Enforcement Looms of FDA's Menu Labeling Regulations
Expensive calorie count mandate set to begin on May 5. Is delay or repeal possible?

FDA enforcement of its absurd rules governing mandatory calorie menu labeling, passed in 2010 as part of Obamacare, is set to begin on May 5, after years of delays.
In 2015, the FDA delayed implementing the rules until December 2016, after the presidential election. At the time, The Hill speculated that a new "Republican president could choose to scrap the rule altogether."
That hasn't happened. Yet. But in December 2016 the FDA delayed enforcing the rules until May 5, 2017, which is the deadline that now looms.
The FDA interprets its menu-labeling rules as requiring mandatory calorie labeling of most foods sold by "restaurants and similar retail food establishments if they are part of a chain of 20 or more locations, doing business under the same name, offering for sale substantially the same menu items and offering for sale restaurant-type foods." Owners of more than twenty vending machines must also comply with the rules.
The rules would be a disaster. They'll cost at least $1 billion. And if they're grounded in science, that science is shoddy.
The purpose of menu-labeling rules in general is to help consumers make smarter (read: lower-calorie) choices. But the very premise that mandatory menu labeling accomplishes this is flawed. Research demonstrates that menu labeling doesn't improve consumer food choices. That's something I first noted here in 2011, and which subsequent reports have also shown (see, for example, here, here, here, and here).
So can the rules be stopped?
Yes. Congress could act by repealing or amending the menu-labeling rules. Or food sellers whose First Amendment rights would be violated by rules that compel speech for no constitutionally supported reason could ask a court to halt implementation of the rules. Or the FDA could delay the rules from taking effect.
Each of these is possible. But how likely are these outcomes? While the clock is ticking, furious efforts are underway to halt the rules.
Earlier this year, Congress introduced a bill supported by the American Pizza Community, an advocacy group that includes pizza companies like Domino's and Pizza Hut. The bill, the Common Sense Nutrition Disclosure Act, would exempt most pizza-delivery companies and delay implementation of the menu-labeling rules by at least two years. A comparable bill passed out of the House last year but died in the Senate.
While pizza makers are working in Congress, two other groups that oppose the law, the National Grocers Association and National Association of Convenience Stores, petitioned the FDA this month in an effort to delay or halt implementation of the rules. The petitioners argue compliance with the "unworkable" rules is impossible; that the costs of complying are exorbitant and far exceed FDA estimates; that the FDA exceeded its authority in adopting the rules; that the rules run afoul of the First Amendment; and that the rules are "inconsistent with the [Trump] Administration's agenda to alleviate unnecessary regulatory burdens on business."
Pushing back against these efforts is the voice of the restaurant industry—the National Restaurant Association—a staunch supporter of the FDA menu-labeling rules. That stance might surprise some—if for no other reason than that it's got some basis beyond rent-seeking.
"With more and more states adopting their own menu-labeling rules, the National Restaurant Association… sought a shield against this death by 1,000 cuts by pushing for one uniform national menu-labeling rule," I explained in a 2013 column.
Will one or more of the aforementioned approaches succeed in stymying the rules from taking effect on May 5? Repeal seems like something Congress won't stomach. Consider that the GOP's ham-fisted attempts to repeal, replace, or rename (or whatever) the Affordable Care Act completely ignored the ACA's menu-labeling provisions. Amending the rules via the Common Sense Nutrition Disclosure Act seems a more likely path.
"[T]here's now been so much time and money sunk into the process that none of the major lobbying groups are trying to get rid of the mandate as part of the Obamacare repeal," Politico reported a week after Pres. Trump took office. "Instead, they say, they want Congress to pass legislation that would tweak the FDA rule to make it easier for businesses to comply."
But the restaurant lobby would strongly oppose efforts to carve out exceptions to the rules.
I'd be stunned if the Trump administration ignores the very real concerns of grocers, convenience stores, and pizza makers. But if the GOP delays or amends implementing the rule for those groups, I also expect they'd have to delay it for National Restaurant Association members, too. In short, it's complicated.
I think the best bets—both in terms of its likelihood and efficacy—is either that the FDA responds to the petition from the National Grocers Association and National Association of Convenience Stores and uses the petition as a basis to delay implementing the rules or that those same parties—perhaps in conjunction with the American Pizza Community—sues the FDA in federal court, seeking an injunction that would delay or halt enforcement of the menu-labeling rules.
But time's running out. In the meantime, restaurants, movie theaters, vending machine owners, grocers, and pizza franchise owners are in a very difficult spot. They're forced to weigh the potential expenses of sinking thousands of dollars each into signage that complies with the FDA rules that might not take effect or risking fines under those same rules if they do take effect.
In any case, it's a shame that Congress, the FDA, and successive presidential administrations have gotten us to this point. Scrapping the rules (or, at the least, delaying them) is long overdue.
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Removing these rules would make the government smaller and less intrusive therefore there is no chance the GOP and the talking yam will ever get it done.
It's not clear that it would make gov't smaller & less intrusive for multi-state chains when you consider all those individual state rules that would be superseded by federal ones.
Research demonstrates that menu labeling doesn't improve consumer food choices.
Are you claiming that the crafters of Obamacare and the regulators in the FDA don't love science?
Is every one of your comments a rhetorical question?
Why? Were you abused by a rhetorical question as a child?
They love fucking science.
Right in the keister.
Yep. They fuck it in the front door, they fuck it in the back door, they fuck it in the ear. Sideways!
And it's pretty presumptuous to say that you've "improved" someone else's choices.
They always count the hits and ignore the misses.
The only increase in choice that mandatory labeling provides is now you have the choice to read it or not.
On the other end, it *removes* a choice from the labeller.
There's no net increase in choice - only shifting the available choices around.
You're lucky you get the illusion of choice at all.
Donald J. Trump
? @realDonaldTrump
I'm finding out that menus are really hard. Sad!
9:41 AM - 22 Apr 2017
I like to know how many calories I am eating. I prefer restaurants that provide this information and patronize them accordingly. I do not, however, support coercive labeling.
You find out things like 2 tall Green Head IPAs and an all-star burger contain 2700 calories.
Yup.
If you are concerned and can't guess by looking at the picture or the potential ingredients, eat at home.
I don't see why Trump can't stop this with a stroke of his peen.
I use the calorie counts to make better decisions. I don't care that other people don't.
I agree that this is intrusive. I also think that if this is the kind of thing that government normally did, we wouldn't worry so much about intrusion.
IOW, of all the government intrusions, this is not the mole hill I choose to die on.
WAIT.
He buried the lede. It was the states that started this. This is not a constitutional intrusion by the Feds. This is a proper exercise of the commerce clause to establish uniform rules after the states began to enforce labeling.
That's actually a very good point.
"This is a proper exercise of the commerce clause..."
No, it is not. Particularly if the 'chain' in question does not operate across state lines. And if you think that is rare then you don't know much about how vending machine operators do business.
This points out a main weakness of the left when it comes to civil rights.
It starts with recognizing that businesses are associations too and protected by freedom of association - that in itself validates the free market.
But the left has "tendency" to ignore civil rights when it comes to business or economics in general - whether it is association or press or speech, etc.
Political cross dressing - point out to the left their lack of support for civil rights when it comes to business/economic associations. Let them try to justify why these associations are not covered.
Let them try to justify why these associations are not covered.
because, profits. you see, the corporations sit there in their corporation buildings, and see thats, they're all corporationy, and they, make money.
do you even prog, bro?
Anyone who needs menu labels to know pub food + beer = fat ass is a fucking idiot.
Amen, brother.
Yeah I've seen plenty people pick up boxes of twinkies look at the nutritional label, shrug, and throw it in their shopping basket. It doesn't work for the most part. I have put a few things back over the years because ridiculous amounts of salt and sugar, but for the most part I'm as guilty as anybody.
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since not all calories are equal (the calories from High Fructose Corn Syrup are VERY different than the calories from French Fries cooked in cheap oil, or from a piece of beefsteak. And FDA's rules make no provision for this difference.
FASCISM defined: government CONTROL of private means of production. Gummit mandates over what industry provide or do in their production activities IS fascism.
I've noted of late that the folks running the Panda Express chain list calorie counts, together with at least SOME information on what those calories are from, on their menuboards. They did this with NO gummit force being applied or threatened. Subway have been doing this for years.
One more incidence of Nannie hopping on her High Horse and riding into town, then ordering everyone about to suit THEIR idea of what is right. The free market has brought tremendous change in the food industry these past five years.... there are now alternate products for nearly everything that contained HFCS. Even Costco began to work with their suppliers to provide products (jams, packaged cereals, salad dressings, etc) free of this poison that is "approved" for food use by this very same FDA now making these stupid demands.
What SHOULD have happened is FDA banning HFCS from any food for humans.
Gubmint definitions AGAIN? This was the whole point of the Pure Food Law that became enforceable in 1907. Instead of sticking to correcting blatant mislabelling, coercive zealots got sucked into acting on questions like: "What is whiskey?" (in the midst of a resurgence of State prohibitionism) and "What is a sardine?" (a question that to this day moves men to fisticuffs). Next thing you knew, HELLO Panic of 1907!
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