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understand from the label what the contents are by percentage for each country or region of <br />origin. <br />4. The Board must require that "...All methods of sale shall provide accurate and <br />adequate quantity information that permits the buyer to make price and quantity comparisons. <br />The board may adopt such reasonable rules as may be necessary to assure that the measure of <br />any commodity for sale reflects accurate information and fair measurement practices to all <br />concerned" (HRS 486 -110). Therefore, fair measurement without full disclosure on the front <br />label of the point of origin or the percentages from each point of origin is deceptive, and the <br />consumer is disadvantaged by a lack of information as to the origin of the product. <br />5. HRS, Section 486 -110 also provides that the consumer shall have enough <br />information to allow price and quantity comparisons. Withholding sufficient information as to <br />the country or point of origin disallows such comparisons; and <br />6. Part of the information that the package shall bear on the outside of the package in <br />its "definite, plain, and conspicuous declarations" is the identity of the commodity in the package <br />which should include all points of origin, and the net quantity of the contents in terms of measure <br />which should include the percentage of each point of origin (HRS 486 -111). The current <br />loophole in the law allows processors to disadvantage the consumer by hiding pertinent <br />information. The net measure should be more than just the weight or measure of the total <br />product. It should include country or region of origin by percentage. Therefore, the consumer is <br />entitled to know the exact composition of the product rather than only ten to fifty percent of the <br />product; and <br />7. Misleading a consumer is not allowed in Hawai`i, as HRS, Section 486 -113 so <br />states. While this section refers to the fill amount, its protection also extends to protecting the <br />consumer if the labeling is misleading. Providing information about only ten percent of a <br />product is deceptive and misleading. Therefore, the consumer needs to know the weight and <br />percentage of each component of the product by country or region of origin; and <br />8. If the administrator is provided substantive information as to the content and point <br />of origin of a product, in the case of blends, the source of such constituent parts, should be <br />provided to the consumer to differentiate a specific consumer commodity from an imitation or <br />"look- alike" (HRS 486 -118). Therefore, if the administrator is entitled to complete information, <br />then so is the consumer. When ten percent or even fifty percent of a product is not identified by <br />country or region of origin, the consumer may falsely believe that he or she is purchasing an <br />entirely different product from what the label reads. This imitation or look -alike product may <br />confuse the consumer into buying something he or she did not intend to buy. To correctly, <br />accurately, and thoroughly label consumer products is the very least our consumers deserve; and <br />9. When 51% of the wholesale value is added by manufacturing, assembling, <br />fabricating, or production outside of the State or Country (HRS 486 -11), a loophole is created <br />that allows foreign products to use the name of "Hawai`i ", "Hawaiian ", or the "Hawaiian country <br />or region of origin" in an effort to deceive the public and promote that foreign product. "Made <br />in Hawai`i" becomes misleading because only 49% of the product may originate in Hawai`i, <br />with the remainder coming from a source outside of the State or Country. This should be <br />remedied by full disclosure of the origins of the all components of the item. <br />5 <br />