NY S1239, the Food Safety and Chemical Disclosure Act, prohibits the use of three specific food additives and color additives (FD&C Red No. 3, potassium bromate, and propylparaben) in food intended for human consumption in New York, with a grace period for existing retail stock. The bill establishes new transparency requirements for GRAS (generally recognized as safe) substances, requiring manufacturers and distributors to submit detailed safety reports that will be made publicly available in a searchable online database. Critically, the legislation prevents the federal Food and Drug Administration's recognition of a substance as safe from being used as a legal defense in enforcement actions, and mandates that data supporting GRAS status must be publicly disclosed rather than protected as trade secrets. The bill represents a state-level departure from federal regulatory deference, asserting New York's independent authority to protect its residents from chemicals that other states and nations have already restricted.
Why It Matters to MAHA
MAHA strongly supports this legislation because it prioritizes patient and consumer autonomy by providing transparency that federal agencies have withheld. The bill dismantles the false safety shield that FDA approval creates, empowering New York consumers with complete information about what is in their food so they can make truly informed choices. By requiring public disclosure of GRAS data and rejecting federal deference in enforcement, the bill challenges regulatory capture and forces manufacturers to justify their chemical use based on genuine science rather than bureaucratic blessing. This aligns perfectly with MAHA's core principle that health freedom requires radical transparency and the freedom to opt out of industry-approved substances that individuals and families deem unsafe for themselves. The bill also demonstrates that states can act independently when federal regulators fail to protect public health, restoring decision-making power to the people and their elected representatives rather than distant federal agencies.