San Francisco Bans Toys in Some Fast-Food Kids Meals
Filed under: In The News, Nutrition: Toddlers & Preschoolers, Nutrition: Big Kids, Nutrition: Tweens
A Happy Meal at a McDonald's restaurant in San Francisco. Credit: AP
San Francisco has become the first major American city to prohibit fast-food restaurants from including toys with children's meals that do not meet nutritional guidelines.
The city's Board of Supervisors gave the measure final approval Tuesday on an 8-3 vote. That's enough votes to survive a planned veto by Mayor Gavin Newsom.
The ordinance, which would go into effect in December of next year, prohibits toy giveaways in fast-food children's meals that have more than 640 milligrams of sodium, 600 calories or 35 percent of their calories from fat. The law also would limit saturated fats and trans fats and require fruits or vegetables to be served with each meal with a toy.
"Our effort is really to work with the restaurants and the fast-food industry to create healthier choices," said Supervisor Eric Mar, the measure's chief sponsor. "What our kids are eating is making them sick, and a lot of it is fast food."
The legislation is a big victory for activists and public health advocates who have charged food marketers with being complicit in the country's growing childhood obesity rates. They hope other cities and counties nationwide will follow their lead.
"This will be a sign to the fast-food industry that it's time to phase out its predatory marketing to children at large," said Deborah Lapidus, a senior organizer with Boston-based Corporate Accountability International, a watchdog group that supported the legislation.
Supervisors and activists who support the measure say they hope obesity-curbing efforts like the one approved Tuesday will eventually spread to other cities, states and the country. A similar ordinance has already been approved in California's Santa Clara County, where it affected about a dozen restaurants.
Newsom, meanwhile, said he plans to veto the ordinance, which he called an "unwise and unprecedented governmental intrusion into parental responsibilities and private choices."
The mayor issued a statement after Tuesday's vote saying the city must continue to combat childhood obesity but the ordinance takes the wrong approach.
"Parents, not politicians, should decide what their children eat, especially when it comes to spending their own money," Newsom said.
The industry, which favors self-regulation, says there is no evidence that San Francisco's law will halt the expanse of children's waistlines and the diseases associated with obesity, such as hypertension, diabetes and heart disease.
McDonald's and Burger King Corp. are among 17 major food and beverage marketers who have signed on to the Children's Food and Beverage Advertising Initiative, a self-regulation effort run by the Council of Better Business Bureaus.
McDonald's says its meals advertised to children meet government nutritional standards, limiting total calories to 600 per meal and capping fats and sugars. The company also agreed to curtail advertising in schools and promote healthy lifestyles in all marketing efforts directed at children.
"McDonald's remains committed to responsible marketing practices, including advertising and promotional campaigns for our youngest customers," McDonald's senior vice president for marketing, Neil Golden, said in a statement to The Associated Press.
McDonald's sent several senior executives and others to San Francisco to oppose the measure in person.
As it was being drafted, amended and discussed over several months, Corporate Accountability ran a local newspaper advertisement signed by physicians, community activists and small restaurants that called on Board of Supervisors swing voter Bevan Dufty to support the measure.
Dufty eventually did so, saying San Francisco should not wait for the federal government to act and should serve as an example to other cities.
"I don't care how much they say, 'It's San Francisco, they're whacked out there, it doesn't matter,' the reality is they're taking notice," Dufty said.
Scott Rodrick, who owns 10 McDonald's restaurants in San Francisco, is worried the new ordinance could hurt his business because families account for many of his customers and they could drive a mile away to another city to buy Happy Meals.
"I think this legislation on the margin is a lot of misplaced energy," Rodrick said. "For the government to step in and tell me where I feed my kids and how I feed my kids is not a good day for parents in the city, including for me."
Fast-food restaurants spent $161 million advertising to children under 12 and an estimated $360 million on toys distributed with their meals in 2006, according to a 2008 Federal Trade Commission report.
Marlene Schwartz, deputy director of Yale University's Rudd Center for Food Policy & Obesity, said fast-food advertising aimed at children has increased since self-regulation efforts began.
"They're only really promoting it halfheartedly," said Schwartz of healthier food options. San Francisco's law "is making the restaurants practice what they preach."
The lure of such items is all too familiar to parents like Carmen Sanchez, who was at a San Francisco McDonald's on a recent evening and said she sometimes hears children beg for Happy Meals.
"If the babies don't get what they want, then they won't stop crying," Sanchez said.
Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. All active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL. This article was written by TREVOR HUNNICUTT, Associated Press Writer.











ReaderComments (Page 1 of 1)
11-10-2010 @ 10:07AM
Meanstr said...Californa is Broke ,San Fan is geting there,You would think these people in City Goverment would have something inportant to do in trying to fix their Cities problems,If a Parent wants a kid to eat stuff that is suppose to be good for them .Keep them at home and Feed them There, the People that take their Kids to Mc Donalds and complain about the Food needs to see a Doctor for their mental Troubles because they are sick in the Head for sure.McDonalds is a fast food joint not a five star Place and not many Kids would be happy with what they would be given to eat at the five star place.A Mcdonalds Happy Meal is just what it is a meal that makes little ones happy .These Sick People who do not want to see their kids happy for at least a minute have no Bussiness going to McDonalds and they can keep their little monsters home because they are teaching them to be just like themselfs Rude and nasty about any thing good.
Reply
11-10-2010 @ 6:44PM
Alicia said...So people who don't eat fast food are rude? Honestly, there are healthier ways to make your child happy and I promise you, a toy from the store will get more use than a toy from McDonald's. Granted, I'm not a parent, I hate fast food and I don't intend to ever have kids, so this effects me not at all. I just find your comment...interesting...
11-10-2010 @ 10:50AM
dougalcandy said...So this is meant to promote "healthier choices"--but where is the choice! Parents certainly don't get to make it. They are basically saying that MY child, who eats healthy the majority of the time and is taken to McDonalds FOR A TREAT can't have the toy if he wants a burger and fries AS A SPECIAL TREAT. I guess parents are too stupid to make decisions about their children's welfare.
We are going down a dangerous road, when the govt starts infringing on parental rights. What's next?
Reply
11-11-2010 @ 12:10AM
jc said...Take them to McDonalds then go to Toys R Us or a 99 cent store afterwards. Problem solved.
11-11-2010 @ 10:42AM
peter said...did you know they put sugar in their salt? weird. and no doubt even more addictive. try playing burger tycoon... Http://bit.ly/GamesForFree ...it makes me think of mickey d's all the way
11-10-2010 @ 4:05PM
Mihir said..."Our effort is really to work with the restaurants and the fast-food industry to create healthier choices," said Supervisor Eric Mar, the measure's chief sponsor. "What our kids are eating is making them sick, and a lot of it is fast food."
his last sentence is wrong. it should be, "What we are feeding our kids ..."
big difference.
Reply
11-11-2010 @ 12:00AM
jc said...I don't understand these comments about "parents not politicians should decide what children eat." No one has banned kids from eating McDonalds. They've banned Happy Meals. Meaning they've banned McDonalds from MARKETING to children. Which is actually now illegal in many countries. Why should children be sold anything? Do they have jobs? Do they buy things? No, but one day they will, which is why McDonalds and many companies like to start them young. How about letting children be guided by their parents and not corporate marketing machines and they can decide their brand loyalty when there at an age to choose wisely.
Reply
11-11-2010 @ 8:02AM
Alicia said...Not only will children one day buy things, but they influence what their parents buy from a very young age. If you're over-worked, stressed, exhausted and you have two young children (or three or six or even just one) hanging on your leg begging to go to McDonald's for whatever Dora toy they're offering, then you're going to cave once and a while because it's easier to give in. And sure, once in a while, McDonald's is an okay treat for kids. But some parents cave every night and this simply removes that stressor because now McDonald's won't be running the advertising that is the catalyst for kids harassing their parents to go to McDonald's. Also someone compared McDonald's to a five star restaurant. I don't know about you, but where I come from, we have more options than "junk food" or "million dollar meal." A kid will be perfectly capable of finding something they like on a menu at a family diner or mom-and-pop restaurant and they're a heck of a lot cheaper and healthier, because at least food there is made fresh and not pre-packaged.
11-11-2010 @ 3:00PM
jc said...Yes! I was thinking that as well after I posted. If parents think they have complete control over what their kids eat and watch they're lying to themselves and others. Kids have a good way of begging for things until you give in to pacify them. And many times these desires come directly from what is being sold to them in commercials and nowhere else. In fact, studies have been done that show the group most influenced by advertising is children, which makes sense.