Frustrated States Banning Local Food Bans
States legislators fed up with local food bans in their states are passing laws that effectively ban the bans, reports the New York Times.
Several state legislatures are passing laws that prohibit municipalities and other local governments from adopting regulations aimed at curbing rising obesity and improving public health, such as requiring restaurants to provide nutritional information on menus or to eliminate trans fats from the foods they serve.
In some cases, lawmakers are responding to complaints from business owners who are weary of playing whack-a-mole with varying regulations from one city to the next. Legislators have decided to sponsor state laws to designate authority for the rules that individual restaurants have to live by.
Florida and Alabama recently adopted such limits, while Georgia, Tennessee and Utah have older statutes on their books. Earlier this year, Arizona prohibited local governments from forbidding the marketing of fast food using "consumer incentives" like toys.
Critics contend the laws are being slipped in under the noses of public-health advocates, who apparently do not have Internet access at their summer homes.
Ohio is one state considering a law that would outlaw local bans. If passed, the law would invalidate Cleveland's pending ban.
The provision, if adopted, could overturn a Cleveland ban on serving foods with trans fats in restaurants, which is scheduled to take effect in 2013.
The Times notes these measures have the backing of the nation's largest and most powerful restaurant group.
Sue Hensley, a spokeswoman for the National Restaurant Association, said it supported the efforts of its state members to protect restaurants from what she described as "a patchwork of regulation."
"We feel it is in the best interests of the consumer to have one uniform standard," Ms. Hensley said.
This mimics a successful strategy first used by the California Restaurant Association to pass a statewide menu-labeling law there, thus putting an end to myriad such laws throughout the state. Last year the National Restaurant Association adopted the same approach, which led to the inclusion of nationwide menu-labeling rules as part of the Obamacare law.
In effect, these new ban bans signal a predictable shift for the restaurant lobby. Instead of biting the bullet and embracing uniform laws that eliminate patchwork laws but add to restaurants' regulatory burden, they've begun to push for uniform laws that both eliminate the patchwork and reduce the burden.
Baylen Linnekin is a lawyer and the executive director of Keep Food Legal, a nonprofit that promotes culinary freedom, the idea that people should be free to make and consume whatever commestibles they prefer. For more information and to join or donate, go here now.
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Ban, ban ban
Ban ban food bans!
The nannies should try Running a restaurant for a few years. Bet that would change their views.
Here's an example.
http://blogs.forbes.com/bruceu.....-mcgovern/
let the collective libertarian identity crisis begin!
"food bans are bad, but centralization of power is bad, too!"
"collective libertarian" being used as ironically as possible, of course
Perhaps this is a good argument for Pro Lib's office of the Censor. Concentrate power in an office the purpose of which is to question power. But then who will watch the watchers?
Protection of rights trumps all. See "Bill of Rights" for more.
The Kochtopus knows no limits!
They will enslave us to their fast food cronies.
passing laws that prohibit municipalities and other local governments from adopting regulations aimed at curbing rising obesity and improving public health
Good grief.
"Aimed at" is the operative phrase there. Hell, good intentions, self-congratulating idiot nannies, unintended consequences, all that.
Watching the parasites battle for power is amusing, I must admit. "I am banning stuff! No, I'm banning your banning stuff!"
Any time a government is told "No you can't" is a good thing.
If progressives were consistent (and yes, I realize what a huge "if" that is), they'd welcome food-ban bans. Socially conservative nanny-statists also justify their restrictions on individual liberty by saying that they're for our own good.
Virginia did this with guns. Passed a preemption law to stop a lot of nonsense at the local level.
The libertarian zeitgeist: federalism for me, but not for we.
How you can support the states bossing around cities while saying that Obamacare is unconstitutional is beyond me.
It's actually pretty simple. The USA, as its name suggests, is a federal union of the states. Congress has certain powers enumerated in the Constitution in Article I, ? 8, and in various amendments; the remaining powers are reserved to the states or the people. No such relationship exists between a state and its political subdivisions.
Association fallacy is....tiresome.