Bill

Bill > A2031


NJ A2031

NJ A2031
Establishes standards for food date labeling; requires Commissioner of Health to establish public education program and promulgate guidelines related to food safety.


summary

Introduced
01/13/2026
In Committee
01/13/2026
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead

Introduced Session

2026-2027 Regular Session

Bill Summary

This bill would establish standards for food date labeling and require the Department of Health to establish a public education program and guidelines related to food safety. Under the bill, a manufacturer may use food date labeling, but is required, if food date labels are used, to follow the labeling standards provided in the bill. A food date label may indicate either: (1) a "quality date" to indicate the date after which the quality of food may begin to deteriorate, but is still acceptable for consumption; or (2) an "elevated-risk date" to indicate the date, established by the manufacturer, after which there is a high level of risk associated with the consumption of a "time/temperature control for safety food." The bill defines a "time/temperature control for safety food" as a food that requires time/temperature control for safety, in accordance with the 2013 United States Food and Drug Administration Food Code, to limit pathogenic microorganism growth or toxin formation. Quality dates would be displayed with the uniform phrase "BEST if Used By" and elevated-risk dates would be displayed with the uniform phrase "USE By." Under the bill, a retail food facility would not be liable for a manufacturer's failure to properly label food in accordance with the bill. Nothing in the bill would prohibit the sale, donation, or use of food after the food's quality date has passed. However, a retail food facility would be prohibited from selling or donating food after its elevated-risk date. A retailer would also be prohibited from selling food labeled with a "sell-by" date, or any date that is intended to communicate primarily to a distributor or retailer for purposes of stock rotation and that is not a quality date or an elevated-risk date, unless the date is in a coded format not easily readable by consumers. The bill would also change the labeling requirements that must be used for fluid milk products from "sell by" or "not to be sold after" to a quality date label as described above. Alcoholic beverages would be exempt from the bill's provisions. The bill allows the Department of Health to designate additional foods as time/temperature control for safety foods, or exempt foods from the designation. The department would post this information on its Internet website. The bill would also require the establishment of a public education program, which would include a public information campaign about the meaning of date labels, and educating consumers on how to handle food properly and when it can safely be consumed.

AI Summary

This bill establishes new standards for how food products are labeled with dates, aiming to clarify the meaning of these dates for consumers and reduce food waste. Manufacturers can choose to use either a "quality date," indicated by "BEST if Used By," which signifies when food quality might decline but it's still safe to eat, or an "elevated-risk date," marked with "USE By," for certain foods that require careful handling and pose a higher risk if consumed after this date. These "elevated-risk dates" apply to "time/temperature control for safety foods," which are foods that need specific temperature management to prevent harmful bacteria growth, as defined by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration Food Code. The bill also prohibits retailers from selling food past its "elevated-risk date" and from using "sell-by" dates or similar labels meant for distributors unless they are in a coded format not easily understood by consumers. Additionally, the Commissioner of Health will create a public education program to explain these new date labels and provide guidance on safe food handling and consumption, and existing regulations for fluid milk products will be updated to align with these quality date labeling requirements, with alcoholic beverages being exempt from these new rules.

Committee Categories

Business and Industry

Sponsors (2)

Last Action

Introduced, Referred to Assembly Consumer Affairs Committee (on 01/13/2026)

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