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California Dietary Supplement Expense (2008)

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Not on Ballot
Proposed ballot measures that were not on a ballot
This measure was not put
on an election ballot

The Dietary Supplements and Food Medical Expense Initiative (07-0072) did not appear on the November 4, 2008 statewide ballot in California as an initiated state statute. Supporters needed to turn in a minimum of 433,971 valid signatures by April 21, 2008 for that to happen, but they did not reach this goal.

Ballot summary

The initiative would have allowed Californians to deduct the cost of dietary supplements or foods used for special dietary needs, from their state income tax returns. Dietary supplements, as outlined by the measure are:

tablets, capsules, powder, and measured doses of liquid that contain vitamins, minerals, herbs, amino acids, or dietary substances, but do not include conventional food products. Foods for special dietary needs are those consumed due to a medical condition, for supplementing the diet, or as the sole item of the diet. Medical condition includes disease, pregnancy, lactation, infancy, food allergy, overweight and underweight.[1]

Proponent

Bryan Tallman, a Bay Area operator of an online nutritional supplements (and other health products) site.[2]

Deadline

The circulation deadline was February 7,2008, the initiative needed 433,971 signatures to qualify, which it failed to do.

See also

External links

Footnotes