Chicago Archives - Real Food Media https://realfoodmedia.org/tag/chicago/ Storytelling, critical analysis, and strategy for the food movement. Wed, 12 Jan 2022 01:05:02 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.1 Real Food Media in The New York Times: How to Win Against Big Soda https://realfoodmedia.org/real-food-media-in-the-new-york-times-how-to-win-against-big-soda/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=real-food-media-in-the-new-york-times-how-to-win-against-big-soda https://realfoodmedia.org/real-food-media-in-the-new-york-times-how-to-win-against-big-soda/#comments Mon, 16 Oct 2017 02:45:17 +0000 http://realfoodmedia.org/?p=1776 Dear friends,   Christina and I are excited to share with you our oped from today’s New York Times, about the battle against Big Soda. In it, we offer our take on how taxes on sugary drinks are one tool to take on this indomitable industry. While more and more people are coming to see the... Read more »

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Dear friends,
 
Christina and I are excited to share with you our oped from today’s New York Times, about the battle against Big Soda. In it, we offer our take on how taxes on sugary drinks are one tool to take on this indomitable industry. While more and more people are coming to see the public-health impacts of sugary drinks, Big Soda is continuing to try to shape the story with the same time-tested tobacco industry tactics of delay, distract, deny. We know that one of the best ways to beat back that messaging is with good old-fashioned community organizing. For this reason, we are excited to be launching our Organizing Toolkits that we hope can help ignite the grassroots action and energy we believe is so critical to winning.
 
We send you this note along with a very heavy heart. The loss and devastation of the fires still raging across Northern California is nearly unfathomable. We’ve heard from friends who have lost everything and read of harrowing escapes and the heartbreak stories of families of have lost loved ones. If you’d like to make a contribution to the those impacted by the fires, there are many great local organizations raising funds. We recommend considering the Northern California Wildlife Relief Fund to support families and farmworker communities with both emergency and long-term needs or the North Bay Fire Recovery Fund to help family farms, farmworkers, and those not covered by insurance or served by traditional relief services. Another great local place to consider donating is the Redwood Credit Union. Thanks for all you do and, if you have the resources to share, thank you for supporting those impacted by the fires.
 
Best,
Anna and Christina

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How to Win Against Big Soda https://realfoodmedia.org/how-to-win-against-big-soda/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=how-to-win-against-big-soda https://realfoodmedia.org/how-to-win-against-big-soda/#respond Sun, 15 Oct 2017 22:57:49 +0000 http://realfoodmedia.org/?p=2874 by Anna Lappé and Christina Bronsing-Lazalde, The New York Times The soda industry won big in Chicago this week when county commissioners voted to scrap the 1-cent-per-ounce tax on sugary drinks that had been in place for just two months. This is a stark turn for the effort to tax these drinks, which has been... Read more »

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by Anna Lappé and Christina Bronsing-Lazalde, The New York Times

The soda industry won big in Chicago this week when county commissioners voted to scrap the 1-cent-per-ounce tax on sugary drinks that had been in place for just two months.

This is a stark turn for the effort to tax these drinks, which has been making headway as voters and City Councils in at least a half-dozen other cities, including San Francisco and Philadelphia, in recent years approved measures in favor of soda levies. The sudden about-face in Chicago, after a battle in which both sides spent millions on TV and radio ads, offers an important lesson for advocates of these taxes, ourselves included, as the industry we call Big Soda takes aim at other communities: We can’t forget the grass roots.

While we are longtime healthy-food advocates, we have only recently awakened to the alarm bell of sugary drinks. For years, these drinks were flagged for “empty calories” that lead to weight gain. Today, the public health community understands that consuming sugar — particularly in liquid form — increases risks of serious health conditions, such as heart disease, Type 2 diabetes and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, not to mention tooth decay. A 2010 study found that consuming just one to two sugary drinks a day increases your risk of developing diabetes by 26 percent.

While sugar is everywhere — in cookies and crackers, breads and pasta sauce — the single largest source in the American diet is sugary drinks. A 20-ounce Coca-Cola contains 65 grams of added sugar, significantly exceeding the American Heart Association’s daily maximum recommendation for adult women, 25 grams, and adult men, 36 grams.

It’s not hyperbolic to claim that sugary drinks pose a major public health threat. Nationally, we spent $245 billion on diabetes medical costs in 2012. By 2030 we could be spending as much as $818 billion on the direct medical costs of heart disease. Both illnesses are associated with the consumption of sugary drinks.

Fortunately, we have effective tools for addressing this crisis. Taxes on sugary drinks are one. As a peer-reviewed study published this spring found, since the tax went into effect in Berkeley, Calif., in March 2015, purchases of healthier drinks have gone up and sales of soda have gone down, all without consumer grocery bills increasing or the local food sector losing money. The tax raised about $1.5 million last year for nutrition and health programs in a city of 113,000 people.

Since Berkeley passed its tax, seven municipalities have followed suit, and many others, even some states, are interested in doing the same. This has Big Soda scared because these taxes — with the awareness they create about the health effects of sugar and the consumption they reduce — threaten the industry’s bottom line.

How scared? Leaked internal Coca-Cola emails last year revealed a “coordinated war” against policies like these, says a public health advocate, Kyle Pfister, who has studied these documents. This war, waged by the American Beverage Association and sugary drink manufacturers like Coca-Cola, includes a slew of duplicitous tactics, like funding research to give a hue of legitimacy to their anti-tax claims, pursuing social media influencers, lobbying at every level of government and targeting key journalists for persuasion. These time-tested tactics have been used by the tobacco industry in its fight against cigarette taxes.

The industry also starts and funds faux grass-roots organizations. In another email, a trade group representative boasted about the impact of Philadelphians Against the Grocery Tax, an industry-funded group, which deployed an aggressive media strategy that achieved a “significant shift in public attitudes away from initial majority support for the discriminatory tax” in Philadelphia. In the end, the industry lost there.

In Cook County, which includes Chicago, the industry’s “Can the Tax” campaign spent millions on local TV ads and pressured commissioners, in particular critiquing the use of the soda tax revenue to help cover budget deficits. (In other cities, the money has been directed to public health concerns or, in the case of Philadelphia, to fund universal pre-K.) When Jesus Garcia, a Cook County commissioner, signaled he would vote to repeal the tax, he acknowledged that the beverage industry used its financial power to shape public opinion before supporters of the tax were able to craft their own message for a public debate.

There is an important lesson here: When efforts for sugary-drinks taxes are driven and supported by community coalitions that build public awareness early on, they’re better able to withstand industry attacks. Strong coalitions are vital both to adopt new taxes and to ensure they remain to curb consumption and generate funds for public health programs.

In Berkeley, the industry waged a $2 million anti-tax campaign. We credit the success of the tax effort there to a broad-based community coalition — a united front of the local NAACP., Latinos Unidos, teachers unions and many more groups. This compact was strong enough to withstand the industry’s onslaught. We won decisively, with 76 percent of the vote. Community engagement is key.

While the Cook County decision is a setback, it’s a clear reminder of what it will take to win. There’s no substitute for good, old-fashioned community building. We know we will be outspent. Let’s not be outnumbered.


Originally published in The New York Times

Photo by Jean Balzan/Pexels

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