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Reclassifying AlcopopS

Date post: 26-Feb-2016
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Reclassifying AlcopopS. Products. Sugary alcoholic drinks that are flavored to taste like soda or lemonade Marketed to a young audience Girls now equal their male peers in drinking rates. Teens Drink a lot of Things so Why Focus on Alcopops?. How they are marketed How they taste - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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RECLASSIFYING ALCOPOPS
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Page 1: Reclassifying  AlcopopS

RECLASSIFYING ALCOPOPS

Page 2: Reclassifying  AlcopopS

Products

Sugary alcoholic drinks that are flavored to taste like soda or lemonade

Marketed to a young audience Girls now equal their male peers in

drinking rates

Page 3: Reclassifying  AlcopopS

Teens Drink a lot of Things so Why Focus on Alcopops?

How they are marketed How they taste How they are formulated

Page 4: Reclassifying  AlcopopS

How an Alcopop Becomes an Alcopop In Europe

Start as a liquor or spirit, flavoring and sugar are added and is sold on the market as a spirit

Straight forward, no gimicks or loopholes

Page 5: Reclassifying  AlcopopS

How an Alcopop Becomes and Alcopop in the US

Starts as a malt The majority of the malt is removed Flavorings including spirits are added to

the drink The end product is primarily spirit-based

Page 6: Reclassifying  AlcopopS

How did we get from

Here… to here?

Page 7: Reclassifying  AlcopopS

Tax Classification

With creative manufacturing, companies were able to convince states to sell alcopops as malts

This led to cheap and available products

Page 8: Reclassifying  AlcopopS

And from here… to here?

Page 9: Reclassifying  AlcopopS

Alcohol deregulation

The percentage of alcohol in malts used to be capped in North Carolina and other states

No longer the case, opening the floodgates for higher alcohol alcopops

Page 10: Reclassifying  AlcopopS

The Timeline

The 21st Amendment: Ratified by the states on Dec. 5, 1933

Gave states the authority to regulate alcohol

Page 11: Reclassifying  AlcopopS

Timeline cont/

In 1996 the Tobacco, Tax and Trade Bureau (TTB) issues a ruling stating that “A malt beverage under the Federal Alcohol Administration (FAA) Act may only contain alcohol which is the result of alcoholic fermentation at the brewery.”

This meant alcopops would be federally classified as a spirit

Page 12: Reclassifying  AlcopopS

Timeline cont/ 2003: The TTB issues a further statement

clarifying its original position, stating that: “[Alcopops] exhibit little or no traditional beer or malt beverage character. … Brewers … remove the color, bitterness, and taste that are generally associated with beer. … This leaves a base product to which brewers add various flavors, which typically contain distilled spirits, to achieve the desired taste profile.”

Page 13: Reclassifying  AlcopopS

2003 cont/ (TTB) issued its long-promised notice of

rule change. The release summarized the TTB’s

analysis of the products: Of the 114 tested, 105 contained over 76% alcohol derived from distilled alcohol;

95% have less than 25% alcohol volume from fermentation.

Page 14: Reclassifying  AlcopopS

Timeline cont/

2005: The TTB seems to ignore its own precedent and establishes the so-called 51/49 standard

The 51/49 standard: Up to 49% of alcohol in alcopops can be spirits

Page 15: Reclassifying  AlcopopS

Post 2005 The TTB itself acknowledged that its

51/49 ruling conflicts with state laws and that the States would have to determine independently whether to adopt the federal standard.

According to one research study, conducted in 2005, at least 29 states had classification laws that require alcopops to be classified as distilled spirits.

Page 16: Reclassifying  AlcopopS

Post 2005 cont/ Attorneys general in at least four states

(California, Connecticut, Maine, and Virginia) have concluded that alcopop producers are violating state laws by marketing alcopops as beer.

In response, alcopop producers have embarked on an intensive lobbying campaign to convince states to adopt the federal standard.

Page 17: Reclassifying  AlcopopS

States Across the Country are Tackling the Issue Through legislative or regulatory action

states have or are attempting to properly classify alcopopsMaine: regulatory change classifies

alcopops as low alcohol spiritsCalifornia: In 2007 the board of Equalization

voted to classify alcopops as spirits. Supposed to take effect in October of 2008, but a law suit by the industry has stalled it from happening.

Page 18: Reclassifying  AlcopopS

States cont/

Utah: adopted legislation in 2008 to classify alcopops as spirits.

Nebraska: Law suit went to the state supreme court to force the state to properly classify. The court recently ruled that these beverages do in fact contain spirits and should be classified as such.

Page 19: Reclassifying  AlcopopS

The majority of States are Not Properly Enforcing the Law

In North Carolina NC GS 18b 101 (14) states: "Spirituous liquor" or "liquor" means distilled spirits or ethyl alcohol, including spirits of wine, whiskey, rum, brandy, gin and all other distilled spirits and mixtures of cordials, liqueur, and premixed cocktails, in closed containers for beverage use regardless of their dilution.

Page 20: Reclassifying  AlcopopS

So What’s the Difference? In North Carolina properly classifying

alcopops would:Reduce alcopop outlet densityRestrict underage availability by placing the

products in a govt. run rather than profit driven marketplace

Increase the price of the product:○ Now: 24 oz can is taxed ~12 cents○ Proper classification: ~75 cents

Page 21: Reclassifying  AlcopopS

Our Message

Reclassify because it’s the law Alcopops are costly. In 2009 they cost

NC:$207 million10 livesNearly 8000 incidents of harm

In North Carolina spirits belong in ABC stores, plain and simple

Page 22: Reclassifying  AlcopopS

Moving Forward: Reclassification Campaign

Begin a campaign to place public pressure on the ABC Commission to follow existing law and classify alcopops as spirits.

Page 23: Reclassifying  AlcopopS

Grassroots Advocacy Visit: bit.ly/alcopops Use the resources; train your groups Our goal is 5000 petitions signed by July Send youth and adults to speak to local

health and social organizations (PTAs, Lions Clubs, Rotary, health departments, etc.)Get petitions signed by individuals and;Get letters of support

Page 24: Reclassifying  AlcopopS

A Word on Petitions This is not a legal or binding document.

This is not a voter issue. Whoever you come across, young, old or otherwise, can sign your petitions.

This is a competition between groups statewide. Who is going to get the most petitions

signed?

Page 25: Reclassifying  AlcopopS

“Town Hall” Meeting Use the online resources to hold a “town

hall” meeting on this issue Leverage the federal money you are

getting to push for this change and educate your local leaders and community

Page 26: Reclassifying  AlcopopS

Grassroots Advocacy cont.

Write letters to the editor and press releases on the issue

Set up meeting with local leaders: town/city council members, county commissioners, school board, etc.

Page 27: Reclassifying  AlcopopS

Grassroots Advocacy Send letters to the governor and ABC

Commission Set up meetings with your state

representatives and senators. Ask for their leadership on this critical health issue.

Page 28: Reclassifying  AlcopopS

Simultaneously We will be working on setting up

meetings with key decision makers on the issue and will need all of the petitions and letters of support we can get to make the case.Update us continuously. Use social media

to keep the campaign going.


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