The Other NRA: National Restaurant Association Eviscerates Rights of Customers, Workers, Children
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2014/02/14-0
Food movement leaders tend to stick to their specific issues, whether its advocating for healthy food, fighting for workers rights or curbing marketing to children. For each of these issues, there are numerous food corporations that need to change. But there is one organization that conveniently provides us with one giant target for all of them: the National Restaurant Association.
The other NRA employs 750 staffers and spent nearly $4 million on lobbying and campaign donations in 2012 alone. The trade group representing some 52,000 members was named a Heavy Hitter by the Center for Responsive Politics for being a top corporate player in Washington, D.C. No wonder, with board members that include the nations largest chains such as McDonalds, Wendys, Starbucks, and Darden (the restaurant conglomerate that owns Olive Garden and Red Lobster), among others.
NRA Hates Public Health
The National Restaurant Association has had a negative impact on a wide range of issues that foodies tend to care about. Do you think chain restaurants should provide basic nutrition information to their customers? Is it really too much to ask to disclose the calorie count for dishes like the Five Cheese Ziti or the Steak Gorgonzola-Alfredo at Olive Garden? The NRA thinks so, as the group lobbied against menu labeling laws for decades, until they gave in by stripping states of their right to enact such laws. The NRA hated New York Citys menu labeling rules so much that the group filed a lawsuit to stop implementation. They lost.
But that didnt stop NRA lawyers from filing another lawsuit against New York City when lobbyists didnt get their way again, this time to oppose limiting the size of sugary soft drinks. (That case is still pending.) Science and plain common sense tells us that consuming sodas out of bucket-size containers is probably not good for you. Yet the NRA and its members demand their right to keep selling these disease-inducing beverages by waging an aggressive astroturf and media campaign in cahoots with the soda industry to manipulate public opinion.