SAN FRANCISCO | It’s a happy moment for people who see the Happy Meal as anything but.
San Francisco is poised to become the first major American city to prohibit fast-food restaurants from including toys with children’s meals that do not meet nutritional guidelines.
The measure passed on a preliminary vote by the city’s Board of Supervisors last week, and was expected to win final passage Tuesday with enough votes to survive a likely veto by Mayor Gavin Newsom.
The ordinance, which would go into effect in December of next year, prohibits toy giveaways in fast-food children’s meals that have more than 640 milligrams of sodium, 600 calories or 35 percent of their calories from fat. The law also would limit saturated fats and trans fats and require fruits or vegetables to be served with each meal offering a toy.
The legislation is a big victory for activists and public health advocates who have charged food marketers with being complicit in the country’s growing childhood obesity rates. They hope other cities and counties nationwide will follow their lead.
“This will be a sign to the fast-food industry that it’s time to phase out its predatory marketing to children at large,” said Deborah Lapidus, a senior organizer with Boston-based Corporate Accountability International, a watchdog group that supported the legislation.
A similar ordinance has already been approved in California’s Santa Clara County, where it affected about a dozen restaurants.
The industry, which favors self-regulation, says there is no evidence that San Francisco’s law will halt the expanse of children’s waistlines and the diseases associated with obesity, such as hypertension, diabetes and heart disease.
McDonald’s and Burger King Corp. are among 17 major food and beverage marketers that are cooperating with the Children’s Food and Beverage Advertising Initiative, a self-regulation effort headed by the Council of Better Business Bureaus.
McDonald’s says its meals advertised to children meet government nutritional standards, limiting total calories to 600 per meal and capping fat and sugar. The company also agreed to curtail advertising in schools and promote healthy lifestyles in all marketing efforts directed at children.
“McDonald’s remains committed to responsible marketing practices, including advertising and promotional campaigns for our youngest customers,” McDonald’s senior vice president for marketing, Neil Golden, said in a statement to the Associated Press.
McDonald’s sent several senior executives and others to San Francisco to oppose the measure in person.
As it was being drafted, amended and discussed over several months, Corporate Accountability ran a local newspaper advertisement signed by physicians, community activists and small restaurants that called on Board of Supervisors swing voter Bevan Dufty to support the measure.
Mr. Dufty eventually did so, saying San Francisco should not wait for the federal government to act and should serve as an example to other cities.
“I don’t care how much they say, ’It’s San Francisco, they’re whacked out there, it doesn’t matter,’ the reality is they’re taking notice,” he said.
Fast-food restaurants spent $161 million advertising to children under 12 and an estimated $360 million on toys distributed with their meals in 2006, according to a 2008 Federal Trade Commission report.
Marlene Schwartz, deputy director of Yale University’s Rudd Center for Food Policy & Obesity, said fast-food advertising aimed at children has increased since self-regulation efforts began.
“They’re only really promoting it halfheartedly,” said Miss Schwartz of healthier food options. San Francisco’s law “is making the restaurants practice what they preach.”
The lure of such items is all too familiar to parents like Carmen Sanchez, who was at a San Francisco McDonald’s on a recent evening and said she sometimes hears children beg for Happy Meals.
“If the babies don’t get what they want, then they won’t stop crying,” Miss Sanchez said.
Please read our comment policy before commenting.