Los Angeles Times

Trump on obesity crisis: Go ahead, have a cookie

- DAVID LAZARUS

The most attentiong­etting news out of the food industry last week was Amazon’s announceme­nt Friday that it’s buying Whole Foods for nearly $14 billion. But that wasn’t the most important news.

The most important news was a largely overlooked announceme­nt from the Trump administra­tion that it’s bowing to the wishes of food companies — and ignoring the pleas of scientific and medical experts — by giving industry players more time to push sugary treats on an increasing­ly blubbery nation.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion said it will delay implementa­tion of planned food-labeling requiremen­ts intended to help consumers better understand how much added sugar they’re taking in and how many calories are being added to their bellies.

The agency said it was responding to “significan­t concerns” from “numerous stakeholde­rs” about their ability to meet a deadline of July 26, 2018, plus an additional 12 months for smaller food companies.

“The agency is mindful of the importance of balancing its mission of protecting public health with the practicali­ties of implementi­ng the amended labeling requiremen­ts,” it said in a statement.

If that were the case, though, the FDA wouldn’t just leave the public hanging as to when the new food labels would take effect. Yet when I asked Deborah Kotz, an agency spokeswoma­n, how long the delay would be, she was unable to answer.

“Any additional detail regarding the extension will be forthcomin­g when the extension is officially announced in the Federal Register,” she told me. When will that be? “We can’t comment on the timing.”

I took that as, “Don’t hold your breath.”

The food-labeling rollback is just one of numerous moves by the Trump administra­tion to override measures introduced by former

President Obama.

Trump and Republican lawmakers are now trying to do away with consumer protection­s put in place after the financial meltdown of 2008. And as I reported last week, the Trump administra­tion also wants to take away the right of people to sue nursing homes.

Jim O’Hara, director of health promotion policy for the Center for Science in the Public Interest, an advocacy group, said it’s not hard to see why the administra­tion has placed a seemingly indefinite hold on better informing consumers about what they’re eating.

“There’s been a lot of lobbying from food companies,” he said. “They’re worried about having to disclose added sugar.”

O’Hara is no stranger to food policy. He previously served as deputy assistant secretary for health at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and as the FDA’s associate commission­er for public affairs.

He pointed me toward a letter submitted in March by food-industry trade groups to Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price. The groups called for a delay in the new disclosure requiremen­ts until at least 2021 “in order to ease the regulatory burden on the economy.”

Signatorie­s included some of the sweetest industries out there, including the American Bakers Assn., the Corn Refiners Assn., the National Confection­ers Assn., the Juice Products Assn., the Assn. for Dressings and Sauces and the Grocery Manufactur­ers Assn., which speaks on behalf of more than 250 individual food and beverage companies.

“These associatio­ns represent a lot of sugar,” O’Hara said.

Separately, Price received a letter in May from scientists and academics, and another letter last week from dozens of healthcare, educationa­l and consumer groups, calling for the foodlabel rule to be implemente­d on schedule next year.

The health secretary — who was a doctor before he became a full-time politician — apparently found the food industry’s pitch more persuasive.

The food-labeling requiremen­ts were announced last year as part of the Obama administra­tion’s efforts to address America’s obesity epidemic. More than a third of U.S. adults are obese, creating greater risk of heart disease, stroke, Type 2 diabetes and certain types of cancer, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“The new label will make it easier for consumers to make better informed food choices,” the FDA said last year.

Planned changes include a larger type size for calories and disclosure of “added sugars” in grams and as a percentage of recommende­d daily allotment.

The Trump administra­tion, in delaying the labeling requiremen­ts, is putting corporate profits ahead of public interest.

It revealed a similar priority in May when it announced the delay of a requiremen­t that restaurant chains include calorie counts and other nutritiona­l info on menus.

That rule was supposed to take effect last month. Now it won’t happen until next year at the earliest.

Cary Kreutzer, an assistant professor at USC’s Davis School of Gerontolog­y and Keck School of Medicine, said Trump seems determined to undo many of the nutritiona­l initiative­s undertaken by former First Lady Michelle Obama, who made reducing America’s waistline her top priority.

“We know from evidence that when people better understand food labels, they make better choices,” Kreutzer said.

By delaying the more informativ­e labels, she said, “people will keep making the poor food choices that they’re making now.” Kreutzer added that “we know sugar is a huge problem.”

Some food companies and restaurant­s already have adopted the new disclosure requiremen­ts. Others, such as candy maker Mars Inc., say they’d have no trouble hitting the originally planned deadline of next summer.

But most industry players seem intent on buying as much time as they can to keep Americans in the dark about all the added sugar they consume (which is about 94 grams, or 358 calories daily, according to the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e — the same as drinking 2½ cans of Coke).

Pamela G. Bailey, head of the Grocery Manufactur­ers Assn., said in a statement that food and beverage companies remain committed to updating their labels to better inform consumers. But delaying the disclosure requiremen­t, she said, “will reduce consumer confusion and costs.”

What it won’t reduce is the massive economic toll being taken on the country. The CDC estimates that obesity-related medical expenses and lost productivi­ty cost the U.S. more than $147 billion annually.

Enjoy your cookie, America. You’re paying for it.

 ?? Jacquelyn Martin Associated Press ?? FORMER First Lady Michelle Obama unveils updated food labels at a Washington summit last year.
Jacquelyn Martin Associated Press FORMER First Lady Michelle Obama unveils updated food labels at a Washington summit last year.
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