Bloomberg "confident" soda ban will be upheld
Last updated 6:06 p.m. EST
Smaller sodas were set to hit New York City eateries tomorrow until a judge stepped in at the eleventh hour to strike down the new regulations.
New York Supreme Court Judge Milton Tingling ruled Monday that the city may not enforce the new regulation, CBS New York reported Monday afternoon. The ban, which was set to take place Tuesday, applied to sugary drinks larger than 16 ounces sold at restaurants, fast food establishments, delis, sports venues and movie theaters. The limits do not apply to milk-based and alcoholic beverages sold at these eateries. Also exempt are sugar-sweetened drinks sold at grocery stories and convenience stores.
Tingling said loopholes in the regulations defeated the limit's stated purpose.
"It is arbitrary and capricious because it applies to some but not all food establishments in the City, it excludes other beverages that have significantly higher concentrations of sugar sweeteners and/or calories on suspect grounds, the loopholes inherent in the Rule, including but not limited to limitations on re-fills, defeat and/or serve to gut the purpose of the Rule," Tingling wrote in his ruling.
New York City's ban on big sodas
There was to be a three-month grace period before violators could face $200 fines.
"I definitely believe it's going to hurt my business," Mary Cira of Pronto Pizza, told CBS New York ahead of the ban. She said she had to throw out about $1,000 worth of 20-ounce and 2-liter bottles of soda and change her menus. "I have a combo special with a 2-liter soda."
Since the sugary drink limits were first proposed last May, health advocates have lauded Mayor Michael Bloomberg for taking a unique step to combat obesity, while consumer groups and advocates for small business owners have accused the mayor of wanting to turn the city into a nanny state.
Sugar war: Is the sweet stuff toxic?
"Certainly the Bloomberg Big Gulp ban is not going to solve obesity, but you know what? It's a good baby step," sugar researcher Dr. Robert Lustig, a professor of medicine at the University of California San Francisco, said on CBS This Morning in February. "It's going in the right direction."
Center for Consumer Freedom Senior Research Analyst J. Justin Wilson said in a statement he didn't expect the ban to make a meaningful difference, according to CBS New York.
"Personal irresponsibility is what got New Yorkers to put on a few extra pounds. And it's going to take personal responsibility, not a government takeover of our diet, to shed that weight," he said.
Critics and the American Beverage Association had taken their challenges to court since the Board of Health approved the mayor's proposal in September.
"It would be a tremendous waste of expense, time, and effort for our members to incur all of the harm and costs associated with the ban if this court decides that the ban is illegal," Chong Sik Le, president of the New York Korean-American Grocers Association, said in court papers filed in February.
CBS New York reported that some businesses were holding off on making changes to their menus while awaiting a court to challenge or delay the ban. The judge issued his ruling Monday afternoon.
Bloomberg on 'Big Gulp' law: Not banning anything, just portion control
Mayor Bloomberg defended the ban on the March 10th "Face The Nation."
"This year, for the first time in the history of the world, more people will die from too much food than from too little food. More people will die from the effects of obesity than from starvation. And we've got to do something about this. This is going to bankrupt the country. Our medical system cannot handle it," he said. "We've just got to do something. And all we're doing in New York is reminding you that it's not in your interest to have too many empty calories," he added.
One day ahead of the rules going into effect, the mayor's office had also released a study that found nine out of 10 of the New York City neighborhoods with the highest obesity rates also were neighborhoods with the highest rates of sugary drink consumption. City officials said the new data is the latest evidence that sugary drinks are harming New Yorkers' health.
"Reducing sugary drink consumption is critical to reducing obesity and obesity-related illnesses, which kill more people in New York City than anything except smoking. This is what the portion cap on sugary drinks is all about," city Health Commissioner Thomas Farley said in a statement.
- Bloomberg wants soda ban to go statewide so it applies to grocery stores
- New York soda ban's rivals spar in court
- NYC soda ban goes into effect in March, but fines won't start for 3 months
Bloomberg tweeted Monday that his office plans to appeal:
We plan to appeal the sugary drinks decision as soon as possible, and we are confident the measure will ultimately be upheld.
-- NYC Mayor's Office (@NYCMayorsOffice) March 11, 2013
The mayor also held a Monday evening press conference where he defended the sugary drink limits, noting their was initial controversy surrounding some of his earlier health campaigns like banning smoking in workplaces or banning trans fats.
"It would be irresponsible not to do everything we can to try and save lives," he said.
Bloomberg also expressed confidence that the ruling would be turned over on appeal and that a judge would eventually rule the city Board of Health was within its legal limits.
"There are many instances where a lower court decision has gone against us and been reversed," he said.
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Bloomberg should be ARRESTED and IMPRISONED immediately.
This ban, now temporarily blocked by a supreme court judge with jurisdiction in the matter, is designed to, essentially, kick people in their wallet.
If you read the underlying message coming from this enactment, it's basically saying that people's intake habits with their body, their consumption and calorie habits, their overall health, is all now between whatever addiction or pattern of choices they have, and an ADDED cost to maintain those addictions and patterns.
Nobody is stopping you or anyone else from consuming as much soda as you want to, at any one point in time. Hap at it; it'll just cost you more insofar as the fact that available sizes for purchase have been curtailed, in terms of only quantity.
There will still be the same soda, the same old menu of soft drinks and sugary options when it comes to beverages. And there will still be large quantities available (provided, however, demand still permits the business to increase their supply and at a profit). If you want more than the available amount, you'll just have to order more than one (or maybe more than even two of the biggest size, depending on the kind of business).
The law as it is, doesn't give employees of a business the legal right to restrict either how much you spend, or what you choose to drink, wherein soft drinks high in sugar or other less caloric choices are available for you to purchase. It is still, your money, after all.
Everyone has the right to agree and to disagree, that is called freedom. You believe healthy people are better off, not so true. They can also face many health issues.
It's sodas now, just what will be next?
and I didn't speak out because I wasn't a socialist.
Then they came for the trade unionists,
and I didn't speak out because I wasn't a trade unionist.
Then they came for the Jews,
and I didn't speak out because I wasn't a Jew.
Then they came for me,
and there was no one left to speak for me.
- Martin Niemoller
So now, first your salt, next your sodas, wait until your chocolate goes ....
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Wow! You certainly have friends in high places. No wonder the smug attitude.
So I shouldn't have friends who work for a living at Walmart? Is something wrong with my freinds? Should they be CEO's of a huge corporation or something? My friends always have a smile on their faces, never take advantage of me, always lend a hand when needed and offer a shoulder to cry on if asked. I could leave a hundred dollars on my table all day long and not a single one of them would ever dream of taking it. They're good people and I'm very PROUD to call them my friends. I don't care where someone works, how much money they do or don't have. They're my friends and I love them for that. Sorry they don't live up to your expectations!
Should the government allow any individual to make an unhealthy decision? Should our government say "I'm sorry Sir/Madame but you are too obese to buy that 32 oz. soda, it will make you fatter and endanger your health"?
What right does any government have to dictate individual legal behavior? When does the "I know best" precedent stop? Bacon, red meat, candy, they are all "bad" for your health in excess. Do we want to surrender our freedom of choice and become drones of a totalitarian government institute?
I hope not. If people die as a result of the freedom of choice we have, it is the cost of that freedom and must be born by society as a whole. We may not like it and seek to control behaviors that we personally don't agree with but freedom means freedom and having other dictate how you live is not what freedom is. Educate, inform and allow.
While I do not choose to injest harmful substances it is certainly my right to do so.
Ridiculous, I hope the judge's decisions sticks
You are way too cynical. Why does an action that stops a law that violates individual freedom have to be tied to a money trail? Smaller soda sizes mean more profits as two 16's cost more than one 32. I don't buy the money connection this time.
No napkin? Use one of your fat folds.
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I have no fat folds, but we could use you as a toothpick.