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Big Soda's Publicity Stunt

By Michele Simon, AlterNet. Posted August 29, 2005.


The trade group responsible for pushing sugary drinks to children of all ages has just trumpeted another set of useless new guidelines.
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Move over Big Tobacco, you've got competition in the Shameless PR award category: With much fanfare, the American Beverage Association (the trade group formerly known as the National Soft Drink Association) has announced a new school-based policy "aimed at providing lower calorie and/or nutritious beverages to schools and limiting the availability of soft drinks."

The specifics of the policy matter less than the enormous amount of positive press that resulted. Newspaper accounts included such headlines as "Soft drink industry takes high road" and "Schools get ally in soda issue: Drink makers."

Unfortunately, the real impact of this move is far different. To begin with, the ABA is the soda makers' lobbying arm and doesn't directly contract with schools. Soda is sold through local distributors controlled by the parent companies. Next, there is no enforcement or oversight mechanism for the voluntary rules. Coca-Cola and Pepsi-Cola boasted that the new policy mirrored their own, and that should raise plenty of red flags. Coca-Cola's 2003 voluntary "model guidelines" to not sell sodas in elementary schools are already routinely violated. Documented examples include schools in Kentucky and Texas.

In addition, the policy only applies to vending machines, ignoring other ways that soda is sold in schools, such as in stores, from soda fountains, and at sporting events. And conveniently enough for industry, many schools are locked into lengthy contracts, sometimes for as long as thirteen years. The rules would only apply to new contracts. If ABA members really cared about children's health, why not call for renegotiation of all school contracts right now?

What Nutrition Standards?

Even if the policy could actually be implemented, from a nutrition standpoint, the guidelines are a joke. Many schools have much stronger policies already in place. The ABA policy says no soda in elementary schools; why do they only care about young children's health? Also, because sports and juice drinks are also high in sugar and calories, nutritionists advise against them. Yet, the ABA says they're ok for middle and high schools.

Numerous school districts around the nation, including in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Boston, Seattle and Chicago, have banned all soda and other highly sweetened beverages in all grades. Philadelphia's school beverage policy is simple: water, 100% juice, and milk, K-12, period. Why doesn't ABA's simply policy call for only healthy beverages in all schools? As New York attorney Ross Getman told Bloomberg News, "The announcement represents a calculation that they can just as easily hook a kid on caffeinated soda in four years instead of six." In other words, it's all about brand loyalty, and high schools kids make decisions that last a lifetime.

Deflecting State Legislation

That the ABA made their big announcement at the annual meeting of the National Conference of State Legislatures was both calculated and ironic, since the group's members have been lobbying against state bills to improve school nutrition for years. In recent months, bills have been either killed or significantly gutted, thanks to heavy lobbying from Coca-Cola and friends, in such states as Connecticut, Arizona, New Mexico and Oregon. While the ABA said their policy would not supercede any existing policies (how nice, since their policy couldn't supercede a state law), no pledges have been made by the ABA or its members to halt their lobbying activities.

The ABA got quotes for its press release from three politicians: North Carolina Lt. Governor Beverly Perdue, California Assemblywoman Gloria Negrete McLeod, and Georgia Senator Renee Unterman. North Carolina passed a bill last month that closely mirrors the new ABA policy, so there would be no impact in that state anyway. In California, a stronger law is already on the books and another bill (backed by Republican Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger) to get sodas out of high schools, is pending. So the policy is moot there as well. And with Coca-Cola headquarters based in Georgia, lawmakers in that state are loath to pass any school vending bill.

ABA's real purpose is to ward off future efforts to enact stronger laws. Every time the local news covers another attempt by a state legislature to pass a bill to limit soda in school, this creates a public relations problem. But if industry is perceived as "being part of the solution" (as the ABA press release professes) then lawmakers just might take the issue off the table.

Money Can Buy Love

There is no better evidence of this announcement being a publicity stunt than the ABA's multi-million dollar plan "to run print and broadcast advertising to educate the public about the new policy." If the motivation is truly children's health, why does the ABA need to advertise? Why not spend that money ensuring that local bottlers make the changes instead? What possible purpose could an ad campaign serve, other than to promote soda companies as caring, responsible corporate citizens?

If this sounds eerily familiar, it should. The ABA is taking a page right out of the tobacco industry's playbook: Spend more money marketing a new responsible image than it costs actually being responsible.

Digg!

Michele Simon, a public-health attorney who teaches health policy at the UC Hastings College of the Law, is director of the Center for Informed Food Choices, a nonprofit in Oakland, Calif.

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Refined sugar
Posted by: InvisiblePimpernil on Aug 29, 2005 1:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Refined sugar should be banned from our food system.

[« Reply to this comment] [Post a new comment »] [Rate this comment: 1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5]

» RE: efined sugar Posted by: bettsoff
» high fructose corn syrup Posted by: Olympiada
» RE: efined sugar Posted by: Olympiada
» RE: efined sugar Posted by: Samantha Vimes
» RE: Refined sugar Posted by: Basenjis
Would it be weird if?
Posted by: barret on Aug 29, 2005 2:07 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Would it be weird if the government went down on soft drink/ caffinated drink companies as bad as the tobacco companies? For instance, no television / radio commercials? I don't feel that soft drinks are nearly as bad as the fast food that these same kids probably consume.

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» soft drinks and fast food Posted by: Olympiada
Fattest People on the Planet
Posted by: nakis on Aug 29, 2005 6:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There is no excusing personal choice in the matter of the US being the nation of the highest average body weight.
But the affect of corporations, marketing and governemental regulation have a profound impact.

This article explains it pretty well. The corporations are willing to deceive and to peddle what it can any way it can to sell its product. That's what corporations do. That's what they are designed to do. Unless governmental regulation at local/city, state or federal levels oversee these companies they will do whatever they can to sell products.

What chance does the average America, never mind minors, have against a literal army that numbers in the hundreds of thousands of advertising professionals who use whatever they can to market the products they are contracted to sell to the public.
All the evidence proves they rarely take the 'high road' on anything.
Regulation protects people.

Just as no caps on tort law protects people from abusive, negligent and criminal corporations and professionals.

Talk to your congressperson and senator to let them know you want to keep corporations under control and responsible for their actions.

We can protect ourselves and our children from these soulless entities.

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The real problem is all these 9-to-5 six-year-olds.
Posted by: ABetterFuture on Aug 29, 2005 7:23 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
After all, if elementary kids weren't rolling in dough, they wouldn't have money to buy candy-pop-and-crap.

I urge parents to keep their six-year-olds home from work. Then they can make informed decisions about what/where their children are spending their money on.

Then, the next most obvious thing for parents to do would be to confiscate their elementary school children's drivers licenses and (obviously) their SUV's. No more unsupervised Mikky Dees drive through problems!

Seriously folks--"parenting" and "legislating" are two different words for a reason. Legislators can't even balance their checkbook--why in the world would you trust a government body to balance your children's long-term health? Why?

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» Point taken. Posted by: ABetterFuture
» Smart Posted by: Olympiada
Sick!
Posted by: Olympiada on Aug 29, 2005 7:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is sick and messed up. I am thankful I live in California. And I am thankful my mom is a dietician. We never had soda at home.
Unfortunately, again, I think this starts with the parents. If the parents drink soda, the kids are going to drink soda. If the parents do not drink soda, the kids are not going to drink soda. Sure they could have it as a treat on occasion when it is available somewhere else, but it is not part of the regular diet.
Now how to educate parents? Well...I know my daughter's school has a health and wellness program through the PTA that I will be helping out with...
This makes me angry, it is like that movie with Russell Crowe when he took on the tobacco industry, what was it called?
Anyways...how disturbing...
that is evil to prey on minors, truly evil.

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» that movie Posted by: nickptar
legislation is only for some situations.
Posted by: Samantha Vimes on Aug 29, 2005 7:58 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Parents give their kids money to buy milk and food-- if the school vending machines give candy and soda, no one will monitor what the child does with his lunch money.

Packing a lunch is probably best, that's what my mother did and I ate better for it, but some parents think a hot meal is better.

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"Super Size Me" said it all....
Posted by: Voicedude on Aug 29, 2005 10:16 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The documentary "Super Size Me" said it all. The most facinating point in the movie came when ONE school district, with ZERO tolerance for junk food, found a way to feed the kids a healthy school lunch - even though the State guidelines allowed a less healthy set of rules. Students being fed these lunches also reflected improvement in their behavior and test scores. And all of this while UNDER the same budget allowed for the junk.

So WHY even think about allowing junk food? The problem started when we allowed the schools to accept funds from the soft drinks and snacks manufacturers in exchange for product placement. Advertising first, education second.

If we fund our schools properly, they won't have to deal with the devil in order to get the job of education done.

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Wow! Are you people really buying this?
Posted by: ssantee on Aug 29, 2005 5:21 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Look guys; you nor the government have any business telling anyone what or what not to drink. It's easy for the control folks to make a big deal of this soda-in-school thing, but kids eat at school once per day and probably have very little access to soda machines(especially the youngest children, which you will undoubtedly argue are the ones most affected) given the fact that they are in class most of the day.

As for adolescents, it may be best for teens to get a preview of the choices that they will encounter in adult life; one of those choices being whether or not to maintain their bodies consistent with your vision of good health.

The government should not be involved in the percieved obesity problem (Where are they getting this information anyway? Has anyone ever been polled about their weight?)


Let's keep a few freedoms folks!!

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» Good point, but... Posted by: Olympiada
A big problem is in the schools, as observed by a school employee
Posted by: Don on Aug 30, 2005 11:02 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Our local high schools are filled with soda machines that sell only the 20 oz size. Yet the school rules say no food or drink in class. So one of the daily battles teachers face is dealing with kids bringing sodas and junk food into the classroom anyway.

When I went to high school in the 50's, kids had mandatory physical education classes every day. Now, it's only mandatory during the freshman year, and even then, the class period alternates between physical activity and a so-called "wellness" class where students sit quietly in their seats for the whole hour.

School officials argue that academic achievement and test scores have become so urgent that there is no longer time enough to allow for a full hour of physical education every day. Because of insufficient funding, the schools rely on the soda and junk food manchines to raise money for extras for which the state and county do not provide adequate funding. The message school authorities are leaving for students is "buy all the junk food you can afford, but don't dare consume it during class time." Yet, the break between classes is only 5 minutes, and the next class is often on the other side of the building from the previous one, so when are kids supposed to consume all the junk food and drink they are encouraged to buy? Judging by the mounds of empty bottles and wrappers that trash up the building every day, they manage somehow.

Add that to the fact that during class, students are expected to "sit quietly" in their seats during each of the six 55-minute class periods. The only break they get is 20 minutes for lunch, and if they purchase lunch in the cafeteria, they often spend over half of that time in the queue waiting to get their food and then to pay for it, and for the remainder of the lunch break they must inhale their "meal" and go discard their trash, all in less than 10 minutes.

The typical high school is a physically very unhealthy place for adolescents, and a large contributing factor in the present-day obesity crisis.

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