Home
Home About Service Clients Projects News Contact
Clients in the NewsUs in the News
BARBARY COAST NEWS
OBAMA, ROMNEY IN BAY AREA FOR FUNDRAISING VISIT
CHRONICLE ENDORSES CHIU FOR MAYOR
SEN. FEINSTEIN ENCOURAGES LEE TO RUN FOR MAYOR
S.F. MAYOR ED LEE REFUSES TO RULE OUT RUNNING
SAN FRANCISCO’S POPULAR MAYOR SAYS HE WON’T RUN FOR ELECTION
LOBBYISTS PLAY OUTSIZE ROLE AS POLITICAL FUND-RAISERS IN SAN FRANCISCO
CIRCUMCISION BAN COULD MAKE BALLOT IN SF
6 HATS IN RING FOR S.F. MAYOR’S RACE
PHIL TING HOPES PARKING ISSUE GETS VOTERS FIRED UP
SAN FRANCISCO’S SHIFT TO CENTER
SCHOLARSHIP FUND SET UP IN HONOR OF SLAIN GIFFORDS AIDE
GAVIN NEWSOM’S LEGACY
NEWSOM DID THE MOST WORK IN HIS LAST SEVEN DAYS AS MAYOR?
A SAN FRANCISCO STANDOFF A COMEDIAN WOULD RELISH
MAYORAL SUCCESSION STILL UP IN THE AIR
’TIS THE POLITICAL SEASON IN CITY HALL
S.F. INTERIM MAYOR PICK STARTS WITH PUSH OF BUTTON
SF’S SHORT-TERM MAYOR
GAVIN NEWSOM HAS BIG GOALS FOR FINAL WEEKS IN S.F.
BAY AREA RACES INCREASE SCRUTINY OF RANKED-CHOICE VOTING
S.F. CITY CHARTER QUIRK ON INTERIM MAYOR
SUPERVISORS SCRAMBLE TO PICK INTERIM SF MAYOR
SAN FRANCISCO CONSIDERS BANNING HAPPY MEALS TOYS
SUPES’ RACES TO DECIDE CITY’S POLITICAL FUTURE
TAKING ON MUNI UNION PUTS ELSBERND AT THE WHEEL
REVENGE OF THE NERDS: WINNERS ANNOUNCED FOR THE S.F. WEB AWARDS
CITY LOBBYISTS NOW HAVE TO REPORT MONTHLY
SF DEBATES USE OF CELL PHONES DURING MEETINGS
THE PILOT NAVIGATES FATE
A MUSTACHE DOES A HERO MAKE
HOW’S NEWSOM’S S.F. FARM IDEA SUPPOSED TO WORK?
PEOPLE ON THE MOVE
A’S OWNER: ’I DON’T REALLY HAVE A PLAN B’
LOCAL POLITICO ALEX CLEMENS IS SULLY FAMILY SPOKESMODEL!
NEW LINEUP OF S.F. SUPERVISORS
S.F. RANKED-CHOICE VOTING SLOW, CONFUSING
SACRAMENTO ELECTS FORMER BASKETBALL STAR AS MAYOR
OFT-MOCKED SAN FRANCISCO LEADS THE WAY
SEVERAL SF SUPERVISORS SEATS UP FOR GRABS
DISTRICT 3 - S.F.’S HOTTEST SUPERVISORIAL RACE
22 SEEK ELECTION IN DISTRICT 5
LOBBYISTS MAY HAVE TO WEAR BADGES
BIG MONEY IN S.F. SUPES’ RACE
DEMS LINE UP FOR CHANCE TO WIN SEAT ON PANEL
IN CREDIT CRUNCH, LENDING TO EACH OTHER
ROMANCING THE NOT-LONG-GONE WASHBAG
CONTROL OF S. F.’S BOARD OF SUPERVISORS UP FOR GRABS IN 2008 READ MORE:
S.F. BIGWIGS TO PARTY FOR PELOSI
SAN FRANCISCO MAYOR AIRS FEELINGS ABOUT JOB
POLITICAL NOTEBOOK: GAY GREEN EMBRACES HIS SILVER SCREEN NAMESAKE
LIEBERMAN LOSES ELECTION AND SUPPORT
ECLECTIC ’MUSIC CITY’ WINS OVER PLANNING COMMISSION
FOREVER THE REBEL WITH A CAUSE, GONZALEZ’S EXITS LEFT AT CITY HALL
RANKED VOTE GETS FANCIFUL SCENARIOS
DISTRICT 5 RACE FOR GONZALEZ SEAT ALREADY CROWDED
 

San Francisco considers banning Happy Meals toys

Associated Press
October 03, 2010

 

By TREVOR HUNNICUTT (AP)

SAN FRANCISCO — San Francisco has a long history of bold public health and environmental stances, going after everything from plastic bags in grocery stores to cigarettes to sugary drinks.

The latest target: Ronald McDonald.

A proposed city ordinance would ban McDonald’s from putting toys in Happy Meals unless it adds fruit and vegetable portions and limits calories. The proposal would apply to all restaurants, but the focus has been on McDonald’s and its iconic Happy Meals.

Supervisor Eric Mar said he proposed the law to protect the health of his constituents, but McDonald’s has waged an aggressive fight to block the measure. A battery of McDonald’s Corp. executives showed up at city hall to argue that the legislation is a heavy-handed effort that threatens the company’s decades-old business model and the free choice of its customers.

The proposed Happy Meal law is just the latest in a string of San Francisco ordinances aimed at regulating public health. The city recently expanded a law banning tobacco sales in pharmacies to include grocery stores and big-box stores that also have pharmacies.

Mayor Gavin Newsom signed an executive order earlier this year banning sweetened beverages like Coca Cola and Pepsi from vending machines on city property. Local leaders considered but ultimately abandoned laws recently that would have imposed a fee on businesses that sell sugary drinks and alcohol.

Newsom has slowed down in his support of some health measures after he was attacked by his opponent in next month’s lieutenant governor’s race, Lt. Gov. Abel Maldonado, for being the "food police." Newsom vetoed the alcohol and soda fees, and he’s indicated he’ll do the same for Ronald McDonald. The Board of Supervisors could overturn a veto but needs the votes of eight of 11 supervisors to do so.

Tony Winnicker, a Newsom spokesman, has said the mayor was opposed to the measures in part because of their negative impact on local businesses.

"The mayor is always open to argument and evidence about a better way — he’s not ideological, he’s not wedded to one approach," Winnicker said. "This is not the time to be considering new fees and taxes that would put San Francisco at a disadvantage to other counties around the state."

Mar said he expected his Happy Meal bill to pass out of committee Monday and receive a vote by the full Board of Supervisors later this month.

McDonald’s vice president for nutrition and menu strategy, Karen Wells, said that denying a toy to a child would undermine the authority of parents to decide what their children should eat and would be difficult to execute.

"It’s different from what we’re doing today and different from what we’ve done for 25 years, successfully," Wells said.

Responded Supervisor Sophie Maxwell in an exasperated voice, "Just because it’s different does not make it necessarily difficult. I mean, McDonald’s is an amazing institution. It’s been around for many years ... because it’s able to change and to adapt to new circumstances and new things that people are eating so I think I have a lot more confidence in McDonald’s, I guess, than you do."

Cynthia Goody, McDonald’s nutrition director, said there was no evidence that childhood obesity would be reduced by requiring a fruit or vegetable with all meals.

In response, a supervisor asked what mix of foods would lower childhood obesity. Goody said she would need to conduct more research to provide an answer.

The Happy Meal ordinance is not all surprising given San Francisco’s famously liberal leanings.

"San Francisco has a reputation — and it’s well deserved — of being a very progressive city," said Alex Clemens, founder of Barbary Coast Consulting, a local political communications firm. "With that comes naturally, hand in hand, a reliance on government to encourage thoughtful change — that’s just tradition."


 
See this article on AP
©Copyright 2010 Barbary Coast Consulting