US California schools could ban Flamin’ Hot Cheetos under new bill - "Urrea, the artist, was introduced to Flamin’ Hot Cheetos before kindergarten, she said."

California schools could ban Flamin’ Hot Cheetos under new bill
Los Angeles Times (archive.ph)
By Nathan Solis and Cindy Carcamo
2024-03-13 17:25:46GMT

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A person carries bags of Flamin’ Hot Cheetos before a screening of the film “Flamin’ Hot” on the South Lawn of the White House on June 15. (Julia Nikhinson / Associated Press)

The days of Flamin’ Hot Cheetos in California schools may be numbered.

A new bill aims to ban from public schools food products that contain artificial dyes, including the ingredient that makes Cheetos pop with their signature yellow and red colors.

Lawmakers argue that developing young minds are harmed by the chemical ingredients and that federal guidelines have not been updated in decades.

Assembly Bill 2316 takes aim at six synthetic food dyes — blue 1, blue 2, green 3, red 40, yellow 5 and yellow 6 — as well as coloring agent titanium dioxide, ingredients commonly used to artificially tint foods, including candy, as well as drinks and some medications and vitamins.

Red 40 and yellow 6 are found in Takis, Doritos and Flamin’ Hot Cheetos, the main culprits that turn snack lovers’ fingers a powdery crimson. Blue 1 is found in Froot Loops, and other artificial dyes can be found in Jolly Ranchers, M&Ms, Sour Patch Kids and Mountain Dew.

Assemblymember Jesse Gabriel (D-Encino) introduced the bill and emphasized this is not an outright ban of any specific products, but of those chemical ingredients.

“This is not going to ban for sale in the state of California any of these foods,” Gabriel said Tuesday during a news conference touting the bill. “This is not a food ban. This is not banning Flamin’ Hot Cheetos in California.”

Flamin’ Hot Cheetos’ parent company, Frito-Lay, did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

A 2021 study from the California Environmental Protection Agency found that consuming synthetic food dyes could lead to hyperactivity and other neurological behavior in some children. Gabriel said he was diagnosed with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder as a child, and his own son has the same neurodevelopmental disorder.

Flamin’ Hot Cheetos is not only ubiquitous among many snackers, but it’s also a cultural phenomenon that has inspired art, rap videos, fashion and menu items at restaurants.

The snack’s spicy kick and neon-red dust is as popular as it is controversial, with some schools already banning the product.

Jazmín Urrea has used the crispy, dark red snack as a medium in her art. One of her pieces, called “Pasarela de Chucherias” — which translates to “a junk food path” — consists of a thick circle of Flamin’ Hot Cheetos laid flat on the floor.

The 33-year-old, who lives in South Los Angeles, applauded the proposed legislation, saying the community she grew up in and others like it are food deserts, dotted with convenience stores that sell snacks, instead of grocery stores or farmers markets, meaning there is little access to fresh foods.

“The school should be an oasis,” she said Tuesday. ”It’s not like I want to completely ban people from having their snacks. But at least at schools, it can be more of a food oasis. Ultimately, it will make our selection of food safer.”

The Los Angeles Unified School District serves roughly 530,000 meals daily. An LAUSD spokesperson said the district is already in compliance with the bill’s proposed legislation because the district’s “current nutrition policy and practice does not allow for products with artificial colors, flavors and preservatives.”

Edgar Zazueta, a spokesperson for the Assn. of California School Administrators, said there aren’t many schools that sell the snacks targeted in the ban.

“The biggest impact would be to student stores that often are selling items for their [Associated Student Body] for student funds,” Zazueta said.

Gabriel’s proposed legislation arrives several months after Gov. Gavin Newsom signed into law a statewide ban against “toxic” ingredients found in some sodas and snacks. That bill goes into effect in 2027 and prompted Just Born, which makes the colorful marshmallow Peeps, to remove red dye No. 3 from its recipe.

The Assembly member says his latest bill is a means to protect children in school. Specifics about how the ingredient ban would be rolled out have not yet been revealed.

“The science here is complicated, but the purpose of the bill is not,” Gabriel said. “It is about protecting our students from chemicals that have been proven to harm children and interfere with their ability to learn.”

According to the bill language, elementary schools would be allowed to sell food items that contain the prohibited ingredients during fundraising events either off-campus or at least 30 minutes after the end of the school day.

The bill aims to encourage manufacturers who want to continue to sell their products in schools to switch their recipes with alternative ingredients or risk school districts across the state using alternative brands that do not have artificial coloring.

“So instead of getting the color from a synthetic food dye, they could get it from beet juice, or turmeric, or pomegranate juice or any of these other natural ingredients out there,” Gabriel said. “We know these companies are capable of making a safer version of their products.”

Scott Faber with the Environmental Working Group, a nonprofit advocacy group co-sponsoring Gabriel’s bill with Consumer Reports, recommends alternative snacks that don’t have food dyes, such as Rice Krispies, Kellogg’s Eggo Waffles and Cheez-It.

He blamed the federal government for not better regulating food ingredients that could be harmful, to both children and adults.

“The truth is, the FDA is not doing their job,” Faber said during Tuesday’s briefing.

The Food and Drug Administration did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The National Confectioners Assn., a trade organization that promotes the interests of candy companies in the U.S., said in response to Gabriel’s proposed legislation that the FDA needs to “wake up and get in the game.”

“These activists are dismantling our national food safety system state by state in an emotionally driven campaign that lacks scientific backing,” the group said in a statement. The “FDA is the only institution in America that can stop this sensationalistic agenda, which is not based on facts and science.“

The confectioners group claims that any replacement ingredients would need to be vetted by the FDA and pointed out that there are no alternatives to red dye No. 3 or titanium dioxide that have been approved by the federal government.

None of the dyes proposed in the ingredient ban are part of a natural diet, said Dana Hunnes, a senior dietitian and adjunct assistant professor at the Fielding School of Public Health at UCLA.

Instead, they’re manufactured, Hunnes wrote in an email, and “unnecessary, unhealthy, carcinogenic, likely inflammatory (which itself is a risk factor for cancer and other chronic diseases).”

Urrea, the artist, was introduced to Flamin’ Hot Cheetos before kindergarten, she said. In sixth grade, she said she fell ill after eating too many of the snacks and had to have her stomach pumped. She also had her appendix removed.

The snack has had a profound effect on her life and her art. She rarely eats Cheetos now but thinks they can be enjoyed in moderation. She said she mostly stopped eating Flamin’ Hot Cheetos after researching their ingredients in 2016 in preparation for her art piece. She said she reuses the Cheetos in her artwork.

“And it’s still holding that dye,” she said. “They haven’t disintegrated on me yet. They are in storage but very much vibrant and holding that color. That gives you something to think about.”
 
Ban junk food in schools.
Better yet, ban schools. Can't be held liable for anything that happens in school if school doesn't exist.

Seriously, ban schools. California schools churn out retards of every color.
Best idea yet, ban niggers. Hot chip consumption will drop significantly, saving civilization from artificial colors.
 
Better yet, ban schools. Can't be held liable for anything that happens in school if school doesn't exist.

Seriously, ban schools. California schools churn out retards of every color.
You know, public schools really do deserve to be abolished.

No. Junk food made school tolerable. Fuck you fun leech. You will take my hot cheetos from my cold dead hands.
Just be glad we don't ban junk food entirely :smug:
 
Queen nigger going after the food quality and now they're going after the hot chip.
Slippery slope confirmed. They're going to go after the skim milk next.
 
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Good. One of the only social/market engineering functions I actually want from the government is banning all the artificial crap out of our food supply. I hope once they're done with the artificial colors, they move on to artificial flavors, and finally to fillers and "modified food product".

I'd miss a few of the junk food snacks myself, but it's worth it to get that garbage out of our regular food options.
The government doesn't care about your health. You aren't centrally planning your way out of this.
 
Can't these companies just take the weird dyes out? I mean it's not like they're part of the taste.
 
Ok fine. That is a better alternative. But just watch what you mean when you say "natural ingredients". Because it doesn't always mean what you think it does. There's no regulation on what is "natural". They can still pump food full of poison and claim it's natural because there's a few grains of turmeric in there somewhere for color.
Oh, the difference between natural and artificial is regulated. Of course, this being Uncle Sam its ass-backwards. The same chemical compound is artificial or natural based solely upon its origin. If you synthesize a naturally-occurring compound, its an artificial ingredient. If you extract it from a natural source, its a natural ingredient.

Take for example vanillin. Its what gives vanilla its unique taste. And it can be extracted from vanilla itself or chemically derived from lignin or petrochemicals. The first one would have it be classed as a natural flavoring, and the next two as artificial flavorings despite it being the exact same chemical compound no matter its origin.
No, their food regulations are pretty much just protectionism because their industry can't compete with giant mechanized farms in the US.

When they ban chemicals, it's mostly just effective in banning things that sound "chemically" and it doesn't really correspond to solid scientific data on whether it's harmful or not.
Glyphosate (aka Roundup, the shit we Americans love using to kill off weeds in our backyards) has been in the EU's crosshairs for a while despite the fact that if it was as lethal as people claim all of America's farmers would be long dead from exposure. Every time they've tried to ban it their own farmers have thrown a fit. Of course, the French have banned it for home use completely despite allowing their farmers access to it. Makes you wonder...
 
I'd be happy if Cheetos would just chill out on their need to color everything they own some sort of neon color. They're tasty and all, in a junk food sort of way, but having that damn dust all over your hands is unironically the biggest drawback to eating them.

Back when I regularly visited SF, there was one particular crosswalk where I'd always see an old (homeless? bored and with a very particular schedule?) lady eating Cheetos out of a bag with chopsticks. When you have to use utensils to eat the damn chips, maybe it's a sign they could do without being neon.
 
The worst thing is white chicks who claim MSG gives them headaches.
My mom was like this. She almost had a second stroke when I showed her the ingredient's list in Accent.
Parents need to take responsibility for their children’s nutrition. How hard is it to pack a lunch and a snack? Stop being incompetent leeches on the state.
Sad part is it's cheaper to make them lunch at home than pay for it, but the other kids are fucking dipshit consumers in the making and will bully the kids who bring their own lunch. It drops off after a couple days into each school year, but it'll happen every year. Some kids can't handle the banter and some parents coddle their kids instead of telling them "say their mom doesn't love them enough to pack them a lunch. If they hit you, hit them back." Worked for mine.
I had to eat school lunch because I was poor enough it was free and I wouldn't wish that shit on anyone, especially not my own kid. From the pictures I've been shown, it's only gotten worse too.
 
Not the fried chicken oh naw what you tryna do to me nigguhI can’t take this shit*sobs uncontrollably*
This was always on the horizon after the talks of a menthol cigarette ban.

How will our beautiful black kangz and kweenz survive without one of their main food sources? Will they come for fried chicken and 40s next?
 
I still had that bitch for giving us those shitty while wheat pizza crusts.
this is why I think the idea they can airlift Michael in to take over for Joe this election is dead-in-the-water
putting aside the claims by many that she HATEed being in the White House and grew to loathe whitey even more from it, there's a fuckload of the young vote demo that the dems need who think "Obeme 'woman' = shitty lunch"
 
Newsom making Michelle Obama look like Little Debby with the "no fun allowed" in school lunches.

I still had that bitch for giving us those shitty while wheat pizza crusts.
Big Mike tried to take away my chocolate milk. I will never forgive him.
 
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