In an attempt to curb obesity rates, Los
Angeles could be the next city after New York to adopt a calorie-counting
legislation for its restaurants.
According to the Department of Public Health, the percentage
of obese adults in Los Angeles
increased from 14.3 percent in 1997 to 20.9 percent in 2005, meaning a 46
percent increase over an eight-year period.
These statistics clearly ask for an urgent measure and
showing people the number of calories in their food might be an effective way
to change their minds about some of the foods they eat. This way, the
authorities believe they will succeed to curb obesity rates, which have reached
an alarming point in the history of the US.
A study released this week by the Center for Science in the
Public Interest revealed that most meals offered to kids at the fast food are
unhealthy and loaded with too many calories and too much sodium. To be more
specific, the study revealed that 93 percent of the 1,474 fast food meals
analyzed had more than 430 calories, the number of calories recommended for a
single meal in kids’ case.
This finding makes you wonder… If kids’ meals are too high
in calories, this means that adults’ meals make no exception, which means that
here is the reason lying behind the high obesity rates.
In order to prevent more adults from becoming obese and to
encourage people to adopt a more healthier diet, Los Angeles County Supervisors
Zev Yaroslavsky and Michael Antonovich plan to introduce an ordinance at next
week’s Board of Supervisors meeting that would force restaurants to put the
calorie count along with the price of items on
their menus.
“The menu should be as informative of what its effect is on
one's waistline as it is on their pocketbooks. Not ingesting 800 calories in a
meal makes a huge difference to one's health and quality of life,” Yaroslavsky
said.
New York
restaurants refusing to post the number of calories on their menus can be fined
$2,000.
The California Restaurant Association was not pleased with
the ordinance being skeptical about its power to reduce obesity rates.
“If we’re going to fight obesity we need to teach folks
about nutrition and proper eating. I question whether this ordinance will have
a real meaningful impact on people’s behavior in terms of what they eat and how
much they exercise,” CRA representative Daniel Conway said.
The request of such measure comes a moth after California lawmakers
passed statewide restrictions on trans fats. Also, last week, city officials
announced a yearlong moratorium on fast-food restaurants in South
Los Angeles.
The Board of Supervisors is expected to approve drafting the
ordinance Tuesday, then vote on the issue in September. If passed, the changes
would take effect before the end of the year.