Moore v. Honey-Can-Do International, LLC

Posted: 03/25/2015  browse the case archive

Citizen enforcer John Moore and settling party Honey-Can-Do International, LLC (“Honey”) entered into an out-of-court settlement agreement on March 25, 2015.  Moore had alleged that Honey sold vinyl/PVC cables containing the phthalate chemical di(2-ethylhexyl)phthalate (“DEHP”) in the State of California without providing the requisite health hazard warnings.

As part of the settlement, Honey agreed not to sell any vinyl/PVC cables in California after March 31, 2015, unless the cables contain less than 1,000 parts per million of DEHP in when analyzed using state or federally approved testing methodologies.  Should Honey provide written certification that all vinyl/PVC cables sold in California qualify as reformulated by October 1, 2015, Moore agreed to waive a portion of the civil fine that would otherwise be applied.

The Settlement Agreement requires settlement payments of $30,000, divided therein between civil penalties, 75% of which are paid to California’s Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment, and compensation to citizen enforcer Moore and his counsel for their successful enforcement of this matter in the public interest.  

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