How does the City ensure that citizens receive their money’s worth when buying items like meat, milk and gasoline?
In New Jersey, all large cities and most counties have weights and measures inspectors working to protect consumers from unfair practices. Highly accurate equipment is used to test and inspect scales and bar code scanners at food stores, hardware stores, meat processing plants, scrap yards, pharmacies and precious metals buyers. In addition, inspections are performed on gasoline dispensers, heating oil truck meters, propane meters, water meters, timing devices and counting devices. Many forms of taxes and fees are based on weight or measurement.
Related Questions
- I live in a smaller town or city that is outside of what most people would consider a "major market" -- so how can Our Milk Money work for me?
- How does the City ensure that citizens receive their money’s worth when buying items like meat, milk and gasoline?
- Does buying Eve ISK (characters, ships, implants, items) for real money violate the EULA?