Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

County officials vote to repeal Chicago-area soda tax

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CHICAGO » The Chicago-area’s penny-per-ounce tax on soda and sweetened drinks was repealed Wednesday after a monthslong conflict that included a court battle and millions of dollars’ worth of television ads on both sides.

The Cook County Board voted 15-2 to end the tax starting Dec. 1. The vote came just more than two months after the tax took effect Aug. 2.

The tax prompted lawsuits, a warning from a federal agency that Illinois could lose millions in funding for food stamp benefits and complaints of plummeting sales from store owners. But among its supporters were health advocates such as billionair­e Michael Bloomberg, whose super PAC ran more than $2 million worth of ads defending the tax as a way to fight obesity and other health conditions.

Cook County, which includes Chicago, became the largest jurisdicti­on in the U.S. to enact the tax on sugary and artificial­ly sweetened beverages when the board approved it in November with Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e as the deciding vote. It applies not just to soda, but also to sports drinks, iced tea and lemonade, and comes on top of beverage taxes imposed by Illinois and Chicago.

Wednesday’s final vote came after a similar finance committee vote Tuesday. Preckwinkl­e said in a statement after Tuesday’s vote that

she was “disappoint­ed.” The Illinois Public Health Institute and Illinois Alliance to Prevent Obesity said in a joint statement that it was a “bad deal” for taxpayers who will have to pay for rising health care costs related to drinking too many sugary beverages.

Some retailers opposed to the tax posted signs in the soda aisle telling customers they will pay $1.44 more on each 12-pack of soda because of the tax, and urging them to tell their county commission­er to repeal it. The Illinois Retail Merchants Associatio­n, which unsuccessf­ully sued to try to stop the tax, called the repeal “great news for consumers and retailers.”

Preckwinkl­e has said repeal could mean budget cuts and layoffs.

After Wednesday’s vote, Preckwinkl­e indicated she wouldn’t be taking the lead in adjusting the county’s finances.

“I assume those commission­ers who are interested in (alternate) revenue will come forward with ideas,” she said.

Preckwinkl­e and commission­ers will have to decide how they will fill an approximat­e $200 million budget hole that the tax would have satisfied. They have until Nov. 30 to approve a budget.

 ?? AP PHOTO BY SARA BURNETT FILE ?? In this Aug. 22 file photo, a sign sponsored by opponents of the new Cook County tax on sweetened beverages is posted in the soda isle of Tischler Finer Foods in Brookfield, Ill. The Cook County board’s finance committee voted Wednesday to repeal the...
AP PHOTO BY SARA BURNETT FILE In this Aug. 22 file photo, a sign sponsored by opponents of the new Cook County tax on sweetened beverages is posted in the soda isle of Tischler Finer Foods in Brookfield, Ill. The Cook County board’s finance committee voted Wednesday to repeal the...
 ?? AP PHOTO/M. SPENCER GREEN, FIL ?? In this Jan. 26, 2012 file photo, Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e speaks at a news conference in Chicago. Cook County officials are expected to take a major step Tuesday, Oct. 10, 2017, toward repealing a Chicago-area tax on sweetened...
AP PHOTO/M. SPENCER GREEN, FIL In this Jan. 26, 2012 file photo, Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e speaks at a news conference in Chicago. Cook County officials are expected to take a major step Tuesday, Oct. 10, 2017, toward repealing a Chicago-area tax on sweetened...

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