Home
Search
Sign up to receive Action Alerts and eNews  join button horiz                                         Stay Connected 

L.A. City Council Public Safety Committee Moves to Ban Alcohol Ads From Public Property

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE       
Englishpdf
Spanishpdf                                   


            CONTACT:  Michael Scippa 415-548-0492
                                                                                                                           Jorge Castillo 213-840-3336
                                                                                                                Ruben Rodriguez 818 203-2811
  

Los Angeles City Council Public Safety Committee Moves
to Ban Alcohol Ads From Public Property
 
Council Member Alarcón and www.NoAlcoholAds.org
Move Closer to Reducing Underage Drinking in L.A.
 
LOS ANGELES, CA (May 24, 2013) – Alcohol Justice joined with the Los Angeles Coalition to Ban Alcohol Ads on Public Property today to thank the L.A. City Public Safety Committee and its Chair Mitchell Englander for moving to create an ordinance to ban alcohol ads from L.A. city-owned or controlled property. The motion had been held-up in the committee since the summer of 2011. It can now move before the full City Council for their approval of the City Attorney drafting the actual ordinance that will reduce alcohol advertising in public spaces to help discourage underage drinking.
 
“We’re excited that the bureaucratic run-around is over,” stated Jorge Castillo, Director of Advocacy for Alcohol Justice. “There is a lack of services to treat massive alcohol-related harm in Los Angeles, so this is a big step for the City to stop promoting alcohol sales, and consumption. Today’s action will eventually lead to harm reduction.”

According to the 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.
 
“Banning alcohol ads from City-owned billboards is both the morally and fiscally responsible choice for Los Angeles,” said Councilmember Alarcon.  “Underage drinking devastates families, wrecks lives and costs the City over a million dollars a year in emergency medical services. Today’s action is a step forward in the process of reducing the exposure young people have to alcohol advertisements and there is no doubt that banning these ads will have a positive impact on our communities.”
 
The L.A. County Department of Public Health has recommended reducing alcohol advertising in public spaces and in areas commonly seen by minors as a way to help discourage underage drinking. Last December, UCLA, Center for Alcohol Marketing to Youth, & Dr. Jonathan Fielding submitted clear and compelling evidence that alcohol advertising on city owned property encourages youth alcohol consumption that leads to harm.

“Alcohol is the number one most accessed and used drug by minors and AADAP data has noted a link between alcohol use and high risk sexual behaviors by our youth and young adults,” said Jeanne Shimatsu, Community Prevention Coordinator, AADAP, Inc. “Alcohol ads regularly remind and reinforce false messages to youth of a promised sexy, cool image and social acceptance. The more exposure to alcohol advertising, the more likely youth will drink, and if they are already drinking, it serves to encouragement them to drink more.”
 
In a January 2013 report entitled Exposure to Alcohol Advertisements and Teenage Alcohol-Related Problems, published in Pediatrics (The Official Journal of the American Academy of Pediatrics), researchers concluded that, “Alcohol ad exposure and the affective reaction to those ads influence some youth to drink more and experience drinking-related problems later in adolescence.” Their study looked at 3,890 Los Angeles area students, surveyed once per year across 4 years from the 7th through the 10th grades. We strongly support efforts to pass the ordinance to ban alcohol advertising from city owned and controlled property to help protect the health and safety of our youth,” stated Jerry L. Grenard, Ph.D., Assistant Professor, School of Community and Global Health, Claremont Graduate University, co-author of the report.
 
“The link between alcohol and risky behavior is undeniable and many of those risky behaviors include guns,” said Margot Bennett, MBA, Executive Director of Women Against Gun Violence (WAGV). “Los Angeles City policymakers support efforts to reduce gun violence. This initiative – to remove alcohol ads from city property – is a no brainer.  If our policymakers want to reduce gun violence, they need to separate our City from peddling of alcohol.”
 
"I see kids my age all the time who get in trouble because they use alcohol and drugs,” stated Maranda Sessions, from the United Coalition East Prevention Project. “Many start out drinking because they see videos and ads with rappers and celebrities looking all cool with their drinks.”
 
“I would like to thank the community for bringing this important issue to our attention,” said Councilmember Mitchell Englander, Chair of the Public Safety Committee. “By banning alcohol advertisements on City property on future City contracts, we have taken an essential step in making the City of Los Angeles safer for our children and families.”
 
In the summer of 2011, the Los Angeles Coalition to Ban Alcohol Ads on Public Property, along with Councilmember Alarcón, were able to influence a bus bench contract that effectively banned alcohol ads from 6,000 bus benches in the City of Los Angeles. 


Coalition Members include:
  • American Indian Movement – WEST
  • Alcohol Justice
  • Asian American Drug Abuse Program Inc.
  • Boyle Heights Stakeholders Association
  • Boyle Heights Coalition for a Safe & Drug Free Community
  • California Hispanic Commission on Alcohol and Drug Abuse
  • Coalition to Ban Billboard Blight
  • Community Coalition
  • Institute for Public Strategies
  • Koreatown Youth & Community Center
  • Mexican History Foundation
  • Mothers of East L.A. (MELA)
  • P3 Partnership for a Positive Pomona
  • Phoenix House
  • Pilar of Fire Church
  • Paso por Paso
  • Pueblo y Salud
  • Saving Lives Drug and Alcohol Coalition
  • Sycamore Grove School
  • Tarzana Treatment Centers & AWARE Coalition
  • United Coalition East Prevention Project
  • Woman’s Christian Temperance Union
  • Women Against Gun Violence
  • Writers In Treatment

Supporters include:
  • Michael & Kitty Dukakis, former Massachusetts Governor & First Lady
  • Boyle Heights Neighborhood Council
  • California Council on Alcohol Problems
  • California Alliance for Retired Americans
  • Center for Living and Learning
  • County Alcohol and Drug Program Administrators’ Association of California
  • Crescenta Valley Drug & Alcohol Prevention Coalition
  • Cri-Help
  • Day One Pasadena
  • Monsignor John Moretta
  • NCADD East San Gabriel & Pomona Valleys
  • Public Citizen
  • Resurrection Church Neighborhood Watch – Los Angeles
  • San Fernando Valley Partnership
  • Venice Neighborhood Council

For More Information go to: www.NoAlcoholAds.org

NoAlcoholAdsDotORG jpeg




###

TAKE ACTION

Don't mortgage the future.

Bring alcohol fees into the present & fund our kids at $500m a year.

TAKE ACTION
TO MODERNIZE CA
ALCOHOL TAXES



a martini glass, a beer glass, and a wine glass in front of a nickel
CA lawmakers want to:
♦ sell more alcohol at colleges
♦ market to underage students
♦ let the excise tax decay

TELL THEM THERE'S A BETTER WAY

FEATURED PUBLICATIONS

*NEW* RUNAWAY RISE IN CA ALCOHOL LEGISLATION
Orange bars surround a spiraling picture of the inside of the California capitol dome, inside the orange bars it reads Circling the Barrel and A Report from Alcohol Justice
CIRCLING THE BARREL:
CA Alcohol Legislative Trends 2013-2022



Recent publications
OUR STORES, OUR FUTURE
Ending Unsafe Alcohol Retail Practices

IN THE DOGHOUSE

On a yellow-green background, a rat stands atop a weathered wooden bar trying to drink from a beer tap, next to a foamy sample glass

Big Alcohol Bids for Underage College Students, Cal State Willing to Sell

AB 840 is moving steadily through the legislature, with few aware of its true impact: to vastly increase the alcohol industry's ability to paste ads all over Cal State campuses, and reach its 180,000 underage students.

READ MORE...

LEGISLATIVE ACTIVITY

californiaCA Alcohol Legislation
All legislation related to alcohol policy in Sacramento. Includes analysis & position letters from AJ & CAPA.


Narcan Kit VsmallNEW!  CA Opioid Legislation
CA bills concerning opioid and overdose prevention, recovery, and treatment.



all bills from every state and federalNationwide Legislative Tracking
State-by-state and federal bills relevant to AJ projects/campaigns.




ADVOCACY TOOLS

Tax Calculator
              Legislative Activity
              Fact Sheets
              a dialogue bubble with an exclamation in it Online ABC Complaint Form