample size shall be a minimum of 0.05 gram if using microwave digestion or 0.5 gram if using hotplate digestion, and shall be chopped or comminuted prior to digestion.(3) Plastic beads or stones shall be crushed prior to digestion.(4) Digested samples may require dilution prior to analysis.(5) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.(e) For testing coatings on glass and plastic pearls, the following protocols shall be observed:(1) The coating of glass or plastic beads shall be scraped onto a surface free of dust, including a clean weighing paper or pan, using a clean stainless steel razor blade or other clean sharp instrument that will not contaminate the sample with lead or cadmium. The substrate pearl material shall not be included in the scrapings.(2) The razor blade or sharp instrument shall be rinsed with deionized water, wiped to remove particulate matter, rinsed again, and dried between samples.(3) The scrapings shall be weighed and not less than 50 micrograms of scraped coating shall be used for analysis. If less than 50 micrograms of scraped coating is obtained from an individual pearl, multiple pearls from that sample shall be scraped and composited to obtain a sufficient sample amount.(4) The number of pearls used to make the composite shall be noted.(5) The scrapings shall be digested according to EPA reference method 3050B or 3051 or an equivalent procedure for hot acid digestion in preparation for trace lead or cadmium analysis.(6) The digestate shall be diluted in the minimum volume practical for analysis.(7) The sample result shall be reported within the calibrated range of the instrument. If the initial test of the sample is above the highest calibration standard, the sample shall be diluted and reanalyzed within the calibrated range of the instrument.(f) For testing dyes, paints, coatings, varnish, printing inks, or ceramic glazes, the following testing protocols shall be observed:(1) The digestion shall use hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.(2) The sample size shall be not less than 0.050 gram, and shall be chopped or comminuted prior to digestion.(3) The digested sample may require dilution prior to analysis.(4) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.(g) For testing glass and crystal, the following protocols shall be used:(1) For determining weight:(A) A component shall be free of any extraneous material, including adhesive, before it is weighed.(B) The scale used to weigh a component shall be calibrated annually by a qualified vendor using reference mass standards that are traceable to the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) of the Department of Commerce or the International System of Units (SI) and shall be verified daily before weighing the component.(C) The calibration of the scale shall be accurate to within 0.0001 gram.(2) Both of the following testing protocols shall be observed:(A) The glass and crystal component shall be crushed or grounded to powder form before digestion and shall be digested according to the United States Environmental Protection Agency Test Method 3052 using hydrofluoric acid in a microwave or an equivalent method to yield complete digestion.(B) The digestate shall be diluted in the minimum volume practical for analysis.SEC. 8. No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution because the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution.
1+Enrolled September 13, 2019 Passed IN Senate September 11, 2019 Passed IN Assembly September 10, 2019 Amended IN Assembly September 06, 2019 Amended IN Assembly September 03, 2019 Amended IN Assembly August 21, 2019 Amended IN Assembly June 20, 2019 Amended IN Senate April 11, 2019 Amended IN Senate March 27, 2019 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20192020 REGULAR SESSION Senate Bill No. 647Introduced by Senator Mitchell(Principal coauthor: Assembly Member Mathis)(Coauthors: Assembly Members Bauer-Kahan and Muratsuchi)February 22, 2019 An act to amend Sections 25214.1, 25214.3.1, 25214.4, and 25214.4.1 of, and to amend, repeal, and add Section 25214.2 of, the Health and Safety Code, relating to hazardous substances. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 647, Mitchell. Hazardous substances: metal-containing jewelry.The hazardous waste control laws require the Department of Toxic Substances Control to regulate the handling and management of hazardous waste and hazardous materials. A violation of the hazardous waste control laws is a crime.Existing law, as part of the hazardous waste control laws, prohibits a person from manufacturing, shipping, selling, or offering for sale or promotional purposes jewelry, as defined, for retail sale in the state, unless the jewelry is made entirely from specified materials that do not exceed specified lead and cadmium content limits. Existing law provides that, for jewelry that is not childrens jewelry or body piercing jewelry, the content limits for electroplated metal, unplated metal, plastic or rubber, and dye or surface coating are 6%, 1.5%, 0.02%, and 0.06% of lead by weight, respectively. Existing law imposes separate content requirements for childrens jewelry, as provided. Existing law defines children for purposes of these provisions to mean children 6 years of age and younger. Existing law requires a manufacturer or supplier of jewelry that is sold, offered for sale, or offered for promotional purposes to prepare a certification that attests that the jewelry does not contain a level of lead or cadmium in excess of the provided limits. Existing law provides test methods and procedures for testing jewelry for purposes of these provisions.This bill would revise and recast the provisions relating to the materials authorized to be used to make jewelry and childrens jewelry, but with certain provisions not to become operative until June 1, 2020. The bill would, on and after June 1, 2020, reduce the lead content limits for electroplated metal, unplated metal, and a dye or surface coating to 0.05% of lead by weight, and would reduce the lead content limit for plastic or rubber to 0.02% of lead by weight. The bill would reduce the lead content limit for childrens jewelry to 0.009% of lead by weight for surface coatings and 0.01% of lead by weight for all other components, and would reduce the cadmium limit for surface coatings on childrens jewelry to 0.0075% of soluble cadmium by weight, as provided. The bill would revise the definition of children to mean persons under 15 years of age. The bill would require the manufacturer or supplier certification to include additional detail about the jewelry covered by the certification, including, among other things, the date or dates on which, and the location or locations where, the jewelry was tested for purposes of certification. Because a violation of these additional certification requirements would be a crime, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program. The bill would also authorize the use of additional specified test methods to determine compliance with the standards for lead in childrens jewelry.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. It is the intent of the Legislature that this act protect the public health, safety, and welfare of Californians by preventing lead and cadmium exposure from jewelry that is sold in the state.SEC. 2. Section 25214.1 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:25214.1. For purposes of this article, the following definitions shall apply:(a) Body piercing jewelry means any part of jewelry that is manufactured or sold for placement in a new piercing or a mucous membrane, but does not include any part of that jewelry that is not placed within a new piercing or a mucous membrane.(b) Children means persons under 15 years of age.(c) Childrens jewelry means jewelry that is made for, marketed for use by, or marketed to, children. For purposes of this article, childrens jewelry includes, but is not limited to, jewelry that meets any of the following conditions:(1) Represented in its packaging, display, or advertising, as appropriate for use by children.(2) Sold in conjunction with, attached to, or packaged together with other products that are packaged, displayed, or advertised as appropriate for use by children.(3) Sized for children and not intended for use by adults.(4) Sold in any of the following:(A) A vending machine.(B) Retail store, catalog, or online internet website, in which a person exclusively offers for sale products that are packaged, displayed, or advertised as appropriate for use by children.(C) A discrete portion of a retail store, catalog, or online internet website, in which a person offers for sale products that are packaged, displayed, or advertised as appropriate for use by children.(d) Component means any part of jewelry.(e) Inaccessible means not physically exposed by reason of a sealed covering or casing and does not become physically exposed through reasonably foreseeable use and abuse of the product, including swallowing, mouthing, breaking, or other childrens activities, and the aging of the product. For purposes of this article, paint, coatings, or electroplating do not render substrate material inaccessible to a child.(f) Jewelry means any of the following:(1) Any of the following ornaments worn by a person:(A) An anklet.(B) Arm cuff.(C) Bracelet.(D) Brooch.(E) Chain.(F) Crown.(G) Cuff link.(H) Hair accessory.(I) Earring.(J) Necklace.(K) Pin.(L) Ring.(M) Tie clip.(N) Body piercing jewelry.(O) Jewelry placed in the mouth for display or ornament.(2) Any bead, chain, link, pendant, or other component of an ornament specified in paragraph (1).(3) A charm, bead, chain, link, pendant, or other attachment to shoes or clothing that can be removed and may be used as a component of an ornament specified in paragraph (1).(4) A watch in which a timepiece is a component of an ornament specified in paragraph (1), excluding the timepiece itself if the timepiece can be removed from the ornament.(g) (1) Surface coating means a fluid, semifluid, or other material, with or without a suspension of finely divided coloring matter, that changes to a solid film when a thin layer is applied to a metal, wood, stone, paper, leather, cloth, plastic, or other surface.(2) Surface coating does not include a printing ink or a material that actually becomes a part of the substrate, including, but not limited to, pigment in a plastic article, or a material that is actually bonded to the substrate, such as by electroplating or ceramic glazing.SEC. 3. Section 25214.2 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:25214.2. (a) For jewelry that is not childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry is made entirely from one or more than one of the following materials:(1) Stainless or surgical steel.(2) Karat gold.(3) Sterling silver.(4) Platinum, palladium, iridium, ruthenium, rhodium, or osmium.(5) Natural or cultured pearls.(6) Glass, ceramic, or crystal decorative components, including cats eye, cubic zirconia, including cubic zirconium or CZ, rhinestones, and cloisonn.(7) A gemstone that is cut and polished for ornamental purposes, excluding aragonite, bayldonite, boleite, cerussite, crocoite, ekanite, linarite, mimetite, phosgenite, samarskite, vanadinite, and wulfenite.(8) Elastic, fabric, ribbon, rope, or string that does not contain intentionally added lead.(9) All natural decorative material, including amber, bone, coral, feathers, fur, horn, leather, shell, or wood, that is in its natural state and is not treated in a way that adds lead.(10) Adhesive.(11) Electroplated metal containing less than 6 percent (60,000 parts per million) lead by weight.(12) Unplated metal not otherwise listed containing less than 1.5 percent (15,000 parts per million) lead by weight.(13) Plastic or rubber, including acrylic, polystyrene, plastic beads and stones, and polyvinyl chloride (PVC) containing less than 0.02 percent (200 parts per million) lead by weight.(14) A dye or surface coating containing less than 0.06 percent (600 parts per million) lead by weight.(15) Any other material that contains less than 0.06 percent (600 parts per million) lead by weight.(b) For body piercing jewelry that is not childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry is made of one or more of the following materials:(1) Surgical implant stainless steel.(2) Surgical implant grade of titanium.(3) Niobium (Nb).(4) Solid 14 karat or higher white or yellow nickel-free gold.(5) Solid platinum.(6) A dense low-porosity plastic, including, but not limited to, Tygon or polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), if the plastic contains no intentionally added lead.(c) (1) For childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry meets all of the following requirements:(A) Every component of the jewelry contains no more than 0.01 percent (100 parts per million) lead by weight, excluding inaccessible component parts.(B) The jewelry has a surface coating that contains no more than 0.009 percent (90 parts per million) lead by weight.(2) The department may establish guidance on what component parts in childrens jewelry shall be considered to be inaccessible for purposes of paragraph (1). In the absence of that guidance from the department, a determination of whether a component part of childrens jewelry is inaccessible shall be made in accordance with Section 1500.87 of Title 16 of the Code of Federal Regulations, as it may be amended from time to time.(d) (1) For childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry that meets either of the following descriptions:(A) The jewelry contains a component or is made of a material that is more than 0.03 percent (300 parts per million) cadmium by weight.(B) The jewelry has a surface coating that contains more than 0.0075 percent (75 parts per million) soluble cadmium by weight.(2) This subdivision shall not apply to any toy regulated for cadmium exposure under the federal Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (Public Law 110-314).(e) The department may establish a standard for childrens jewelry or for a component of childrens jewelry that is more protective of public health, of sensitive subpopulations, or of the environment than the standards established pursuant to subdivisions (c) and (d).(f) This section shall become inoperative on June 1, 2020, and, as of January 1, 2021, is repealed.SEC. 4. Section 25214.2 is added to the Health and Safety Code, to read:25214.2. (a) For jewelry that is not childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry is made entirely from one or more than one of the following materials:(1) Stainless or surgical steel.(2) Karat gold.(3) Sterling silver.(4) Platinum, palladium, iridium, ruthenium, rhodium, or osmium.(5) Natural or cultured pearls.(6) Glass, ceramic, or crystal decorative components, including cats eye, cubic zirconia, including cubic zirconium or CZ, rhinestones, and cloisonn.(7) A gemstone that is cut and polished for ornamental purposes, excluding aragonite, bayldonite, boleite, cerussite, crocoite, ekanite, linarite, mimetite, phosgenite, samarskite, vanadinite, and wulfenite.(8) Elastic, fabric, ribbon, rope, or string that does not contain intentionally added lead.(9) All natural decorative material, including amber, bone, coral, feathers, fur, horn, leather, shell, or wood, that is in its natural state and is not treated in a way that adds lead.(10) Adhesive.(11) Electroplated metal containing less than 0.05 percent (500 parts per million) lead by weight.(12) Unplated metal not otherwise listed containing less than 0.05 percent (500 parts per million) lead by weight.(13) Plastic or rubber, including acrylic, polystyrene, plastic beads and stones, and polyvinyl chloride (PVC) containing less than 0.02 percent (200 parts per million) lead by weight.(14) A dye or surface coating containing less than 0.05 percent (500 parts per million) lead by weight.(15) Any other material that contains less than 0.05 percent (500 parts per million) lead by weight.(b) For body piercing jewelry that is not childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry is made of one or more of the following materials:(1) Surgical implant stainless steel.(2) Surgical implant grade of titanium.(3) Niobium (Nb).(4) Solid 14 karat or higher white or yellow nickel-free gold.(5) Solid platinum.(6) A dense low-porosity plastic, including, but not limited to, Tygon or polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), if the plastic contains no intentionally added lead.(c) (1) For childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry meets all of the following requirements:(A) Every component of the jewelry contains no more than 0.01 percent (100 parts per million) lead by weight, excluding inaccessible component parts.(B) The jewelry has a surface coating that contains no more than 0.009 percent (90 parts per million) lead by weight.(2) The department may establish guidance on what component parts in childrens jewelry shall be considered to be inaccessible for purposes of paragraph (1). In the absence of that guidance from the department, a determination of whether a component part of childrens jewelry is inaccessible shall be made in accordance with Section 1500.87 of Title 16 of the Code of Federal Regulations, as it may be amended from time to time.(d) (1) For childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry that meets either of the following descriptions:(A) The jewelry contains a component or is made of a material that is more than 0.03 percent (300 parts per million) cadmium by weight.(B) The jewelry has a surface coating that contains more than 0.0075 percent (75 parts per million) soluble cadmium by weight.(2) This subdivision shall not apply to any toy regulated for cadmium exposure under the federal Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (Public Law 110-314).(e) The department may establish a standard for childrens jewelry or for a component of childrens jewelry that is more protective of public health, of sensitive subpopulations, or of the environment than the standards established pursuant to subdivisions (c) and (d). (f) This section shall become operative on June 1, 2020.SEC. 5. Section 25214.3.1 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:25214.3.1. (a) A manufacturer or supplier of jewelry that is sold, offered for sale, or offered for promotional purposes shall prepare and, at the request of the department, submit to the department no more than 28 days after the date of the request, technical documentation or other information showing that the jewelry is in compliance with the requirements of this article.(b) A manufacturer or supplier of jewelry that is sold, offered for sale, or offered for promotional purposes shall prepare a certification. This certification shall attest that the jewelry does not contain a level of lead or cadmium that prohibits the jewelry from being sold or offered for sale pursuant to this article and shall do all of the following:(1) Identify the jewelry covered by the certificate, including a description of the jewelry that is sufficiently detailed to match the certificate to each product covered by the certificate and that could not be used to describe any jewelry that is not covered by the certificate.(2) Cite to each separate rule or standard for which the jewelry is being certified.(3) Identify the manufacturer or supplier certifying compliance of the jewelry, including the name, full mailing address, and telephone number of the manufacturer or supplier.(4) Include the contact information for the person maintaining records of the test results of jewelry tested for purposes of this article, including the name, full mailing address, email address, and telephone number of that person.(5) Include the date on which the jewelry was manufactured, including at least the month and year.(6) Include the location where the jewelry was manufactured, including at least the city or administrative region, state, if applicable, and country where the product was manufactured or finally assembled. If the same manufacturer operates more than one location in the same city, the street address of the factory shall be included.(7) Include the date or dates on which, and the location or locations where, the jewelry was tested for purposes of certification.(8) Identify any third-party laboratory that performed the testing for purposes of certification, including the name, full mailing address, and telephone number of the laboratory.(c) A manufacturer or supplier of jewelry sold or offered for promotional purposes in this state shall do either of the following:(1) Provide the certification required by subdivision (b) to a person who sells or offers for sale that manufacturers or suppliers jewelry.(2) Display the certification required by subdivision (b) prominently on the shipping container or on the packaging of jewelry.SEC. 6. Section 25214.4 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:25214.4. (a) The test methods for determining compliance with this article shall be conducted using the EPA reference methods 3050B, 3051A, or 3052, as specified in EPA Test Methods for Evaluating Solid Waste, Physical/Chemical Methods, SW-846 (Third Edition, or subsequent update, as applicable) for lead and cadmium in the material being tested, except as otherwise provided in subdivision (b) and Sections 24214.4.1 and 25214.4.2, and shall be conducted in accordance with all of the following procedures:(1) When preparing a sample, the laboratory shall make every effort to ensure that the sample removed from a jewelry piece is representative of the component to be tested, and is free of contamination from extraneous dirt and material not related to the jewelry component to be tested.(2) All jewelry component samples shall be washed prior to testing using standard laboratory detergent, rinsed with laboratory reagent grade deionized water, and dried in a clean ambient environment.(3) If a component is required to be cut or scraped to obtain a sample, the metal snips, scissors, or other cutting tools used for the cutting or scraping shall be made of stainless steel and washed and rinsed before each use and between samples.(4) A sample shall be digested in a container that is known to be free of lead and cadmium and with the use of an acid that is not contaminated by lead or cadmium, including analytical reagent grade digestion acids and reagent grade deionized water.(5) Method blanks, consisting of all reagents used in sample preparation handled, digested, and made to volume in the same exact manner and in the same container type as samples, shall be tested with each group of 20 or fewer samples tested.(6) The results for the method blanks shall be reported with each group of sample results, and shall be below the stated reporting limit for sample results to be considered valid.(7) Test methods selected shall be those that best demonstrate they can achieve total digestion of the sample material being analyzed. Test methods shall not be used if they are inconsistent with the specified application of the test method or do not demonstrate the best performance or proficiency for achieving total digestion of the sample material.(b) Notwithstanding subdivision (a) and Section 25214.4.1, test methods for determining compliance with the limits for lead in childrens jewelry in subdivision (c) of Section 25214.2 include those permissible to demonstrate compliance with the federal Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (Public Law 110-314). The test method for determining compliance with subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) of subdivision (d) of Section 25214.2 shall be the same test method used to demonstrate compliance with Section 2056b of Title 15 of the United States Code. (c) Digested samples shall be analyzed according to the specification of an approved and validated methodology using inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectroscopy. Other analytical methods, such as inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry, flame atomic absorption spectroscopy, graphite furnace atomic absorption spectroscopy, or other technology, may be used under appropriate conditions, using applicable, recognized analytical techniques for the alternative method to achieve a reported quantitation limit no greater than 0.001 percent (10 parts per million) for samples.(d) All testing for determining compliance with this article shall be performed by a laboratory that conforms to the requirements in Article 8.5 (commencing with Section 25198).SEC. 7. Section 25214.4.1 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:25214.4.1. In addition to the requirements of Section 25214.4, the following procedures shall be used for testing the following materials:(a) For testing a metal plated with suitable undercoats and finish coats, the following protocols shall be observed:(1) Digestion shall be conducted using hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.(2) The sample size shall be 0.050 gram to one gram.(3) The digested sample may require dilution prior to analysis.(4) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.(b) For testing unplated metal and metal substrates that are not a material listed in paragraphs (1) to (10), inclusive, of subdivision (a) of Section 25214.2, the following protocols shall be observed:(1) Digestion shall be conducted using hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.(2) The sample size shall be 0.050 gram to one gram.(3) The digested sample may require dilution prior to analysis.(4) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.(c) For testing polyvinyl chloride (PVC), the following protocols shall be observed:(1) The digestion shall be conducted using hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.(2) The sample size shall be a minimum of 0.05 gram if using microwave digestion or 0.5 gram if using hotplate digestion, and shall be chopped or comminuted prior to digestion.(3) Digested samples may require dilution prior to analysis.(4) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.(d) For testing plastic or rubber that is not polyvinyl chloride (PVC), including acrylic, polystyrene, plastic beads, or plastic stones, the following protocols shall be observed:(1) The digestion shall be conducted using hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.(2) The sample size shall be a minimum of 0.05 gram if using microwave digestion or 0.5 gram if using hotplate digestion, and shall be chopped or comminuted prior to digestion.(3) Plastic beads or stones shall be crushed prior to digestion.(4) Digested samples may require dilution prior to analysis.(5) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.(e) For testing coatings on glass and plastic pearls, the following protocols shall be observed:(1) The coating of glass or plastic beads shall be scraped onto a surface free of dust, including a clean weighing paper or pan, using a clean stainless steel razor blade or other clean sharp instrument that will not contaminate the sample with lead or cadmium. The substrate pearl material shall not be included in the scrapings.(2) The razor blade or sharp instrument shall be rinsed with deionized water, wiped to remove particulate matter, rinsed again, and dried between samples.(3) The scrapings shall be weighed and not less than 50 micrograms of scraped coating shall be used for analysis. If less than 50 micrograms of scraped coating is obtained from an individual pearl, multiple pearls from that sample shall be scraped and composited to obtain a sufficient sample amount.(4) The number of pearls used to make the composite shall be noted.(5) The scrapings shall be digested according to EPA reference method 3050B or 3051 or an equivalent procedure for hot acid digestion in preparation for trace lead or cadmium analysis.(6) The digestate shall be diluted in the minimum volume practical for analysis.(7) The sample result shall be reported within the calibrated range of the instrument. If the initial test of the sample is above the highest calibration standard, the sample shall be diluted and reanalyzed within the calibrated range of the instrument.(f) For testing dyes, paints, coatings, varnish, printing inks, or ceramic glazes, the following testing protocols shall be observed:(1) The digestion shall use hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.(2) The sample size shall be not less than 0.050 gram, and shall be chopped or comminuted prior to digestion.(3) The digested sample may require dilution prior to analysis.(4) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.(g) For testing glass and crystal, the following protocols shall be used:(1) For determining weight:(A) A component shall be free of any extraneous material, including adhesive, before it is weighed.(B) The scale used to weigh a component shall be calibrated annually by a qualified vendor using reference mass standards that are traceable to the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) of the Department of Commerce or the International System of Units (SI) and shall be verified daily before weighing the component.(C) The calibration of the scale shall be accurate to within 0.0001 gram.(2) Both of the following testing protocols shall be observed:(A) The glass and crystal component shall be crushed or grounded to powder form before digestion and shall be digested according to the United States Environmental Protection Agency Test Method 3052 using hydrofluoric acid in a microwave or an equivalent method to yield complete digestion.(B) The digestate shall be diluted in the minimum volume practical for analysis.SEC. 8. No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution because the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution.
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3- Senate Bill No. 647 CHAPTER 379 An act to amend Sections 25214.1, 25214.3.1, 25214.4, and 25214.4.1 of, and to amend, repeal, and add Section 25214.2 of, the Health and Safety Code, relating to hazardous substances. [ Approved by Governor September 27, 2019. Filed with Secretary of State September 27, 2019. ] LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 647, Mitchell. Hazardous substances: metal-containing jewelry.The hazardous waste control laws require the Department of Toxic Substances Control to regulate the handling and management of hazardous waste and hazardous materials. A violation of the hazardous waste control laws is a crime.Existing law, as part of the hazardous waste control laws, prohibits a person from manufacturing, shipping, selling, or offering for sale or promotional purposes jewelry, as defined, for retail sale in the state, unless the jewelry is made entirely from specified materials that do not exceed specified lead and cadmium content limits. Existing law provides that, for jewelry that is not childrens jewelry or body piercing jewelry, the content limits for electroplated metal, unplated metal, plastic or rubber, and dye or surface coating are 6%, 1.5%, 0.02%, and 0.06% of lead by weight, respectively. Existing law imposes separate content requirements for childrens jewelry, as provided. Existing law defines children for purposes of these provisions to mean children 6 years of age and younger. Existing law requires a manufacturer or supplier of jewelry that is sold, offered for sale, or offered for promotional purposes to prepare a certification that attests that the jewelry does not contain a level of lead or cadmium in excess of the provided limits. Existing law provides test methods and procedures for testing jewelry for purposes of these provisions.This bill would revise and recast the provisions relating to the materials authorized to be used to make jewelry and childrens jewelry, but with certain provisions not to become operative until June 1, 2020. The bill would, on and after June 1, 2020, reduce the lead content limits for electroplated metal, unplated metal, and a dye or surface coating to 0.05% of lead by weight, and would reduce the lead content limit for plastic or rubber to 0.02% of lead by weight. The bill would reduce the lead content limit for childrens jewelry to 0.009% of lead by weight for surface coatings and 0.01% of lead by weight for all other components, and would reduce the cadmium limit for surface coatings on childrens jewelry to 0.0075% of soluble cadmium by weight, as provided. The bill would revise the definition of children to mean persons under 15 years of age. The bill would require the manufacturer or supplier certification to include additional detail about the jewelry covered by the certification, including, among other things, the date or dates on which, and the location or locations where, the jewelry was tested for purposes of certification. Because a violation of these additional certification requirements would be a crime, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program. The bill would also authorize the use of additional specified test methods to determine compliance with the standards for lead in childrens jewelry.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES
3+ Enrolled September 13, 2019 Passed IN Senate September 11, 2019 Passed IN Assembly September 10, 2019 Amended IN Assembly September 06, 2019 Amended IN Assembly September 03, 2019 Amended IN Assembly August 21, 2019 Amended IN Assembly June 20, 2019 Amended IN Senate April 11, 2019 Amended IN Senate March 27, 2019 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20192020 REGULAR SESSION Senate Bill No. 647Introduced by Senator Mitchell(Principal coauthor: Assembly Member Mathis)(Coauthors: Assembly Members Bauer-Kahan and Muratsuchi)February 22, 2019 An act to amend Sections 25214.1, 25214.3.1, 25214.4, and 25214.4.1 of, and to amend, repeal, and add Section 25214.2 of, the Health and Safety Code, relating to hazardous substances. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTSB 647, Mitchell. Hazardous substances: metal-containing jewelry.The hazardous waste control laws require the Department of Toxic Substances Control to regulate the handling and management of hazardous waste and hazardous materials. A violation of the hazardous waste control laws is a crime.Existing law, as part of the hazardous waste control laws, prohibits a person from manufacturing, shipping, selling, or offering for sale or promotional purposes jewelry, as defined, for retail sale in the state, unless the jewelry is made entirely from specified materials that do not exceed specified lead and cadmium content limits. Existing law provides that, for jewelry that is not childrens jewelry or body piercing jewelry, the content limits for electroplated metal, unplated metal, plastic or rubber, and dye or surface coating are 6%, 1.5%, 0.02%, and 0.06% of lead by weight, respectively. Existing law imposes separate content requirements for childrens jewelry, as provided. Existing law defines children for purposes of these provisions to mean children 6 years of age and younger. Existing law requires a manufacturer or supplier of jewelry that is sold, offered for sale, or offered for promotional purposes to prepare a certification that attests that the jewelry does not contain a level of lead or cadmium in excess of the provided limits. Existing law provides test methods and procedures for testing jewelry for purposes of these provisions.This bill would revise and recast the provisions relating to the materials authorized to be used to make jewelry and childrens jewelry, but with certain provisions not to become operative until June 1, 2020. The bill would, on and after June 1, 2020, reduce the lead content limits for electroplated metal, unplated metal, and a dye or surface coating to 0.05% of lead by weight, and would reduce the lead content limit for plastic or rubber to 0.02% of lead by weight. The bill would reduce the lead content limit for childrens jewelry to 0.009% of lead by weight for surface coatings and 0.01% of lead by weight for all other components, and would reduce the cadmium limit for surface coatings on childrens jewelry to 0.0075% of soluble cadmium by weight, as provided. The bill would revise the definition of children to mean persons under 15 years of age. The bill would require the manufacturer or supplier certification to include additional detail about the jewelry covered by the certification, including, among other things, the date or dates on which, and the location or locations where, the jewelry was tested for purposes of certification. Because a violation of these additional certification requirements would be a crime, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program. The bill would also authorize the use of additional specified test methods to determine compliance with the standards for lead in childrens jewelry.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: YES
44
5- Senate Bill No. 647 CHAPTER 379
5+ Enrolled September 13, 2019 Passed IN Senate September 11, 2019 Passed IN Assembly September 10, 2019 Amended IN Assembly September 06, 2019 Amended IN Assembly September 03, 2019 Amended IN Assembly August 21, 2019 Amended IN Assembly June 20, 2019 Amended IN Senate April 11, 2019 Amended IN Senate March 27, 2019
66
7- Senate Bill No. 647
7+Enrolled September 13, 2019
8+Passed IN Senate September 11, 2019
9+Passed IN Assembly September 10, 2019
10+Amended IN Assembly September 06, 2019
11+Amended IN Assembly September 03, 2019
12+Amended IN Assembly August 21, 2019
13+Amended IN Assembly June 20, 2019
14+Amended IN Senate April 11, 2019
15+Amended IN Senate March 27, 2019
816
9- CHAPTER 379
17+ CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20192020 REGULAR SESSION
18+
19+ Senate Bill
20+
21+No. 647
22+
23+Introduced by Senator Mitchell(Principal coauthor: Assembly Member Mathis)(Coauthors: Assembly Members Bauer-Kahan and Muratsuchi)February 22, 2019
24+
25+Introduced by Senator Mitchell(Principal coauthor: Assembly Member Mathis)(Coauthors: Assembly Members Bauer-Kahan and Muratsuchi)
26+February 22, 2019
1027
1128 An act to amend Sections 25214.1, 25214.3.1, 25214.4, and 25214.4.1 of, and to amend, repeal, and add Section 25214.2 of, the Health and Safety Code, relating to hazardous substances.
12-
13- [ Approved by Governor September 27, 2019. Filed with Secretary of State September 27, 2019. ]
1429
1530 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
1631
1732 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
1833
1934 SB 647, Mitchell. Hazardous substances: metal-containing jewelry.
2035
2136 The hazardous waste control laws require the Department of Toxic Substances Control to regulate the handling and management of hazardous waste and hazardous materials. A violation of the hazardous waste control laws is a crime.Existing law, as part of the hazardous waste control laws, prohibits a person from manufacturing, shipping, selling, or offering for sale or promotional purposes jewelry, as defined, for retail sale in the state, unless the jewelry is made entirely from specified materials that do not exceed specified lead and cadmium content limits. Existing law provides that, for jewelry that is not childrens jewelry or body piercing jewelry, the content limits for electroplated metal, unplated metal, plastic or rubber, and dye or surface coating are 6%, 1.5%, 0.02%, and 0.06% of lead by weight, respectively. Existing law imposes separate content requirements for childrens jewelry, as provided. Existing law defines children for purposes of these provisions to mean children 6 years of age and younger. Existing law requires a manufacturer or supplier of jewelry that is sold, offered for sale, or offered for promotional purposes to prepare a certification that attests that the jewelry does not contain a level of lead or cadmium in excess of the provided limits. Existing law provides test methods and procedures for testing jewelry for purposes of these provisions.This bill would revise and recast the provisions relating to the materials authorized to be used to make jewelry and childrens jewelry, but with certain provisions not to become operative until June 1, 2020. The bill would, on and after June 1, 2020, reduce the lead content limits for electroplated metal, unplated metal, and a dye or surface coating to 0.05% of lead by weight, and would reduce the lead content limit for plastic or rubber to 0.02% of lead by weight. The bill would reduce the lead content limit for childrens jewelry to 0.009% of lead by weight for surface coatings and 0.01% of lead by weight for all other components, and would reduce the cadmium limit for surface coatings on childrens jewelry to 0.0075% of soluble cadmium by weight, as provided. The bill would revise the definition of children to mean persons under 15 years of age. The bill would require the manufacturer or supplier certification to include additional detail about the jewelry covered by the certification, including, among other things, the date or dates on which, and the location or locations where, the jewelry was tested for purposes of certification. Because a violation of these additional certification requirements would be a crime, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program. The bill would also authorize the use of additional specified test methods to determine compliance with the standards for lead in childrens jewelry.The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.
2237
2338 The hazardous waste control laws require the Department of Toxic Substances Control to regulate the handling and management of hazardous waste and hazardous materials. A violation of the hazardous waste control laws is a crime.
2439
2540 Existing law, as part of the hazardous waste control laws, prohibits a person from manufacturing, shipping, selling, or offering for sale or promotional purposes jewelry, as defined, for retail sale in the state, unless the jewelry is made entirely from specified materials that do not exceed specified lead and cadmium content limits. Existing law provides that, for jewelry that is not childrens jewelry or body piercing jewelry, the content limits for electroplated metal, unplated metal, plastic or rubber, and dye or surface coating are 6%, 1.5%, 0.02%, and 0.06% of lead by weight, respectively. Existing law imposes separate content requirements for childrens jewelry, as provided. Existing law defines children for purposes of these provisions to mean children 6 years of age and younger. Existing law requires a manufacturer or supplier of jewelry that is sold, offered for sale, or offered for promotional purposes to prepare a certification that attests that the jewelry does not contain a level of lead or cadmium in excess of the provided limits. Existing law provides test methods and procedures for testing jewelry for purposes of these provisions.
2641
2742 This bill would revise and recast the provisions relating to the materials authorized to be used to make jewelry and childrens jewelry, but with certain provisions not to become operative until June 1, 2020. The bill would, on and after June 1, 2020, reduce the lead content limits for electroplated metal, unplated metal, and a dye or surface coating to 0.05% of lead by weight, and would reduce the lead content limit for plastic or rubber to 0.02% of lead by weight. The bill would reduce the lead content limit for childrens jewelry to 0.009% of lead by weight for surface coatings and 0.01% of lead by weight for all other components, and would reduce the cadmium limit for surface coatings on childrens jewelry to 0.0075% of soluble cadmium by weight, as provided. The bill would revise the definition of children to mean persons under 15 years of age. The bill would require the manufacturer or supplier certification to include additional detail about the jewelry covered by the certification, including, among other things, the date or dates on which, and the location or locations where, the jewelry was tested for purposes of certification. Because a violation of these additional certification requirements would be a crime, the bill would impose a state-mandated local program. The bill would also authorize the use of additional specified test methods to determine compliance with the standards for lead in childrens jewelry.
2843
2944 The California Constitution requires the state to reimburse local agencies and school districts for certain costs mandated by the state. Statutory provisions establish procedures for making that reimbursement.
3045
3146 This bill would provide that no reimbursement is required by this act for a specified reason.
3247
3348 ## Digest Key
3449
3550 ## Bill Text
3651
3752 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. It is the intent of the Legislature that this act protect the public health, safety, and welfare of Californians by preventing lead and cadmium exposure from jewelry that is sold in the state.SEC. 2. Section 25214.1 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:25214.1. For purposes of this article, the following definitions shall apply:(a) Body piercing jewelry means any part of jewelry that is manufactured or sold for placement in a new piercing or a mucous membrane, but does not include any part of that jewelry that is not placed within a new piercing or a mucous membrane.(b) Children means persons under 15 years of age.(c) Childrens jewelry means jewelry that is made for, marketed for use by, or marketed to, children. For purposes of this article, childrens jewelry includes, but is not limited to, jewelry that meets any of the following conditions:(1) Represented in its packaging, display, or advertising, as appropriate for use by children.(2) Sold in conjunction with, attached to, or packaged together with other products that are packaged, displayed, or advertised as appropriate for use by children.(3) Sized for children and not intended for use by adults.(4) Sold in any of the following:(A) A vending machine.(B) Retail store, catalog, or online internet website, in which a person exclusively offers for sale products that are packaged, displayed, or advertised as appropriate for use by children.(C) A discrete portion of a retail store, catalog, or online internet website, in which a person offers for sale products that are packaged, displayed, or advertised as appropriate for use by children.(d) Component means any part of jewelry.(e) Inaccessible means not physically exposed by reason of a sealed covering or casing and does not become physically exposed through reasonably foreseeable use and abuse of the product, including swallowing, mouthing, breaking, or other childrens activities, and the aging of the product. For purposes of this article, paint, coatings, or electroplating do not render substrate material inaccessible to a child.(f) Jewelry means any of the following:(1) Any of the following ornaments worn by a person:(A) An anklet.(B) Arm cuff.(C) Bracelet.(D) Brooch.(E) Chain.(F) Crown.(G) Cuff link.(H) Hair accessory.(I) Earring.(J) Necklace.(K) Pin.(L) Ring.(M) Tie clip.(N) Body piercing jewelry.(O) Jewelry placed in the mouth for display or ornament.(2) Any bead, chain, link, pendant, or other component of an ornament specified in paragraph (1).(3) A charm, bead, chain, link, pendant, or other attachment to shoes or clothing that can be removed and may be used as a component of an ornament specified in paragraph (1).(4) A watch in which a timepiece is a component of an ornament specified in paragraph (1), excluding the timepiece itself if the timepiece can be removed from the ornament.(g) (1) Surface coating means a fluid, semifluid, or other material, with or without a suspension of finely divided coloring matter, that changes to a solid film when a thin layer is applied to a metal, wood, stone, paper, leather, cloth, plastic, or other surface.(2) Surface coating does not include a printing ink or a material that actually becomes a part of the substrate, including, but not limited to, pigment in a plastic article, or a material that is actually bonded to the substrate, such as by electroplating or ceramic glazing.SEC. 3. Section 25214.2 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:25214.2. (a) For jewelry that is not childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry is made entirely from one or more than one of the following materials:(1) Stainless or surgical steel.(2) Karat gold.(3) Sterling silver.(4) Platinum, palladium, iridium, ruthenium, rhodium, or osmium.(5) Natural or cultured pearls.(6) Glass, ceramic, or crystal decorative components, including cats eye, cubic zirconia, including cubic zirconium or CZ, rhinestones, and cloisonn.(7) A gemstone that is cut and polished for ornamental purposes, excluding aragonite, bayldonite, boleite, cerussite, crocoite, ekanite, linarite, mimetite, phosgenite, samarskite, vanadinite, and wulfenite.(8) Elastic, fabric, ribbon, rope, or string that does not contain intentionally added lead.(9) All natural decorative material, including amber, bone, coral, feathers, fur, horn, leather, shell, or wood, that is in its natural state and is not treated in a way that adds lead.(10) Adhesive.(11) Electroplated metal containing less than 6 percent (60,000 parts per million) lead by weight.(12) Unplated metal not otherwise listed containing less than 1.5 percent (15,000 parts per million) lead by weight.(13) Plastic or rubber, including acrylic, polystyrene, plastic beads and stones, and polyvinyl chloride (PVC) containing less than 0.02 percent (200 parts per million) lead by weight.(14) A dye or surface coating containing less than 0.06 percent (600 parts per million) lead by weight.(15) Any other material that contains less than 0.06 percent (600 parts per million) lead by weight.(b) For body piercing jewelry that is not childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry is made of one or more of the following materials:(1) Surgical implant stainless steel.(2) Surgical implant grade of titanium.(3) Niobium (Nb).(4) Solid 14 karat or higher white or yellow nickel-free gold.(5) Solid platinum.(6) A dense low-porosity plastic, including, but not limited to, Tygon or polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), if the plastic contains no intentionally added lead.(c) (1) For childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry meets all of the following requirements:(A) Every component of the jewelry contains no more than 0.01 percent (100 parts per million) lead by weight, excluding inaccessible component parts.(B) The jewelry has a surface coating that contains no more than 0.009 percent (90 parts per million) lead by weight.(2) The department may establish guidance on what component parts in childrens jewelry shall be considered to be inaccessible for purposes of paragraph (1). In the absence of that guidance from the department, a determination of whether a component part of childrens jewelry is inaccessible shall be made in accordance with Section 1500.87 of Title 16 of the Code of Federal Regulations, as it may be amended from time to time.(d) (1) For childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry that meets either of the following descriptions:(A) The jewelry contains a component or is made of a material that is more than 0.03 percent (300 parts per million) cadmium by weight.(B) The jewelry has a surface coating that contains more than 0.0075 percent (75 parts per million) soluble cadmium by weight.(2) This subdivision shall not apply to any toy regulated for cadmium exposure under the federal Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (Public Law 110-314).(e) The department may establish a standard for childrens jewelry or for a component of childrens jewelry that is more protective of public health, of sensitive subpopulations, or of the environment than the standards established pursuant to subdivisions (c) and (d).(f) This section shall become inoperative on June 1, 2020, and, as of January 1, 2021, is repealed.SEC. 4. Section 25214.2 is added to the Health and Safety Code, to read:25214.2. (a) For jewelry that is not childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry is made entirely from one or more than one of the following materials:(1) Stainless or surgical steel.(2) Karat gold.(3) Sterling silver.(4) Platinum, palladium, iridium, ruthenium, rhodium, or osmium.(5) Natural or cultured pearls.(6) Glass, ceramic, or crystal decorative components, including cats eye, cubic zirconia, including cubic zirconium or CZ, rhinestones, and cloisonn.(7) A gemstone that is cut and polished for ornamental purposes, excluding aragonite, bayldonite, boleite, cerussite, crocoite, ekanite, linarite, mimetite, phosgenite, samarskite, vanadinite, and wulfenite.(8) Elastic, fabric, ribbon, rope, or string that does not contain intentionally added lead.(9) All natural decorative material, including amber, bone, coral, feathers, fur, horn, leather, shell, or wood, that is in its natural state and is not treated in a way that adds lead.(10) Adhesive.(11) Electroplated metal containing less than 0.05 percent (500 parts per million) lead by weight.(12) Unplated metal not otherwise listed containing less than 0.05 percent (500 parts per million) lead by weight.(13) Plastic or rubber, including acrylic, polystyrene, plastic beads and stones, and polyvinyl chloride (PVC) containing less than 0.02 percent (200 parts per million) lead by weight.(14) A dye or surface coating containing less than 0.05 percent (500 parts per million) lead by weight.(15) Any other material that contains less than 0.05 percent (500 parts per million) lead by weight.(b) For body piercing jewelry that is not childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry is made of one or more of the following materials:(1) Surgical implant stainless steel.(2) Surgical implant grade of titanium.(3) Niobium (Nb).(4) Solid 14 karat or higher white or yellow nickel-free gold.(5) Solid platinum.(6) A dense low-porosity plastic, including, but not limited to, Tygon or polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), if the plastic contains no intentionally added lead.(c) (1) For childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry meets all of the following requirements:(A) Every component of the jewelry contains no more than 0.01 percent (100 parts per million) lead by weight, excluding inaccessible component parts.(B) The jewelry has a surface coating that contains no more than 0.009 percent (90 parts per million) lead by weight.(2) The department may establish guidance on what component parts in childrens jewelry shall be considered to be inaccessible for purposes of paragraph (1). In the absence of that guidance from the department, a determination of whether a component part of childrens jewelry is inaccessible shall be made in accordance with Section 1500.87 of Title 16 of the Code of Federal Regulations, as it may be amended from time to time.(d) (1) For childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry that meets either of the following descriptions:(A) The jewelry contains a component or is made of a material that is more than 0.03 percent (300 parts per million) cadmium by weight.(B) The jewelry has a surface coating that contains more than 0.0075 percent (75 parts per million) soluble cadmium by weight.(2) This subdivision shall not apply to any toy regulated for cadmium exposure under the federal Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (Public Law 110-314).(e) The department may establish a standard for childrens jewelry or for a component of childrens jewelry that is more protective of public health, of sensitive subpopulations, or of the environment than the standards established pursuant to subdivisions (c) and (d). (f) This section shall become operative on June 1, 2020.SEC. 5. Section 25214.3.1 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:25214.3.1. (a) A manufacturer or supplier of jewelry that is sold, offered for sale, or offered for promotional purposes shall prepare and, at the request of the department, submit to the department no more than 28 days after the date of the request, technical documentation or other information showing that the jewelry is in compliance with the requirements of this article.(b) A manufacturer or supplier of jewelry that is sold, offered for sale, or offered for promotional purposes shall prepare a certification. This certification shall attest that the jewelry does not contain a level of lead or cadmium that prohibits the jewelry from being sold or offered for sale pursuant to this article and shall do all of the following:(1) Identify the jewelry covered by the certificate, including a description of the jewelry that is sufficiently detailed to match the certificate to each product covered by the certificate and that could not be used to describe any jewelry that is not covered by the certificate.(2) Cite to each separate rule or standard for which the jewelry is being certified.(3) Identify the manufacturer or supplier certifying compliance of the jewelry, including the name, full mailing address, and telephone number of the manufacturer or supplier.(4) Include the contact information for the person maintaining records of the test results of jewelry tested for purposes of this article, including the name, full mailing address, email address, and telephone number of that person.(5) Include the date on which the jewelry was manufactured, including at least the month and year.(6) Include the location where the jewelry was manufactured, including at least the city or administrative region, state, if applicable, and country where the product was manufactured or finally assembled. If the same manufacturer operates more than one location in the same city, the street address of the factory shall be included.(7) Include the date or dates on which, and the location or locations where, the jewelry was tested for purposes of certification.(8) Identify any third-party laboratory that performed the testing for purposes of certification, including the name, full mailing address, and telephone number of the laboratory.(c) A manufacturer or supplier of jewelry sold or offered for promotional purposes in this state shall do either of the following:(1) Provide the certification required by subdivision (b) to a person who sells or offers for sale that manufacturers or suppliers jewelry.(2) Display the certification required by subdivision (b) prominently on the shipping container or on the packaging of jewelry.SEC. 6. Section 25214.4 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:25214.4. (a) The test methods for determining compliance with this article shall be conducted using the EPA reference methods 3050B, 3051A, or 3052, as specified in EPA Test Methods for Evaluating Solid Waste, Physical/Chemical Methods, SW-846 (Third Edition, or subsequent update, as applicable) for lead and cadmium in the material being tested, except as otherwise provided in subdivision (b) and Sections 24214.4.1 and 25214.4.2, and shall be conducted in accordance with all of the following procedures:(1) When preparing a sample, the laboratory shall make every effort to ensure that the sample removed from a jewelry piece is representative of the component to be tested, and is free of contamination from extraneous dirt and material not related to the jewelry component to be tested.(2) All jewelry component samples shall be washed prior to testing using standard laboratory detergent, rinsed with laboratory reagent grade deionized water, and dried in a clean ambient environment.(3) If a component is required to be cut or scraped to obtain a sample, the metal snips, scissors, or other cutting tools used for the cutting or scraping shall be made of stainless steel and washed and rinsed before each use and between samples.(4) A sample shall be digested in a container that is known to be free of lead and cadmium and with the use of an acid that is not contaminated by lead or cadmium, including analytical reagent grade digestion acids and reagent grade deionized water.(5) Method blanks, consisting of all reagents used in sample preparation handled, digested, and made to volume in the same exact manner and in the same container type as samples, shall be tested with each group of 20 or fewer samples tested.(6) The results for the method blanks shall be reported with each group of sample results, and shall be below the stated reporting limit for sample results to be considered valid.(7) Test methods selected shall be those that best demonstrate they can achieve total digestion of the sample material being analyzed. Test methods shall not be used if they are inconsistent with the specified application of the test method or do not demonstrate the best performance or proficiency for achieving total digestion of the sample material.(b) Notwithstanding subdivision (a) and Section 25214.4.1, test methods for determining compliance with the limits for lead in childrens jewelry in subdivision (c) of Section 25214.2 include those permissible to demonstrate compliance with the federal Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (Public Law 110-314). The test method for determining compliance with subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) of subdivision (d) of Section 25214.2 shall be the same test method used to demonstrate compliance with Section 2056b of Title 15 of the United States Code. (c) Digested samples shall be analyzed according to the specification of an approved and validated methodology using inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectroscopy. Other analytical methods, such as inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry, flame atomic absorption spectroscopy, graphite furnace atomic absorption spectroscopy, or other technology, may be used under appropriate conditions, using applicable, recognized analytical techniques for the alternative method to achieve a reported quantitation limit no greater than 0.001 percent (10 parts per million) for samples.(d) All testing for determining compliance with this article shall be performed by a laboratory that conforms to the requirements in Article 8.5 (commencing with Section 25198).SEC. 7. Section 25214.4.1 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:25214.4.1. In addition to the requirements of Section 25214.4, the following procedures shall be used for testing the following materials:(a) For testing a metal plated with suitable undercoats and finish coats, the following protocols shall be observed:(1) Digestion shall be conducted using hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.(2) The sample size shall be 0.050 gram to one gram.(3) The digested sample may require dilution prior to analysis.(4) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.(b) For testing unplated metal and metal substrates that are not a material listed in paragraphs (1) to (10), inclusive, of subdivision (a) of Section 25214.2, the following protocols shall be observed:(1) Digestion shall be conducted using hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.(2) The sample size shall be 0.050 gram to one gram.(3) The digested sample may require dilution prior to analysis.(4) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.(c) For testing polyvinyl chloride (PVC), the following protocols shall be observed:(1) The digestion shall be conducted using hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.(2) The sample size shall be a minimum of 0.05 gram if using microwave digestion or 0.5 gram if using hotplate digestion, and shall be chopped or comminuted prior to digestion.(3) Digested samples may require dilution prior to analysis.(4) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.(d) For testing plastic or rubber that is not polyvinyl chloride (PVC), including acrylic, polystyrene, plastic beads, or plastic stones, the following protocols shall be observed:(1) The digestion shall be conducted using hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.(2) The sample size shall be a minimum of 0.05 gram if using microwave digestion or 0.5 gram if using hotplate digestion, and shall be chopped or comminuted prior to digestion.(3) Plastic beads or stones shall be crushed prior to digestion.(4) Digested samples may require dilution prior to analysis.(5) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.(e) For testing coatings on glass and plastic pearls, the following protocols shall be observed:(1) The coating of glass or plastic beads shall be scraped onto a surface free of dust, including a clean weighing paper or pan, using a clean stainless steel razor blade or other clean sharp instrument that will not contaminate the sample with lead or cadmium. The substrate pearl material shall not be included in the scrapings.(2) The razor blade or sharp instrument shall be rinsed with deionized water, wiped to remove particulate matter, rinsed again, and dried between samples.(3) The scrapings shall be weighed and not less than 50 micrograms of scraped coating shall be used for analysis. If less than 50 micrograms of scraped coating is obtained from an individual pearl, multiple pearls from that sample shall be scraped and composited to obtain a sufficient sample amount.(4) The number of pearls used to make the composite shall be noted.(5) The scrapings shall be digested according to EPA reference method 3050B or 3051 or an equivalent procedure for hot acid digestion in preparation for trace lead or cadmium analysis.(6) The digestate shall be diluted in the minimum volume practical for analysis.(7) The sample result shall be reported within the calibrated range of the instrument. If the initial test of the sample is above the highest calibration standard, the sample shall be diluted and reanalyzed within the calibrated range of the instrument.(f) For testing dyes, paints, coatings, varnish, printing inks, or ceramic glazes, the following testing protocols shall be observed:(1) The digestion shall use hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.(2) The sample size shall be not less than 0.050 gram, and shall be chopped or comminuted prior to digestion.(3) The digested sample may require dilution prior to analysis.(4) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.(g) For testing glass and crystal, the following protocols shall be used:(1) For determining weight:(A) A component shall be free of any extraneous material, including adhesive, before it is weighed.(B) The scale used to weigh a component shall be calibrated annually by a qualified vendor using reference mass standards that are traceable to the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) of the Department of Commerce or the International System of Units (SI) and shall be verified daily before weighing the component.(C) The calibration of the scale shall be accurate to within 0.0001 gram.(2) Both of the following testing protocols shall be observed:(A) The glass and crystal component shall be crushed or grounded to powder form before digestion and shall be digested according to the United States Environmental Protection Agency Test Method 3052 using hydrofluoric acid in a microwave or an equivalent method to yield complete digestion.(B) The digestate shall be diluted in the minimum volume practical for analysis.SEC. 8. No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution because the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution.
3853
3954 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4055
4156 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4257
4358 SECTION 1. It is the intent of the Legislature that this act protect the public health, safety, and welfare of Californians by preventing lead and cadmium exposure from jewelry that is sold in the state.
4459
4560 SECTION 1. It is the intent of the Legislature that this act protect the public health, safety, and welfare of Californians by preventing lead and cadmium exposure from jewelry that is sold in the state.
4661
4762 SECTION 1. It is the intent of the Legislature that this act protect the public health, safety, and welfare of Californians by preventing lead and cadmium exposure from jewelry that is sold in the state.
4863
4964 ### SECTION 1.
5065
5166 SEC. 2. Section 25214.1 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:25214.1. For purposes of this article, the following definitions shall apply:(a) Body piercing jewelry means any part of jewelry that is manufactured or sold for placement in a new piercing or a mucous membrane, but does not include any part of that jewelry that is not placed within a new piercing or a mucous membrane.(b) Children means persons under 15 years of age.(c) Childrens jewelry means jewelry that is made for, marketed for use by, or marketed to, children. For purposes of this article, childrens jewelry includes, but is not limited to, jewelry that meets any of the following conditions:(1) Represented in its packaging, display, or advertising, as appropriate for use by children.(2) Sold in conjunction with, attached to, or packaged together with other products that are packaged, displayed, or advertised as appropriate for use by children.(3) Sized for children and not intended for use by adults.(4) Sold in any of the following:(A) A vending machine.(B) Retail store, catalog, or online internet website, in which a person exclusively offers for sale products that are packaged, displayed, or advertised as appropriate for use by children.(C) A discrete portion of a retail store, catalog, or online internet website, in which a person offers for sale products that are packaged, displayed, or advertised as appropriate for use by children.(d) Component means any part of jewelry.(e) Inaccessible means not physically exposed by reason of a sealed covering or casing and does not become physically exposed through reasonably foreseeable use and abuse of the product, including swallowing, mouthing, breaking, or other childrens activities, and the aging of the product. For purposes of this article, paint, coatings, or electroplating do not render substrate material inaccessible to a child.(f) Jewelry means any of the following:(1) Any of the following ornaments worn by a person:(A) An anklet.(B) Arm cuff.(C) Bracelet.(D) Brooch.(E) Chain.(F) Crown.(G) Cuff link.(H) Hair accessory.(I) Earring.(J) Necklace.(K) Pin.(L) Ring.(M) Tie clip.(N) Body piercing jewelry.(O) Jewelry placed in the mouth for display or ornament.(2) Any bead, chain, link, pendant, or other component of an ornament specified in paragraph (1).(3) A charm, bead, chain, link, pendant, or other attachment to shoes or clothing that can be removed and may be used as a component of an ornament specified in paragraph (1).(4) A watch in which a timepiece is a component of an ornament specified in paragraph (1), excluding the timepiece itself if the timepiece can be removed from the ornament.(g) (1) Surface coating means a fluid, semifluid, or other material, with or without a suspension of finely divided coloring matter, that changes to a solid film when a thin layer is applied to a metal, wood, stone, paper, leather, cloth, plastic, or other surface.(2) Surface coating does not include a printing ink or a material that actually becomes a part of the substrate, including, but not limited to, pigment in a plastic article, or a material that is actually bonded to the substrate, such as by electroplating or ceramic glazing.
5267
5368 SEC. 2. Section 25214.1 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:
5469
5570 ### SEC. 2.
5671
5772 25214.1. For purposes of this article, the following definitions shall apply:(a) Body piercing jewelry means any part of jewelry that is manufactured or sold for placement in a new piercing or a mucous membrane, but does not include any part of that jewelry that is not placed within a new piercing or a mucous membrane.(b) Children means persons under 15 years of age.(c) Childrens jewelry means jewelry that is made for, marketed for use by, or marketed to, children. For purposes of this article, childrens jewelry includes, but is not limited to, jewelry that meets any of the following conditions:(1) Represented in its packaging, display, or advertising, as appropriate for use by children.(2) Sold in conjunction with, attached to, or packaged together with other products that are packaged, displayed, or advertised as appropriate for use by children.(3) Sized for children and not intended for use by adults.(4) Sold in any of the following:(A) A vending machine.(B) Retail store, catalog, or online internet website, in which a person exclusively offers for sale products that are packaged, displayed, or advertised as appropriate for use by children.(C) A discrete portion of a retail store, catalog, or online internet website, in which a person offers for sale products that are packaged, displayed, or advertised as appropriate for use by children.(d) Component means any part of jewelry.(e) Inaccessible means not physically exposed by reason of a sealed covering or casing and does not become physically exposed through reasonably foreseeable use and abuse of the product, including swallowing, mouthing, breaking, or other childrens activities, and the aging of the product. For purposes of this article, paint, coatings, or electroplating do not render substrate material inaccessible to a child.(f) Jewelry means any of the following:(1) Any of the following ornaments worn by a person:(A) An anklet.(B) Arm cuff.(C) Bracelet.(D) Brooch.(E) Chain.(F) Crown.(G) Cuff link.(H) Hair accessory.(I) Earring.(J) Necklace.(K) Pin.(L) Ring.(M) Tie clip.(N) Body piercing jewelry.(O) Jewelry placed in the mouth for display or ornament.(2) Any bead, chain, link, pendant, or other component of an ornament specified in paragraph (1).(3) A charm, bead, chain, link, pendant, or other attachment to shoes or clothing that can be removed and may be used as a component of an ornament specified in paragraph (1).(4) A watch in which a timepiece is a component of an ornament specified in paragraph (1), excluding the timepiece itself if the timepiece can be removed from the ornament.(g) (1) Surface coating means a fluid, semifluid, or other material, with or without a suspension of finely divided coloring matter, that changes to a solid film when a thin layer is applied to a metal, wood, stone, paper, leather, cloth, plastic, or other surface.(2) Surface coating does not include a printing ink or a material that actually becomes a part of the substrate, including, but not limited to, pigment in a plastic article, or a material that is actually bonded to the substrate, such as by electroplating or ceramic glazing.
5873
5974 25214.1. For purposes of this article, the following definitions shall apply:(a) Body piercing jewelry means any part of jewelry that is manufactured or sold for placement in a new piercing or a mucous membrane, but does not include any part of that jewelry that is not placed within a new piercing or a mucous membrane.(b) Children means persons under 15 years of age.(c) Childrens jewelry means jewelry that is made for, marketed for use by, or marketed to, children. For purposes of this article, childrens jewelry includes, but is not limited to, jewelry that meets any of the following conditions:(1) Represented in its packaging, display, or advertising, as appropriate for use by children.(2) Sold in conjunction with, attached to, or packaged together with other products that are packaged, displayed, or advertised as appropriate for use by children.(3) Sized for children and not intended for use by adults.(4) Sold in any of the following:(A) A vending machine.(B) Retail store, catalog, or online internet website, in which a person exclusively offers for sale products that are packaged, displayed, or advertised as appropriate for use by children.(C) A discrete portion of a retail store, catalog, or online internet website, in which a person offers for sale products that are packaged, displayed, or advertised as appropriate for use by children.(d) Component means any part of jewelry.(e) Inaccessible means not physically exposed by reason of a sealed covering or casing and does not become physically exposed through reasonably foreseeable use and abuse of the product, including swallowing, mouthing, breaking, or other childrens activities, and the aging of the product. For purposes of this article, paint, coatings, or electroplating do not render substrate material inaccessible to a child.(f) Jewelry means any of the following:(1) Any of the following ornaments worn by a person:(A) An anklet.(B) Arm cuff.(C) Bracelet.(D) Brooch.(E) Chain.(F) Crown.(G) Cuff link.(H) Hair accessory.(I) Earring.(J) Necklace.(K) Pin.(L) Ring.(M) Tie clip.(N) Body piercing jewelry.(O) Jewelry placed in the mouth for display or ornament.(2) Any bead, chain, link, pendant, or other component of an ornament specified in paragraph (1).(3) A charm, bead, chain, link, pendant, or other attachment to shoes or clothing that can be removed and may be used as a component of an ornament specified in paragraph (1).(4) A watch in which a timepiece is a component of an ornament specified in paragraph (1), excluding the timepiece itself if the timepiece can be removed from the ornament.(g) (1) Surface coating means a fluid, semifluid, or other material, with or without a suspension of finely divided coloring matter, that changes to a solid film when a thin layer is applied to a metal, wood, stone, paper, leather, cloth, plastic, or other surface.(2) Surface coating does not include a printing ink or a material that actually becomes a part of the substrate, including, but not limited to, pigment in a plastic article, or a material that is actually bonded to the substrate, such as by electroplating or ceramic glazing.
6075
6176 25214.1. For purposes of this article, the following definitions shall apply:(a) Body piercing jewelry means any part of jewelry that is manufactured or sold for placement in a new piercing or a mucous membrane, but does not include any part of that jewelry that is not placed within a new piercing or a mucous membrane.(b) Children means persons under 15 years of age.(c) Childrens jewelry means jewelry that is made for, marketed for use by, or marketed to, children. For purposes of this article, childrens jewelry includes, but is not limited to, jewelry that meets any of the following conditions:(1) Represented in its packaging, display, or advertising, as appropriate for use by children.(2) Sold in conjunction with, attached to, or packaged together with other products that are packaged, displayed, or advertised as appropriate for use by children.(3) Sized for children and not intended for use by adults.(4) Sold in any of the following:(A) A vending machine.(B) Retail store, catalog, or online internet website, in which a person exclusively offers for sale products that are packaged, displayed, or advertised as appropriate for use by children.(C) A discrete portion of a retail store, catalog, or online internet website, in which a person offers for sale products that are packaged, displayed, or advertised as appropriate for use by children.(d) Component means any part of jewelry.(e) Inaccessible means not physically exposed by reason of a sealed covering or casing and does not become physically exposed through reasonably foreseeable use and abuse of the product, including swallowing, mouthing, breaking, or other childrens activities, and the aging of the product. For purposes of this article, paint, coatings, or electroplating do not render substrate material inaccessible to a child.(f) Jewelry means any of the following:(1) Any of the following ornaments worn by a person:(A) An anklet.(B) Arm cuff.(C) Bracelet.(D) Brooch.(E) Chain.(F) Crown.(G) Cuff link.(H) Hair accessory.(I) Earring.(J) Necklace.(K) Pin.(L) Ring.(M) Tie clip.(N) Body piercing jewelry.(O) Jewelry placed in the mouth for display or ornament.(2) Any bead, chain, link, pendant, or other component of an ornament specified in paragraph (1).(3) A charm, bead, chain, link, pendant, or other attachment to shoes or clothing that can be removed and may be used as a component of an ornament specified in paragraph (1).(4) A watch in which a timepiece is a component of an ornament specified in paragraph (1), excluding the timepiece itself if the timepiece can be removed from the ornament.(g) (1) Surface coating means a fluid, semifluid, or other material, with or without a suspension of finely divided coloring matter, that changes to a solid film when a thin layer is applied to a metal, wood, stone, paper, leather, cloth, plastic, or other surface.(2) Surface coating does not include a printing ink or a material that actually becomes a part of the substrate, including, but not limited to, pigment in a plastic article, or a material that is actually bonded to the substrate, such as by electroplating or ceramic glazing.
6277
6378
6479
6580 25214.1. For purposes of this article, the following definitions shall apply:
6681
6782 (a) Body piercing jewelry means any part of jewelry that is manufactured or sold for placement in a new piercing or a mucous membrane, but does not include any part of that jewelry that is not placed within a new piercing or a mucous membrane.
6883
6984 (b) Children means persons under 15 years of age.
7085
7186 (c) Childrens jewelry means jewelry that is made for, marketed for use by, or marketed to, children. For purposes of this article, childrens jewelry includes, but is not limited to, jewelry that meets any of the following conditions:
7287
7388 (1) Represented in its packaging, display, or advertising, as appropriate for use by children.
7489
7590 (2) Sold in conjunction with, attached to, or packaged together with other products that are packaged, displayed, or advertised as appropriate for use by children.
7691
7792 (3) Sized for children and not intended for use by adults.
7893
7994 (4) Sold in any of the following:
8095
8196 (A) A vending machine.
8297
8398 (B) Retail store, catalog, or online internet website, in which a person exclusively offers for sale products that are packaged, displayed, or advertised as appropriate for use by children.
8499
85100 (C) A discrete portion of a retail store, catalog, or online internet website, in which a person offers for sale products that are packaged, displayed, or advertised as appropriate for use by children.
86101
87102 (d) Component means any part of jewelry.
88103
89104 (e) Inaccessible means not physically exposed by reason of a sealed covering or casing and does not become physically exposed through reasonably foreseeable use and abuse of the product, including swallowing, mouthing, breaking, or other childrens activities, and the aging of the product. For purposes of this article, paint, coatings, or electroplating do not render substrate material inaccessible to a child.
90105
91106 (f) Jewelry means any of the following:
92107
93108 (1) Any of the following ornaments worn by a person:
94109
95110 (A) An anklet.
96111
97112 (B) Arm cuff.
98113
99114 (C) Bracelet.
100115
101116 (D) Brooch.
102117
103118 (E) Chain.
104119
105120 (F) Crown.
106121
107122 (G) Cuff link.
108123
109124 (H) Hair accessory.
110125
111126 (I) Earring.
112127
113128 (J) Necklace.
114129
115130 (K) Pin.
116131
117132 (L) Ring.
118133
119134 (M) Tie clip.
120135
121136 (N) Body piercing jewelry.
122137
123138 (O) Jewelry placed in the mouth for display or ornament.
124139
125140 (2) Any bead, chain, link, pendant, or other component of an ornament specified in paragraph (1).
126141
127142 (3) A charm, bead, chain, link, pendant, or other attachment to shoes or clothing that can be removed and may be used as a component of an ornament specified in paragraph (1).
128143
129144 (4) A watch in which a timepiece is a component of an ornament specified in paragraph (1), excluding the timepiece itself if the timepiece can be removed from the ornament.
130145
131146 (g) (1) Surface coating means a fluid, semifluid, or other material, with or without a suspension of finely divided coloring matter, that changes to a solid film when a thin layer is applied to a metal, wood, stone, paper, leather, cloth, plastic, or other surface.
132147
133148 (2) Surface coating does not include a printing ink or a material that actually becomes a part of the substrate, including, but not limited to, pigment in a plastic article, or a material that is actually bonded to the substrate, such as by electroplating or ceramic glazing.
134149
135150 SEC. 3. Section 25214.2 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:25214.2. (a) For jewelry that is not childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry is made entirely from one or more than one of the following materials:(1) Stainless or surgical steel.(2) Karat gold.(3) Sterling silver.(4) Platinum, palladium, iridium, ruthenium, rhodium, or osmium.(5) Natural or cultured pearls.(6) Glass, ceramic, or crystal decorative components, including cats eye, cubic zirconia, including cubic zirconium or CZ, rhinestones, and cloisonn.(7) A gemstone that is cut and polished for ornamental purposes, excluding aragonite, bayldonite, boleite, cerussite, crocoite, ekanite, linarite, mimetite, phosgenite, samarskite, vanadinite, and wulfenite.(8) Elastic, fabric, ribbon, rope, or string that does not contain intentionally added lead.(9) All natural decorative material, including amber, bone, coral, feathers, fur, horn, leather, shell, or wood, that is in its natural state and is not treated in a way that adds lead.(10) Adhesive.(11) Electroplated metal containing less than 6 percent (60,000 parts per million) lead by weight.(12) Unplated metal not otherwise listed containing less than 1.5 percent (15,000 parts per million) lead by weight.(13) Plastic or rubber, including acrylic, polystyrene, plastic beads and stones, and polyvinyl chloride (PVC) containing less than 0.02 percent (200 parts per million) lead by weight.(14) A dye or surface coating containing less than 0.06 percent (600 parts per million) lead by weight.(15) Any other material that contains less than 0.06 percent (600 parts per million) lead by weight.(b) For body piercing jewelry that is not childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry is made of one or more of the following materials:(1) Surgical implant stainless steel.(2) Surgical implant grade of titanium.(3) Niobium (Nb).(4) Solid 14 karat or higher white or yellow nickel-free gold.(5) Solid platinum.(6) A dense low-porosity plastic, including, but not limited to, Tygon or polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), if the plastic contains no intentionally added lead.(c) (1) For childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry meets all of the following requirements:(A) Every component of the jewelry contains no more than 0.01 percent (100 parts per million) lead by weight, excluding inaccessible component parts.(B) The jewelry has a surface coating that contains no more than 0.009 percent (90 parts per million) lead by weight.(2) The department may establish guidance on what component parts in childrens jewelry shall be considered to be inaccessible for purposes of paragraph (1). In the absence of that guidance from the department, a determination of whether a component part of childrens jewelry is inaccessible shall be made in accordance with Section 1500.87 of Title 16 of the Code of Federal Regulations, as it may be amended from time to time.(d) (1) For childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry that meets either of the following descriptions:(A) The jewelry contains a component or is made of a material that is more than 0.03 percent (300 parts per million) cadmium by weight.(B) The jewelry has a surface coating that contains more than 0.0075 percent (75 parts per million) soluble cadmium by weight.(2) This subdivision shall not apply to any toy regulated for cadmium exposure under the federal Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (Public Law 110-314).(e) The department may establish a standard for childrens jewelry or for a component of childrens jewelry that is more protective of public health, of sensitive subpopulations, or of the environment than the standards established pursuant to subdivisions (c) and (d).(f) This section shall become inoperative on June 1, 2020, and, as of January 1, 2021, is repealed.
136151
137152 SEC. 3. Section 25214.2 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:
138153
139154 ### SEC. 3.
140155
141156 25214.2. (a) For jewelry that is not childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry is made entirely from one or more than one of the following materials:(1) Stainless or surgical steel.(2) Karat gold.(3) Sterling silver.(4) Platinum, palladium, iridium, ruthenium, rhodium, or osmium.(5) Natural or cultured pearls.(6) Glass, ceramic, or crystal decorative components, including cats eye, cubic zirconia, including cubic zirconium or CZ, rhinestones, and cloisonn.(7) A gemstone that is cut and polished for ornamental purposes, excluding aragonite, bayldonite, boleite, cerussite, crocoite, ekanite, linarite, mimetite, phosgenite, samarskite, vanadinite, and wulfenite.(8) Elastic, fabric, ribbon, rope, or string that does not contain intentionally added lead.(9) All natural decorative material, including amber, bone, coral, feathers, fur, horn, leather, shell, or wood, that is in its natural state and is not treated in a way that adds lead.(10) Adhesive.(11) Electroplated metal containing less than 6 percent (60,000 parts per million) lead by weight.(12) Unplated metal not otherwise listed containing less than 1.5 percent (15,000 parts per million) lead by weight.(13) Plastic or rubber, including acrylic, polystyrene, plastic beads and stones, and polyvinyl chloride (PVC) containing less than 0.02 percent (200 parts per million) lead by weight.(14) A dye or surface coating containing less than 0.06 percent (600 parts per million) lead by weight.(15) Any other material that contains less than 0.06 percent (600 parts per million) lead by weight.(b) For body piercing jewelry that is not childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry is made of one or more of the following materials:(1) Surgical implant stainless steel.(2) Surgical implant grade of titanium.(3) Niobium (Nb).(4) Solid 14 karat or higher white or yellow nickel-free gold.(5) Solid platinum.(6) A dense low-porosity plastic, including, but not limited to, Tygon or polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), if the plastic contains no intentionally added lead.(c) (1) For childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry meets all of the following requirements:(A) Every component of the jewelry contains no more than 0.01 percent (100 parts per million) lead by weight, excluding inaccessible component parts.(B) The jewelry has a surface coating that contains no more than 0.009 percent (90 parts per million) lead by weight.(2) The department may establish guidance on what component parts in childrens jewelry shall be considered to be inaccessible for purposes of paragraph (1). In the absence of that guidance from the department, a determination of whether a component part of childrens jewelry is inaccessible shall be made in accordance with Section 1500.87 of Title 16 of the Code of Federal Regulations, as it may be amended from time to time.(d) (1) For childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry that meets either of the following descriptions:(A) The jewelry contains a component or is made of a material that is more than 0.03 percent (300 parts per million) cadmium by weight.(B) The jewelry has a surface coating that contains more than 0.0075 percent (75 parts per million) soluble cadmium by weight.(2) This subdivision shall not apply to any toy regulated for cadmium exposure under the federal Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (Public Law 110-314).(e) The department may establish a standard for childrens jewelry or for a component of childrens jewelry that is more protective of public health, of sensitive subpopulations, or of the environment than the standards established pursuant to subdivisions (c) and (d).(f) This section shall become inoperative on June 1, 2020, and, as of January 1, 2021, is repealed.
142157
143158 25214.2. (a) For jewelry that is not childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry is made entirely from one or more than one of the following materials:(1) Stainless or surgical steel.(2) Karat gold.(3) Sterling silver.(4) Platinum, palladium, iridium, ruthenium, rhodium, or osmium.(5) Natural or cultured pearls.(6) Glass, ceramic, or crystal decorative components, including cats eye, cubic zirconia, including cubic zirconium or CZ, rhinestones, and cloisonn.(7) A gemstone that is cut and polished for ornamental purposes, excluding aragonite, bayldonite, boleite, cerussite, crocoite, ekanite, linarite, mimetite, phosgenite, samarskite, vanadinite, and wulfenite.(8) Elastic, fabric, ribbon, rope, or string that does not contain intentionally added lead.(9) All natural decorative material, including amber, bone, coral, feathers, fur, horn, leather, shell, or wood, that is in its natural state and is not treated in a way that adds lead.(10) Adhesive.(11) Electroplated metal containing less than 6 percent (60,000 parts per million) lead by weight.(12) Unplated metal not otherwise listed containing less than 1.5 percent (15,000 parts per million) lead by weight.(13) Plastic or rubber, including acrylic, polystyrene, plastic beads and stones, and polyvinyl chloride (PVC) containing less than 0.02 percent (200 parts per million) lead by weight.(14) A dye or surface coating containing less than 0.06 percent (600 parts per million) lead by weight.(15) Any other material that contains less than 0.06 percent (600 parts per million) lead by weight.(b) For body piercing jewelry that is not childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry is made of one or more of the following materials:(1) Surgical implant stainless steel.(2) Surgical implant grade of titanium.(3) Niobium (Nb).(4) Solid 14 karat or higher white or yellow nickel-free gold.(5) Solid platinum.(6) A dense low-porosity plastic, including, but not limited to, Tygon or polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), if the plastic contains no intentionally added lead.(c) (1) For childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry meets all of the following requirements:(A) Every component of the jewelry contains no more than 0.01 percent (100 parts per million) lead by weight, excluding inaccessible component parts.(B) The jewelry has a surface coating that contains no more than 0.009 percent (90 parts per million) lead by weight.(2) The department may establish guidance on what component parts in childrens jewelry shall be considered to be inaccessible for purposes of paragraph (1). In the absence of that guidance from the department, a determination of whether a component part of childrens jewelry is inaccessible shall be made in accordance with Section 1500.87 of Title 16 of the Code of Federal Regulations, as it may be amended from time to time.(d) (1) For childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry that meets either of the following descriptions:(A) The jewelry contains a component or is made of a material that is more than 0.03 percent (300 parts per million) cadmium by weight.(B) The jewelry has a surface coating that contains more than 0.0075 percent (75 parts per million) soluble cadmium by weight.(2) This subdivision shall not apply to any toy regulated for cadmium exposure under the federal Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (Public Law 110-314).(e) The department may establish a standard for childrens jewelry or for a component of childrens jewelry that is more protective of public health, of sensitive subpopulations, or of the environment than the standards established pursuant to subdivisions (c) and (d).(f) This section shall become inoperative on June 1, 2020, and, as of January 1, 2021, is repealed.
144159
145160 25214.2. (a) For jewelry that is not childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry is made entirely from one or more than one of the following materials:(1) Stainless or surgical steel.(2) Karat gold.(3) Sterling silver.(4) Platinum, palladium, iridium, ruthenium, rhodium, or osmium.(5) Natural or cultured pearls.(6) Glass, ceramic, or crystal decorative components, including cats eye, cubic zirconia, including cubic zirconium or CZ, rhinestones, and cloisonn.(7) A gemstone that is cut and polished for ornamental purposes, excluding aragonite, bayldonite, boleite, cerussite, crocoite, ekanite, linarite, mimetite, phosgenite, samarskite, vanadinite, and wulfenite.(8) Elastic, fabric, ribbon, rope, or string that does not contain intentionally added lead.(9) All natural decorative material, including amber, bone, coral, feathers, fur, horn, leather, shell, or wood, that is in its natural state and is not treated in a way that adds lead.(10) Adhesive.(11) Electroplated metal containing less than 6 percent (60,000 parts per million) lead by weight.(12) Unplated metal not otherwise listed containing less than 1.5 percent (15,000 parts per million) lead by weight.(13) Plastic or rubber, including acrylic, polystyrene, plastic beads and stones, and polyvinyl chloride (PVC) containing less than 0.02 percent (200 parts per million) lead by weight.(14) A dye or surface coating containing less than 0.06 percent (600 parts per million) lead by weight.(15) Any other material that contains less than 0.06 percent (600 parts per million) lead by weight.(b) For body piercing jewelry that is not childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry is made of one or more of the following materials:(1) Surgical implant stainless steel.(2) Surgical implant grade of titanium.(3) Niobium (Nb).(4) Solid 14 karat or higher white or yellow nickel-free gold.(5) Solid platinum.(6) A dense low-porosity plastic, including, but not limited to, Tygon or polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), if the plastic contains no intentionally added lead.(c) (1) For childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry meets all of the following requirements:(A) Every component of the jewelry contains no more than 0.01 percent (100 parts per million) lead by weight, excluding inaccessible component parts.(B) The jewelry has a surface coating that contains no more than 0.009 percent (90 parts per million) lead by weight.(2) The department may establish guidance on what component parts in childrens jewelry shall be considered to be inaccessible for purposes of paragraph (1). In the absence of that guidance from the department, a determination of whether a component part of childrens jewelry is inaccessible shall be made in accordance with Section 1500.87 of Title 16 of the Code of Federal Regulations, as it may be amended from time to time.(d) (1) For childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry that meets either of the following descriptions:(A) The jewelry contains a component or is made of a material that is more than 0.03 percent (300 parts per million) cadmium by weight.(B) The jewelry has a surface coating that contains more than 0.0075 percent (75 parts per million) soluble cadmium by weight.(2) This subdivision shall not apply to any toy regulated for cadmium exposure under the federal Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (Public Law 110-314).(e) The department may establish a standard for childrens jewelry or for a component of childrens jewelry that is more protective of public health, of sensitive subpopulations, or of the environment than the standards established pursuant to subdivisions (c) and (d).(f) This section shall become inoperative on June 1, 2020, and, as of January 1, 2021, is repealed.
146161
147162
148163
149164 25214.2. (a) For jewelry that is not childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry is made entirely from one or more than one of the following materials:
150165
151166 (1) Stainless or surgical steel.
152167
153168 (2) Karat gold.
154169
155170 (3) Sterling silver.
156171
157172 (4) Platinum, palladium, iridium, ruthenium, rhodium, or osmium.
158173
159174 (5) Natural or cultured pearls.
160175
161176 (6) Glass, ceramic, or crystal decorative components, including cats eye, cubic zirconia, including cubic zirconium or CZ, rhinestones, and cloisonn.
162177
163178 (7) A gemstone that is cut and polished for ornamental purposes, excluding aragonite, bayldonite, boleite, cerussite, crocoite, ekanite, linarite, mimetite, phosgenite, samarskite, vanadinite, and wulfenite.
164179
165180 (8) Elastic, fabric, ribbon, rope, or string that does not contain intentionally added lead.
166181
167182 (9) All natural decorative material, including amber, bone, coral, feathers, fur, horn, leather, shell, or wood, that is in its natural state and is not treated in a way that adds lead.
168183
169184 (10) Adhesive.
170185
171186 (11) Electroplated metal containing less than 6 percent (60,000 parts per million) lead by weight.
172187
173188 (12) Unplated metal not otherwise listed containing less than 1.5 percent (15,000 parts per million) lead by weight.
174189
175190 (13) Plastic or rubber, including acrylic, polystyrene, plastic beads and stones, and polyvinyl chloride (PVC) containing less than 0.02 percent (200 parts per million) lead by weight.
176191
177192 (14) A dye or surface coating containing less than 0.06 percent (600 parts per million) lead by weight.
178193
179194 (15) Any other material that contains less than 0.06 percent (600 parts per million) lead by weight.
180195
181196 (b) For body piercing jewelry that is not childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry is made of one or more of the following materials:
182197
183198 (1) Surgical implant stainless steel.
184199
185200 (2) Surgical implant grade of titanium.
186201
187202 (3) Niobium (Nb).
188203
189204 (4) Solid 14 karat or higher white or yellow nickel-free gold.
190205
191206 (5) Solid platinum.
192207
193208 (6) A dense low-porosity plastic, including, but not limited to, Tygon or polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), if the plastic contains no intentionally added lead.
194209
195210 (c) (1) For childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry meets all of the following requirements:
196211
197212 (A) Every component of the jewelry contains no more than 0.01 percent (100 parts per million) lead by weight, excluding inaccessible component parts.
198213
199214 (B) The jewelry has a surface coating that contains no more than 0.009 percent (90 parts per million) lead by weight.
200215
201216 (2) The department may establish guidance on what component parts in childrens jewelry shall be considered to be inaccessible for purposes of paragraph (1). In the absence of that guidance from the department, a determination of whether a component part of childrens jewelry is inaccessible shall be made in accordance with Section 1500.87 of Title 16 of the Code of Federal Regulations, as it may be amended from time to time.
202217
203218 (d) (1) For childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry that meets either of the following descriptions:
204219
205220 (A) The jewelry contains a component or is made of a material that is more than 0.03 percent (300 parts per million) cadmium by weight.
206221
207222 (B) The jewelry has a surface coating that contains more than 0.0075 percent (75 parts per million) soluble cadmium by weight.
208223
209224 (2) This subdivision shall not apply to any toy regulated for cadmium exposure under the federal Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (Public Law 110-314).
210225
211226 (e) The department may establish a standard for childrens jewelry or for a component of childrens jewelry that is more protective of public health, of sensitive subpopulations, or of the environment than the standards established pursuant to subdivisions (c) and (d).
212227
213228 (f) This section shall become inoperative on June 1, 2020, and, as of January 1, 2021, is repealed.
214229
215230 SEC. 4. Section 25214.2 is added to the Health and Safety Code, to read:25214.2. (a) For jewelry that is not childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry is made entirely from one or more than one of the following materials:(1) Stainless or surgical steel.(2) Karat gold.(3) Sterling silver.(4) Platinum, palladium, iridium, ruthenium, rhodium, or osmium.(5) Natural or cultured pearls.(6) Glass, ceramic, or crystal decorative components, including cats eye, cubic zirconia, including cubic zirconium or CZ, rhinestones, and cloisonn.(7) A gemstone that is cut and polished for ornamental purposes, excluding aragonite, bayldonite, boleite, cerussite, crocoite, ekanite, linarite, mimetite, phosgenite, samarskite, vanadinite, and wulfenite.(8) Elastic, fabric, ribbon, rope, or string that does not contain intentionally added lead.(9) All natural decorative material, including amber, bone, coral, feathers, fur, horn, leather, shell, or wood, that is in its natural state and is not treated in a way that adds lead.(10) Adhesive.(11) Electroplated metal containing less than 0.05 percent (500 parts per million) lead by weight.(12) Unplated metal not otherwise listed containing less than 0.05 percent (500 parts per million) lead by weight.(13) Plastic or rubber, including acrylic, polystyrene, plastic beads and stones, and polyvinyl chloride (PVC) containing less than 0.02 percent (200 parts per million) lead by weight.(14) A dye or surface coating containing less than 0.05 percent (500 parts per million) lead by weight.(15) Any other material that contains less than 0.05 percent (500 parts per million) lead by weight.(b) For body piercing jewelry that is not childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry is made of one or more of the following materials:(1) Surgical implant stainless steel.(2) Surgical implant grade of titanium.(3) Niobium (Nb).(4) Solid 14 karat or higher white or yellow nickel-free gold.(5) Solid platinum.(6) A dense low-porosity plastic, including, but not limited to, Tygon or polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), if the plastic contains no intentionally added lead.(c) (1) For childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry meets all of the following requirements:(A) Every component of the jewelry contains no more than 0.01 percent (100 parts per million) lead by weight, excluding inaccessible component parts.(B) The jewelry has a surface coating that contains no more than 0.009 percent (90 parts per million) lead by weight.(2) The department may establish guidance on what component parts in childrens jewelry shall be considered to be inaccessible for purposes of paragraph (1). In the absence of that guidance from the department, a determination of whether a component part of childrens jewelry is inaccessible shall be made in accordance with Section 1500.87 of Title 16 of the Code of Federal Regulations, as it may be amended from time to time.(d) (1) For childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry that meets either of the following descriptions:(A) The jewelry contains a component or is made of a material that is more than 0.03 percent (300 parts per million) cadmium by weight.(B) The jewelry has a surface coating that contains more than 0.0075 percent (75 parts per million) soluble cadmium by weight.(2) This subdivision shall not apply to any toy regulated for cadmium exposure under the federal Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (Public Law 110-314).(e) The department may establish a standard for childrens jewelry or for a component of childrens jewelry that is more protective of public health, of sensitive subpopulations, or of the environment than the standards established pursuant to subdivisions (c) and (d). (f) This section shall become operative on June 1, 2020.
216231
217232 SEC. 4. Section 25214.2 is added to the Health and Safety Code, to read:
218233
219234 ### SEC. 4.
220235
221236 25214.2. (a) For jewelry that is not childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry is made entirely from one or more than one of the following materials:(1) Stainless or surgical steel.(2) Karat gold.(3) Sterling silver.(4) Platinum, palladium, iridium, ruthenium, rhodium, or osmium.(5) Natural or cultured pearls.(6) Glass, ceramic, or crystal decorative components, including cats eye, cubic zirconia, including cubic zirconium or CZ, rhinestones, and cloisonn.(7) A gemstone that is cut and polished for ornamental purposes, excluding aragonite, bayldonite, boleite, cerussite, crocoite, ekanite, linarite, mimetite, phosgenite, samarskite, vanadinite, and wulfenite.(8) Elastic, fabric, ribbon, rope, or string that does not contain intentionally added lead.(9) All natural decorative material, including amber, bone, coral, feathers, fur, horn, leather, shell, or wood, that is in its natural state and is not treated in a way that adds lead.(10) Adhesive.(11) Electroplated metal containing less than 0.05 percent (500 parts per million) lead by weight.(12) Unplated metal not otherwise listed containing less than 0.05 percent (500 parts per million) lead by weight.(13) Plastic or rubber, including acrylic, polystyrene, plastic beads and stones, and polyvinyl chloride (PVC) containing less than 0.02 percent (200 parts per million) lead by weight.(14) A dye or surface coating containing less than 0.05 percent (500 parts per million) lead by weight.(15) Any other material that contains less than 0.05 percent (500 parts per million) lead by weight.(b) For body piercing jewelry that is not childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry is made of one or more of the following materials:(1) Surgical implant stainless steel.(2) Surgical implant grade of titanium.(3) Niobium (Nb).(4) Solid 14 karat or higher white or yellow nickel-free gold.(5) Solid platinum.(6) A dense low-porosity plastic, including, but not limited to, Tygon or polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), if the plastic contains no intentionally added lead.(c) (1) For childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry meets all of the following requirements:(A) Every component of the jewelry contains no more than 0.01 percent (100 parts per million) lead by weight, excluding inaccessible component parts.(B) The jewelry has a surface coating that contains no more than 0.009 percent (90 parts per million) lead by weight.(2) The department may establish guidance on what component parts in childrens jewelry shall be considered to be inaccessible for purposes of paragraph (1). In the absence of that guidance from the department, a determination of whether a component part of childrens jewelry is inaccessible shall be made in accordance with Section 1500.87 of Title 16 of the Code of Federal Regulations, as it may be amended from time to time.(d) (1) For childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry that meets either of the following descriptions:(A) The jewelry contains a component or is made of a material that is more than 0.03 percent (300 parts per million) cadmium by weight.(B) The jewelry has a surface coating that contains more than 0.0075 percent (75 parts per million) soluble cadmium by weight.(2) This subdivision shall not apply to any toy regulated for cadmium exposure under the federal Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (Public Law 110-314).(e) The department may establish a standard for childrens jewelry or for a component of childrens jewelry that is more protective of public health, of sensitive subpopulations, or of the environment than the standards established pursuant to subdivisions (c) and (d). (f) This section shall become operative on June 1, 2020.
222237
223238 25214.2. (a) For jewelry that is not childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry is made entirely from one or more than one of the following materials:(1) Stainless or surgical steel.(2) Karat gold.(3) Sterling silver.(4) Platinum, palladium, iridium, ruthenium, rhodium, or osmium.(5) Natural or cultured pearls.(6) Glass, ceramic, or crystal decorative components, including cats eye, cubic zirconia, including cubic zirconium or CZ, rhinestones, and cloisonn.(7) A gemstone that is cut and polished for ornamental purposes, excluding aragonite, bayldonite, boleite, cerussite, crocoite, ekanite, linarite, mimetite, phosgenite, samarskite, vanadinite, and wulfenite.(8) Elastic, fabric, ribbon, rope, or string that does not contain intentionally added lead.(9) All natural decorative material, including amber, bone, coral, feathers, fur, horn, leather, shell, or wood, that is in its natural state and is not treated in a way that adds lead.(10) Adhesive.(11) Electroplated metal containing less than 0.05 percent (500 parts per million) lead by weight.(12) Unplated metal not otherwise listed containing less than 0.05 percent (500 parts per million) lead by weight.(13) Plastic or rubber, including acrylic, polystyrene, plastic beads and stones, and polyvinyl chloride (PVC) containing less than 0.02 percent (200 parts per million) lead by weight.(14) A dye or surface coating containing less than 0.05 percent (500 parts per million) lead by weight.(15) Any other material that contains less than 0.05 percent (500 parts per million) lead by weight.(b) For body piercing jewelry that is not childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry is made of one or more of the following materials:(1) Surgical implant stainless steel.(2) Surgical implant grade of titanium.(3) Niobium (Nb).(4) Solid 14 karat or higher white or yellow nickel-free gold.(5) Solid platinum.(6) A dense low-porosity plastic, including, but not limited to, Tygon or polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), if the plastic contains no intentionally added lead.(c) (1) For childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry meets all of the following requirements:(A) Every component of the jewelry contains no more than 0.01 percent (100 parts per million) lead by weight, excluding inaccessible component parts.(B) The jewelry has a surface coating that contains no more than 0.009 percent (90 parts per million) lead by weight.(2) The department may establish guidance on what component parts in childrens jewelry shall be considered to be inaccessible for purposes of paragraph (1). In the absence of that guidance from the department, a determination of whether a component part of childrens jewelry is inaccessible shall be made in accordance with Section 1500.87 of Title 16 of the Code of Federal Regulations, as it may be amended from time to time.(d) (1) For childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry that meets either of the following descriptions:(A) The jewelry contains a component or is made of a material that is more than 0.03 percent (300 parts per million) cadmium by weight.(B) The jewelry has a surface coating that contains more than 0.0075 percent (75 parts per million) soluble cadmium by weight.(2) This subdivision shall not apply to any toy regulated for cadmium exposure under the federal Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (Public Law 110-314).(e) The department may establish a standard for childrens jewelry or for a component of childrens jewelry that is more protective of public health, of sensitive subpopulations, or of the environment than the standards established pursuant to subdivisions (c) and (d). (f) This section shall become operative on June 1, 2020.
224239
225240 25214.2. (a) For jewelry that is not childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry is made entirely from one or more than one of the following materials:(1) Stainless or surgical steel.(2) Karat gold.(3) Sterling silver.(4) Platinum, palladium, iridium, ruthenium, rhodium, or osmium.(5) Natural or cultured pearls.(6) Glass, ceramic, or crystal decorative components, including cats eye, cubic zirconia, including cubic zirconium or CZ, rhinestones, and cloisonn.(7) A gemstone that is cut and polished for ornamental purposes, excluding aragonite, bayldonite, boleite, cerussite, crocoite, ekanite, linarite, mimetite, phosgenite, samarskite, vanadinite, and wulfenite.(8) Elastic, fabric, ribbon, rope, or string that does not contain intentionally added lead.(9) All natural decorative material, including amber, bone, coral, feathers, fur, horn, leather, shell, or wood, that is in its natural state and is not treated in a way that adds lead.(10) Adhesive.(11) Electroplated metal containing less than 0.05 percent (500 parts per million) lead by weight.(12) Unplated metal not otherwise listed containing less than 0.05 percent (500 parts per million) lead by weight.(13) Plastic or rubber, including acrylic, polystyrene, plastic beads and stones, and polyvinyl chloride (PVC) containing less than 0.02 percent (200 parts per million) lead by weight.(14) A dye or surface coating containing less than 0.05 percent (500 parts per million) lead by weight.(15) Any other material that contains less than 0.05 percent (500 parts per million) lead by weight.(b) For body piercing jewelry that is not childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry is made of one or more of the following materials:(1) Surgical implant stainless steel.(2) Surgical implant grade of titanium.(3) Niobium (Nb).(4) Solid 14 karat or higher white or yellow nickel-free gold.(5) Solid platinum.(6) A dense low-porosity plastic, including, but not limited to, Tygon or polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), if the plastic contains no intentionally added lead.(c) (1) For childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry meets all of the following requirements:(A) Every component of the jewelry contains no more than 0.01 percent (100 parts per million) lead by weight, excluding inaccessible component parts.(B) The jewelry has a surface coating that contains no more than 0.009 percent (90 parts per million) lead by weight.(2) The department may establish guidance on what component parts in childrens jewelry shall be considered to be inaccessible for purposes of paragraph (1). In the absence of that guidance from the department, a determination of whether a component part of childrens jewelry is inaccessible shall be made in accordance with Section 1500.87 of Title 16 of the Code of Federal Regulations, as it may be amended from time to time.(d) (1) For childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry that meets either of the following descriptions:(A) The jewelry contains a component or is made of a material that is more than 0.03 percent (300 parts per million) cadmium by weight.(B) The jewelry has a surface coating that contains more than 0.0075 percent (75 parts per million) soluble cadmium by weight.(2) This subdivision shall not apply to any toy regulated for cadmium exposure under the federal Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (Public Law 110-314).(e) The department may establish a standard for childrens jewelry or for a component of childrens jewelry that is more protective of public health, of sensitive subpopulations, or of the environment than the standards established pursuant to subdivisions (c) and (d). (f) This section shall become operative on June 1, 2020.
226241
227242
228243
229244 25214.2. (a) For jewelry that is not childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry is made entirely from one or more than one of the following materials:
230245
231246 (1) Stainless or surgical steel.
232247
233248 (2) Karat gold.
234249
235250 (3) Sterling silver.
236251
237252 (4) Platinum, palladium, iridium, ruthenium, rhodium, or osmium.
238253
239254 (5) Natural or cultured pearls.
240255
241256 (6) Glass, ceramic, or crystal decorative components, including cats eye, cubic zirconia, including cubic zirconium or CZ, rhinestones, and cloisonn.
242257
243258 (7) A gemstone that is cut and polished for ornamental purposes, excluding aragonite, bayldonite, boleite, cerussite, crocoite, ekanite, linarite, mimetite, phosgenite, samarskite, vanadinite, and wulfenite.
244259
245260 (8) Elastic, fabric, ribbon, rope, or string that does not contain intentionally added lead.
246261
247262 (9) All natural decorative material, including amber, bone, coral, feathers, fur, horn, leather, shell, or wood, that is in its natural state and is not treated in a way that adds lead.
248263
249264 (10) Adhesive.
250265
251266 (11) Electroplated metal containing less than 0.05 percent (500 parts per million) lead by weight.
252267
253268 (12) Unplated metal not otherwise listed containing less than 0.05 percent (500 parts per million) lead by weight.
254269
255270 (13) Plastic or rubber, including acrylic, polystyrene, plastic beads and stones, and polyvinyl chloride (PVC) containing less than 0.02 percent (200 parts per million) lead by weight.
256271
257272 (14) A dye or surface coating containing less than 0.05 percent (500 parts per million) lead by weight.
258273
259274 (15) Any other material that contains less than 0.05 percent (500 parts per million) lead by weight.
260275
261276 (b) For body piercing jewelry that is not childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry is made of one or more of the following materials:
262277
263278 (1) Surgical implant stainless steel.
264279
265280 (2) Surgical implant grade of titanium.
266281
267282 (3) Niobium (Nb).
268283
269284 (4) Solid 14 karat or higher white or yellow nickel-free gold.
270285
271286 (5) Solid platinum.
272287
273288 (6) A dense low-porosity plastic, including, but not limited to, Tygon or polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE), if the plastic contains no intentionally added lead.
274289
275290 (c) (1) For childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry for retail sale or promotional purposes in the state, unless the jewelry meets all of the following requirements:
276291
277292 (A) Every component of the jewelry contains no more than 0.01 percent (100 parts per million) lead by weight, excluding inaccessible component parts.
278293
279294 (B) The jewelry has a surface coating that contains no more than 0.009 percent (90 parts per million) lead by weight.
280295
281296 (2) The department may establish guidance on what component parts in childrens jewelry shall be considered to be inaccessible for purposes of paragraph (1). In the absence of that guidance from the department, a determination of whether a component part of childrens jewelry is inaccessible shall be made in accordance with Section 1500.87 of Title 16 of the Code of Federal Regulations, as it may be amended from time to time.
282297
283298 (d) (1) For childrens jewelry, a person shall not manufacture, ship, sell, offer for sale, or offer for promotional purposes such jewelry that meets either of the following descriptions:
284299
285300 (A) The jewelry contains a component or is made of a material that is more than 0.03 percent (300 parts per million) cadmium by weight.
286301
287302 (B) The jewelry has a surface coating that contains more than 0.0075 percent (75 parts per million) soluble cadmium by weight.
288303
289304 (2) This subdivision shall not apply to any toy regulated for cadmium exposure under the federal Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (Public Law 110-314).
290305
291306 (e) The department may establish a standard for childrens jewelry or for a component of childrens jewelry that is more protective of public health, of sensitive subpopulations, or of the environment than the standards established pursuant to subdivisions (c) and (d).
292307
293308 (f) This section shall become operative on June 1, 2020.
294309
295310 SEC. 5. Section 25214.3.1 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:25214.3.1. (a) A manufacturer or supplier of jewelry that is sold, offered for sale, or offered for promotional purposes shall prepare and, at the request of the department, submit to the department no more than 28 days after the date of the request, technical documentation or other information showing that the jewelry is in compliance with the requirements of this article.(b) A manufacturer or supplier of jewelry that is sold, offered for sale, or offered for promotional purposes shall prepare a certification. This certification shall attest that the jewelry does not contain a level of lead or cadmium that prohibits the jewelry from being sold or offered for sale pursuant to this article and shall do all of the following:(1) Identify the jewelry covered by the certificate, including a description of the jewelry that is sufficiently detailed to match the certificate to each product covered by the certificate and that could not be used to describe any jewelry that is not covered by the certificate.(2) Cite to each separate rule or standard for which the jewelry is being certified.(3) Identify the manufacturer or supplier certifying compliance of the jewelry, including the name, full mailing address, and telephone number of the manufacturer or supplier.(4) Include the contact information for the person maintaining records of the test results of jewelry tested for purposes of this article, including the name, full mailing address, email address, and telephone number of that person.(5) Include the date on which the jewelry was manufactured, including at least the month and year.(6) Include the location where the jewelry was manufactured, including at least the city or administrative region, state, if applicable, and country where the product was manufactured or finally assembled. If the same manufacturer operates more than one location in the same city, the street address of the factory shall be included.(7) Include the date or dates on which, and the location or locations where, the jewelry was tested for purposes of certification.(8) Identify any third-party laboratory that performed the testing for purposes of certification, including the name, full mailing address, and telephone number of the laboratory.(c) A manufacturer or supplier of jewelry sold or offered for promotional purposes in this state shall do either of the following:(1) Provide the certification required by subdivision (b) to a person who sells or offers for sale that manufacturers or suppliers jewelry.(2) Display the certification required by subdivision (b) prominently on the shipping container or on the packaging of jewelry.
296311
297312 SEC. 5. Section 25214.3.1 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:
298313
299314 ### SEC. 5.
300315
301316 25214.3.1. (a) A manufacturer or supplier of jewelry that is sold, offered for sale, or offered for promotional purposes shall prepare and, at the request of the department, submit to the department no more than 28 days after the date of the request, technical documentation or other information showing that the jewelry is in compliance with the requirements of this article.(b) A manufacturer or supplier of jewelry that is sold, offered for sale, or offered for promotional purposes shall prepare a certification. This certification shall attest that the jewelry does not contain a level of lead or cadmium that prohibits the jewelry from being sold or offered for sale pursuant to this article and shall do all of the following:(1) Identify the jewelry covered by the certificate, including a description of the jewelry that is sufficiently detailed to match the certificate to each product covered by the certificate and that could not be used to describe any jewelry that is not covered by the certificate.(2) Cite to each separate rule or standard for which the jewelry is being certified.(3) Identify the manufacturer or supplier certifying compliance of the jewelry, including the name, full mailing address, and telephone number of the manufacturer or supplier.(4) Include the contact information for the person maintaining records of the test results of jewelry tested for purposes of this article, including the name, full mailing address, email address, and telephone number of that person.(5) Include the date on which the jewelry was manufactured, including at least the month and year.(6) Include the location where the jewelry was manufactured, including at least the city or administrative region, state, if applicable, and country where the product was manufactured or finally assembled. If the same manufacturer operates more than one location in the same city, the street address of the factory shall be included.(7) Include the date or dates on which, and the location or locations where, the jewelry was tested for purposes of certification.(8) Identify any third-party laboratory that performed the testing for purposes of certification, including the name, full mailing address, and telephone number of the laboratory.(c) A manufacturer or supplier of jewelry sold or offered for promotional purposes in this state shall do either of the following:(1) Provide the certification required by subdivision (b) to a person who sells or offers for sale that manufacturers or suppliers jewelry.(2) Display the certification required by subdivision (b) prominently on the shipping container or on the packaging of jewelry.
302317
303318 25214.3.1. (a) A manufacturer or supplier of jewelry that is sold, offered for sale, or offered for promotional purposes shall prepare and, at the request of the department, submit to the department no more than 28 days after the date of the request, technical documentation or other information showing that the jewelry is in compliance with the requirements of this article.(b) A manufacturer or supplier of jewelry that is sold, offered for sale, or offered for promotional purposes shall prepare a certification. This certification shall attest that the jewelry does not contain a level of lead or cadmium that prohibits the jewelry from being sold or offered for sale pursuant to this article and shall do all of the following:(1) Identify the jewelry covered by the certificate, including a description of the jewelry that is sufficiently detailed to match the certificate to each product covered by the certificate and that could not be used to describe any jewelry that is not covered by the certificate.(2) Cite to each separate rule or standard for which the jewelry is being certified.(3) Identify the manufacturer or supplier certifying compliance of the jewelry, including the name, full mailing address, and telephone number of the manufacturer or supplier.(4) Include the contact information for the person maintaining records of the test results of jewelry tested for purposes of this article, including the name, full mailing address, email address, and telephone number of that person.(5) Include the date on which the jewelry was manufactured, including at least the month and year.(6) Include the location where the jewelry was manufactured, including at least the city or administrative region, state, if applicable, and country where the product was manufactured or finally assembled. If the same manufacturer operates more than one location in the same city, the street address of the factory shall be included.(7) Include the date or dates on which, and the location or locations where, the jewelry was tested for purposes of certification.(8) Identify any third-party laboratory that performed the testing for purposes of certification, including the name, full mailing address, and telephone number of the laboratory.(c) A manufacturer or supplier of jewelry sold or offered for promotional purposes in this state shall do either of the following:(1) Provide the certification required by subdivision (b) to a person who sells or offers for sale that manufacturers or suppliers jewelry.(2) Display the certification required by subdivision (b) prominently on the shipping container or on the packaging of jewelry.
304319
305320 25214.3.1. (a) A manufacturer or supplier of jewelry that is sold, offered for sale, or offered for promotional purposes shall prepare and, at the request of the department, submit to the department no more than 28 days after the date of the request, technical documentation or other information showing that the jewelry is in compliance with the requirements of this article.(b) A manufacturer or supplier of jewelry that is sold, offered for sale, or offered for promotional purposes shall prepare a certification. This certification shall attest that the jewelry does not contain a level of lead or cadmium that prohibits the jewelry from being sold or offered for sale pursuant to this article and shall do all of the following:(1) Identify the jewelry covered by the certificate, including a description of the jewelry that is sufficiently detailed to match the certificate to each product covered by the certificate and that could not be used to describe any jewelry that is not covered by the certificate.(2) Cite to each separate rule or standard for which the jewelry is being certified.(3) Identify the manufacturer or supplier certifying compliance of the jewelry, including the name, full mailing address, and telephone number of the manufacturer or supplier.(4) Include the contact information for the person maintaining records of the test results of jewelry tested for purposes of this article, including the name, full mailing address, email address, and telephone number of that person.(5) Include the date on which the jewelry was manufactured, including at least the month and year.(6) Include the location where the jewelry was manufactured, including at least the city or administrative region, state, if applicable, and country where the product was manufactured or finally assembled. If the same manufacturer operates more than one location in the same city, the street address of the factory shall be included.(7) Include the date or dates on which, and the location or locations where, the jewelry was tested for purposes of certification.(8) Identify any third-party laboratory that performed the testing for purposes of certification, including the name, full mailing address, and telephone number of the laboratory.(c) A manufacturer or supplier of jewelry sold or offered for promotional purposes in this state shall do either of the following:(1) Provide the certification required by subdivision (b) to a person who sells or offers for sale that manufacturers or suppliers jewelry.(2) Display the certification required by subdivision (b) prominently on the shipping container or on the packaging of jewelry.
306321
307322
308323
309324 25214.3.1. (a) A manufacturer or supplier of jewelry that is sold, offered for sale, or offered for promotional purposes shall prepare and, at the request of the department, submit to the department no more than 28 days after the date of the request, technical documentation or other information showing that the jewelry is in compliance with the requirements of this article.
310325
311326 (b) A manufacturer or supplier of jewelry that is sold, offered for sale, or offered for promotional purposes shall prepare a certification. This certification shall attest that the jewelry does not contain a level of lead or cadmium that prohibits the jewelry from being sold or offered for sale pursuant to this article and shall do all of the following:
312327
313328 (1) Identify the jewelry covered by the certificate, including a description of the jewelry that is sufficiently detailed to match the certificate to each product covered by the certificate and that could not be used to describe any jewelry that is not covered by the certificate.
314329
315330 (2) Cite to each separate rule or standard for which the jewelry is being certified.
316331
317332 (3) Identify the manufacturer or supplier certifying compliance of the jewelry, including the name, full mailing address, and telephone number of the manufacturer or supplier.
318333
319334 (4) Include the contact information for the person maintaining records of the test results of jewelry tested for purposes of this article, including the name, full mailing address, email address, and telephone number of that person.
320335
321336 (5) Include the date on which the jewelry was manufactured, including at least the month and year.
322337
323338 (6) Include the location where the jewelry was manufactured, including at least the city or administrative region, state, if applicable, and country where the product was manufactured or finally assembled. If the same manufacturer operates more than one location in the same city, the street address of the factory shall be included.
324339
325340 (7) Include the date or dates on which, and the location or locations where, the jewelry was tested for purposes of certification.
326341
327342 (8) Identify any third-party laboratory that performed the testing for purposes of certification, including the name, full mailing address, and telephone number of the laboratory.
328343
329344 (c) A manufacturer or supplier of jewelry sold or offered for promotional purposes in this state shall do either of the following:
330345
331346 (1) Provide the certification required by subdivision (b) to a person who sells or offers for sale that manufacturers or suppliers jewelry.
332347
333348 (2) Display the certification required by subdivision (b) prominently on the shipping container or on the packaging of jewelry.
334349
335350 SEC. 6. Section 25214.4 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:25214.4. (a) The test methods for determining compliance with this article shall be conducted using the EPA reference methods 3050B, 3051A, or 3052, as specified in EPA Test Methods for Evaluating Solid Waste, Physical/Chemical Methods, SW-846 (Third Edition, or subsequent update, as applicable) for lead and cadmium in the material being tested, except as otherwise provided in subdivision (b) and Sections 24214.4.1 and 25214.4.2, and shall be conducted in accordance with all of the following procedures:(1) When preparing a sample, the laboratory shall make every effort to ensure that the sample removed from a jewelry piece is representative of the component to be tested, and is free of contamination from extraneous dirt and material not related to the jewelry component to be tested.(2) All jewelry component samples shall be washed prior to testing using standard laboratory detergent, rinsed with laboratory reagent grade deionized water, and dried in a clean ambient environment.(3) If a component is required to be cut or scraped to obtain a sample, the metal snips, scissors, or other cutting tools used for the cutting or scraping shall be made of stainless steel and washed and rinsed before each use and between samples.(4) A sample shall be digested in a container that is known to be free of lead and cadmium and with the use of an acid that is not contaminated by lead or cadmium, including analytical reagent grade digestion acids and reagent grade deionized water.(5) Method blanks, consisting of all reagents used in sample preparation handled, digested, and made to volume in the same exact manner and in the same container type as samples, shall be tested with each group of 20 or fewer samples tested.(6) The results for the method blanks shall be reported with each group of sample results, and shall be below the stated reporting limit for sample results to be considered valid.(7) Test methods selected shall be those that best demonstrate they can achieve total digestion of the sample material being analyzed. Test methods shall not be used if they are inconsistent with the specified application of the test method or do not demonstrate the best performance or proficiency for achieving total digestion of the sample material.(b) Notwithstanding subdivision (a) and Section 25214.4.1, test methods for determining compliance with the limits for lead in childrens jewelry in subdivision (c) of Section 25214.2 include those permissible to demonstrate compliance with the federal Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (Public Law 110-314). The test method for determining compliance with subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) of subdivision (d) of Section 25214.2 shall be the same test method used to demonstrate compliance with Section 2056b of Title 15 of the United States Code. (c) Digested samples shall be analyzed according to the specification of an approved and validated methodology using inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectroscopy. Other analytical methods, such as inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry, flame atomic absorption spectroscopy, graphite furnace atomic absorption spectroscopy, or other technology, may be used under appropriate conditions, using applicable, recognized analytical techniques for the alternative method to achieve a reported quantitation limit no greater than 0.001 percent (10 parts per million) for samples.(d) All testing for determining compliance with this article shall be performed by a laboratory that conforms to the requirements in Article 8.5 (commencing with Section 25198).
336351
337352 SEC. 6. Section 25214.4 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:
338353
339354 ### SEC. 6.
340355
341356 25214.4. (a) The test methods for determining compliance with this article shall be conducted using the EPA reference methods 3050B, 3051A, or 3052, as specified in EPA Test Methods for Evaluating Solid Waste, Physical/Chemical Methods, SW-846 (Third Edition, or subsequent update, as applicable) for lead and cadmium in the material being tested, except as otherwise provided in subdivision (b) and Sections 24214.4.1 and 25214.4.2, and shall be conducted in accordance with all of the following procedures:(1) When preparing a sample, the laboratory shall make every effort to ensure that the sample removed from a jewelry piece is representative of the component to be tested, and is free of contamination from extraneous dirt and material not related to the jewelry component to be tested.(2) All jewelry component samples shall be washed prior to testing using standard laboratory detergent, rinsed with laboratory reagent grade deionized water, and dried in a clean ambient environment.(3) If a component is required to be cut or scraped to obtain a sample, the metal snips, scissors, or other cutting tools used for the cutting or scraping shall be made of stainless steel and washed and rinsed before each use and between samples.(4) A sample shall be digested in a container that is known to be free of lead and cadmium and with the use of an acid that is not contaminated by lead or cadmium, including analytical reagent grade digestion acids and reagent grade deionized water.(5) Method blanks, consisting of all reagents used in sample preparation handled, digested, and made to volume in the same exact manner and in the same container type as samples, shall be tested with each group of 20 or fewer samples tested.(6) The results for the method blanks shall be reported with each group of sample results, and shall be below the stated reporting limit for sample results to be considered valid.(7) Test methods selected shall be those that best demonstrate they can achieve total digestion of the sample material being analyzed. Test methods shall not be used if they are inconsistent with the specified application of the test method or do not demonstrate the best performance or proficiency for achieving total digestion of the sample material.(b) Notwithstanding subdivision (a) and Section 25214.4.1, test methods for determining compliance with the limits for lead in childrens jewelry in subdivision (c) of Section 25214.2 include those permissible to demonstrate compliance with the federal Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (Public Law 110-314). The test method for determining compliance with subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) of subdivision (d) of Section 25214.2 shall be the same test method used to demonstrate compliance with Section 2056b of Title 15 of the United States Code. (c) Digested samples shall be analyzed according to the specification of an approved and validated methodology using inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectroscopy. Other analytical methods, such as inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry, flame atomic absorption spectroscopy, graphite furnace atomic absorption spectroscopy, or other technology, may be used under appropriate conditions, using applicable, recognized analytical techniques for the alternative method to achieve a reported quantitation limit no greater than 0.001 percent (10 parts per million) for samples.(d) All testing for determining compliance with this article shall be performed by a laboratory that conforms to the requirements in Article 8.5 (commencing with Section 25198).
342357
343358 25214.4. (a) The test methods for determining compliance with this article shall be conducted using the EPA reference methods 3050B, 3051A, or 3052, as specified in EPA Test Methods for Evaluating Solid Waste, Physical/Chemical Methods, SW-846 (Third Edition, or subsequent update, as applicable) for lead and cadmium in the material being tested, except as otherwise provided in subdivision (b) and Sections 24214.4.1 and 25214.4.2, and shall be conducted in accordance with all of the following procedures:(1) When preparing a sample, the laboratory shall make every effort to ensure that the sample removed from a jewelry piece is representative of the component to be tested, and is free of contamination from extraneous dirt and material not related to the jewelry component to be tested.(2) All jewelry component samples shall be washed prior to testing using standard laboratory detergent, rinsed with laboratory reagent grade deionized water, and dried in a clean ambient environment.(3) If a component is required to be cut or scraped to obtain a sample, the metal snips, scissors, or other cutting tools used for the cutting or scraping shall be made of stainless steel and washed and rinsed before each use and between samples.(4) A sample shall be digested in a container that is known to be free of lead and cadmium and with the use of an acid that is not contaminated by lead or cadmium, including analytical reagent grade digestion acids and reagent grade deionized water.(5) Method blanks, consisting of all reagents used in sample preparation handled, digested, and made to volume in the same exact manner and in the same container type as samples, shall be tested with each group of 20 or fewer samples tested.(6) The results for the method blanks shall be reported with each group of sample results, and shall be below the stated reporting limit for sample results to be considered valid.(7) Test methods selected shall be those that best demonstrate they can achieve total digestion of the sample material being analyzed. Test methods shall not be used if they are inconsistent with the specified application of the test method or do not demonstrate the best performance or proficiency for achieving total digestion of the sample material.(b) Notwithstanding subdivision (a) and Section 25214.4.1, test methods for determining compliance with the limits for lead in childrens jewelry in subdivision (c) of Section 25214.2 include those permissible to demonstrate compliance with the federal Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (Public Law 110-314). The test method for determining compliance with subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) of subdivision (d) of Section 25214.2 shall be the same test method used to demonstrate compliance with Section 2056b of Title 15 of the United States Code. (c) Digested samples shall be analyzed according to the specification of an approved and validated methodology using inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectroscopy. Other analytical methods, such as inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry, flame atomic absorption spectroscopy, graphite furnace atomic absorption spectroscopy, or other technology, may be used under appropriate conditions, using applicable, recognized analytical techniques for the alternative method to achieve a reported quantitation limit no greater than 0.001 percent (10 parts per million) for samples.(d) All testing for determining compliance with this article shall be performed by a laboratory that conforms to the requirements in Article 8.5 (commencing with Section 25198).
344359
345360 25214.4. (a) The test methods for determining compliance with this article shall be conducted using the EPA reference methods 3050B, 3051A, or 3052, as specified in EPA Test Methods for Evaluating Solid Waste, Physical/Chemical Methods, SW-846 (Third Edition, or subsequent update, as applicable) for lead and cadmium in the material being tested, except as otherwise provided in subdivision (b) and Sections 24214.4.1 and 25214.4.2, and shall be conducted in accordance with all of the following procedures:(1) When preparing a sample, the laboratory shall make every effort to ensure that the sample removed from a jewelry piece is representative of the component to be tested, and is free of contamination from extraneous dirt and material not related to the jewelry component to be tested.(2) All jewelry component samples shall be washed prior to testing using standard laboratory detergent, rinsed with laboratory reagent grade deionized water, and dried in a clean ambient environment.(3) If a component is required to be cut or scraped to obtain a sample, the metal snips, scissors, or other cutting tools used for the cutting or scraping shall be made of stainless steel and washed and rinsed before each use and between samples.(4) A sample shall be digested in a container that is known to be free of lead and cadmium and with the use of an acid that is not contaminated by lead or cadmium, including analytical reagent grade digestion acids and reagent grade deionized water.(5) Method blanks, consisting of all reagents used in sample preparation handled, digested, and made to volume in the same exact manner and in the same container type as samples, shall be tested with each group of 20 or fewer samples tested.(6) The results for the method blanks shall be reported with each group of sample results, and shall be below the stated reporting limit for sample results to be considered valid.(7) Test methods selected shall be those that best demonstrate they can achieve total digestion of the sample material being analyzed. Test methods shall not be used if they are inconsistent with the specified application of the test method or do not demonstrate the best performance or proficiency for achieving total digestion of the sample material.(b) Notwithstanding subdivision (a) and Section 25214.4.1, test methods for determining compliance with the limits for lead in childrens jewelry in subdivision (c) of Section 25214.2 include those permissible to demonstrate compliance with the federal Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (Public Law 110-314). The test method for determining compliance with subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) of subdivision (d) of Section 25214.2 shall be the same test method used to demonstrate compliance with Section 2056b of Title 15 of the United States Code. (c) Digested samples shall be analyzed according to the specification of an approved and validated methodology using inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectroscopy. Other analytical methods, such as inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry, flame atomic absorption spectroscopy, graphite furnace atomic absorption spectroscopy, or other technology, may be used under appropriate conditions, using applicable, recognized analytical techniques for the alternative method to achieve a reported quantitation limit no greater than 0.001 percent (10 parts per million) for samples.(d) All testing for determining compliance with this article shall be performed by a laboratory that conforms to the requirements in Article 8.5 (commencing with Section 25198).
346361
347362
348363
349364 25214.4. (a) The test methods for determining compliance with this article shall be conducted using the EPA reference methods 3050B, 3051A, or 3052, as specified in EPA Test Methods for Evaluating Solid Waste, Physical/Chemical Methods, SW-846 (Third Edition, or subsequent update, as applicable) for lead and cadmium in the material being tested, except as otherwise provided in subdivision (b) and Sections 24214.4.1 and 25214.4.2, and shall be conducted in accordance with all of the following procedures:
350365
351366 (1) When preparing a sample, the laboratory shall make every effort to ensure that the sample removed from a jewelry piece is representative of the component to be tested, and is free of contamination from extraneous dirt and material not related to the jewelry component to be tested.
352367
353368 (2) All jewelry component samples shall be washed prior to testing using standard laboratory detergent, rinsed with laboratory reagent grade deionized water, and dried in a clean ambient environment.
354369
355370 (3) If a component is required to be cut or scraped to obtain a sample, the metal snips, scissors, or other cutting tools used for the cutting or scraping shall be made of stainless steel and washed and rinsed before each use and between samples.
356371
357372 (4) A sample shall be digested in a container that is known to be free of lead and cadmium and with the use of an acid that is not contaminated by lead or cadmium, including analytical reagent grade digestion acids and reagent grade deionized water.
358373
359374 (5) Method blanks, consisting of all reagents used in sample preparation handled, digested, and made to volume in the same exact manner and in the same container type as samples, shall be tested with each group of 20 or fewer samples tested.
360375
361376 (6) The results for the method blanks shall be reported with each group of sample results, and shall be below the stated reporting limit for sample results to be considered valid.
362377
363378 (7) Test methods selected shall be those that best demonstrate they can achieve total digestion of the sample material being analyzed. Test methods shall not be used if they are inconsistent with the specified application of the test method or do not demonstrate the best performance or proficiency for achieving total digestion of the sample material.
364379
365380 (b) Notwithstanding subdivision (a) and Section 25214.4.1, test methods for determining compliance with the limits for lead in childrens jewelry in subdivision (c) of Section 25214.2 include those permissible to demonstrate compliance with the federal Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (Public Law 110-314). The test method for determining compliance with subparagraph (B) of paragraph (1) of subdivision (d) of Section 25214.2 shall be the same test method used to demonstrate compliance with Section 2056b of Title 15 of the United States Code.
366381
367382 (c) Digested samples shall be analyzed according to the specification of an approved and validated methodology using inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectroscopy. Other analytical methods, such as inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry, flame atomic absorption spectroscopy, graphite furnace atomic absorption spectroscopy, or other technology, may be used under appropriate conditions, using applicable, recognized analytical techniques for the alternative method to achieve a reported quantitation limit no greater than 0.001 percent (10 parts per million) for samples.
368383
369384 (d) All testing for determining compliance with this article shall be performed by a laboratory that conforms to the requirements in Article 8.5 (commencing with Section 25198).
370385
371386 SEC. 7. Section 25214.4.1 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:25214.4.1. In addition to the requirements of Section 25214.4, the following procedures shall be used for testing the following materials:(a) For testing a metal plated with suitable undercoats and finish coats, the following protocols shall be observed:(1) Digestion shall be conducted using hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.(2) The sample size shall be 0.050 gram to one gram.(3) The digested sample may require dilution prior to analysis.(4) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.(b) For testing unplated metal and metal substrates that are not a material listed in paragraphs (1) to (10), inclusive, of subdivision (a) of Section 25214.2, the following protocols shall be observed:(1) Digestion shall be conducted using hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.(2) The sample size shall be 0.050 gram to one gram.(3) The digested sample may require dilution prior to analysis.(4) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.(c) For testing polyvinyl chloride (PVC), the following protocols shall be observed:(1) The digestion shall be conducted using hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.(2) The sample size shall be a minimum of 0.05 gram if using microwave digestion or 0.5 gram if using hotplate digestion, and shall be chopped or comminuted prior to digestion.(3) Digested samples may require dilution prior to analysis.(4) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.(d) For testing plastic or rubber that is not polyvinyl chloride (PVC), including acrylic, polystyrene, plastic beads, or plastic stones, the following protocols shall be observed:(1) The digestion shall be conducted using hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.(2) The sample size shall be a minimum of 0.05 gram if using microwave digestion or 0.5 gram if using hotplate digestion, and shall be chopped or comminuted prior to digestion.(3) Plastic beads or stones shall be crushed prior to digestion.(4) Digested samples may require dilution prior to analysis.(5) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.(e) For testing coatings on glass and plastic pearls, the following protocols shall be observed:(1) The coating of glass or plastic beads shall be scraped onto a surface free of dust, including a clean weighing paper or pan, using a clean stainless steel razor blade or other clean sharp instrument that will not contaminate the sample with lead or cadmium. The substrate pearl material shall not be included in the scrapings.(2) The razor blade or sharp instrument shall be rinsed with deionized water, wiped to remove particulate matter, rinsed again, and dried between samples.(3) The scrapings shall be weighed and not less than 50 micrograms of scraped coating shall be used for analysis. If less than 50 micrograms of scraped coating is obtained from an individual pearl, multiple pearls from that sample shall be scraped and composited to obtain a sufficient sample amount.(4) The number of pearls used to make the composite shall be noted.(5) The scrapings shall be digested according to EPA reference method 3050B or 3051 or an equivalent procedure for hot acid digestion in preparation for trace lead or cadmium analysis.(6) The digestate shall be diluted in the minimum volume practical for analysis.(7) The sample result shall be reported within the calibrated range of the instrument. If the initial test of the sample is above the highest calibration standard, the sample shall be diluted and reanalyzed within the calibrated range of the instrument.(f) For testing dyes, paints, coatings, varnish, printing inks, or ceramic glazes, the following testing protocols shall be observed:(1) The digestion shall use hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.(2) The sample size shall be not less than 0.050 gram, and shall be chopped or comminuted prior to digestion.(3) The digested sample may require dilution prior to analysis.(4) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.(g) For testing glass and crystal, the following protocols shall be used:(1) For determining weight:(A) A component shall be free of any extraneous material, including adhesive, before it is weighed.(B) The scale used to weigh a component shall be calibrated annually by a qualified vendor using reference mass standards that are traceable to the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) of the Department of Commerce or the International System of Units (SI) and shall be verified daily before weighing the component.(C) The calibration of the scale shall be accurate to within 0.0001 gram.(2) Both of the following testing protocols shall be observed:(A) The glass and crystal component shall be crushed or grounded to powder form before digestion and shall be digested according to the United States Environmental Protection Agency Test Method 3052 using hydrofluoric acid in a microwave or an equivalent method to yield complete digestion.(B) The digestate shall be diluted in the minimum volume practical for analysis.
372387
373388 SEC. 7. Section 25214.4.1 of the Health and Safety Code is amended to read:
374389
375390 ### SEC. 7.
376391
377392 25214.4.1. In addition to the requirements of Section 25214.4, the following procedures shall be used for testing the following materials:(a) For testing a metal plated with suitable undercoats and finish coats, the following protocols shall be observed:(1) Digestion shall be conducted using hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.(2) The sample size shall be 0.050 gram to one gram.(3) The digested sample may require dilution prior to analysis.(4) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.(b) For testing unplated metal and metal substrates that are not a material listed in paragraphs (1) to (10), inclusive, of subdivision (a) of Section 25214.2, the following protocols shall be observed:(1) Digestion shall be conducted using hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.(2) The sample size shall be 0.050 gram to one gram.(3) The digested sample may require dilution prior to analysis.(4) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.(c) For testing polyvinyl chloride (PVC), the following protocols shall be observed:(1) The digestion shall be conducted using hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.(2) The sample size shall be a minimum of 0.05 gram if using microwave digestion or 0.5 gram if using hotplate digestion, and shall be chopped or comminuted prior to digestion.(3) Digested samples may require dilution prior to analysis.(4) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.(d) For testing plastic or rubber that is not polyvinyl chloride (PVC), including acrylic, polystyrene, plastic beads, or plastic stones, the following protocols shall be observed:(1) The digestion shall be conducted using hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.(2) The sample size shall be a minimum of 0.05 gram if using microwave digestion or 0.5 gram if using hotplate digestion, and shall be chopped or comminuted prior to digestion.(3) Plastic beads or stones shall be crushed prior to digestion.(4) Digested samples may require dilution prior to analysis.(5) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.(e) For testing coatings on glass and plastic pearls, the following protocols shall be observed:(1) The coating of glass or plastic beads shall be scraped onto a surface free of dust, including a clean weighing paper or pan, using a clean stainless steel razor blade or other clean sharp instrument that will not contaminate the sample with lead or cadmium. The substrate pearl material shall not be included in the scrapings.(2) The razor blade or sharp instrument shall be rinsed with deionized water, wiped to remove particulate matter, rinsed again, and dried between samples.(3) The scrapings shall be weighed and not less than 50 micrograms of scraped coating shall be used for analysis. If less than 50 micrograms of scraped coating is obtained from an individual pearl, multiple pearls from that sample shall be scraped and composited to obtain a sufficient sample amount.(4) The number of pearls used to make the composite shall be noted.(5) The scrapings shall be digested according to EPA reference method 3050B or 3051 or an equivalent procedure for hot acid digestion in preparation for trace lead or cadmium analysis.(6) The digestate shall be diluted in the minimum volume practical for analysis.(7) The sample result shall be reported within the calibrated range of the instrument. If the initial test of the sample is above the highest calibration standard, the sample shall be diluted and reanalyzed within the calibrated range of the instrument.(f) For testing dyes, paints, coatings, varnish, printing inks, or ceramic glazes, the following testing protocols shall be observed:(1) The digestion shall use hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.(2) The sample size shall be not less than 0.050 gram, and shall be chopped or comminuted prior to digestion.(3) The digested sample may require dilution prior to analysis.(4) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.(g) For testing glass and crystal, the following protocols shall be used:(1) For determining weight:(A) A component shall be free of any extraneous material, including adhesive, before it is weighed.(B) The scale used to weigh a component shall be calibrated annually by a qualified vendor using reference mass standards that are traceable to the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) of the Department of Commerce or the International System of Units (SI) and shall be verified daily before weighing the component.(C) The calibration of the scale shall be accurate to within 0.0001 gram.(2) Both of the following testing protocols shall be observed:(A) The glass and crystal component shall be crushed or grounded to powder form before digestion and shall be digested according to the United States Environmental Protection Agency Test Method 3052 using hydrofluoric acid in a microwave or an equivalent method to yield complete digestion.(B) The digestate shall be diluted in the minimum volume practical for analysis.
378393
379394 25214.4.1. In addition to the requirements of Section 25214.4, the following procedures shall be used for testing the following materials:(a) For testing a metal plated with suitable undercoats and finish coats, the following protocols shall be observed:(1) Digestion shall be conducted using hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.(2) The sample size shall be 0.050 gram to one gram.(3) The digested sample may require dilution prior to analysis.(4) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.(b) For testing unplated metal and metal substrates that are not a material listed in paragraphs (1) to (10), inclusive, of subdivision (a) of Section 25214.2, the following protocols shall be observed:(1) Digestion shall be conducted using hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.(2) The sample size shall be 0.050 gram to one gram.(3) The digested sample may require dilution prior to analysis.(4) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.(c) For testing polyvinyl chloride (PVC), the following protocols shall be observed:(1) The digestion shall be conducted using hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.(2) The sample size shall be a minimum of 0.05 gram if using microwave digestion or 0.5 gram if using hotplate digestion, and shall be chopped or comminuted prior to digestion.(3) Digested samples may require dilution prior to analysis.(4) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.(d) For testing plastic or rubber that is not polyvinyl chloride (PVC), including acrylic, polystyrene, plastic beads, or plastic stones, the following protocols shall be observed:(1) The digestion shall be conducted using hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.(2) The sample size shall be a minimum of 0.05 gram if using microwave digestion or 0.5 gram if using hotplate digestion, and shall be chopped or comminuted prior to digestion.(3) Plastic beads or stones shall be crushed prior to digestion.(4) Digested samples may require dilution prior to analysis.(5) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.(e) For testing coatings on glass and plastic pearls, the following protocols shall be observed:(1) The coating of glass or plastic beads shall be scraped onto a surface free of dust, including a clean weighing paper or pan, using a clean stainless steel razor blade or other clean sharp instrument that will not contaminate the sample with lead or cadmium. The substrate pearl material shall not be included in the scrapings.(2) The razor blade or sharp instrument shall be rinsed with deionized water, wiped to remove particulate matter, rinsed again, and dried between samples.(3) The scrapings shall be weighed and not less than 50 micrograms of scraped coating shall be used for analysis. If less than 50 micrograms of scraped coating is obtained from an individual pearl, multiple pearls from that sample shall be scraped and composited to obtain a sufficient sample amount.(4) The number of pearls used to make the composite shall be noted.(5) The scrapings shall be digested according to EPA reference method 3050B or 3051 or an equivalent procedure for hot acid digestion in preparation for trace lead or cadmium analysis.(6) The digestate shall be diluted in the minimum volume practical for analysis.(7) The sample result shall be reported within the calibrated range of the instrument. If the initial test of the sample is above the highest calibration standard, the sample shall be diluted and reanalyzed within the calibrated range of the instrument.(f) For testing dyes, paints, coatings, varnish, printing inks, or ceramic glazes, the following testing protocols shall be observed:(1) The digestion shall use hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.(2) The sample size shall be not less than 0.050 gram, and shall be chopped or comminuted prior to digestion.(3) The digested sample may require dilution prior to analysis.(4) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.(g) For testing glass and crystal, the following protocols shall be used:(1) For determining weight:(A) A component shall be free of any extraneous material, including adhesive, before it is weighed.(B) The scale used to weigh a component shall be calibrated annually by a qualified vendor using reference mass standards that are traceable to the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) of the Department of Commerce or the International System of Units (SI) and shall be verified daily before weighing the component.(C) The calibration of the scale shall be accurate to within 0.0001 gram.(2) Both of the following testing protocols shall be observed:(A) The glass and crystal component shall be crushed or grounded to powder form before digestion and shall be digested according to the United States Environmental Protection Agency Test Method 3052 using hydrofluoric acid in a microwave or an equivalent method to yield complete digestion.(B) The digestate shall be diluted in the minimum volume practical for analysis.
380395
381396 25214.4.1. In addition to the requirements of Section 25214.4, the following procedures shall be used for testing the following materials:(a) For testing a metal plated with suitable undercoats and finish coats, the following protocols shall be observed:(1) Digestion shall be conducted using hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.(2) The sample size shall be 0.050 gram to one gram.(3) The digested sample may require dilution prior to analysis.(4) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.(b) For testing unplated metal and metal substrates that are not a material listed in paragraphs (1) to (10), inclusive, of subdivision (a) of Section 25214.2, the following protocols shall be observed:(1) Digestion shall be conducted using hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.(2) The sample size shall be 0.050 gram to one gram.(3) The digested sample may require dilution prior to analysis.(4) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.(c) For testing polyvinyl chloride (PVC), the following protocols shall be observed:(1) The digestion shall be conducted using hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.(2) The sample size shall be a minimum of 0.05 gram if using microwave digestion or 0.5 gram if using hotplate digestion, and shall be chopped or comminuted prior to digestion.(3) Digested samples may require dilution prior to analysis.(4) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.(d) For testing plastic or rubber that is not polyvinyl chloride (PVC), including acrylic, polystyrene, plastic beads, or plastic stones, the following protocols shall be observed:(1) The digestion shall be conducted using hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.(2) The sample size shall be a minimum of 0.05 gram if using microwave digestion or 0.5 gram if using hotplate digestion, and shall be chopped or comminuted prior to digestion.(3) Plastic beads or stones shall be crushed prior to digestion.(4) Digested samples may require dilution prior to analysis.(5) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.(e) For testing coatings on glass and plastic pearls, the following protocols shall be observed:(1) The coating of glass or plastic beads shall be scraped onto a surface free of dust, including a clean weighing paper or pan, using a clean stainless steel razor blade or other clean sharp instrument that will not contaminate the sample with lead or cadmium. The substrate pearl material shall not be included in the scrapings.(2) The razor blade or sharp instrument shall be rinsed with deionized water, wiped to remove particulate matter, rinsed again, and dried between samples.(3) The scrapings shall be weighed and not less than 50 micrograms of scraped coating shall be used for analysis. If less than 50 micrograms of scraped coating is obtained from an individual pearl, multiple pearls from that sample shall be scraped and composited to obtain a sufficient sample amount.(4) The number of pearls used to make the composite shall be noted.(5) The scrapings shall be digested according to EPA reference method 3050B or 3051 or an equivalent procedure for hot acid digestion in preparation for trace lead or cadmium analysis.(6) The digestate shall be diluted in the minimum volume practical for analysis.(7) The sample result shall be reported within the calibrated range of the instrument. If the initial test of the sample is above the highest calibration standard, the sample shall be diluted and reanalyzed within the calibrated range of the instrument.(f) For testing dyes, paints, coatings, varnish, printing inks, or ceramic glazes, the following testing protocols shall be observed:(1) The digestion shall use hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.(2) The sample size shall be not less than 0.050 gram, and shall be chopped or comminuted prior to digestion.(3) The digested sample may require dilution prior to analysis.(4) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.(g) For testing glass and crystal, the following protocols shall be used:(1) For determining weight:(A) A component shall be free of any extraneous material, including adhesive, before it is weighed.(B) The scale used to weigh a component shall be calibrated annually by a qualified vendor using reference mass standards that are traceable to the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) of the Department of Commerce or the International System of Units (SI) and shall be verified daily before weighing the component.(C) The calibration of the scale shall be accurate to within 0.0001 gram.(2) Both of the following testing protocols shall be observed:(A) The glass and crystal component shall be crushed or grounded to powder form before digestion and shall be digested according to the United States Environmental Protection Agency Test Method 3052 using hydrofluoric acid in a microwave or an equivalent method to yield complete digestion.(B) The digestate shall be diluted in the minimum volume practical for analysis.
382397
383398
384399
385400 25214.4.1. In addition to the requirements of Section 25214.4, the following procedures shall be used for testing the following materials:
386401
387402 (a) For testing a metal plated with suitable undercoats and finish coats, the following protocols shall be observed:
388403
389404 (1) Digestion shall be conducted using hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.
390405
391406 (2) The sample size shall be 0.050 gram to one gram.
392407
393408 (3) The digested sample may require dilution prior to analysis.
394409
395410 (4) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.
396411
397412 (b) For testing unplated metal and metal substrates that are not a material listed in paragraphs (1) to (10), inclusive, of subdivision (a) of Section 25214.2, the following protocols shall be observed:
398413
399414 (1) Digestion shall be conducted using hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.
400415
401416 (2) The sample size shall be 0.050 gram to one gram.
402417
403418 (3) The digested sample may require dilution prior to analysis.
404419
405420 (4) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.
406421
407422 (c) For testing polyvinyl chloride (PVC), the following protocols shall be observed:
408423
409424 (1) The digestion shall be conducted using hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.
410425
411426 (2) The sample size shall be a minimum of 0.05 gram if using microwave digestion or 0.5 gram if using hotplate digestion, and shall be chopped or comminuted prior to digestion.
412427
413428 (3) Digested samples may require dilution prior to analysis.
414429
415430 (4) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.
416431
417432 (d) For testing plastic or rubber that is not polyvinyl chloride (PVC), including acrylic, polystyrene, plastic beads, or plastic stones, the following protocols shall be observed:
418433
419434 (1) The digestion shall be conducted using hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.
420435
421436 (2) The sample size shall be a minimum of 0.05 gram if using microwave digestion or 0.5 gram if using hotplate digestion, and shall be chopped or comminuted prior to digestion.
422437
423438 (3) Plastic beads or stones shall be crushed prior to digestion.
424439
425440 (4) Digested samples may require dilution prior to analysis.
426441
427442 (5) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.
428443
429444 (e) For testing coatings on glass and plastic pearls, the following protocols shall be observed:
430445
431446 (1) The coating of glass or plastic beads shall be scraped onto a surface free of dust, including a clean weighing paper or pan, using a clean stainless steel razor blade or other clean sharp instrument that will not contaminate the sample with lead or cadmium. The substrate pearl material shall not be included in the scrapings.
432447
433448 (2) The razor blade or sharp instrument shall be rinsed with deionized water, wiped to remove particulate matter, rinsed again, and dried between samples.
434449
435450 (3) The scrapings shall be weighed and not less than 50 micrograms of scraped coating shall be used for analysis. If less than 50 micrograms of scraped coating is obtained from an individual pearl, multiple pearls from that sample shall be scraped and composited to obtain a sufficient sample amount.
436451
437452 (4) The number of pearls used to make the composite shall be noted.
438453
439454 (5) The scrapings shall be digested according to EPA reference method 3050B or 3051 or an equivalent procedure for hot acid digestion in preparation for trace lead or cadmium analysis.
440455
441456 (6) The digestate shall be diluted in the minimum volume practical for analysis.
442457
443458 (7) The sample result shall be reported within the calibrated range of the instrument. If the initial test of the sample is above the highest calibration standard, the sample shall be diluted and reanalyzed within the calibrated range of the instrument.
444459
445460 (f) For testing dyes, paints, coatings, varnish, printing inks, or ceramic glazes, the following testing protocols shall be observed:
446461
447462 (1) The digestion shall use hot concentrated nitric acid with the option of using hydrochloric acid or hydrogen peroxide.
448463
449464 (2) The sample size shall be not less than 0.050 gram, and shall be chopped or comminuted prior to digestion.
450465
451466 (3) The digested sample may require dilution prior to analysis.
452467
453468 (4) All necessary dilutions shall be made to ensure that measurements are made within the calibrated range of the analytical instrument.
454469
455470 (g) For testing glass and crystal, the following protocols shall be used:
456471
457472 (1) For determining weight:
458473
459474 (A) A component shall be free of any extraneous material, including adhesive, before it is weighed.
460475
461476 (B) The scale used to weigh a component shall be calibrated annually by a qualified vendor using reference mass standards that are traceable to the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) of the Department of Commerce or the International System of Units (SI) and shall be verified daily before weighing the component.
462477
463478 (C) The calibration of the scale shall be accurate to within 0.0001 gram.
464479
465480 (2) Both of the following testing protocols shall be observed:
466481
467482 (A) The glass and crystal component shall be crushed or grounded to powder form before digestion and shall be digested according to the United States Environmental Protection Agency Test Method 3052 using hydrofluoric acid in a microwave or an equivalent method to yield complete digestion.
468483
469484 (B) The digestate shall be diluted in the minimum volume practical for analysis.
470485
471486 SEC. 8. No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution because the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution.
472487
473488 SEC. 8. No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution because the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution.
474489
475490 SEC. 8. No reimbursement is required by this act pursuant to Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution because the only costs that may be incurred by a local agency or school district will be incurred because this act creates a new crime or infraction, eliminates a crime or infraction, or changes the penalty for a crime or infraction, within the meaning of Section 17556 of the Government Code, or changes the definition of a crime within the meaning of Section 6 of Article XIIIB of the California Constitution.
476491
477492 ### SEC. 8.