Topics
Bill Information
Summary
Bill Summary
PA HB 507, the Baby Food Protection Act, requires the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture to test representative samples of every batch of baby food manufactured in the state for toxic heavy metals including arsenic, lead, cadmium, and mercury. The bill establishes maximum permissible levels for these contaminants (10 ppb for arsenic, 5 ppb for lead, 5 ppb for cadmium, 2 ppb for mercury) and prohibits the sale or distribution of baby food exceeding these limits. Products must be labeled with the actual levels of heavy metals detected. The bill also requires Pennsylvania to adopt any lower federal limits set by the FDA and sunsets if substantially similar federal legislation is enacted.
Why It Matters to MAHA
This bill directly advances MAHA's core commitment to transparency in healthcare and food safety by requiring honest labeling of heavy metal contamination in products consumed by the most vulnerable population—infants. Heavy metal exposure in early childhood causes irreversible neurological damage, developmental delays, and lifelong health consequences, making this a critical health freedom issue where patients and parents deserve complete information. By establishing state-level testing and labeling requirements, the bill empowers parents to make informed choices about what they feed their children rather than relying on inadequate federal oversight. This represents exactly the kind of protective measure MAHA supports: reducing exposure to contaminants that harm health while giving families the transparency they need to protect their children.
Introduced
In Committee
02/05/2025
Passed
Pending
Sponsors

Liz Hanbidge
Democratic Representative (PA)

Carol Hill-Evans
Democratic Representative (PA)

José Giral
Democratic Representative (PA)

Chris Pielli
Democratic Representative (PA)