“We thank these Senators and Representatives for bringing this issue to the attention of FDA,” said FMI President and Chief Executive Officer Leslie G. Sarasin. “We believe these letters clarify that Members of Congress did not intend for the recently passed chain restaurant menu labeling law to be applied to supermarkets.”
The Food Marketing Institute (FMI) recently filed comments on the FDA proposed rule implementing “Nutrition Labeling of Standard Menu Items at Chain Restaurants,” as included as Section 4205 of the Affordable Care Act, which requires nutrition labeling on menus of standard items in chain restaurants.
Supermarkets average more than 34,000 items available for purchase, versus 80 items that FDA estimates for an average restaurant menu. Of these supermarket items, 95 percent or more of them are labeled with calorie information as well as a nutrition facts panel. Restaurants requested the menu labeling law in order to provide them a national, uniform standard that preempts various state and local menu labeling laws. None of the various state and local restaurant menu labeling laws currently apply to supermarkets. However, FDA’s proposed rule attempts to apply the restaurant nutrition regulations to grocery stores, even though such a move lacks precedent from state or municipal menu labeling laws.
The regulatory community has historically recognized the fundamental differences between the chain restaurant industry and supermarkets or grocery. Existing labeling regulations covering nutrition panels, food safety, allergens, ingredients, and country-of-origin labeling are currently applied differently for supermarkets than for restaurants. In addition, grocery stores already comply with the Nutrition Labeling and Education Act, which covers more than 95 percent of foods sold in a typical supermarket.
Food Marketing Institute proudly advocates on behalf of the food retail industry. FMI’s U.S. members operate nearly 40,000 retail food stores and 25,000 pharmacies, representing a combined annual sales volume of almost $770 billion. Through programs in public affairs, food safety, research, education and industry relations, FMI offers resources and provides valuable benefits to more than 1,225 food retail and wholesale member companies in the United States and around the world. FMI membership covers the spectrum of diverse venues where food is sold, including single owner grocery stores, large multi-store supermarket chains and mixed retail stores. For more information, visit www.fmi.org and for information regarding the FMI foundation, visit www.fmifoundation.org.
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