2019 New York Laws
AGM - Agriculture and Markets
Article 16 - Weights and Measures
197-B - Retail Pricing Accuracy.

§  197-b.  Retail  pricing accuracy. 1. Definitions. a. "Retail store"
shall mean a store that sells stock-keeping units directly to  consumers
and  charges  or  is  liable  for  the  collection of sales tax. For the
purposes of this section the term "retail  store"  shall  include  those
stores  that  use universal product code (UPC) scanners or price-look-up
(PLU) codes in checkout systems or use manual pricing of items.
  b. "Pricing accuracy inspection" shall mean an inspection of a  retail
store for the purpose of ensuring that customers are charged the correct
price for the items they purchase.
  c.  "Price charged" means the price a customer is charged for an item.
For prices determined by an automated checkout device, the price charged
means the price on the receipt issued to the consumer  after  the  final
total  has  been  determined,  whether  the  item is scanned or actually
purchased, the device is computing or recording while in training  mode,
or by using a hand-held device connected to a store's database.
  d.  "Stock-keeping unit" means each group of items offered for sale of
the same brand, quantity of contents, retail price, and having different
colors, flavors, or varieties.
  e. "Retail price" means the lowest  advertised,  written,  posted,  or
marked price of a stock-keeping unit.
  f.  "Overcharge"  means a price charged that is higher than the retail
price.
  g. "Undercharge" means a price charged that is lower than  the  retail
price.
  h.  "Large  overcharge"  means  an  error  of twenty-five cents on any
individual item up to two  dollars  and  fifty  cents  and  ten  percent
thereafter.
  2. Pricing requirements. A retail store shall:
  a.  Display  the  retail  price of each stock-keeping unit offered for
sale, either on each unit or on easy  to  read  shelf  tags,  or  signs,
located  directly  above  or  below  or  immediately  adjacent  to every
stock-keeping unit or group of stock-keeping units of  the  same  brand,
size and price.
  b.  Assure  that  the  price  charged  after  the final total has been
determined is equivalent to the retail price.
  c. If a UPC scanner system is used to  determine  the  price  charged,
provide  the  appropriate  inspection  official  access  to the checkout
system in use at such retail store to verify the price charged for items
included in a pricing accuracy inspection. Access shall be  provided  to
the system either in normal operating mode, in training mode, or through
a hand-held or other device tied to the store's database.
  d.  Post,  in  a  conspicuous  place, the refund policy of such retail
store in the event of an overcharge.
  3. Test procedures and  accuracy  requirements.  a.  The  commissioner
shall,   by  regulation,  adopt  test  procedures  utilizing  randomized
sampling techniques.  Such  procedures  shall  be  consistent  with  the
examination  procedure  for price verification developed by the national
conference on  weights  and  measures  and  published  in  the  national
institute  of  standards and technology handbook one hundred thirty. For
purposes of this section, pricing accuracy  inspections  shall,  to  the
extent  possible,  be  conducted at a time and in a manner that does not
interrupt the normal flow of retail business at the retail store.
  b. A retail store at least three hundred square feet in size shall  be
deemed  in compliance if ninety-eight percent of the items in the sample
selected are accurately priced. For  purposes  of  this  section  retail
stores that are less than three thousand square feet and employ a manual
pricing  system  shall be deemed in compliance if, effective June first,
two thousand seven through May  thirty-first,  two  thousand  eight,  at

least  ninety-six  percent  of  the  items  in  the  sample selected are
accurately priced and beginning on June first,  two  thousand  eight  at
least  ninety-eight  percent  of  the  items  in the sample selected are
accurately priced.
  c.  In  addition  to  establishing  a standard frequency of inspection
consistent with the provisions of paragraph a of this  subdivision,  the
commissioner  or a weights and measures official may conduct inspections
of individual items in response to consumer complaints or as a follow-up
on items ordered to be corrected in a previous inspection.
  4. Enforcement procedures.  a.  The  commissioner  or  a  weights  and
measures  official  shall advise the operator of the retail store of any
pricing error encountered in an inspection. If the correction cannot  be
made  immediately,  then,  the  commissioner  or  a weights and measures
official  shall  issue  a  stop  removal  order  for  items  subject  to
overcharges  and  such  stock-keeping  units  shall be removed from sale
until correction is made.
  b. Upon finding a violation of this section, the commissioner  or  the
municipal director of weights and measures may impose civil penalties as
prescribed  in  section  thirty-nine of this chapter. Such penalty shall
not exceed three hundred dollars per violation for  violations  assessed
during an initial inspection in a calendar year and shall not exceed six
hundred  dollars  per  violation  for violations assessed in a second or
subsequent inspection during a calendar year. In determining the  amount
of  any  civil  penalty imposed, the magnitude of the errors, corrective
action taken by the retail store, history  of  such  prior  conduct,  or
other  relevant  information  shall be considered. Penalties may only be
imposed for:

(1) Overcharges found in a sample selected using the procedures adopted pursuant to subdivision three of this section, when overcharges number more than two percent of the sample. Each such overcharge may be considered a separate violation provided, however, that any overcharge for a single stock-keeping unit that includes more than one item in such unit shall count as a single violation and not as separate violations for each item in the stock-keeping unit.

(2) A large overcharge found on an individual item.

(3) An overcharge verified in response to a consumer complaint.

(4) Overcharges found on follow-up inspections of items ordered corrected.

(5) Failure to disclose the retail price of a stock-keeping unit pursuant to paragraph a of subdivision two of this section.

(6) Failure to conspicuously post a refund policy pursuant to paragraph d of subdivision two of this section. 5. Local pricing laws. Nothing in this section shall be construed to prohibit a political subdivision of the state from continuing to implement and enforce any local pricing law or regulation in effect prior to the effective date of this section. Where a political subdivision has a local pricing law in effect prior to the effective date of this section, the provisions of this section shall have no force and effect until such time as the political subdivision repeals its local pricing law. Any political subdivision of the state not having any local pricing law or regulation in effect prior to the effective date of this section shall adopt and implement the pricing accuracy provisions set forth in this section or by regulations adopted pursuant to this section.

Disclaimer: These codes may not be the most recent version. New York may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.