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S2642 • 2026

AN ACT RELATING TO COMMERCIAL LAW -- GENERAL REGULATORY PROVISIONS -- PROTECTING RHODE ISLANDERS FROM COERCIVE ECONOMIC TACTICS AT GROCERY STORES (Creates a new chapter to protect Rhode Island consumers from coercive tactics at grocery stores.)

AN ACT RELATING TO COMMERCIAL LAW -- GENERAL REGULATORY PROVISIONS -- PROTECTING RHODE ISLANDERS FROM COERCIVE ECONOMIC TACTICS AT GROCERY STORES (Creates a new chapter to protect Rhode Island consumers from coercive tactics at grocery stores.)

Passed Legislature

This bill passed both chambers and reached final enrollment, even if later executive action is not shown here.

Sponsor
Britto, Gu, DiMario, McKenney, Zurier, Bissaillon, Urso
Last action
2026-03-24
Official status
Committee recommended measure be held for further study
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

The plain English breakdown is still being put together. The official documents below are already here.

Bill History

  1. 2026-03-24 Committee

    Committee recommended measure be held for further study

  2. 2026-03-20 Rhode Island General Assembly

    Scheduled for hearing and/or consideration (03/24/2026)

  3. 2026-02-27 Rhode Island General Assembly

    Introduced, referred to Senate Commerce

Official Summary Text

AN ACT RELATING TO COMMERCIAL LAW -- GENERAL REGULATORY PROVISIONS -- PROTECTING RHODE ISLANDERS FROM COERCIVE ECONOMIC TACTICS AT GROCERY STORES (Creates a new chapter to protect Rhode Island consumers from coercive tactics at grocery stores.)

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
S2642

2026 -- S 2642
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LC004788
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2026
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A N A C T
RELATING TO COMMERCIAL LAW -- GENERAL REGULATORY PROVISIONS --
PROTECTING RHODE ISLANDERS FROM COERCIVE ECONOMIC TACTICS AT
GROCERY STORES

Introduced By:
Senators Britto, Gu, DiMario, McKenney, Zurier, Bissaillon, and Urso

Date Introduced:
February 27, 2026

Referred To:
Senate Commerce
(Lieutenant Governor)
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows:
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SECTION 1. Title 6 of the General Laws entitled "COMMERCIAL LAW — GENERAL
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REGULATORY PROVISIONS" is hereby amended by adding thereto the following chapter:
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CHAPTER 63
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PROTECTING RHODE ISLANDERS FROM COERCIVE ECONOMIC TACTICS AT
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GROCERY STORES
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6-63-1. Short title.

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This chapter shall be known and may be cited as the “Price Tags Act”.
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6-63-2. Definitions.

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For the purposes of this chapter:
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(1) “Channels of trade” means the distinct and diverse pathways through which covered
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goods are marketed, distributed, and sold to consumers in the United States, including traditional
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supermarkets, hypermarkets, discount stores, convenience stores, online or e-commerce retailers,
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specialty food stores, mass merchandisers, wholesale clubs, and any other retail establishments,
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platforms, or entities that engage in the sale of covered goods, either primarily or as a segment of
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their broader retail offering, and compete for consumer grocery dollars.
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(2) “Covered goods” means a grocery item, including any item described in paragraph (1)
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or (2) of the definition of eligible foods under section 271.2 of title 7, Code of Federal Regulations,
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or a consumer-packaged goods and excludes gasoline, prescription drugs, tobacco, and alcoholic

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beverages.
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(3) “Covered retailer” means a person that sells covered goods to end purchasers at one or
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more physical locations in Rhode Island.
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(4) “Covered supplier” means a person that:
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(i) Produces and sells covered goods in Rhode Island; and
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(ii) Sells, directly or through its agent or any third party with which the covered supplier
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contracts, covered goods produced or manufactured by the person, directly or through its agent or
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any third party with which the covered supplier contracts, to covered retailers or covered
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wholesalers in an aggregate amount exceeding six billion dollars ($6,000,000,000) (as adjusted
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each year by an amount equal to the percentage increase, if any, in the Consumer Price Index for
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All Urban Consumers published by the Department of Labor) per year.
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(5) “Covered wholesaler” means a person that purchases covered goods for the purpose of
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reselling or distributing them to covered retailers in Rhode Island.
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(6) “Dominant covered retailer” means a covered retailer with:
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(i) Annual retail sales of covered goods in an aggregate amount exceeding eighteen billion
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dollars ($18,000,000,000) (as adjusted each year by an amount equal to the percentage increase, if
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any, in the Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers published by the Department of Labor);
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and
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(ii) Not less than one storefront or distribution center located in more than twenty (20)
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states including Rhode Island operated by the covered retailer, the covered retailer’s parent
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company, and/or subsidiaries of the same parent company.
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(7) “Person” includes:
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(i) Each entity that a person owns or controls, in whole or in part; and
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(ii) Each entity that owns or controls the person, in whole or in part;
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(8) “Pricing differential” means, with respect to the volume unit basis of a covered good
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purchased by a covered retailer or covered wholesaler compared to the volume unit basis of a
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product purchased a dominant covered retailer, means:
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(i) The difference in price of the product multiplied by the quantity sold; or
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(ii) The difference in the price equivalent of the terms of sale of the product, discounted to
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present value, if needed, to account for any difference in payment terms, multiplied by the quantity
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sold.
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(9) “Same covered good” means, with respect to two (2) different covered goods, a covered
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good and any other covered good sold under the same brand that differs only in quantity or
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packaging.

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(10) “Same terms of sale” means, with respect to two (2) different agreements, terms of
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sale that are identical on a per unit basis, excluding shipping and delivery costs, which may vary
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on account of distance, speed, or method of shipping and delivery, or availability of self-
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distribution.
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(11) “Terms of sale” means all substantive terms and conditions of sale commonly subject
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to negotiation and competition, including price, discounts, rebates, delivery terms, payment terms,
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package size, promotional allowances, marketing devices, merchandising arrangements, terms of
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distribution, and any other similar terms, considered on a per unit basis as appropriate.
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(12) “Volume unit basis” means the base unit of measurement, not exceeding a truckload,
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by which purchase quantities are measured in purchase agreements between a covered supplier and
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a covered retailer or covered wholesaler.
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6-63-3. Ensuring price fairness.

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It shall be unlawful for:
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(1) A covered supplier, directly or through its agent, to fail to extend the same terms of sale
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of a covered good to all covered retailers and covered wholesalers that purchase the covered good
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on the same volume unit basis in reasonably contemporaneous sales;
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(2) A covered supplier to fail to provide, within fourteen (14) days of a written request
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from a covered retailer or covered wholesaler that has purchased a covered good or received an
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offer including terms of sale for a covered good from the covered supplier, directly or through its
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agent, the anonymized terms of sale from all contracts with dominant covered retailers that
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purchased the same covered good on the same volume unit basis during the one hundred eighty
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(180) day period prior to which the purchase or offer including terms of sale was made;
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(3) A covered supplier, directly or through its agent, to refuse the sale of a covered good to
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a covered retailer or a covered wholesaler if:
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(i) The covered retailer is not a dominant covered retailer;
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(ii) The covered retailer or the covered wholesaler has made and completed payment for
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purchases from the covered supplier within the previous twelve (12) months;
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(iii) The covered retailer or the covered wholesaler has made a request of the covered
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supplier to provide to such retailer or wholesaler the same terms of sale provided to other covered
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retailers or covered wholesalers, consistent with the terms of this section; and
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(iv) A refusal by the covered supplier to sell a covered good to the covered retailer or
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covered wholesaler has no commercially reasonable justification;
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(4) A dominant covered retailer, or its purchasing agent or any third party through which a
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dominant covered retailer contracts to purchase covered goods, directly or indirectly, to take any

LC004788 - Page 3 of 6
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action that such dominant covered retailer, purchasing agent, or third party intends, knows, or
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should know will coerce or induce a covered supplier to violate this section.
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6-63-4. Agency liability.

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A covered supplier or dominant covered retailer, as applicable, shall be liable for any
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violation of § 6-63-3 by a contracted third party.
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6-63-5. Defenses.

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A person alleged to have engaged in unlawful conduct described in § 6-63-3 shall not be
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liable for such conduct on showing, by a preponderance of the evidence, that:
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(1) Any difference in the terms of sale was predominantly attributable to a covered retailer
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engaging in self-distribution of the covered good at issue or otherwise lowering the overall costs of
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the covered supplier through genuine efficiencies including, but not limited to, economies in
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distribution or manufacturing;
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(2) A covered retailer, in exchange for commercially reasonable consideration, voluntarily
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accepted terms of sale relating to a covered good that were not the same terms of sale as the terms
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of sale offered to another covered retailer;
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(3) The terms of sale applied only to cases in which there was an actual or imminent
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deterioration of perishable goods, obsolescence of seasonal goods, distress sales under court
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process, or sales in good faith in discontinuance of business in the goods concerned.
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6-63-6. Covered supplier immunity.

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Provided that a covered supplier did not collude with the relevant dominant retailer in any
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scheme violative of the antitrust laws, a covered supplier shall be immune from liability for a
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violation of § 6-63-3 where the defendant covered supplier shows by a preponderance of the
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evidence that:
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(1) The violation was imposed on or required of the defendant covered supplier by a
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dominant covered retailer;
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(2) The defendant covered supplier would have suffered substantial harm to its business
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were it to refuse the demand of the dominant retailer; and
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(3) The defendant covered supplier made a good faith effort to disclose the dominant
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covered retailer’s conduct to the office of the attorney general.
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6-63-7. Enforcement.

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The attorney general or a covered retailer, covered wholesaler, or covered supplier injured
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by a violation of this chapter may file suit to:
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(1) Obtain an injunction to cure a violation of this chapter;
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(2) Obtain a civil penalty or damages in an amount not greater than:

LC004788 - Page 4 of 6
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(i) One and one-half (1½) the actual damages; or
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(ii) The pricing differential suffered by a covered retailer or a covered wholesaler; or
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(3) Both subsections (a)(1) and (a)(2) of this section.
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6-63-8. Rules of construction.

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Definition. For purposes of this chapter, the term “antitrust laws”:
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(1) Has the meaning given that term in subsection (a) of the first section of the Clayton Act
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(15 U.S.C. 12(a)); and
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(2) Includes:
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(i) Section 45 of the Federal Trade Commission Act (15 U.S.C. 45) to the extent such
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section 45 applies to unfair methods of competition; and
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(ii) Includes any Rhode Island law similar to the laws described in subsection (1) and (2)(i)
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of this section.
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(2) No effect on antitrust laws. Notwithstanding any provision of this chapter or an
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amendment made by this chapter, this chapter shall not be construed to limit, impair, or supersede
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any of the antitrust laws.
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6-63-9. Severability.

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If any portion of this chapter is found by a court of competent jurisdiction to be unlawful,
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such finding shall not affect any other portion of said chapter not specifically so found.
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SECTION 2. This act shall take effect upon passage.
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LC004788
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LC004788 - Page 5 of 6
EXPLANATION
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL
OF
A N A C T
RELATING TO COMMERCIAL LAW -- GENERAL REGULATORY PROVISIONS --
PROTECTING RHODE ISLANDERS FROM COERCIVE ECONOMIC TACTICS AT
GROCERY STORES
***
1
This act would create a new chapter to protect Rhode Island consumers from coercive
2
tactics at grocery stores.
3
This act would take effect upon passage.
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LC004788
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