2018 -- H 7868 | |
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LC004696 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2018 | |
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A N A C T | |
RELATING TO FOOD AND DRUGS -- HEALTHY BEVERAGE ACT | |
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Introduced By: Representatives Tanzi, Regunberg, and Maldonado | |
Date Introduced: February 28, 2018 | |
Referred To: House Health, Education & Welfare | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Title 21 of the General Laws entitled "FOOD AND DRUGS" is hereby |
2 | amended by adding thereto the following chapter: |
3 | CHAPTER 38 |
4 | HEALTHY BEVERAGE ACT |
5 | 21-38-1. Short title. |
6 | This act shall be known and may be cited as the "Healthy Beverage Act". |
7 | 21-38-2. Legislative findings. |
8 | The general assembly hereby finds and declares that: |
9 | (1) Over the past thirty (30) years, the obesity rate in the United States has more than |
10 | doubled. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, two-thirds (68.5%) of |
11 | American adults are overweight or obese. About one-third (33.3%) of children nationwide are |
12 | overweight or obese. Obese children are at least twice as likely as non-obese children to become |
13 | obese adults. |
14 | (2) Obese children and adults are at greater risk for numerous adverse health |
15 | consequences, including type II diabetes, heart disease, stroke, high blood pressure, high |
16 | cholesterol, certain cancers, asthma, low self-esteem, depression, and other debilitating diseases. |
17 | (3) Obesity-related health conditions have serious economic costs. Annual health care |
18 | costs from obesity are at least one hundred and ninety billion dollars ($190,000,000,000) or |
19 | twenty-one percent (21%) of total health care spending and are expected to rise substantially. |
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1 | Roughly forty percent (40%) of these costs are paid through Medicare and Medicaid, which |
2 | means that taxpayers foot much of the bill. Obesity-related annual medical expenditures in Rhode |
3 | Island are estimated at five hundred and fifty million dollars ($550,000,000) and more than half |
4 | of these expenditures are incurred by the Medicare and Medicaid programs. |
5 | (4) Sugary drinks play a critical role in the obesity epidemic. Sugary drinks, including |
6 | soda, energy and sports drinks, sweetened water and fruit drinks, provide the largest source of |
7 | daily calories in the diets of American children ages two (2) to eighteen (18). Each extra serving |
8 | of a sugary beverage consumed a day increases a child's chance of becoming obese by sixty |
9 | percent (60%). Sugary drinks are also linked to other health problems, including a greater risk of |
10 | cardiovascular disease in adolescents, higher blood pressure in adolescents, dental caries |
11 | (cavities), and inadequate intake of nutrients, including calcium, iron folate, magnesium, and |
12 | vitamin A. |
13 | (5) Nationwide, American children eat nineteen percent (19%) of their calories at fast- |
14 | food and other restaurants. Children and adolescents who eat at both fast-food and full-service |
15 | restaurants drink more sugary drinks and soda and less milk. |
16 | (6) Requiring restaurants to provide a healthy beverage as the "default" beverage |
17 | automatically included in children's meals is an effective way to improve the nutritional quality of |
18 | children's meals. The Disney Corporation moved to this practice at its worldwide resorts and, in |
19 | 2008, reported that at its American resorts sixty-eight percent (68%) of beverage orders included |
20 | the default healthier option. |
21 | (7) By enacting this chapter, the general assembly intends to support parents' efforts to |
22 | feed their children healthfully by ensuring that healthy beverages are available to children in |
23 | restaurants. |
24 | 21-38-3. Definitions. |
25 | As used in this chapter, unless the context clearly requires otherwise: |
26 | (1) "Children's meal" means a combination of food and a beverage, sold together at a |
27 | single price, primarily intended for consumption by children. |
28 | (2) "Default beverage" means a beverage automatically included or offered as part of a |
29 | children's meal, absent a specific request for an alternate beverage by the purchaser of the |
30 | children's meal. |
31 | (3) "Restaurant" means a food establishment that serves food to customers for |
32 | consumption on or off the premises, including fast-food and full-service dining establishments. It |
33 | includes, but is not limited to, drive through or walk-up counters, coffee shops, cafes, pizza |
34 | parlors, and dine-in establishments. |
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1 | 21-38-4. Default beverages in children's meals. |
2 | (a) A restaurant that sells a children's meal that includes a beverage shall include a default |
3 | beverage offered with the children's meal which shall be one of the following; |
4 | (1) Water, sparkling water, or flavored water, with no added natural or artificial |
5 | sweeteners; |
6 | (2) Nonfat or one percent milk or non-dairy milk alternative containing no more than one |
7 | hundred thirty (130) calories per container and/or serving as offered for sale; or |
8 | (3) One hundred percent (100%) fruit juice or fruit juice combined with water or |
9 | carbonated water, with no added sweeteners, in a serving size of no more than eight ounces |
10 | (8oz.). |
11 | (b) Nothing in this section shall prohibit a restaurant's ability to sell, or a customer's |
12 | ability to purchase, a substitute or alternative beverage instead of the default beverage offered |
13 | with a children's meal, if requested by the purchaser of the children's meal. |
14 | 21-38-5. Enforcement. |
15 | The department of health shall implement, administer and enforce this section, and is |
16 | hereby authorized to issue rules and regulations consistent with this section and shall have all |
17 | necessary powers to carry out the purpose of this section. |
18 | SECTION 2. This act shall take effect on January 1, 2019. |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO FOOD AND DRUGS -- HEALTHY BEVERAGE ACT | |
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1 | This act would create the "Healthy Beverage Act" which would require that children's |
2 | meals offered by restaurants include certain healthy beverage options if the beverage is |
3 | automatically included in the meal. |
4 | This act would take effect on January 1, 2019. |
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