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		California lawmaker makes push for health 
		warning labels on soda 
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		 [February 14, 2017] 
		By Chris Prentice 
 NEW YORK (Reuters) - A California state 
		senator is taking another stab at introducing a law that would require 
		sugary drink manufacturers to put a warning label on their products, the 
		latest effort in the "War on Sugar."
 
 Officials and public health advocates have heightened their criticism of 
		sugar as a key contributor to health epidemics like obesity and 
		diabetes, and California has become a major battleground in the fight 
		against what they say is excessive sugar consumption.
 
 San Francisco is battling Big Soda in court over a law requiring a 
		warning label on advertisements for sugary drinks, and voters in four 
		Bay Area cities have approved taxes on the products. On Monday, 
		Democratic state Senator Bill Monning for a third time introduced a bill 
		that would place warning labels on soda and other sugar-sweetened 
		beverages sold in California.
 
 Similar bills from Monning failed in 2014 and 2015, but the lawmaker 
		said he sees a rising tide of support.
 
		
		 
		"Certainly the victories in local communities show a growing awareness 
		of the health risk posed by these drinks," Monning said by telephone, 
		referring to votes in November in three Bay Area cities approving soda 
		levies. Voters in Berkeley had approved a soda tax in 2014.
 "This is not a tax measure. We're not taking products off the shelves. 
		This is about consumers' right to know," he said.
 
 The legislation would require companies like Coca-Cola Co and PepsiCo 
		Inc to put warning labels on beverages sold in California that have 
		added sugars and have 75 or more calories per 12 ounces. The warning 
		would state that drinking beverages with added sugar contributes to 
		obesity, diabetes and tooth decay.
 
 Soda companies are already facing declining sales of their namesake 
		beverages and trying to introduce new products to meet changing tastes.
 
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			Cans of soda are displayed in a case at Kwik Stops Liquor in San 
			Diego, California February 13, 2014. REUTERS/Sam Hodgson 
            
			 
			"America's beverage companies already provide fact-based, 
			easy-to-use calorie labels on the front of every bottle, can and 
			pack we produce," said an American Beverage Association spokeswoman, 
			adding that "misleading warnings" won't solve complex public health 
			problems.
 ABA has sued San Francisco to block the city from introducing a 
			warning label on sugar-sweetened beverages. It recently lost a legal 
			challenge to block a soda tax from being rolled out in Philadelphia 
			last month.
 
 Coca-Cola and the ABA have been sued by a nonprofit group for 
			allegedly misleading consumers about the health risks from consuming 
			sugary beverages. That case is in U.S. District Court for the 
			Northern District of California.
 
 (Reporting by Chris Prentice; Editing by Leslie Adler)
 
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