College Board President Richard Holober scrutinized spending, cut waste, and protected classroom programs. Today, College of San Mateo, Skyline College and Cañada College serve more students than before the state imposed 20% cuts.
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College Board President Richard Holober scrutinized spending, cut waste, and protected classroom programs. Today, College of San Mateo, Skyline College and Cañada College serve more students than before the state imposed 20% cuts. Richard is a leader in the successful efforts to modernize College of San Mateo, Skyline College and Cañada College, including the construction of cutting-edge science classrooms and laboratories. Navigation |
Ban the Sale of Expired Baby Food and MedicineUpdate: Gov. Browns signs bill banning expired baby food, infant formula and medications. When Dale Proctor’s nine month old son Kai became violently ill this year after eating baby food purchased at a Raley’s Supermarket in Woodland, he and his wife Connie desperately searched for an explanation. “I went to the cupboard to check the baby food jars – to my surprise the jar of baby food was past the use by date – seven months past the date. I cannot explain how upset we were.” Dale Proctor testified to the State Senate Health Committee “I thought that maybe this one baby jar was just a mistake so I went back to the store to the baby food section. I picked up one of the baby food jars and was surprised to find that one expired too. Still, I thought maybe it was just something a store clerk overlooked. So I picked up another jar. Expired six months. And I picked up another. Expired. Another. Expired. I kept picking and picking until I found eight jars of expired baby food products. This was no simple careless mistake.” Federal regulations require expiration dates on over-the-counter medication, baby food and infant formula product labels as the manufacturer’s guarantee of the product’s safety and effectiveness. Remarkably, there is no law prohibiting the sale of expired baby food or medications. Assembly Bill 688 by Dr. Richard Pan would ban the retail selling of these products. The bill is on Governor Jerry Brown’s desk, awaiting his signature or veto. A statewide poll conducted in September found that 74% of all California likely voters supported AB 688. Republicans supported the measure by a slightly higher percentage than Democrats. Federal requirements for expiration dates serve a public health purpose. Formula that has passed its "use by" health date may lose its nutritional value or clog the nipple of a baby bottle. Health effects may include inadequate consumption of ingredients that promote an infant’s brain and eye development. Expired medications may lose their potency. AB 688 is modeled on similar legislation vetoed in 2009 by former Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. At that time, the Consumer Federation of California provided evidence of the pervasive industry practice, when we displayed expired products purchased at two dozen Rite Aid pharmacy stores in Los Angeles and the Bay Area. Last year, San Diego’s ABC TV Channel 10 News reported on quantities of expired baby food or infant formula its reporters found on the shelves of several Toys “R” Us stores. As Attorney General, Jerry Brown sued the CVS pharmacy chain in 2008 after Department of Justice investigators found baby formula, toddler food, and over-the-counter medications offered for sale six months or longer past their expiration date on the shelves of 26 CVS stores in Los Angeles, Orange, and San Diego counties. The company settled the case, paid fines and agreed to rigorously police its sales practices. Similar undercover shopping operation by state agencies led to lawsuits against CVS and Rite Aid chains in New York and against Walmart and Target Stores in New Jersey. To their credit, some retailers voluntarily provide a refund or replacement to a consumer who returns a product purchased after its expiration date. But that’s not enough to curb a practice that we just confirmed remains all too common. Two weeks ago, we went shopping and purchased expired formula baby food and medications at Northern California stores belonging to some of the nation’s biggest supermarket, pharmacy and discount department store chains. When embarrassing exposés don’t get an industry’s attention, regulations become necessary. AB 688 is a logical companion to federal food and drug safety standards. It’s time that retailers got the message that it is not acceptable to sell expired food and medication. |
April 15, 2011: Holober: top pick for SM board seat April 6, 2011: Richard Holober on CBS 5 Consumer Watch March 28, 2011: Holober says he would cut San Mateo County's top brass to reduce budget deficit February 22, 2011: The College of San Mateo’s new Health and Wellness Building honored ... February 16, 2011: KGO's Michael Finney Interviews CFC's Richard Holober on Supreme Court Privacy Ruling February 11, 2011: Storing customer's ZIP code violates California law, high court rules February 2, 2011: Peninsula mail-in supervisor election a first ... January 31, 2011: Profile: Richard Holober, one of six candidates running for an open seat ... December 16, 2010 Parcel allows San Mateo County Community College District offerings to expand December 16, 2010 Community College District Discusses Allocation of New Funds November 4, 2010 PG&E tab for San Bruno blast may hit $1 billion June 15, 2010 Privacy Protection Bll Passes State Senate June 9, 2010 Despite $46 million spending fest, Proposition 16 goes down June 9, 2010 Big money losers: PG&E and Mercury Insurance initiatives June 7, 2010 Some in San Mateo County Still Haven't Received Voter Guide June 4, 2010 Some Peninsula residents still checking their mail for missing voter information guide May 23, 2010 CAUSE to save education May 7, 2010 Reader Rebuttal - Prop 15 April 9, 2010 KRON TV Channel 4 Interviews Richard Holober About Opposition to Proposition 17 February 25, 2010 Blue ribbon panel meets over NUMMI closure February 23, 2010 Lockyer names NUMMI commission January 3, 2010 Andy Shapiro, It Takes a Village: Ten trends the past decade brought to California schools December 31, 2009 New year, new laws, new low for state |