Houston Chronicle

NYC first to require warnings about salty food

Rule is intended to decrease risk of heart attack

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NEW YORK — New York became the first U.S. city or state to require chain restaurant­s to post a warning on menus when dishes contain high levels of salt.

The Board of Health on Wednesday unanimousl­y approved the rule for food establishm­ents with at least 15 locations nationwide, a group that generates about a third of the city’s restaurant traffic. The rule is intended to reduce high blood pressure, which increases the risk of heart attacks and strokes, the Health Department said.

“High sodium intake is dangerous,” the Health Department said in a statement. “With a simple menu icon and statement to alert restaurant customers which items have exceedingl­y high sodium, New Yorkers will have easily accessible informatio­n.”

The Board of Health decision, which carries the force of law, requires restaurant­s to identify any offerings with more than 2,300 milligrams of sodium, the recommende­d daily limit. Beginning Dec. 1, dishes exceeding the limit will bear a warning label: an icon of a salt shaker inside a triangle.

The restrictio­n is consistent with Mayor Bill de Blasio’s vow to continue a campaign started by former Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who banned transfats and required calorie counts on chainresta­urant menus. The restaurant industry criticized the measure as costly and unnecessar­y, in light of federal regulation­s planned for next year. Kevin Dugan, spokesman for the New York State Restaurant Associatio­n, said the group hasn’t decided whether to appeal.

“This is just the latest in a long litany of superfluou­s hoops that restaurant­s here in New York must jump through,” said Melissa Fleishut, chief executive officer of the associatio­n, in a prepared statement. “Every one of these cumbersome new laws makes it tougher … for restaurant­s to find success.”

One in three New York City deaths are due to heart disease. Among black adults, 36 percent have been diagnosed with high blood pressure, a rate 50 percent higher than for whites, according to Health Department surveys.

 ?? Mary Altaffar / Associated Press ?? A Bistro French Onion Soup Bread Bowl at a Panera bread restaurant in New York would require a warning under the new rule.
Mary Altaffar / Associated Press A Bistro French Onion Soup Bread Bowl at a Panera bread restaurant in New York would require a warning under the new rule.

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