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PostPosted: May 3rd, 2006, 5:32 pm 
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http://articles.news.aol.com/news/artic ... 3009990021

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NEW YORK (May 3) - The nation's largest beverage distributors have agreed to halt nearly all sales of sodas to public schools -- a step that will remove the sugary, caloric drinks from vending machines and cafeterias around the country.

The agreement was announced Wednesday by the William J. Clinton Foundation and will also likely apply to many private and parochial schools.

"This is a bold step forward in the struggle to help 35 million young people lead healthier lives," former President Clinton said at a news conference. "This one policy can add years and years and years to the lives of a very large number of young people."

Under the agreement, the companies also have agreed to sell only water, unsweetened juice and low-fat milks to elementary and middle schools. Diet sodas would be sold only to high schools.

"I don't think anyone should underestimate the influence this agreement will have," Susan Neely, president and CEO of the American Beverage Association, which has signed onto the deal, said earlier Wednesday. "I think other people are going to want to follow this agreement because it just makes sense."

The agreement should reach an estimated 87 percent of the public and private school drink market, Neely said. Industry giants Cadbury Schweppes PLC, Coca-Cola Co. and PepsiCo Inc. and the ABA have signed on. Officials said they hope companies representing the other 13 percent of the market would follow suit.

The Alliance for a Healthier Generation, a collaboration between Clinton's foundation and the American Heart Association, helped broker the deal.

"This one policy can add years and years and years to the lives of a very large number of young people."
-Former President Clinton


"The soft drink industry has decided that it won't wait to be pushed," said Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, the co-chair of the alliance. "It jumped in. ... It may be the soft drink industry, but they made a very hard decision."

The move follows a mounting wave of regulation by school boards and legislators alarmed by reports of rising childhood obesity. Soda has been a particular target of those fighting obesity because of its caloric content and popularity among children.

Still, the deal imposes stricter drink regulations than are currently in place for nearly 35 million public school students.

"This is really the beginning of a major effort to modify childhood obesity at the level of the school systems," said Robert H. Eckel, the president of the Heart Association, adding that the alliance would also be working to put healthier foods in schools.

John Sicher, editor and publisher of Beverage Digest, which compiles extensive data on the beverage industry, said the agreement would have no impact on the $63 billion beverage industry's bottom line.

"The sale of sugar-carbonated sodas in schools is a tiny, tiny part of their overall volume," said Sicher. "Financially, on the big companies, it will have virtually no impact."

He applauded the move, however, saying "The impact is more in terms of responsibility and accountability to the consumer."

Under the agreement, high schools will still be able to sell low-calorie drinks that contain less than 10 calories per serving, as well as drinks that are considered nutritious, such as juice, sports drinks and low-fat milk. The "nutritious" drinks will be limited to 12-ounce servings, Neely said.

Elementary schools will sell 8-ounce servings of the "nutritious" drinks, and middle school kids will get 10-ounce-size drinks.

Whole milk will no longer be offered to any schools, Neely said.

School sales of sports drinks, diet sodas and bottled water have been on the rise in recent years, while sugary soft drink purchases by students have been falling, according to an ABA report released in December. But regular soda, averaging 150 calories a can, is still the most popular drink, accounting for 45 percent of drinks sold in schools in 2005, according to the report.

Diana Garza, a spokeswoman for the Atlanta-based Coca-Cola Co., said in a telephone interview that "these voluntary guidelines escalate ... the shift to lower calorie, more nutritious beverages."

A man who answered the phone at Cadbury Schweppes' London headquarters said no one was available for comment. A call to PepsiCo Inc. was not immediately returned.

The new rules will apply to beverages sold on school grounds during the regular school day and at after-school activities such as band and choir practice, said Jay Carson, a spokesman for ClintonBut sales at events such as school plays, band concerts and sporting events, where a significant portion of the audience are adults, won't be affected, he said.

The deal will be most easily enforced at vending machines, where students buy most of their drinks, Neely said.

How quickly the changes take hold will depend in part on individual school districts' willingness to alter existing contracts, The Alliance for a Healthier Generation said in a release. The companies will work to implement the changes at 75 percent of the nation's public schools before the 2008-2009 school year, and at all public schools a year later.

Dozens of states have considered legislation on school nutrition this year, but about 32 states still have no legislative or regulatory policy regulating the sale of drinks in schools, according to the American Heart Association.

Lawmakers in Connecticut voted last week to prohibit schools from selling regular and diet soda as well as electrolyte replacement drinks such as Gatorade.

The agreement follows an August decision by the ABA to adopt a policy limiting soft drinks in high schools to no more than 50 percent of the selections in vending machines. Unlike the agreement announced Wednesday, that recommendation was not binding.

Most elementary schools are already soda-free.

Associated Press Writers Karen Matthews, Nahal Toosi and Ula Ilnytzky contributed to this report.

5/3/2006 14:12:36

Copyright 2006 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. All active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.

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PostPosted: May 3rd, 2006, 5:44 pm 
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Well they better still have some decent drinks available. Cardboard-flavored milk and waterfountain water are not very good with food.

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PostPosted: May 4th, 2006, 12:17 am 
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About time they did that, there should be some energy drinks and juices.


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PostPosted: May 4th, 2006, 3:14 am 
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Energy drinks are disgusting.

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PostPosted: May 4th, 2006, 5:59 pm 
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This isn't going to stop kids from drinking them at home or bringing them from home.

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PostPosted: May 4th, 2006, 7:07 pm 
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Bonanza Wire wrote:
Energy drinks are disgusting.


And why do you think that?


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PostPosted: May 5th, 2006, 1:11 am 
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Kratos Aurion wrote:
This isn't going to stop kids from drinking them at home or bringing them from home.


True but atleast some of the kids won't use sprite as breakfast or lunch


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PostPosted: May 5th, 2006, 12:17 pm 
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Soda is not what's making these children obese. I'm sure if you asked every obese person in your city how they got to fat, they won't answer "from drinking soda." Maybe the school system should do something about the caloric intake the children inhabit from eating some of the fatty foods sold in schools?

Here's the thing - it's easy for the schools to cut back on something they do not directly make a profit off of, such as merchandised soda that they give the children. What they really need to start doing is offering choices during lunch - either the regular food or the low-carb food. But they won't - why? Because they'd have to put out more money whereas they can simply cancel the sell of soda, which they do not make a great profit off of, as opposed to letting the children have a choice between regular food and a low-calorie, low-fat food. (Also, it's up to the parent's disgretion as to whether to give their children packed lunches as well.)

Lastly it's still not going to help the situation because some kid who brings his lunch from home is going to bring a ton of soda to give to his friends (or maybe even charge 10 cents for), so there will still be soda to go around.

The whole thing sounds cheap. Just another way to justify their existence, it seems.


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PostPosted: May 5th, 2006, 1:03 pm 
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Perversion wrote:
Bonanza Wire wrote:
Energy drinks are disgusting.


And why do you think that?


Because I myself have tried them, and believe me, it's not even worth it. For one, I don't think a energy drink should be marketed if the taste is pure sh*t.

Secondly, energy drinks like red bull have some chemical in them that CAUSES death. Don't drink them period.

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PostPosted: May 5th, 2006, 4:06 pm 
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Red bull never caused a death, unless you have some article about someone dieng from it.


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PostPosted: May 6th, 2006, 6:04 pm 
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No NO....I said that there is a chemical in red bull that CAN CAUSE death, but like you said, I know of no casualties yet.

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PostPosted: May 6th, 2006, 11:03 pm 
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Well realistically speaking anything can kill you. Water can kill you even a pencil can kill you. But I don't drink red bull its not all that good.


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PostPosted: May 6th, 2006, 11:04 pm 
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Yeah. Monster Energy drinks are so much better.


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PostPosted: May 8th, 2006, 11:20 pm 
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I don't even drink THOSE. Stay away from them.

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