Booze for Kids
Consumer groups say alcohol producers are luring younger drinkers with
sweet, fruit-flavored drinks whose bright, colorful packaging more closely
resembles non-alcoholic fruit drinks popular with teens
than other alcoholic beverages.
A poll conducted for the Center for Science in the Public Interest (CSPI)
shows that alcopop beverages appeal more to teenagers than
to adults and that teens are more likely to consume them. Forty-one percent
of 600 teenagers aged 14 to 18 surveyed have tried an alcopop.
These alcopop drinks can have serious implications
for Americas youth and for alcohol-related problems throughout society,
says CSPIs George Hacker.
According to the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism,
young people who begin drinking before the age of 15 are four times as
likely to develop alcohol dependence than those who wait until age 21
to start.
Along with the American Medical Association and the National Association
for Children of Alcoholics (NACOA), CSPI has petitioned the Bureau of
Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms to revoke previously approved labels for
several alcopop drinks, including Mikes Hard Lemonade,
Ricks Spiked Lemonade, Doc Otis Hard Lemonade and Hoopers
Hooch. The groups called for an investigation into whether labeling and
marketing of the fruit-flavored alcoholic beverages could be construed
as unfair marketing practices under federal law.
Underage drinking is a societal and family issue not an
advertising issue, Lori Levy of the Beer Institute says. Exposure
to beer advertising by those under the legal drinking age has nothing
to do with what can help them make decisions about not drinking alcoholic
beverages.
Hoop Nightmares
Salvadoran maquila factory workers are paid just 29 cents for jerseys
that retail for $140 at stores selling National Basketball Association
(NBA) clothing in the United States, according to a U.S. Agency for International
Development-funded investigation uncovered by the National Labor Committee,
a New York-based labor rights group.
The investigation was carried out last year by a special unit of the
Salvadoran labor ministry in response to growing concerns about working
conditions in the Salvadoran free trade zone. The report was suppressed
when factory owners objected to its release.
The investigators found a pattern of abusive working conditions at 229
factories, including below-subsistence wages (leaving families mired in
abject poverty), forced overtime, excessively high production
goals and complete denial of any right to form a union, among other conditions.
At the Hermosa Factory in Apopa, El Salvador, 600 workers make Nike clothing
for the NBA. The workers are paid just 29 cents for copies of Shaquille
ONeals Lakers jersey, which retails at U.S. stores for $140.
When rush orders come in, the workers are forced to work 19 1/2 hour
shifts, after which they sleep on the factory floor under their sewing
machines, only to begin again early the next morning.
I think many of the NBA players would be really shocked and disgusted
to know that their names are on jerseys made by women who are paid pennies
per hour, forced to drink filthy drinking water, work in 100 degree temperatures
and who have to raise their children in broken-down hovels, says
Charles Kernaghan, the National Labor Committees executive director.
No to Prison Food
Following a student-led pressure campaign, American University announced
in April that it would drop Sodexho Marriott as a long-term food services
contractor. In announcing the decision, AUs vice president of finance
cited social responsibility as a motivating factor.
American University joins a growing list of colleges which have dropped
or denied contracts to Sodexho Marriott because of the companys
ties to the nations largest private prison corporation, the Correctional
Corporation of America (CCA). Other such colleges include State University
of New York (Albany), Goucher College (Maryland), James Madison (Virginia),
Oberlin College (Ohio), Evergreen State College (Washington State) and
DePaul University (Illinois).
Activists say private prison systems run by CCA and other companies are
notorious for their poor management.
While there are very serious problems in public prisons, there
are additional concerns about the management of private prisons,
says Kevin Pranis of the Prison Moratorium Project.
Private prison companies have also distorted criminal justice policy.
Through groups such as the American Legislative Exchange Council, they
have pushed tough-on-crime and prison privatization laws to expand the
number of private prisons.
Student activists across the United States have waged campaigns to kick
Sodexho Marriott off campus for two years. While many students have raised
their concerns about the company through campus contract review committees,
some have resorted to sit-ins and other protests.
There have been many misrepresentations about Sodexhos role
in the corrections industry, Pierre Bellon, Sodexhos CEO,
wrote to University of Texas athletic director DeLoss Dodds in May. We
are committed to divesting from CCA and we are committed to our continued
efforts to improve prison conditions wherever we provide service.
Charlie Cray
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