
| Consumer/Health Groups Unite in Pressing for a Final Rule Mandating a Standardized, Useful Alcohol Facts Label | 
|                White Paper      and Ad Campaign Put      Issue in Front of Policymakers; | 
| Sally Greenberg's remarks | 
|      Release Date: April 22, 2008 | 
| Washington, D.C.-- A coalition of public interest groups today called for the federal government to end 30 years of “deliberations and fact finding” by issuing a useful final regulation to require standardized labeling information on beer, wine and distilled spirits products. At a news conference in Washington, members of a broad-based coalition of public health leaders and consumer advocacy organizations used the occasion of Alcohol Awareness Month to release a white paper laying out the need for an easy-to-read, standardized label that will provide consumers with complete information about alcohol and calorie content per serving. Issued as a nationwide call to action, the white paper concludes that easily accessible alcohol labeling can play an important role in reducing alcohol abuse, drunk driving, and the many diseases attributable to excessive alcohol intake, such as liver cirrhosis and cancers of the upper gastrointestinal tract.      To highlight this issue for      federal policymakers, Shape Up America! -- the anti-obesity      crusade launched by former Surgeon General C. Everett Koop --      also unveiled a newspaper advertising campaign featuring an open      letter to Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson signed by 18      organizations and public health officials. The open letter cites      more than 30 years of delay by Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade      Bureau (TTB) and its predecessor agency, the Bureau of Alcohol,      Tobacco and Firearms (BATF), in responding to public pressure,      several petitions, and court challenges, none of which has      produced a government rule requiring an easy-to-read,      standardized label on all alcoholic beverages. ___________________________________________________________________ | 
 
