2016 -- H 7487 | |
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LC003845 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2016 | |
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A N A C T | |
RELATING TO EDUCATION-UNHEALTHY FOOD AND BEVERAGE ADVERTISING | |
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Introduced By: Representatives McNamara, Bennett, Diaz, and Naughton | |
Date Introduced: February 05, 2016 | |
Referred To: House Health, Education & Welfare | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Legislative Findings: |
2 | (a) Childhood obesity rates in the United States have risen dramatically over the past |
3 | thirty (30) years and today almost one-third (1/3) of American children are obese or overweight. |
4 | In 2013, sixteen percent (16%) of Rhode Island high school students were overweight and eleven |
5 | percent (11%) were obese. Poor diet and physical inactivity increase the risk for certain chronic |
6 | health conditions, including high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes, and obesity. |
7 | (b) The medical costs of obesity are rising rapidly in the United States and are estimated |
8 | to be $147 billion per year. Roughly half of these obesity-related costs are paid by Medicare and |
9 | Medicaid, indicating that taxpayers foot the bill for obesity's medical costs. Obesity-related |
10 | health-care spending accounts for eight and one-half percent (8.5%) of Medicare spending, eleven |
11 | and eight-tenths percent (11.8%) of Medicaid spending, and twelve and nine tenths percent |
12 | (12.9%) of private payer spending. |
13 | (c) The marketing of foods of poor nutritional value to American children contributes to |
14 | the rise in obesity by affecting children’s food preferences, choices, and diet. The amount of |
15 | money that the food industry currently spends on marketing and advertising to influence what |
16 | children choose to eat is twice the amount spent a decade ago. Young children ages twelve (12) |
17 | and under are especially vulnerable to these marketing and advertising strategies because they are |
18 | developmentally less able to comprehend their intent. |
19 | (d) The mission of our schools is to educate our children. Increasingly, studies |
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1 | demonstrate a relationship between healthy eating, regular physical activity, and students' |
2 | academic success. The Federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that students |
3 | who are physically active, and eat a nutritious diet receive higher grades than their classmates |
4 | who are physically inactive and eat foods that are less nutritious. Helping students to stay healthy |
5 | promotes academic success. |
6 | (e) While national, state, and local efforts have improved the nutritional quality of foods |
7 | provided and sold in schools, some schools permit the marketing of foods high in calories, fat, |
8 | and sugar and of minimal nutritional value. That marketing includes sales, free samples, and |
9 | advertising of unhealthy foods; corporate-sponsored fundraising programs which encourage |
10 | students and their families to sell, purchase, and consume foods and beverages with little |
11 | nutritional value; incentive programs, which reward children with free or discounted foods or |
12 | beverages when they reach certain academic goals; sponsorship of school programs or events; |
13 | and branded educational materials. |
14 | (f) Permitting the advertising of foods and beverages at schools that may not be sold there |
15 | interferes with school messages promoting good health and academic success. If children are |
16 | taught through school health and nutrition curriculum to limit their intake of these foods and at |
17 | the same time the foods are promoted by school-based advertising and marketing, the lessons of |
18 | school health and nutrition curricula are undermined. The marketing also undermines parents' |
19 | efforts to feed their children a healthy diet. |
20 | SECTION 2. Chapter 16-21 of the General Laws entitled "Health and Safety of Pupils" is |
21 | hereby amended by adding thereto the following section: |
22 | 16-21-7.1. Unhealthy food and beverage advertising prohibited in schools. -- (a) |
23 | Except as provided in subsection (b) of this section, a school district shall prohibit at any school |
24 | within the district: |
25 | (1) The advertising of any food or beverage that may not be sold on the school campus |
26 | during the school day or of any corporate brand, unless every food and beverage product |
27 | manufactured, sold, or distributed under the corporate brand name can be served or sold on the |
28 | school campus during the school day. For purposes of this section, food and beverages that may |
29 | not be sold on the school campus during the school day are those that do not meet the minimum |
30 | nutrition standards as set forth by the United States Department of Agriculture under the Healthy, |
31 | Hunger-Free Kids Act of 2010 Pub. L. No. 111-296, and federal statutes implementing the act at |
32 | 42 U.S.C. § 1779(b), and as set forth by the local school committee. Advertising is prohibited on |
33 | any property or facility owned or leased by the school district or school and used at any time for |
34 | school-related activities, including, but not limited to, school buildings, athletic fields, facilities, |
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1 | signs, scoreboards, parking lots, school buses or other vehicles, equipment, vending machines, |
2 | uniforms, educational material, or supplies; |
3 | (2) The participation in a corporate incentive program that rewards children with free or |
4 | discounted foods or beverages that may not be sold on the school campus during the school day |
5 | when they reach certain academic goals; or |
6 | (3) The participation in corporate-sponsored programs that provide funds to schools in |
7 | exchange for consumer purchases of foods and beverages that may not be sold on the school |
8 | campus during the school day. |
9 | (b) Exceptions. The restriction on advertising in subsection (a) of this section shall not |
10 | apply to: |
11 | (1) Advertising on broadcast, digital, or print media, unless the media are produced or |
12 | controlled by the local education agency, school, faculty, or its students; |
13 | (2) Advertising on clothing with brand images worn on school grounds; or |
14 | (3) Advertising contained on product packaging. |
15 | (c) As used in this section: |
16 | (1) "Advertising" means an oral, written, or graphic statement or representation, |
17 | including a company logo or trademark, made for the purpose of promoting the use or sale of a |
18 | product by the producer, manufacturer, distributer, seller, or any other entity with a commercial |
19 | interest in the product; and |
20 | (2) "Brand" means a corporate or product name, a business image, or a mark, regardless |
21 | of whether it may legally qualify as a trademark used by a seller or manufacturer to identify |
22 | goods or services and to distinguish them from competitors' goods. |
23 | SECTION 3. This act shall take effect on September 1, 2016. |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO EDUCATION-UNHEALTHY FOOD AND BEVERAGE ADVERTISING | |
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1 | This act would prohibit on any school campus the advertising of any food or beverage |
2 | that may not be sold on the school campus during the school day or of any corporate brand, |
3 | unless every food and beverage product manufactured, sold, or distributed under the corporate |
4 | brand name can be served or sold on the school campus during the school day. |
5 | This act would take effect on September 1, 2016. |
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