Friday, July 30, 2010
Wednesday, July 28, 2010
Please, folks, consider writing your congressperson about the many concerns of the Safe Cosmetics Act of 2010. To find out how to contact your congressperson, go here. If you'd like some "talking points", see the last post, or visit this wonderful blog by the Soap Queen.
Here is the letter I sent today.
Congressman Latham,
I am writing to you to express my concern about the Safe Cosmetics Act of 2010' (H.R. 5786). I run a small, natural-bodycare business with my mother. We have been in business for 12 years, and are proud to support our rural economy by using local herbs, grains, honey and beeswax to create our safe, natural, handmade herbal bodycare products. We support ourselves from this business; we built it from the ground up, on a shoestring budget, and now have a dedicated and devoted client base from Iowa, and around the world. People regularly send us thank you letters for making such pure, natural, bodycare products that keep them healthy and provide them with natural, affordable, locally-made alternatives to mass-produced bodycare products. But we are concerned that this Safe Cosmetics Act, while sounding good, has many fundamental flaws.
We use time-tested, basic ingredients to craft our simple products. We do not use complex chemicals or anything unsafe. Our ingredients are similar to what you would find in your kitchen: vinegar, raw sugar, oatmeal, herbs, oils. We FULLY AGREE that cosmetics should be produced safely, labeled correctly, and sold with the utmost concern for consumer health. But we believe this bill will NOT help these things, but rather, simply force small businesspeople such as ourselves out of business.
We believe this law is unnecessary. There are already laws in place to ensure that products such as ours are properly produced and labeled. The further labeling requirements stated in this bill would only make labels harder for consumers to read and understand, not easier.
We are also concerned that there is no full exemption for small businesses such as ours. We would be subject to the same (and unnessary, in the case of small businesses), paperwork and testing laws as large corporations such as Estee Lauder or Clinique.
I have worked in this industry for 12 years, and have a very good working knowledge of how small businesses such as mine operate. As a whole, we in this industry are ethical, and PROUD of our outstandingly good products. We are supporting our local economy, and ourselves, by producing extremely high quality natural bodycare products, and want nothing more than to continue to do so. I urge you to read this bill in it's entirety, and please, do not hesitate to contact me if you have any questions or concerns. I assure you that while this bill sounds good, it really will do nothing to ensure consumer safety, and simply make it hard for small, ethical businesses to compete in today's already-tough marketplace.
Thank you for your time.
Maggie Howe
co-owner, Prairieland Herbs
prairielandherbs.com
Here is the letter I sent today.
Congressman Latham,
I am writing to you to express my concern about the Safe Cosmetics Act of 2010' (H.R. 5786). I run a small, natural-bodycare business with my mother. We have been in business for 12 years, and are proud to support our rural economy by using local herbs, grains, honey and beeswax to create our safe, natural, handmade herbal bodycare products. We support ourselves from this business; we built it from the ground up, on a shoestring budget, and now have a dedicated and devoted client base from Iowa, and around the world. People regularly send us thank you letters for making such pure, natural, bodycare products that keep them healthy and provide them with natural, affordable, locally-made alternatives to mass-produced bodycare products. But we are concerned that this Safe Cosmetics Act, while sounding good, has many fundamental flaws.
We use time-tested, basic ingredients to craft our simple products. We do not use complex chemicals or anything unsafe. Our ingredients are similar to what you would find in your kitchen: vinegar, raw sugar, oatmeal, herbs, oils. We FULLY AGREE that cosmetics should be produced safely, labeled correctly, and sold with the utmost concern for consumer health. But we believe this bill will NOT help these things, but rather, simply force small businesspeople such as ourselves out of business.
We believe this law is unnecessary. There are already laws in place to ensure that products such as ours are properly produced and labeled. The further labeling requirements stated in this bill would only make labels harder for consumers to read and understand, not easier.
We are also concerned that there is no full exemption for small businesses such as ours. We would be subject to the same (and unnessary, in the case of small businesses), paperwork and testing laws as large corporations such as Estee Lauder or Clinique.
I have worked in this industry for 12 years, and have a very good working knowledge of how small businesses such as mine operate. As a whole, we in this industry are ethical, and PROUD of our outstandingly good products. We are supporting our local economy, and ourselves, by producing extremely high quality natural bodycare products, and want nothing more than to continue to do so. I urge you to read this bill in it's entirety, and please, do not hesitate to contact me if you have any questions or concerns. I assure you that while this bill sounds good, it really will do nothing to ensure consumer safety, and simply make it hard for small, ethical businesses to compete in today's already-tough marketplace.
Thank you for your time.
Maggie Howe
co-owner, Prairieland Herbs
prairielandherbs.com
Tuesday, July 27, 2010
The Safe Cosmetics Act of 2010 - sounds good, right? I mean who doesn't want good, safe, natural bodycare products? The problem is - this bill, as written would make it extremely difficult for small bodycare product producers, such as US, to continue to do what we do best - provide small batch natural artisan bodycare products.
If you would like to continue to have the freedom to purchase affordable bodycare products from businesses such as ours, please consider signing the petition AGAINST the Safe Cosmetics Act of 2010, and encourage others to do so as well!
We have no problem complying with labelling and testing laws, but this bill is badly written and lacking scientific validity.
Here are a couple of great articles about this bill.
http://personalcaretruth.com/2010/07/1602/
http://sagescript.blogspot.com/2010/07/how-safe-cosmetics-bill-will-affect.html
http://essentialu.typepad.com/my_weblog/2010/07/comments-concerns-regarding-the-safe-cosmetics-act-of-2010.html
If you would like to continue to have the freedom to purchase affordable bodycare products from businesses such as ours, please consider signing the petition AGAINST the Safe Cosmetics Act of 2010, and encourage others to do so as well!
We have no problem complying with labelling and testing laws, but this bill is badly written and lacking scientific validity.
Here are a couple of great articles about this bill.
http://personalcaretruth.com/2010/07/1602/
http://sagescript.blogspot.com/2010/07/how-safe-cosmetics-bill-will-affect.html
http://essentialu.typepad.com/my_weblog/2010/07/comments-concerns-regarding-the-safe-cosmetics-act-of-2010.html
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