Project – Prop65 Mexican-Style Candy

Prop 65 Compliance for Mexican-Style Candy (Lead + Tamarind + Chili + Wrapper Risk)

Mexican Candy Sits in a Long-Established Enforcement Zone

California Prop 65 applies to all food — including imported and artisanal confectionery. Mexican-style candy has faced sustained enforcement for over two decades, particularly for lead contamination affecting products marketed to children.

Three numbers that define the risk floor:
  • 0.5 µg/day: Lead MADL
  • 100 ppb: Statutory lead cap in chili/tamarind candies
  • ~38%: Food share of annual Prop 65 NOVs

Why This Matters

  • Lead enters through ingredients: Tamarind, chili, and salt accumulate heavy metals from soil.
  • Processing contamination: Lead-soldered or unlined equipment introduces batch-level exposure.
  • Wrapper inks: Pigmented packaging contributes independent lead pathways.
  • Children are primary consumers: Low MADL + kid-focused marketing amplifies litigation exposure.

By the Numbers — The Lead Thresholds

  • 0.5 µg/dayLead MADL (reproductive toxicity)
  • 100 ppb — Chili/tamarind statutory cap
  • 20+ years — CDPH Lead in Candy Program oversight

Four Risk Drivers Converge in Every Dulce

Each SKU inherits risk from ingredient origin, processing, packaging, and consumer profile.

  • Ingredient origin: Tamarind and chili grown in contaminated soil.
  • Processing: Milling equipment contamination.
  • Packaging: Lead-based wrapper inks.
  • Consumption pattern: Small daily servings exceed MADL quickly.

Ingredients. Equipment. Wrappers. Any one can trigger a 60-Day Notice.

Chemical Inventory (Category Chemicals of Concern)

  • Lead (Pb) — MADL 0.5 µg/day
  • Cadmium (Cd) — MADL 4.1 µg/day
  • Arsenic — region-dependent presence
  • Lead-based pigments — wrapper ink source

Risk Profile by Candy Format

  • Chili powder-coated candy: lead high
  • Tamarind pulp candy: lead med–high
  • Chamoy candy: heavy metals med
  • Individually wrapped sweets: wrapper-ink risk med

A Five-Pillar Compliance Program

  • Pillar 1 — Hazard identification: ingredient & wrapper risk mapping
  • Pillar 2 — Exposure assessment: serving-size modeling vs MADL & 100 ppb cap
  • Pillar 3 — Verification testing: ICP‑MS metals on ingredients & finished candy
  • Pillar 4 — Warning determination: compliant Prop 65 warning logic
  • Pillar 5 — Records & reassessment: supplier attestations + 5-year retention

Verification Testing — What, How, How Often

  • Lead & Cadmium: ICP‑MS — per lot
  • Wrapper inks: pigment screening
  • Composite sampling: across ingredient batches
  • Trend analysis: monthly compliance review

ISO/IEC 17025 accredited laboratories only. Every lot tied to documented compliance determination.

90-Day Implementation Plan (Three Sprints)

Days 1–30 — Discover

  • SKU-level intake & origin mapping
  • Historical heavy-metal data review
  • Wrapper chemistry analysis
  • Initial gap report

Days 31–60 — Build

  • Lead testing program artifact
  • Exposure calculation framework
  • Supplier compliance pack rollout
  • Warning decision matrix

Days 61–90 — Validate

  • Mock NOV tabletop
  • Internal audit + corrective actions
  • QI approval & document control handoff

Build a Defensible Multi-Framework Compliance System for Your Face Powder Portfolio

Consultare Inc. Group designs and operationalizes Prop 65 programs for Mexican-style candy manufacturers — integrating ingredient testing, wrapper controls, and child-exposure modeling into one defensible system.

Schedule a Compliance Consultation
Prop 65 · Lead (0.5 µg/day MADL) · 100 ppb Chili/Tamarind Cap · Wrapper Ink Risk · CDPH Lead in Candy Program · ISO 17025 Testing · QI Sign-Off

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