Cosmetic Safety for Communities of Color and Professional Salon Workers Act of 2025
Summary
Cosmetic Safety for Communities of Color and Professional Salon Workers Act of 2025
This bill establishes programs and requirements to address the effects of harmful chemicals in cosmetics on consumers and salon workers, particularly in communities of color, and subjects synthetic braids to regulation by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
Specifically, the FDA must establish safety standards for synthetic braids. Synthetic braids that do not meet such standards must be labeled with a specified warning.
The bill also requires the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to conduct (or award grants for) research on harmful chemicals most commonly found in cosmetics marketed to and used by women and girls of color and professional nail, hair, and beauty salon workers. HHS must publish reports summarizing this research, including recommendations for reducing potentially unsafe exposures.
In addition, the FDA must award grants to support the development of alternative, safer chemicals that may be used in place of harmful chemicals in cosmetics.
HHS must also establish, through grants to eligible entities, national resource centers on beauty justice and salon worker health and safety to educate consumers and salon workers, respectively, about harmful chemicals in cosmetics.
Finally, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration must require manufacturers and importers of professional cosmetic products to make safety data sheets available in multiple languages for cosmetics that include certain hazardous chemicals. Employers, including salon operators, must make the relevant safety data sheet available to any employee exposed to a product subject to this requirement.
Timeline
- Jul 16, 2025Referred to the Committee on Energy and Commerce, and in addition to the Committee on Education and Workforce, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as fall within the jurisdiction of the committee concerned.
- Jul 16, 2025Referred to the Committee on Energy and Commerce, and in addition to the Committee on Education and Workforce, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as fall within the jurisdiction of the committee concerned.
- Jul 16, 2025Introduced in House
- Jul 16, 2025Introduced in House
Cosponsors
- Rep. Pressley, Ayanna [D-MA-7] D-MA
- Rep. Dingell, Debbie [D-MI-6] D-MI
- Rep. Evans, Dwight [D-PA-3] D-PA
- Rep. Khanna, Ro [D-CA-17] D-CA
- Del. Norton, Eleanor Holmes [D-DC-At Large] D-DC
- Rep. Thanedar, Shri [D-MI-13] D-MI
- Rep. Tlaib, Rashida [D-MI-12] D-MI
- Rep. Watson Coleman, Bonnie [D-NJ-12] D-NJ
- Rep. Jacobs, Sara [D-CA-51] D-CA
- Rep. Doggett, Lloyd [D-TX-37] D-TX
- Rep. Matsui, Doris O. [D-CA-7] D-CA
- Rep. Clarke, Yvette D. [D-NY-9] D-NY
- Rep. Fletcher, Lizzie [D-TX-7] D-TX
In the News
- The Safer Beauty Bill Package: Implications for the Cosmetic Industry - The National Law Review
- Press Release: Congresswoman Jan Schakowsky Issues Statement Against Republican Continuing Resolution - Quiver Quantitative
- Safer Beauty Bill Package Targets Federal Gaps in Cosmetics Safety - BeautyMatter
- Legislation to ban toxic chemicals from beauty, health products introduced by Ilinois lawmaker - NBC 5 Chicago
- Schakowsky, Fletcher, Matsui, Pressley Introduce Safer Beauty Bill Package - Congresswoman Jan Schakowsky (.gov)
- Lawmakers Introduce Landmark Safer Beauty Bill Package to Address Dangerous Gaps in Cosmetic Safety - newswire.com
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