Toronto Star

Freshii runs afoul of calorie-counting law

Province directs public health to inspect Toronto locations and consider issuing fines

- ALEKSANDRA SAGAN THE CANADIAN PRESS PETER GOFFIN STAFF REPORTER

The Freshii restaurant chain says it will display calorie informatio­n on its menus, as required by Ontario law, but has derided the legislatio­n as “overly simplistic.”

Inspectors were dispatched Tuesday to ensure the Toronto-based company was complying with the provincial Healthy Menu Choices Act, which has been in effect since Jan. 1.

Freshii, which sells salads, wraps and smoothies to appeal to a more health-conscious customer, promotes itself as an alternativ­e to greasier fast-food competitor­s.

Its motto is “Count nutrients, not calories.”

Although the chain said in a state- ment that it would comply with the Healthy Menus Choices Act under threat of fines, it pushed back against the new rules.

“We believe that displaying only calories on a menu is misleading for our guests,” Freshii said.

On its website, the company makes a point of discouragi­ng customers from focusing on the number of calories they consume, saying that can prevent them from considerin­g nutrient-rich food that may also be high in calories.

Dr. David Jenkins, a nutritiona­l sciences professor at the University of Toronto, agrees.

“The nature of the food is probably more important than the calories,” he said.

“If you have a stir fry with tofu and vegetables, there may be a certain amount of fat in that, and you may take a large portion but I’m not going to be worried, (as opposed to) having a Big Mac with fries and shake or, even worse, a soft drink.”

And while it’s nice to know how many calories you are taking in, Jenkins said, the target of government regulation­s should be major fast food chains, not necessaril­y places like Freshii.

“I’m more interested in what McDonald’s are doing,” he added. “Where do we want to aim our guns? I think that’s the question. And I think where we want to aim our guns is the fast food restaurant­s that stretch across not only Toronto . . . but globally.”

When the Star went to a Freshii location in Toronto on Tuesday and asked for calorie informatio­n, staff handed over a nutrition guide listing the number of calories, and amounts of fats, sodium, carbohydra­tes, protein and more, for every menu item.

The nutrition guide is available on Freshii’s website.

And a sign on the front door invites customers to direct any nutrition questions to Freshii’s “in-house nutritioni­st” via email.

A request for calorie informatio­n was responded to within an hour.

The Health Ministry said Tuesday it would not budge from its stance, saying eating too many calories is a key contributo­r to weight gain and menu labelling can influence consumer behaviour.

The ministry said it will continue to seek compliance with the rules after learning from inspectors that multiple Freshii locations appear to be contraveni­ng the act, which applies to food service providers with 20 or more locations. Freshii has about 50 restaurant­s in the province, according to its website.

The ministry directed local public health units to inspect Freshii restaurant­s and consider enforcemen­t action against any found to be contraveni­ng the act, spokesman David Jensen said. Individual fines for a first offence are a maximum of $500 daily, while corporate first offence fines are a maximum of $5,000 a day.

 ?? RYAN REMIORZ/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Freshii said in a statement that it would comply with the Healthy Menu Choices Act under threat of fines, but pushed back against the rules.
RYAN REMIORZ/THE CANADIAN PRESS Freshii said in a statement that it would comply with the Healthy Menu Choices Act under threat of fines, but pushed back against the rules.

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