California health officials will now decide which ingredients, additives, dyes, and other forms of processing don’t belong in school meals and K-12 cafeterias.
California is the first state in the nation to officially define what counts as an "ultra-processed food" — a move supporters ...
The lapse of two key federal programs could discourage information sharing between companies and the government, leaving an opening for a cyberattack.
IAPP Staff Writer Alex LaCasse reports on California Governor Gavin Newsom signing Assembly Bill 556 into law, requiring ...
The first-in-the-nation law requires the adoption of rules by mid-2028 defining “ultraprocessed foods of concern” and ...
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