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“This is a major victory for public health advocates, community groups, physicians, and dentists,” said Democratic state senator Bill Monning, author of the bill. “By informing consumer choice, we can improve the health of Californians.”
In 2012, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg spearheaded a citywide ban on sales of oversized sugary soft drinks, but the move was declared illegal by a state judge after a legal challenge by makers of soft drinks and a restaurant group. New York’s highest court has agreed to hear an appeal.
The California measure, passed on Friday by a 5-2 vote in the state senate’s appropriations committee, marks the second time that Monning, who represents the central coastal area around Carmel, has tried to influence consumers’ drink choices.
The bill next goes to the senate floor, where it could have its final senate vote as early as Wednesday.
Last year, Monning backed an unsuccessful measure that would have taxed the drinks.
Efforts to curtail consumption of sugary drinks through taxes and other efforts have met fierce resistance from the US food and beverage industry, which opposes the labelling bill.
Lisa Katic, who testified on behalf of the California Nevada Soft Drink Association in April, said the proposal, while well intentioned, “will do nothing to prevent obesity, diabetes or tooth decay, and may even make problems worse.”
According to Katic, the main source of added sugars in American diets are sandwiches and hamburgers, and not sodas or other soft drinks.