Key Updates in LD 1423
Enacted: June 20–24, 2025
Clarified Definitions
• Producer: Expanded to include manufacturers, brand owners, importers, and distributors.
• Consumer: Now explicitly includes schools, public spaces, and government facilities, even if served by municipalities.
• Postconsumer Recycled Material: Broadened to cover both pre-consumer and post-industrial recycled inputs.
• Toxicity: Definition now focuses on intentionally added substances only.
Expanded Exemptions
• Medical device packaging
• Hazardous and flammable product packaging
• Packaging regulated under FIFRA (e.g., pesticides)
• Over-the-counter drugs, cosmetics, infant formula, diagnostics
Program Mechanism Adjustment
• Stewardship Organization (SO) authorized to recommend fee schedules that incentivize recyclable packaging.
• Streamlined administrative requirements to reduce costs and align with other U.S. EPR frameworks.
Rationale Behind the Changes
• Industry and Stewardship Groups such as the Flexible Packaging Association, Ameripen, Circular Action Alliance, Maine Beverage Association, and the American Forest & Paper Association welcomed the updates.
• AF&PA’s Terry Webber called the revisions “much needed improvements,” designed to better recycle low-rate materials without negatively impacting high-recycling streams like paper.
• Environmental Advocates, including the Natural Resources Council of Maine and National Stewardship Action Council, expressed concerns that the amendments might dilute the original law’s impact.
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What This Means for Producers and Stakeholders
• Producers should prepare to register and report packaging data in mid-2026.
• Fee schedules may incentivize use of more recyclable materials.
• Exemptions reduce regulatory scope for certain product categories.
• Alignment with national EPR models simplifies multi-state compliance efforts.
Reference: Maine amends packaging Extended Producer Responsibility law
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