The Mercury News

NYC salt warning rule hits eateries

Label required on some items in bid to reduce patrons’ sodium intake

- By Jake Pearson and Jennifer Peltz Associated Press

NEW YORK — New York City begins a new era in nutritiona­l warnings this week, when chain restaurant­s will have to start putting a special symbol on highly salty dishes.

The first-of-its-kind rule, which takes effect Tuesday, will require a salt-shaker emblem on some sandwiches, salads and other menu items that top the recommende­d daily limit of 2,300 milligrams — about a teaspoon — of sodium.

It’s the latest in a series of novel nutritiona­l moves by the nation’s biggest city, and it comes as health advocates, federal regulators and some in the food industry are trying to get Americans to cut down on salt. Experts say most Americans consume too much salt, raising their risks of high blood pressure and heart problems. But the plan faces opposition and a potential court challenge from restaurant groups and salt producers, who say the city is going overboard.

“When you see this warning label, you know that that item has more than the total amount of sodium that you should consume in a single day,” city Health Commission­er Dr. Mary Bassett said Monday at an Applebee’s in Times Square as 40 of the chain’s New York City-area locations announced they had added the labels ahead of the deadline.

The average American consumes about 3,400 mg of salt per day, and public health advocates have cheered the measure as a smart step to make diners aware of how much sodium they’re ordering. A TGI Friday’s New York cheddar and bacon burger counts 4,280 mg, for example while a Chili’s boneless Buffalo chicken salad has 3,460 mg.

But national restaurant and salt-producers’ organizati­ons say they plan legal action over the warnings.

“The people of New York City should fight against an over-reaching government bureaucrac­y” that’s acting on misimpress­ions about the risks of salt, Salt Institute trade group President Lori Roman said Monday.

An internatio­nal study involving 100,000 people suggested last year that most people’s salt intake was OK for heart health, though other scientists faulted the study.

Restaurate­urs say the city shouldn’t create its own salt-warning scheme when federal regulators have been working on national sodium guidelines.

Such local requiremen­ts put an “overly onerous and costly burden” on city chain restaurant­s, often owned by small-time franchisee­s, the National Restaurant Associatio­n said Monday.

Health Department officials say they have clear authority to require the warnings and believe the public health benefits outweigh any burdens to restaurant owners.

Indeed, Apple Metro CEO Zane Tankel said adding the warnings won’t affect the bottom line at his Applebee’s in the area.

“We’re not the food police, and we’re not telling (customers) what to do,” he said. “But I think it’s important that we give them the opportunit­y to make the right decisions, or wrong decisions, if that’s what they so choose.”

In recent years, New York City has pioneered banning trans fats from restaurant meals and forcing chain eateries to post calorie counts on menus.

The city also led the developmen­t of voluntary salt-reduction targets that have prompted manufactur­ers to squeeze some sodium out of products from canned beans to cookies.

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