|      New    York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg    vowed on Monday to appeal a judge's ruling that struck down his pioneering    ban on large sugary drinks sold by the city's    restaurants, movie theaters and other food service businesses just a day    before it was to take effect. The judge called the ban    "arbitrary and capricious" in an 11th-hour decision that dealt a    serious blow to Bloomberg, who has made public    health a cornerstone of his administration, with laws prohibiting smoking in    restaurants, bars and parks; banning trans fats; and requiring chain    restaurants to post calorie counts. At a press conference,    Bloomberg said the judge's ruling was "totally in error" and    promised to keep pressing his effort to combat a growing obesity epidemic    linked to heart disease and diabetes. He has successfully fought off past    court challenges to the smoking ban and the    calorie count rule. "Anytime you adopt a    groundbreaking policy, special interests will sue," Bloomberg said.    "That's America." It is unclear whether the    case will be resolved by the time Bloomberg's term expires at the end of this    year. Beverage manufacturers,    restaurants and other business groups had called the so-called "soda    ban" an illegal overreach that would infringe upon consumers' personal    liberty. The regulation would have    prohibited the city's food-service establishments from selling sugary drinks    larger than 16 ounces (473 ml) starting on Tuesday, though city officials had    said they would not begin imposing $200 fines on offending businesses until June. "People are dying    every day," Bloomberg said. "This is not a joke. This is about real    lives." But the ban only applied    to businesses under the auspices of the health    department, since it was the mayor-appointed health board, and not the    city council, that approved the policy last fall. That meant that grocery and    convenience stores - including 7 Eleven and its 64-ounce Big Gulp - were    exempt from the regulation's reach. In his ruling, state Supreme Court Justice Milton Tingling in Manhattan    zeroed in on the loopholes, noting it would only have applied to businesses    that are under the purview of the health department, like restaurants, and    would allow sweetened milk-based drinks like milkshakes. "It is arbitrary and    capricious because it applies to some but not all food establishments in the    city, it excludes other beverages that have significantly higher    concentrations of sugar sweeteners and/or calories on suspect grounds, and    the loopholes inherent in the rule ... serve to gut the purpose of the    rule," he wrote. He also expressed concern    that to allow the health board such sweeping authority would    "eviscerate" the separation of powers between the executive and the    legislature branches of city government. Chris Gindlesperger, a    spokesman for the American Beverage Association,    which brought the lawsuit on behalf of companies such as Coca-Cola, PepsiCo    and Dr Pepper Snapple, said the ruling was a "sigh of relief" for    New Yorkers and small businesses throughout the city. Dawn Sweeney, CEO of the    National Restaurant Association, which joined the lawsuit as a plaintiff,    said the decision would save thousands of restaurants and suppliers from    unnecessary costs. But beverage industry    consultant Tom Pirko of Bevmark Consulting in Santa Barbara, California, said    the ruling could backfire if it convinces municipalities that the only way to    reduce soda consumption is through higher taxes. "What the industry    is very worried about is not measures like Bloomberg's, which is local and    easy to walk around. What they're worried about is taxes," he said. In anticipation of the    soda ban, Bloomberg on Monday released new data tying sugary drinks to the    city's fattest neighborhoods, though the ABA was quick to criticize its    methodology. Meanwhile, fast food restaurants and cafes had been scrambling    on Monday to comply with the looming deadline. Many were confused over    whether the rules applied to popular sweetened coffee drinks, underlining the    ban's uneven applications. McDonald's Corp said    customers ordering a large coffee would be handed as many packets of sugar as    they like on the side, to be poured into the drink at the customer's leisure. By contrast, Dunkin'    Donuts, which had been handing out leaflets to explain the law's impact on    its menu, decided its servers would hand over large drinks unsweetened and    simply direct customers to a self-serve stand where sugar and flavored syrups    are kept. Public sentiment on the    ban had appeared divided, with a Marist University poll last summer showing    53 percent of New York City adults against the ban and 42 percent in favor. "The mayor took a    bullet and now we'll wait for the next big Bloomberg health initiative,"    said Professor Douglas Muzzio of Baruch College. "He's not going to    stop." Last month, Bloomberg    proposed a ban on polystyrene foam, the packaging material that is widely    popular for take-out food but is almost impossible to recycle.  |    
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