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Center for Science in the Public Interest

The Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI) is a Washington, D.C.-based non-profit watchdog and consumer advocacy group that advocates for safer and healthier foods.

Center for Science in the Public Interest
AbbreviationCSPI
Formation1971
FounderMichael F. Jacobson
TypeNon-profit
PurposeConsumer advocacy
HeadquartersWashington, D.C.
Region served
United States
Websitecspinet.org

History and funding edit

CSPI is a consumer advocacy organization. Its focus is nutrition and health, food safety, and alcohol policy. CSPI was founded in 1971 by the microbiologist Michael F. Jacobson,[1] along with the meteorologist James Sullivan and the chemist Albert Fritsch, two fellow scientists from Ralph Nader's Center for the Study of Responsive Law.[2] In the early days, CSPI focused on various aspects such as nutrition, environmental issues, and nuclear energy. However, after the 1977 departure of Fritsch and Sullivan, CSPI began to focus largely on nutrition and food safety[3] and began publishing nutritional analyses and critiques.[1]

CSPI has 501(c)(3) status. Its chief source of income is its Nutrition Action Healthletter, which has about 900,000 subscribers and does not accept advertising.[4][5] The organization receives about 5 to 10 percent of its $17 million annual budget from grants by private foundations.

CSPI has more than sixty staff members and an annual budget from over $20 million.[2]

Jacobson now serves as a Senior Scientist at CSPI, with Peter G. Lurie acting as the organization's current President.

Programs and campaigns edit

Nutrition and food labeling edit

CSPI advocates for clearer nutrition and food labeling.[6] For example, labeling of "low-fat" or "heart healthy" foods in restaurants must now meet specific requirements established by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) as of May 2, 1997.[7]

In 1994, the group first brought the issue of high saturated fat in movie popcorn to the public attention.[8]

In 1975, CSPI published a "White Paper on Infant Feeding Practices" aimed at criticizing the commercial baby food industry's products and advertising. The White Paper started a formalized, political discussion of issues surrounding early introduction of solid foods and the extraordinarily processed ingredients in commercial baby food. CSPI took particular issue with the modified starches, excessive sugar and salt additions, and presence of nitrates in baby food products. In addition, the White Paper criticized branding and advertisements on products, which they argued lead mothers to believe that solid foods ought to be introduced earlier in an infant's diet.[9]

In 1989, CSPI was instrumental in convincing fast-food restaurants to stop using animal fat for frying. They would later campaign against the use of trans fats.[10]

CSPI's 1994 petition led to the FDA's 2003 regulation requiring trans fat to be disclosed on food labels. CSPI's 2004 petition, as well as a later one from a University of Illinois professor, led to the FDA's ban of partially hydrogenated vegetable oil, the major source of artificial trans fat.[11]

In 1998, the Center published a report entitled Liquid Candy: How Soft Drinks are Harming Americans' Health. It examined statistics relating to the soaring consumption of soft drinks, particularly by children, and the consequent health ramifications including tooth decay, nutritional depletion, obesity, type 2 (formerly known as "adult-onset") diabetes, and heart disease. It also reviewed soft drink marketing and made various recommendations aimed at reducing soft drink consumption, in schools and elsewhere. A second, updated edition of the report was published in 2005.[12] Among the actions they advocate are taxing soft drinks.[13] Sugar-sweetened beverages are taxed in Berkeley, California; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Boulder, Colorado; San Francisco, California; Oakland, California; Albany, California; and Cook County, Illinois.[14] Seattle introduced a city-wide comprehensive sugary drinks tax in 2019. CSPI followed up with a 2013 petition calling on the FDA to limit the sugar content of soft drinks and to set voluntary targets for sugar levels in other foods with added sugars.[15]

In 2003, it worked with lawyer John F. Banzhaf III to pressure ice cream retailers to display nutritional information about their products.[16]

In January 2016, the Center released a report entitled "Seeing Red - Time for Action on Food Dyes"[17] which criticized the continued use of artificial food coloring in the United States. The report estimated that over half a million children in the United States suffer adverse behavioral reactions as a result of ingesting food dyes, with an estimated cost exceeding $5 billion per year, citing data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The report urges the FDA to take action to ban or curtail the use of such dyes.[18] CSPI has urged companies to replace synthetic colorings with natural ones, and Mars,[19] General Mills,[20] and other major food manufacturers [21] have begun doing so.

School foods edit

CSPI has worked since the 1970s to improve the nutritional quality of school meals, and remove soda and unhealthy foods from school vending machines, snack bars, and a la carte lines. Despite pushback from the soda and snack food industries, CSPI successfully worked with a number of local school districts and states to pass policies in the early 2000s to restrict the sale of soda and other unhealthy snack foods in schools.[22] In 2004, CSPI worked with members of the National Alliance for Nutrition and Activity (NANA) (a CSPI-led coalition) to include a provision in the Child Nutrition and WIC Reauthorization Act of 2004 to ensure all local school districts develop a nutrition and physical activity wellness policy by 2006.[23]

In 2010, CSPI and NANA led the successful effort to pass the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act, a landmark law to improve child nutrition programs. The law (enacted December 13, 2010) authorized the U.S. Department of Agriculture to update the nutrition standards for snacks and beverages sold in schools through vending machines, a la carte lines, school stores, fundraisers, and other school venues. CSPI worked with NANA to mobilize support for the updated nutrition standards and urge the USDA to adopt strong final school nutrition standards (released in June 2013). Despite opposition from some members of Congress and the potato and pizza industries (which lobbied for unlimited french fries and ketchup as a vegetable in school meals) CSPI and NANA's efforts also resulted in strong nutrition standards for school lunches.[24]

Food safety edit

One of CSPI's largest projects is its Food Safety Initiative, directed to reduce food contamination and foodborne illness. In addition to publishing Outbreak Alert!, a compilation of food-borne illnesses and outbreaks, the project advocated for the Food Safety Modernization Act, which was signed into law in 2011. The law refocused government attention on preventing food contamination rather than on identifying problems after they caused outbreaks of illnesses.[25][26][27]

Food Day: October 24 edit

 
Food Day logo

Between 2011 and 2016, CSPI sponsored Food Day, a nationwide celebration of healthy, affordable, and sustainably produced food and a grassroots campaign for better food policies.[28]

Food Day's goal was to help people "Eat Real", which the project defined as cutting back on sugar drinks, overly salted packaged foods, and fatty, factory-farmed meats in favor of vegetables, fruits, whole grains, and sustainably raised protein. This annual event involved some of the country's most prominent food activists,[29] united by a vision of food that is healthy, affordable, and produced with care for the environment, farm animals, and the people who grow, harvest, and serve it.

Across the country, several thousand events took place each year, from community festivals in Denver, Savannah, and New York City, to a national conference in Washington, D.C., to thousands of school activities in Portland, Minneapolis, and elsewhere.[30]

Alcohol Policies Project edit

The group's "Alcohol Policies Project", now discontinued, advocated against what it considers adverse societal influences of alcohol, such as marketing campaigns that target young drinkers,[31] and promoted turning self-imposed advertising bans by alcohol industry groups into law.[32]

In 1985 CSPI organized Project SMART (Stop Marketing Alcohol on Radio and Television). It generated huge public interest, a petition campaign that obtained a million signatures, and congressional hearings. Members of the media joined the project, such as syndicated columnist Colman McCarthy.[33] However, strong opposition from the alcoholic beverage and advertising industries ultimately prevailed.

The Alcohol Policies Project organized the "Campaign for Alcohol-Free Sports TV". Launched in 2003 with the support of at least 80 other local and national groups, the campaign asked schools to pledge to prohibit alcohol advertising on local sports programming and to work toward eliminating alcohol advertising from televised college sports programs.[34] It also sought Congressional support for such a prohibition.[35] CSPI also sponsored Project SMART—Stop Marketing Alcohol on Radio and TV—which called for federal bans on marketing. The project gathered more than 1 million signatures on a petition, which it presented to Congress at a hearing. That effort was unsuccessful.

In addition, CSPI has pressured alcoholic beverage companies with lawsuits. In one such lawsuit, filed in September 2008, the Center "sue[d] MillerCoors Brewing Company over its malt beverage Sparks, arguing that the caffeine and guarana in the drink are additives that have not been approved by the FDA," and that the combination of those ingredients with alcohol resulted in "more drunk driving, more injuries, and more sexual assaults."[36]

Trans fats edit

During the 1980s, CSPI's campaign "Saturated Fat Attack" advocated the replacement of beef tallow, palm oil and coconut oil in processed foods and restaurant foods with fats containing less saturated fatty acids.[37] CSPI assumed that trans fats were benign.[38] In a 1986 book entitled The Fast-Food Guide, it praised chains such as KFC that had converted to partially hydrogenated vegetable oils, which are lower in saturated fat but high in trans fat. As a result of this pressure, many restaurants such as McDonald's made the switch.[37]

After new scientific research in the early 1990s found that trans fat increased the risk of heart disease, CSPI began leading a successful two-decades-long effort to ban artificial trans fat.[39] From the mid-1990s onward, however, CSPI identified trans fats as the greater public health danger.[40] CSPI executive director Michael Jacobson went on record saying, "Twenty years ago, scientists (including me) thought trans [fat] was innocuous. Since then, we've learned otherwise."[37]

In response, three trade groups – the National Restaurant Association, the National Association of Margarine Manufacturers and the Institute of Shortening and Edible Oils – "said the evidence [on trans fat] was contradictory and inconclusive, and accused [CSPI] of jumping to a premature conclusion."[41]

In 1994, CSPI petitioned the FDA to require trans fat to be added to Nutrition Facts labels, and in 2004,[42] with stronger evidence of trans fat's harmfulness, CSPI petitioned FDA to ban partially hydrogenated oil, the source of most artificial trans fat. In 2003 FDA required trans fat to be labeled,[43] and in 2015[44] FDA banned the use of partially hydrogenated oil.

Opposition edit

Former U.S. Representative Bob Barr (a Republican, and later Libertarian Party nominee for President of the United States) accused CSPI of pursuing "a pre-existing political agenda" and pointed to individual responsibility for dietary choices.[45] Cato Institute (a Washington D.C.-based libertarian think tank) scholar Walter Olson wrote that the group's "longtime shtick is to complain that businesses like McDonald's, rather than our own choices, are to blame for rising obesity," and called CSPI's suit against McDonald's for using toys to encourage young children to ask for the company's Happy Meals on behalf of a California mother a "new low in responsible parenting."[46]

In 2002, the Center for Consumer Freedom, a group opposed to excessive government regulation, published a series of print and radio ads designed in part to drive traffic to the CCF website that provided additional critical information about CSPI. A San Francisco Chronicle article identified CSPI as "one of two groups singled out [by the CCF] for full-on attack," and said, "What's not mentioned on the [CCF] Web site is that it's one of a cluster of such nonprofits started... by Berman."[47][48]

References edit

  1. ^ a b Smith, Andrew F. (2008). Encyclopedia of Junk Food and Fast Food. London. p. 38.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  2. ^ a b Brobeck, Stephan; Mayer, Robert N. (2015). Watchdogs and Whistleblowers: A Reference Guide to Consumer Activism. p. 73.
  3. ^ James Bennett & Thomas DiLorenzo, Food and Drink Police: Center for Science in the Public Interest wants government to control our eating habits, (Capital Research Center, 1998).
  4. ^ . Center for Science in the Public Interest. August 6, 2016. Archived from the original on October 7, 1999. Retrieved April 1, 2006.
  5. ^ "Our Funding: CSPI Funding Sources". Center for Science in the Public Interest. Retrieved March 31, 2008.
  6. ^ Masterson, K (October 14, 2007). "Food cop: Love him or hate him". Chicago Tribune.
  7. ^ Kurtzweil, P. (July 1997). . FDA Consumer magazine (May–June 1997). Archived from the original on September 18, 2008.
  8. ^ "Pulling the Curtains on Another CSPI Scare Campaign". Center for Consumer Freedom. March 4, 2011. Retrieved February 14, 2020.
  9. ^ Amy Bentley. "Inventing Baby Food: Taste, Health, and the Industrialization of the American Diet". University of California Press, 2014, p. 122.
  10. ^ CSPI Accomplishments. . Center for Science in the Public Interest. Archived from the original on October 28, 2007. Retrieved October 2, 2007.
  11. ^ "Final Determination Regarding Partially Hydrogenated Oils". June 17, 2015.
  12. ^ Michael F Jacobson PhD, Liquid Candy: How Soft Drinks are Harming Americans' Health, (CSPI, Washington DC 1998; 2nd Ed. 2005).
  13. ^ . April 1, 2010. Archived from the original on April 17, 2010. Retrieved April 2, 2010.
  14. ^ "Comparing local soda taxes" (PDF). cspinet.org. 2018. Retrieved June 8, 2019.
  15. ^ "CSPI Petition to FDA re: Added Sugars" (PDF). Center for Science in the Public Interest. Retrieved May 30, 2017.
  16. ^ "CERTIFIED MAIL — RECEIPT REQUESTED" (PDF).
  17. ^ "Seeing Red: Time for Action on Food Dyes - Center for Science in the Public Interest" (PDF). cspinet.org. January 19, 2016.
  18. ^ "Color Wars re: Artificial Food Coloring CSPI releases report criticizing use of artificial colors in food". The National Law Review. Keller and Heckman LLP. January 21, 2016. ISSN 2161-3362. Retrieved January 22, 2016.
  19. ^ Incorporated, Mars. "Mars, Incorporated to remove all artificial colors from its human food portfolio". www.prnewswire.com (Press release).
  20. ^ Hunt, Kevin (June 22, 2015). "A big commitment for Big G cereal".
  21. ^ "Dunkin' Donuts and Baskin-Robbins plan to remove artificial colorings from U.S. menus by end of 2018". Dunkin' Donuts.
  22. ^ Morgan, Kevin; Sonnino, Roberta (2008). The School Food Revolution: Public Food and the Challenge of Sustainable Development. New York.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  23. ^ "Child Nutrition and WIC Reauthorization Act of 2004 | Center for Science in the Public Interest". cspinet.org. January 2004. Retrieved February 14, 2020.
  24. ^ Schwartz, Colin; Wootan, Margo G. (2019). "How a Public Health Goal Became a National Law: The Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act of 2010". Nutrition Today. 54 (2): 67–77. doi:10.1097/NT.0000000000000318. PMC 6716573. PMID 31588151.
  25. ^ Kraig, Bruce. The Oxford Encyclopedia of Food and Drink in America. p. 328.
  26. ^ "The Food Safety Modernization Act – A Series on What is Essential for a Food Professional to Know" (PDF).
  27. ^ Lytton, Timothy D. (2019). Outbreak: Foodborne Illness and the Struggle for Food Safety. Chicago/ London. p. 325.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  28. ^ . October 24, 2013. Archived from the original on June 14, 2013. Retrieved June 19, 2013.
  29. ^ . October 24, 2013. Archived from the original on July 28, 2012.
  30. ^ "University joins Food Day observance | Fitchburg State University". www.fitchburgstate.edu. Retrieved February 19, 2020.[permanent dead link]
  31. ^ Nat Ives. "The media business: Advertising; a trade group tries to wean the alcohol industry from full-figured twins and other racy images". New York Times. March 6, 2003.
  32. ^ "Alcohol industry ends its ad ban in broadcasting", New York Times. November 8, 1996.
  33. ^ Lerner, Barron H. (2011). One for the Road: Drunk Driving since 1900.
  34. ^ "Colleges are reaching their limit on alcohol". USAToday. November 16, 2006.
  35. ^ "Bill would ask N.C.A.A. to forgo alcohol ads". New York Times. March 9, 2005.
  36. ^ Sullum, Jacob (February 16, 2011) Loco over Four Loko, Reason
  37. ^ a b c David Schleifer (2012). "The Perfect Solution: How Trans Fats Became the Healthy Replacement for Saturated Fats". Technology and Culture. Columbia University. 53 (1): 94–119. doi:10.1353/tech.2012.0018. PMID 22530389. S2CID 26343964. Retrieved September 10, 2012.
  38. ^ Blume, Elaine (March 1988). "The truth about trans: hydrogenated oils aren't guilty as charged". Nutrition Action Healthletter, published by CSPI. Retrieved March 16, 2013.
  39. ^ "FDA: Artificial Trans Fat Not Safe for Use in Food". Center for Science in the Public Interest. June 16, 2015. Retrieved May 30, 2017.
  40. ^ Liebman, Bonnie (October 1, 1990). "Trans in trouble". Nutrition Action Healthletter. Retrieved September 10, 2012.
  41. ^ "Debate Flares on Fat From Hydrogenated Oils". New York Times. August 8, 1996. Retrieved October 8, 2008.
  42. ^ "FDA Urged to Require Restaurants to Disclose Use of Partially Hydrogenated Oils". Center for Science in the Public Interest. July 22, 2004. Retrieved May 30, 2017.
  43. ^ "Trans Fat Coming to Food Labels". Center for Science in the Public Interest. July 9, 2003. Retrieved May 30, 2017.
  44. ^ "Final Determination Regarding Partially Hydrogenated Oils (Removing Trans Fat)". FDA. Retrieved May 30, 2017.
  45. ^ Barr, Bob (September 17, 2006). "Scientific Research Ruse". Washington Times. Retrieved October 8, 2008.
  46. ^ Olson, Walter (December 15, 2010) McDonald's suit over Happy Meal toys by California mom Monet Parham new low in responsible parenting, New York Daily News
  47. ^ Ness, Carol (May 11, 2002). "Hand that feeds bites back: Food industry forks over ad campaign to win hearts, stomachs". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved October 14, 2008.
  48. ^ Krieger, James; Saelens, Brian. . Healthy Eating Research. Archived from the original on July 16, 2014. Retrieved October 22, 2014.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Brody, Jane E. (January 1, 2018). "They Took On the Food Giants — and Won". The New York Times. Retrieved January 13, 2018.

center, science, public, interest, cspi, redirects, here, canadian, school, district, commission, scolaire, pointe, Île, systems, integrator, cspi, technology, solutions, cspi, washington, based, profit, watchdog, consumer, advocacy, group, that, advocates, sa. CSPI redirects here For the Canadian school district see Commission scolaire de la Pointe de l Ile For the systems integrator see CSPi Technology Solutions The Center for Science in the Public Interest CSPI is a Washington D C based non profit watchdog and consumer advocacy group that advocates for safer and healthier foods Center for Science in the Public InterestAbbreviationCSPIFormation1971FounderMichael F JacobsonTypeNon profitPurposeConsumer advocacyHeadquartersWashington D C Region servedUnited StatesWebsitecspinet org Contents 1 History and funding 2 Programs and campaigns 2 1 Nutrition and food labeling 2 2 School foods 2 3 Food safety 2 4 Food Day October 24 2 5 Alcohol Policies Project 3 Trans fats 4 Opposition 5 References 6 External linksHistory and funding editCSPI is a consumer advocacy organization Its focus is nutrition and health food safety and alcohol policy CSPI was founded in 1971 by the microbiologist Michael F Jacobson 1 along with the meteorologist James Sullivan and the chemist Albert Fritsch two fellow scientists from Ralph Nader s Center for the Study of Responsive Law 2 In the early days CSPI focused on various aspects such as nutrition environmental issues and nuclear energy However after the 1977 departure of Fritsch and Sullivan CSPI began to focus largely on nutrition and food safety 3 and began publishing nutritional analyses and critiques 1 CSPI has 501 c 3 status Its chief source of income is its Nutrition Action Healthletter which has about 900 000 subscribers and does not accept advertising 4 5 The organization receives about 5 to 10 percent of its 17 million annual budget from grants by private foundations CSPI has more than sixty staff members and an annual budget from over 20 million 2 Jacobson now serves as a Senior Scientist at CSPI with Peter G Lurie acting as the organization s current President Programs and campaigns editNutrition and food labeling edit CSPI advocates for clearer nutrition and food labeling 6 For example labeling of low fat or heart healthy foods in restaurants must now meet specific requirements established by the Food and Drug Administration FDA as of May 2 1997 7 In 1994 the group first brought the issue of high saturated fat in movie popcorn to the public attention 8 In 1975 CSPI published a White Paper on Infant Feeding Practices aimed at criticizing the commercial baby food industry s products and advertising The White Paper started a formalized political discussion of issues surrounding early introduction of solid foods and the extraordinarily processed ingredients in commercial baby food CSPI took particular issue with the modified starches excessive sugar and salt additions and presence of nitrates in baby food products In addition the White Paper criticized branding and advertisements on products which they argued lead mothers to believe that solid foods ought to be introduced earlier in an infant s diet 9 In 1989 CSPI was instrumental in convincing fast food restaurants to stop using animal fat for frying They would later campaign against the use of trans fats 10 CSPI s 1994 petition led to the FDA s 2003 regulation requiring trans fat to be disclosed on food labels CSPI s 2004 petition as well as a later one from a University of Illinois professor led to the FDA s ban of partially hydrogenated vegetable oil the major source of artificial trans fat 11 In 1998 the Center published a report entitled Liquid Candy How Soft Drinks are Harming Americans Health It examined statistics relating to the soaring consumption of soft drinks particularly by children and the consequent health ramifications including tooth decay nutritional depletion obesity type 2 formerly known as adult onset diabetes and heart disease It also reviewed soft drink marketing and made various recommendations aimed at reducing soft drink consumption in schools and elsewhere A second updated edition of the report was published in 2005 12 Among the actions they advocate are taxing soft drinks 13 Sugar sweetened beverages are taxed in Berkeley California Philadelphia Pennsylvania Boulder Colorado San Francisco California Oakland California Albany California and Cook County Illinois 14 Seattle introduced a city wide comprehensive sugary drinks tax in 2019 CSPI followed up with a 2013 petition calling on the FDA to limit the sugar content of soft drinks and to set voluntary targets for sugar levels in other foods with added sugars 15 In 2003 it worked with lawyer John F Banzhaf III to pressure ice cream retailers to display nutritional information about their products 16 In January 2016 the Center released a report entitled Seeing Red Time for Action on Food Dyes 17 which criticized the continued use of artificial food coloring in the United States The report estimated that over half a million children in the United States suffer adverse behavioral reactions as a result of ingesting food dyes with an estimated cost exceeding 5 billion per year citing data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention The report urges the FDA to take action to ban or curtail the use of such dyes 18 CSPI has urged companies to replace synthetic colorings with natural ones and Mars 19 General Mills 20 and other major food manufacturers 21 have begun doing so School foods edit CSPI has worked since the 1970s to improve the nutritional quality of school meals and remove soda and unhealthy foods from school vending machines snack bars and a la carte lines Despite pushback from the soda and snack food industries CSPI successfully worked with a number of local school districts and states to pass policies in the early 2000s to restrict the sale of soda and other unhealthy snack foods in schools 22 In 2004 CSPI worked with members of the National Alliance for Nutrition and Activity NANA a CSPI led coalition to include a provision in the Child Nutrition and WIC Reauthorization Act of 2004 to ensure all local school districts develop a nutrition and physical activity wellness policy by 2006 23 In 2010 CSPI and NANA led the successful effort to pass the Healthy Hunger Free Kids Act a landmark law to improve child nutrition programs The law enacted December 13 2010 authorized the U S Department of Agriculture to update the nutrition standards for snacks and beverages sold in schools through vending machines a la carte lines school stores fundraisers and other school venues CSPI worked with NANA to mobilize support for the updated nutrition standards and urge the USDA to adopt strong final school nutrition standards released in June 2013 Despite opposition from some members of Congress and the potato and pizza industries which lobbied for unlimited french fries and ketchup as a vegetable in school meals CSPI and NANA s efforts also resulted in strong nutrition standards for school lunches 24 Food safety edit One of CSPI s largest projects is its Food Safety Initiative directed to reduce food contamination and foodborne illness In addition to publishing Outbreak Alert a compilation of food borne illnesses and outbreaks the project advocated for the Food Safety Modernization Act which was signed into law in 2011 The law refocused government attention on preventing food contamination rather than on identifying problems after they caused outbreaks of illnesses 25 26 27 Food Day October 24 edit nbsp Food Day logoBetween 2011 and 2016 CSPI sponsored Food Day a nationwide celebration of healthy affordable and sustainably produced food and a grassroots campaign for better food policies 28 Food Day s goal was to help people Eat Real which the project defined as cutting back on sugar drinks overly salted packaged foods and fatty factory farmed meats in favor of vegetables fruits whole grains and sustainably raised protein This annual event involved some of the country s most prominent food activists 29 united by a vision of food that is healthy affordable and produced with care for the environment farm animals and the people who grow harvest and serve it Across the country several thousand events took place each year from community festivals in Denver Savannah and New York City to a national conference in Washington D C to thousands of school activities in Portland Minneapolis and elsewhere 30 Alcohol Policies Project edit The group s Alcohol Policies Project now discontinued advocated against what it considers adverse societal influences of alcohol such as marketing campaigns that target young drinkers 31 and promoted turning self imposed advertising bans by alcohol industry groups into law 32 In 1985 CSPI organized Project SMART Stop Marketing Alcohol on Radio and Television It generated huge public interest a petition campaign that obtained a million signatures and congressional hearings Members of the media joined the project such as syndicated columnist Colman McCarthy 33 However strong opposition from the alcoholic beverage and advertising industries ultimately prevailed The Alcohol Policies Project organized the Campaign for Alcohol Free Sports TV Launched in 2003 with the support of at least 80 other local and national groups the campaign asked schools to pledge to prohibit alcohol advertising on local sports programming and to work toward eliminating alcohol advertising from televised college sports programs 34 It also sought Congressional support for such a prohibition 35 CSPI also sponsored Project SMART Stop Marketing Alcohol on Radio and TV which called for federal bans on marketing The project gathered more than 1 million signatures on a petition which it presented to Congress at a hearing That effort was unsuccessful In addition CSPI has pressured alcoholic beverage companies with lawsuits In one such lawsuit filed in September 2008 the Center sue d MillerCoors Brewing Company over its malt beverage Sparks arguing that the caffeine and guarana in the drink are additives that have not been approved by the FDA and that the combination of those ingredients with alcohol resulted in more drunk driving more injuries and more sexual assaults 36 Trans fats editDuring the 1980s CSPI s campaign Saturated Fat Attack advocated the replacement of beef tallow palm oil and coconut oil in processed foods and restaurant foods with fats containing less saturated fatty acids 37 CSPI assumed that trans fats were benign 38 In a 1986 book entitled The Fast Food Guide it praised chains such as KFC that had converted to partially hydrogenated vegetable oils which are lower in saturated fat but high in trans fat As a result of this pressure many restaurants such as McDonald s made the switch 37 After new scientific research in the early 1990s found that trans fat increased the risk of heart disease CSPI began leading a successful two decades long effort to ban artificial trans fat 39 From the mid 1990s onward however CSPI identified trans fats as the greater public health danger 40 CSPI executive director Michael Jacobson went on record saying Twenty years ago scientists including me thought trans fat was innocuous Since then we ve learned otherwise 37 In response three trade groups the National Restaurant Association the National Association of Margarine Manufacturers and the Institute of Shortening and Edible Oils said the evidence on trans fat was contradictory and inconclusive and accused CSPI of jumping to a premature conclusion 41 In 1994 CSPI petitioned the FDA to require trans fat to be added to Nutrition Facts labels and in 2004 42 with stronger evidence of trans fat s harmfulness CSPI petitioned FDA to ban partially hydrogenated oil the source of most artificial trans fat In 2003 FDA required trans fat to be labeled 43 and in 2015 44 FDA banned the use of partially hydrogenated oil Opposition editFormer U S Representative Bob Barr a Republican and later Libertarian Party nominee for President of the United States accused CSPI of pursuing a pre existing political agenda and pointed to individual responsibility for dietary choices 45 Cato Institute a Washington D C based libertarian think tank scholar Walter Olson wrote that the group s longtime shtick is to complain that businesses like McDonald s rather than our own choices are to blame for rising obesity and called CSPI s suit against McDonald s for using toys to encourage young children to ask for the company s Happy Meals on behalf of a California mother a new low in responsible parenting 46 In 2002 the Center for Consumer Freedom a group opposed to excessive government regulation published a series of print and radio ads designed in part to drive traffic to the CCF website that provided additional critical information about CSPI A San Francisco Chronicle article identified CSPI as one of two groups singled out by the CCF for full on attack and said What s not mentioned on the CCF Web site is that it s one of a cluster of such nonprofits started by Berman 47 48 References edit a b Smith Andrew F 2008 Encyclopedia of Junk Food and Fast Food London p 38 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b Brobeck Stephan Mayer Robert N 2015 Watchdogs and Whistleblowers A Reference Guide to Consumer Activism p 73 James Bennett amp Thomas DiLorenzo Food and Drink Police Center for Science in the Public Interest wants government to control our eating habits Capital Research Center 1998 Nutrition Action Health Letter Center for Science in the Public Interest August 6 2016 Archived from the original on October 7 1999 Retrieved April 1 2006 Our Funding CSPI Funding Sources Center for Science in the Public Interest Retrieved March 31 2008 Masterson K October 14 2007 Food cop Love him or hate him Chicago Tribune Kurtzweil P July 1997 Today s Special Nutrition Information FDA Consumer magazine May June 1997 Archived from the original on September 18 2008 Pulling the Curtains on Another CSPI Scare Campaign Center for Consumer Freedom March 4 2011 Retrieved February 14 2020 Amy Bentley Inventing Baby Food Taste Health and the Industrialization of the American Diet University of California Press 2014 p 122 CSPI Accomplishments CSPI Accomplishments Center for Science in the Public Interest Archived from the original on October 28 2007 Retrieved October 2 2007 Final Determination Regarding Partially Hydrogenated Oils June 17 2015 Michael F Jacobson PhD Liquid Candy How Soft Drinks are Harming Americans Health CSPI Washington DC 1998 2nd Ed 2005 Taxing Soda Could Trim State Deficits and Waistlines Says Report April 1 2010 Archived from the original on April 17 2010 Retrieved April 2 2010 Comparing local soda taxes PDF cspinet org 2018 Retrieved June 8 2019 CSPI Petition to FDA re Added Sugars PDF Center for Science in the Public Interest Retrieved May 30 2017 CERTIFIED MAIL RECEIPT REQUESTED PDF Seeing Red Time for Action on Food Dyes Center for Science in the Public Interest PDF cspinet org January 19 2016 Color Wars re Artificial Food Coloring CSPI releases report criticizing use of artificial colors in food The National Law Review Keller and Heckman LLP January 21 2016 ISSN 2161 3362 Retrieved January 22 2016 Incorporated Mars Mars Incorporated to remove all artificial colors from its human food portfolio www prnewswire com Press release Hunt Kevin June 22 2015 A big commitment for Big G cereal Dunkin Donuts and Baskin Robbins plan to remove artificial colorings from U S menus by end of 2018 Dunkin Donuts Morgan Kevin Sonnino Roberta 2008 The School Food Revolution Public Food and the Challenge of Sustainable Development New York a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Child Nutrition and WIC Reauthorization Act of 2004 Center for Science in the Public Interest cspinet org January 2004 Retrieved February 14 2020 Schwartz Colin Wootan Margo G 2019 How a Public Health Goal Became a National Law The Healthy Hunger Free Kids Act of 2010 Nutrition Today 54 2 67 77 doi 10 1097 NT 0000000000000318 PMC 6716573 PMID 31588151 Kraig Bruce The Oxford Encyclopedia of Food and Drink in America p 328 The Food Safety Modernization Act A Series on What is Essential for a Food Professional to Know PDF Lytton Timothy D 2019 Outbreak Foodborne Illness and the Struggle for Food Safety Chicago London p 325 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Food Day October 24 2013 Archived from the original on June 14 2013 Retrieved June 19 2013 Food Day Advisory Board October 24 2013 Archived from the original on July 28 2012 University joins Food Day observance Fitchburg State University www fitchburgstate edu Retrieved February 19 2020 permanent dead link Nat Ives The media business Advertising a trade group tries to wean the alcohol industry from full figured twins and other racy images New York Times March 6 2003 Alcohol industry ends its ad ban in broadcasting New York Times November 8 1996 Lerner Barron H 2011 One for the Road Drunk Driving since 1900 Colleges are reaching their limit on alcohol USAToday November 16 2006 Bill would ask N C A A to forgo alcohol ads New York Times March 9 2005 Sullum Jacob February 16 2011 Loco over Four Loko Reason a b c David Schleifer 2012 The Perfect Solution How Trans Fats Became the Healthy Replacement for Saturated Fats Technology and Culture Columbia University 53 1 94 119 doi 10 1353 tech 2012 0018 PMID 22530389 S2CID 26343964 Retrieved September 10 2012 Blume Elaine March 1988 The truth about trans hydrogenated oils aren t guilty as charged Nutrition Action Healthletter published by CSPI Retrieved March 16 2013 FDA Artificial Trans Fat Not Safe for Use in Food Center for Science in the Public Interest June 16 2015 Retrieved May 30 2017 Liebman Bonnie October 1 1990 Trans in trouble Nutrition Action Healthletter Retrieved September 10 2012 Debate Flares on Fat From Hydrogenated Oils New York Times August 8 1996 Retrieved October 8 2008 FDA Urged to Require Restaurants to Disclose Use of Partially Hydrogenated Oils Center for Science in the Public Interest July 22 2004 Retrieved May 30 2017 Trans Fat Coming to Food Labels Center for Science in the Public Interest July 9 2003 Retrieved May 30 2017 Final Determination Regarding Partially Hydrogenated Oils Removing Trans Fat FDA Retrieved May 30 2017 Barr Bob September 17 2006 Scientific Research Ruse Washington Times Retrieved October 8 2008 Olson Walter December 15 2010 McDonald s suit over Happy Meal toys by California mom Monet Parham new low in responsible parenting New York Daily News Ness Carol May 11 2002 Hand that feeds bites back Food industry forks over ad campaign to win hearts stomachs San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved October 14 2008 Krieger James Saelens Brian Impact of Menu Labeling on Consumer Behavior A 2008 2012 Update Healthy Eating Research Archived from the original on July 16 2014 Retrieved October 22 2014 External links editOfficial website Brody Jane E January 1 2018 They Took On the Food Giants and Won The New York Times Retrieved January 13 2018 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Center for Science in the Public Interest amp oldid 1186317136, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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