Or. Admin. Code § 333-016-0115 - Labeling Requirements, Placement, Conspicuousness, Contrast
(1) The signal
word, the statement of the principal hazard or hazards, and instructions to
read carefully any cautionary information that may be placed elsewhere on the
label shall appear together on the main panel of the label. Such information
shall be placed together and distinctively apart from other wording or designs.
The necessary prominence shall be achieved by placement within the borders of a
square or rectangle with or without a borderline, and by the use of suitable
contrasts with the background achieved by distinctive typography or color, and
by both color and typography when needed. For hazardous substances that contain
toxic or highly toxic chemicals, the label shall include in addition to all
other requirements of these rules the generic name of the chemical or chemicals
which present the most significant hazards.
(2) If the product is "highly toxic" as
defined in OAR 333-016-0005 and ORS
453.005(a), (B), or
(C), the labeling shall also include in
conjunction with the word "poison", the skull and crossbones symbol. The word
"poison" is not considered a signal word as that term is used in section (1) of
this rule.
(3) The signal word and
statement of hazard shall be in capital letters. The size of the signal word
(and the word "poison" if required) shall be of a size bearing a reasonable
relationship to the other type on the main panel, but shall not be less than 18
point type, and the size of the statement of hazard shall not be less than 12
point type, unless the label space on the container is too small to accommodate
such type size. When the size of the label space requires a reduction in type
size, the reduction shall be made to a size no smaller than is necessary and in
no event to a size smaller than six point type.
(4) All the items of label information
required by ORS 453.035(2)(a) through
(i) may appear on the main panel; but if they
do not, all such items not required by section (1) of this rule to appear on
the main panel shall be placed together in a distinctive place elsewhere on the
label with adequate contrast, achieved by typography, color, or layout except
that the name and place of business of the manufacturer , packer, distributor,
or seller may appear separately on the same or on a different panel. The type
size used shall bear a reasonable relationship to the printing on the panel
involved and shall be no smaller than ten point unless the available label
space requires reduction, in which event it shall be reduced no smaller than 6
point type unless because of small label space an exception has been granted
under ORS 453.035(4) and
333-016-0095.
(5) Collapsible metal tubes containing
hazardous substances shall be labeled so that all items of label information
required by ORS 453.035(2)(a) through
(i) shall appear as close to the dispensing
end of the container as possible. The size, placement, and conspicuousness of
these statements shall conform with sections (1), (3), and (4) of this
rule.
(6) Unpackaged hazardous
substances intended or in a form suitable for use in or around a household or
by children shall be labeled so that all items of information required by the
Act or by rules in this part shall appear upon the article itself. In instances
where such labeling is impracticable because of the size or nature of the
article, the required cautionary labeling must be displayed by means of a tag
or other suitable material that is securely affixed to the article so that the
labeling will remain attached throughout conditions of merchandising and
distribution to the ultimate consumer. The size, placement, and conspicuousness
of these statements shall conform with sections (1), (3), and (4) of this
rule.
Notes
Stat. Auth.: ORS 453.095
Stats. Implemented: ORS 453.005 & 453.035
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.