Blog
Search

Blog

Los Angeles City Council Vote Bans Alcohol Ads From Public Property

January 20, 2015

LOS ANGELES, CA – Alcohol Justice joined with Los Angeles-based coalition - NoAlcoholAds.org - to thank members of the Los Angeles City Council today for passing an ordinance long-sought by public health advocates to ban alcohol ads from L.A. city-owned and controlled property. The measure will reduce alcohol advertising in public spaces commonly seen by minors as a way to help discourage underage drinking. The ordinance, co-authored by Councilmembers Paul Koretz and
José Huizar, was passed by unanimous vote of the councilmembers present.
noalcoholads


“The City of Los Angeles has taken another step towards truly protecting its most vulnerable residents,” stated Jorge Castillo, Advocacy Director for Alcohol Justice. “We thank Councilmembers Huizar, Englander, and Koretz for their leadership on this critical public health and safety issue.”

According to L.A. County Department of Public Health, alcohol-related crashes, violent crimes and deaths cost the county more than $10.8 billion every year. Families and youth utilize city owned and controlled property on a daily basis, such as school buildings, recreation centers, libraries and bus shelters.

“This is in line with my administration’s focus on improving the quality of life for all Angelenos and helping boost the sense of pride people have in our neighborhoods,” said Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti.

Read the full Press Release (English)

Read the full Press Release (Spanish)




Ireland, UK Efforts to Ban Alcohol Sport Sponsorship Continue

January 10, 2015


Everton shirt with Chang sponsorship. The club have been sponsored by the Thai
beer producer for over 10 years. Source: theguardian.com.
Photograph: Shaun Boggust/ Shaun Boggust/Colorsport/Corbis
Doctors and public health advocates in the United Kingdom and Ireland are calling for a ban on alcohol sports sponsorships, with concerns that they encourage youth drinking and normalize the association of drinking with sport spectatorship.

England and Ireland join a growing chorus of public health experts in the European Union, New Zealand and Australia who have called for similar alcohol advertising restrictions in sporting events and broadcasts to protect youth from overexposure to alcohol marketing. Reports have indicated that sport sponsorship increases problem drinking in athletes, overexposes youth to alcohol advertising on television, and that youth were bombarded with alcohol advertising during the World Cup.

Restrictions on alcohol advertising in sports should be part of a larger policy to protect youth, including elimination of self-regulation of advertising by the alcohol industry, which allows overexposure of alcohol advertising to youth and provides no effective enforcement for code violations.


Binge Drinking & Alcohol Poisoning in the US: Perception vs. Reality

January 10, 2015

New research from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) illuminates the link between binge drinking and alcohol poisoning, dispelling common beliefs about who is most affected:

  • An estimated 6 adults a day die from alcohol poisoning in the U.S.
  • A majority of these deaths occur among the age group 34-64, not young drinkers.
  • Alcohol addiction is a contributing factor in just 30% of alcohol poisoning deaths.

The alcohol poisoning report is the latest in a series of CDC research studies showing that alcohol-related harm is a widespread problem in the U.S., affecting a much larger proportion of the population than is commonly believed:


Alcohol-related harm and its associated costs are not relegated to a small proportion of the population who are alcohol dependent. These problems must be addressed by policies that are directed at the population level, and by targeting environmental factors that contribute to excessive consumption. The CDC recommends evidence-based strategies such as limiting access and availability and raising taxes to prevent alcohol-related harm.