Sooo, you are saying that the breaker manufacturers conspired to limit the competition from receptacle manufacturers by stacking the deck to keep a rule that is almost impossible to follow?
Gee, what a surprise...
-Hal
This was done at the annual meeting via a NITMAM and the motion was approved by the NFPA members who attended and voted at the meeting. Note that is is something totally different from excessive influence by manufactures within the CMPs.
I can't say that the breaker manufacturers conspired as there is no evidence, but there were about 150 more votes on that motion than other motion votes that took place after that one. The vote on this issue was the first one. One or two that occurred right after the first one only had about 50 less votes, but then the participation started dropping quickly.
Many proposals over the years have been from manufacturers fighting with each other for market share. In the 80s there were lots of proposal from the conduit manufacturers to limit the use of non-metallic cable methods, and in return there were lots of proposals from the cable manufactures to require a wire type EGC in all raceways. Most of these never got to the point where there was a floor motion and floor vote.
The process to get a motion on the floor is more difficult than it was in the past. In the past, you could actually make a motion from the floor at the technical meeting. Now you have to submit a Notice of Intent To Make a Motion (NITMAM). You have to have submitted an opposing comment to the panel action taken on the issue to be able to get your motion certified. The Certified Amending Motions are voted on at the technical meeting. If the motion passes, that is not the end of it...it goes back to the CMP, and it needs to get a 2/3s majority to become a part of the code. If the panel does not get a 2/3s majority in agreement with the motion, the code language for that section reverts back to the previous edition language.