Calories on menus - Government Nannying?

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Replies

  • mojohowitz
    mojohowitz Posts: 900 Member
    I don't care if the government pushes it or not. I have had enough of that argument with paranoid sociopaths here at work. Seriously, go back to your bunker in Utah and shut your man-pleaser.

    I CAN tell you that since Panera Bread starting posting calories I find myself going there if I HAVE to do fast food. However, you have to do a little homework to discover sodium content. It's horrific.

    The more I learn about fast food the more I realize how terrible it really is. If the food is lower calorie, they make up for it with sodium and vice versa.

    Solution: Eat protein, vegetables and whole grains, at home, as often as possible. Leave the griping about government intrusion to Ted Nugent.

    Edit for craapy speeling.
  • jsj024519
    jsj024519 Posts: 400 Member
    they can't limit your intake, but I think the knowledge would help many people make better choices.

    This^
  • susannamarie
    susannamarie Posts: 2,148 Member
    Eh,

    I think that forcing restaurants to adhere to calorie/sodium guidelines would be completely unnecessary government nannying. I don't want to be told that I have to order 2-3 meals to get in the calories I need for a heavy mid-day meal after some strenuous exertion.

    But I think that *publishing* the information is a good idea. People can make up their own mind what to do with the information.
  • MobOfBricks
    MobOfBricks Posts: 22 Member
    Hi everybody,
    what an interesting thread!

    As I grew up in restaurants, worked, managed and owned several and in different countries i will tell you this:

    Providing nutritional info on my "Soupe du Jour", would have been the least of my problems as a restaurant owner.
    Restaurant owners evolved and are evolving their practices every day.
    Spending more money for a more "advanced" Chef that will make this, also his responsibility it s not a big deal. The same way it wasnt a big deal when the market forced me to get a website, or have WiFi, or pay my BMI fees, and the list can go on for days.

    If the "government" decides to get involved, then they are going to need money for obvious reasons. Getting the "House" to vote for it is going to need Lobbying. Who is going to do it?

    So my point is, that restaurants do not provide Nutritional info the same way "prop 37" was so difficult. We have Democracy, We the people are the government (not some extraterrestrial tribe) but we dont care enough. We will care for eachother once we become more responsible than we are today. Until that happens we will be eating a 2500 cal burger and thinking it s a 1000 cal "treat".
  • redheaddee
    redheaddee Posts: 2,005 Member
    Yes I think restaurants should post the info, and most do. Should it be required by the government? No, but it will have to be otherwise many wouldn't do it. It is very eye opening to see how many calories are really in that "value meal" you just purchased. Maybe some people will make healthier choices as a result.
  • witmer1
    witmer1 Posts: 128 Member
    I don't think it's government nannying. If we want to cure the obesity epidemic, it's necessary for people to be mindful of what they eat. It may also cause some companies to make their items lower in calories to cater to those making better decisions. I may not eat the most healthy things at every meal, but when I go out to eat, calorie counts on products or menus make my decisions much easier and aid me in my weight loss.

    If companies are required to put nutritional information on packaged products, it makes sense that restaurants need to do the same. If you don't care how many calories are in something, don't read it. It's your choice.
  • ndj1979
    ndj1979 Posts: 29,136 Member
    Government, by nature, always seeks to expand ....Give me an example of a Government in history that has ever gotten smaller?

    Irish Home Rule? The devolution of power from Westminster to Wales, N. Ireland and Scotland? (Scottish parliament could be a particular argument here.) The commonwealth and associated countries? The UK government has far less power now than it once did. There are so many examples of governments that have fallen or lost power and have 'grown smaller' simply because their nation's influence, power and reach has decreased if we're talking about it in literal terms.

    But if you're talking about a small government WRT laissez faire politics, libertarianism and privatisation? In living memory, Thatcher epitomised that -- especially in comparison to the Labour government that directly preceded her Tory government. So: there's at least one for you.

    Thatcher was a politician within a political party, not a government. The UK government has more power over their people today then they did in Thatcher's time..so I respectfully disagree with your example. Just look at National Institute of Healthy and how they determine who does, or does not, get care..

    I am not talking about political party's or individual leaders, I am talking about government as something that, over time, encroaches on people's liberties/lives. It has happened in the US over the past 100 years....
  • Commander_Keen
    Commander_Keen Posts: 1,179 Member
    you should email them, <the company > and tell them you will not give them 1 dime until they responce. You should also tell them, that you are going to encourage your friends to do the same.

    When company's start to loose money, that is when they will start to listen
  • mdhummel
    mdhummel Posts: 201 Member
    I like having access to the nutrition content on the menu, but it is hard for restaurants to publish accurate information since portions can vary. Larger meat portions or extra sauce can add up to a few hundred extra calories!
  • sevsmom
    sevsmom Posts: 1,172 Member
    Playing devil's advocate here. . . if the government where you lives offers you health care be it universal or age/poverty related (Medicare/Medicaid) shouldn't that goverment take steps that help minimize the costs associated with your future health care needs?? Doesn't it make sense for them to try to stave off expenses in medical costs by providing people with ample opportunities to make informed/best practice choices?

    I'm not a "big" government fan.

    However, when we sit back and rely on the government to provide us with health care, we have to expect they will take steps to soften the blow of costs.

    "We' (used collectively and not personally inclusively) expect our government to take care of so much, yet get riled when they step in to make necessary changes to mitigate future losses/expenses.

    Calories on menus.
  • EDollah
    EDollah Posts: 464 Member
    What an absurd position that providing data for consumers to make more informed choices is "government nannying." I suppose public companies shouldn't be required to published earnings reports and automotive manufactures shouldn't divulge fuel efficiency.
  • chineyLuv
    chineyLuv Posts: 130 Member
    I'm TOTALLY for the info!
  • JustJennie1
    JustJennie1 Posts: 3,749 Member
    However, when we sit back and rely on the government to provide us with health care, we have to expect they will take steps to soften the blow of costs

    I am definitely not sitting back and "relying on the government to provide me with healthcare". I was very happy with the way things were prior to Obamacare. Now my premiums have skyrocketed and I don't even go to the doctor!

    I also don't expect the government to take care of me. I am fully aware of the fact that I am the one looking out for myself and my own well being.

    Regardless I don't think that the government should be in my bedroom or my dining room. It IS going to get to the point where restaurants will be forced to put the calories on menus and probably get fined for not doing so. It will also get to the point where certain foods and drinks will be banned. Look at what was going on in New York (as far as I know that drink law didn't pass but I could be wrong). It's ridiculous. The government needs to stay out of the lives of the people who live here. It's not their business if I want to buy two 36 oz. soda drinks and have five big bags of chips with it. Who are they to say I can't?

    Seriously, where will it end?
  • LAW_714
    LAW_714 Posts: 258
    What an absurd position that providing data for consumers to make more informed choices is "government nannying." I suppose public companies shouldn't be required to published earnings reports and automotive manufactures shouldn't divulge fuel efficiency.

    Informing actual living people of what's in the food that they buy and eat violates the rights of a profit-earning contractural entity...or something. Why should actual living breathing human beings have the right to know what's going into their own bodies? Pfft. (This is sarcasm by the way. These are topsy-turvey days. Apparently the Randian rationale(?) is that the profitting business (that doesn't actually eat) has more right to know (or keep to themselves) what is in our food than the living human beings that actually buy and eat it do.)
    I am definitely not sitting back and "relying on the government to provide me with healthcare". I was very happy with the way things were prior to Obamacare. Now my premiums have skyrocketed

    Look at the bright side, actual statistics show that, nationally, it slowed down the decades-long skyrocketing increases in the cost of actual healthcare. Someday that should be reflected by the insurance industry... if they aren't allowed to continue their regional non-competitive monopolies (as they've done in the past). http://peoplesworld.org/obamacare-is-already-lowering-costs/
  • pikanchi
    pikanchi Posts: 72 Member
    Thatcher was a politician within a political party, not a government. The UK government has more power over their people today then they did in Thatcher's time..so I respectfully disagree with your example. Just look at National Institute of Healthy and how they determine who does, or does not, get care..

    I am not talking about political party's or individual leaders, I am talking about government as something that, over time, encroaches on people's liberties/lives. It has happened in the US over the past 100 years....

    Within the UK, at least, a reference to Thatcher's government is acknowledged to specifically refer to the period of time in which the Conservative Party was in power under her rule and the Labour Party in opposition. Thus, I'll reiterate, that from the government in the '70s to the government in the '80s through to 1997, there was a decrease in size. Your original question didn't specify that the government presently be smaller than it was previously, only that it had, at one point, decreased. I certainly won't disagree that it's increased since 1997, courtesy of Tony Blair's New Labour, although since the Conservative Party has regained power, the size of the UK government has comparatively decreased. See: David Cameron, Small Government/Big Society.

    Nevertheless, I would argue that the idea of a 'small government' in and of itself in somewhat flawed in light of the way that the world is connected at present. Unless there's a collapse of government, given the manner in which information is exchanged; the manner in which companies and the free market operate (obligatory LOL BANKS comment goes here); and the public demands greater access to information and demands for accountability, "small government" is just. It's flawed. The governmental system in and of itself at present is utterly flawed, but that's a debate for another time and place, and certainly not for a fitness forum.

    That aside, wrt your mention of the "National Institute of Healthy" [sic], I'll admit to a relative lack of knowledge on that front. I cannot nor will I ever agree with a healthcare system that is not free at point of use nor freely available to everyone within a nation. I adore the premise of the NHS despite the flaws currently present in its practice.

    It appears (I believe) that we're on somewhat different sides of the political fence and though I've ... been tempted to descend into hyperbole at times, I think I'm just going to say that I disagree with your stance (and you disagree with mine), but I respect your opinion and your right to it, and I hope you respect mine and my right to it.

    And I hope we can both agree that whatever shape it takes, it's a pity that more people aren't taking more accountability for their health and fitness, and knowledge of related matters. Government nannying or not, studies have shown that the availability of nutritional information on menus is negligible with regards to results on dining choices; having not read the studies myself, I'd guess that for a vast majority it'd be a case of ignoring it, being unaware of RDAs and/or one's own calorific needs, or simple underestimating one's intake throughout the rest of the day.
  • CoffeeLush
    CoffeeLush Posts: 46 Member
    Coming from the restaurant industry, I don't feel it should be mandatory for small companies. It is VERY expensive to get your food nutritionally analyzed-- it has to be sent to a professional lab. Additionally, menus have to be reprinted, new signs made that are in compliance, etc. Any time you want to add new seasonal items you would have to go through it all over again.

    For a large chain where your net sales per location is $3 MIL and your net sales as a company is in the hundreds of millions, spending $50k overall on nutrition analysis followed up by say ballpark $5k per location on menus, boards, signs, etc, isn't going to kill your business. But, if you are a Mom & Pop little cafe with net sales of only 500k a year, and you are just barely squeaking by (because no one gets rich running a single small restaurant), mandatory menu analysis would shut down your business. If all restaurants were required to have nutritional analysis, we'd only have corporate chains around.

    This exactly the problem currently, as I understand it. I hope that that can change in the future somehow so smaller restaurants can participate.

    I ask all of them when I go. Most of them tell me they are asked all the time. I see that as a positive sign. The restaurants hate it.

    is it really going to be that much of a burden to add one line that says Cal: XXX fat: XXX or even just calories?? Most people are happy to just know the calories forget micornutrients. Mom & pop generally have 1 location. 1 operation. Why cant' they just put up 1 board on the wall listing the calories and not put in on the menu?? that would suffice. If the consumer wants to know, they can walk thier happy *kitten* over to the list and look. I'd be happy to do that.

    It really is THAT much of a burden for a Mom & Pop to shell out $50k for a nutritional analysis. They can't just legally compute the stuff themselves on a calorie calculator and post it. It has to be through an FDA regulated lab.
  • Woodsmoke
    Woodsmoke Posts: 360 Member
    Basically, we have the right to know what we are eating.

    'nuff said.
  • JustJennie1
    JustJennie1 Posts: 3,749 Member
    What an absurd position that providing data for consumers to make more informed choices is "government nannying." I suppose public companies shouldn't be required to published earnings reports and automotive manufactures shouldn't divulge fuel efficiency.

    Now that's a ludicrous response. Public companies are required to publish their earnings because they have investors.
  • EDollah
    EDollah Posts: 464 Member
    What an absurd position that providing data for consumers to make more informed choices is "government nannying." I suppose public companies shouldn't be required to published earnings reports and automotive manufactures shouldn't divulge fuel efficiency.

    Now that's a ludicrous response. Public companies are required to publish their earnings because they have investors.

    It appears you don't see the obvious parallels.
  • JUDDDing
    JUDDDing Posts: 1,367 Member
    They can't just legally compute the stuff themselves on a calorie calculator and post it. It has to be through an FDA regulated lab.

    Do you have a source for this statement?

    Since we don't have a national law in the US (which presumably we are talking about here - since you said FDA) it seems odd that you have details of this non-existent law.

    The USDA has already calculated the calories in every conceivable natural raw ingredient.

    Food manufacturers have to label the foods they add to the system...

    Restaurants know what they put into their recipes...

    Restaurants know with reasonable precision what the portion size is...

    What info is missing?
  • JUDDDing
    JUDDDing Posts: 1,367 Member
    What an absurd position that providing data for consumers to make more informed choices is "government nannying." I suppose public companies shouldn't be required to published earnings reports and automotive manufactures shouldn't divulge fuel efficiency.

    Now that's a ludicrous response. Public companies are required to publish their earnings because they have investors.

    Right, but following the chain of thought - those investors (customers of a financial instrument) don't really NEED to know what they are buying (eating) do they?

    All analogies suck - this one is no worse than most.
  • ThisCanadian
    ThisCanadian Posts: 1,086 Member
    Coming from the restaurant industry, I don't feel it should be mandatory for small companies. It is VERY expensive to get your food nutritionally analyzed-- it has to be sent to a professional lab. Additionally, menus have to be reprinted, new signs made that are in compliance, etc. Any time you want to add new seasonal items you would have to go through it all over again.

    For a large chain where your net sales per location is $3 MIL and your net sales as a company is in the hundreds of millions, spending $50k overall on nutrition analysis followed up by say ballpark $5k per location on menus, boards, signs, etc, isn't going to kill your business. But, if you are a Mom & Pop little cafe with net sales of only 500k a year, and you are just barely squeaking by (because no one gets rich running a single small restaurant), mandatory menu analysis would shut down your business. If all restaurants were required to have nutritional analysis, we'd only have corporate chains around.

    This exactly the problem currently, as I understand it. I hope that that can change in the future somehow so smaller restaurants can participate.

    I ask all of them when I go. Most of them tell me they are asked all the time. I see that as a positive sign. The restaurants hate it.

    is it really going to be that much of a burden to add one line that says Cal: XXX fat: XXX or even just calories?? Most people are happy to just know the calories forget micornutrients. Mom & pop generally have 1 location. 1 operation. Why cant' they just put up 1 board on the wall listing the calories and not put in on the menu?? that would suffice. If the consumer wants to know, they can walk thier happy *kitten* over to the list and look. I'd be happy to do that.

    It really is THAT much of a burden for a Mom & Pop to shell out $50k for a nutritional analysis. They can't just legally compute the stuff themselves on a calorie calculator and post it. It has to be through an FDA regulated lab.

    This is a push for larger, chain restaurants to provide total calorie and sodium figures. This will not apply to small business owners.
  • knityoupants
    knityoupants Posts: 76 Member
    It changed my life for the better when we passed that law in California. Beforehand, there was a lot of philosophical political conversations, but once it went into effect, nutritional choices were SO MUCH EASIER. I never realized that a tiny In-N-Out shake has 600 calories, or a creamy-looking Subway soup isn't half bad! I would KILL to have calories listed where I live now.
  • Confuzzled4ever
    Confuzzled4ever Posts: 2,860 Member
    They can't just legally compute the stuff themselves on a calorie calculator and post it. It has to be through an FDA regulated lab.

    Do you have a source for this statement?

    Since we don't have a national law in the US (which presumably we are talking about here - since you said FDA) it seems odd that you have details of this non-existent law.

    The USDA has already calculated the calories in every conceivable natural raw ingredient.

    Food manufacturers have to label the foods they add to the system...

    Restaurants know what they put into their recipes...

    Restaurants know with reasonable precision what the portion size is...

    What info is missing?

    Ah took the words right out of my mouth. :~)

    Also: (so mom and pops would NOT have to sent it to an FDA lab.. plus I don't think this actually passed.. however it would be NICE and GOOD if they posted the info)

    The 2011 proposed rules would require chain restaurants with 20 or more locations, along with bakeries, grocery stores, convenience stores and coffee chains, to clearly post the calorie count for each item on their menus. Additional nutritional information would have to be available upon request. The rules would also apply to vending machines if calorie information isn't already visible on the package.


    The proposed rules exempted movie theaters, airplanes, bowling alleys and other businesses whose primary business is not to sell food. Alcohol would also be exempt.
  • Joreanasaurous
    Joreanasaurous Posts: 1,384 Member
    They can't just legally compute the stuff themselves on a calorie calculator and post it. It has to be through an FDA regulated lab.

    Do you have a source for this statement?

    Since we don't have a national law in the US (which presumably we are talking about here - since you said FDA) it seems odd that you have details of this non-existent law.

    The USDA has already calculated the calories in every conceivable natural raw ingredient.

    Food manufacturers have to label the foods they add to the system...

    Restaurants know what they put into their recipes...

    Restaurants know with reasonable precision what the portion size is...

    What info is missing?

    Ah took the words right out of my mouth. :~)

    Under Obamacare there IS a national law regarding nutritional info. It just hasn't been taken into effect yet. Granted I am curious if it will ever see the light of day, but part of the Obamacare bill included nutritional info on I believe all restaurant chains of 20 or more.
    Edit to add the first source I found on Google: http://thanksobamacare.org/index.php?id=8

    It's been a pretty hot topic lately so I'm surprised people don't know about it since every chain and their mother are suddenly crying over it.
  • Joreanasaurous
    Joreanasaurous Posts: 1,384 Member
    I quoted instead of edited myself... Oops.
  • corgicake
    corgicake Posts: 846 Member
    Okay, I realize we're notoriously bad with geography, but did Obamacare need to be brought up in something about Toronto? Maybe I could change my Facebook location to Frostbite Falls...
  • JUDDDing
    JUDDDing Posts: 1,367 Member
    Under Obamacare there IS a national law regarding nutritional info. It just hasn't been taken into effect yet. Granted I am curious if it will ever see the light of day, but part of the Obamacare bill included nutritional info on I believe all restaurant chains of 20 or more.
    Edit to add the first source I found on Google: http://thanksobamacare.org/index.php?id=8

    It's been a pretty hot topic lately so I'm surprised people don't know about it since every chain and their mother are suddenly crying over it.

    You're right, but it does not apply to small operations.

    And it does not require an FDA lab.

    It requires:

    "‘‘(iv) REASONABLE BASIS.—For the purposes of this clause,
    a restaurant or similar retail food establishment shall have a
    reasonable basis for its nutrient content disclosures, including
    nutrient databases, cookbooks, laboratory analyses, and other
    reasonable means, as described in section 101.10 of title 21,
    Code of Federal Regulations (or any successor regulation) or in
    a related guidance of the Food and Drug Administration."

    http://housedocs.house.gov/energycommerce/ppacacon.pdf Pg 500
  • Joreanasaurous
    Joreanasaurous Posts: 1,384 Member
    Under Obamacare there IS a national law regarding nutritional info. It just hasn't been taken into effect yet. Granted I am curious if it will ever see the light of day, but part of the Obamacare bill included nutritional info on I believe all restaurant chains of 20 or more.
    Edit to add the first source I found on Google: http://thanksobamacare.org/index.php?id=8

    It's been a pretty hot topic lately so I'm surprised people don't know about it since every chain and their mother are suddenly crying over it.

    You're right, but it does not apply to small operations.

    And it does not require an FDA lab.

    It requires:

    "‘‘(iv) REASONABLE BASIS.—For the purposes of this clause,
    a restaurant or similar retail food establishment shall have a
    reasonable basis for its nutrient content disclosures, including
    nutrient databases, cookbooks, laboratory analyses, and other
    reasonable means, as described in section 101.10 of title 21,
    Code of Federal Regulations (or any successor regulation) or in
    a related guidance of the Food and Drug Administration."

    http://housedocs.house.gov/energycommerce/ppacacon.pdf Pg 500

    Interesting. Thank you for clarifying. I'm curious how this is going to be enforced and regulated.

    What I find entertaining is some of the chains making a stink about how hard this is going to be already do it here in California. So if they are already providing nutritional info at Ca locations it can't be that hard to figure out is it? Or am I just completely missing something....
  • Joreanasaurous
    Joreanasaurous Posts: 1,384 Member
    Okay, I realize we're notoriously bad with geography, but did Obamacare need to be brought up in something about Toronto? Maybe I could change my Facebook location to Frostbite Falls...

    You're right... Clearly the parallels between a law in the US and a law there should be ignored. Especially when the poster asked for opinions on nutritional info being provided at restaurants, not just nutritional info for Toronto. Who could ever be so ignorant as to dry on their own personal experience on the exact same issue... Just in a different county.