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Bill

S 3213

Destruction of Hazardous Imports Act

119th Congress Introduced by Cindy Hyde-Smith and 2 co-sponsors

Expands FDA authority to destroy food, drug, and cosmetic products deemed to pose significant public health concerns, broadening current destruction powers beyond adulterated/misbranded articles.

Introduced in Senate
0
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Bill Summary · S 3213

Legislative bill overview

S. 3213 amends the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act to expand the Secretary of Health and Human Services' authority to destroy food, drug, and cosmetic articles that present a "significant public health concern." Currently, destruction authority is limited to articles that are adulterated or misbranded; this bill broadens that scope to include items deemed to pose broader health risks.

Why is this important

The FDA's ability to quickly remove potentially dangerous products from commerce has direct implications for consumer safety and public health response times. Expanding destruction authority could accelerate removal of contaminated or hazardous products, but also increases regulatory power without necessarily requiring proof of adulteration or misbranding—a significant shift in the regulatory framework.

Potential points of contention

  • Vagueness of "significant public health concern": The term lacks precise definition, potentially giving the Secretary subjective discretion to destroy products based on interpretations that could vary or be challenged as overreach
  • Due process concerns: Expanded destruction authority without clear standards may allow removal of products before manufacturers have adequate opportunity to respond or appeal, raising property rights questions
  • Commercial impact: Businesses could face rapid product destruction based on regulatory determination alone, with unclear standards for what qualifies as a public health concern versus normal business risk

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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