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NCADD News Release
For More Information, Contact:
Sarah Kayson, Director for Public Policy
Jeffrey Hon, Director for Public Information
Bob Shearouse, MADD Director of Public Policy
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For Immediate Release:
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24 Organizations Petition FCC to Require Alcoholic Beverage Counter Ads on Radio and TV
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Arguing that radio and television commercials for alcoholic
beverages threaten the public interest and public safety by glamorizing
their appeal to children, the National Council on Alcoholism and Drug
Dependence, Inc. (NCADD), Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD) and 22
other organizations today (May 14) petitioned the Federal Communications
Commission (FCC) to require counter advertising for alcohol just as
it once did for tobacco.
"The alcoholic beverage industry has used the nation's airwaves to
create a distorted view of a product which, in reality, is associated
with the leading causes of death among teenagers," said NCADD president
Paul Wood, PhD. "Without intervention of the kind that the FCC has
taken before, parents, schools and public health organizations will
never have the resources to compete with the millions of dollars worth
of pro-drinking messages that are broadcast into American homes every
year."
"Alcohol is the drug of choice among youth of our nation and alcohol involvement is still the single greatest factor in motor vehicle deaths and injuries," said Katherine Prescott, MADD national president.
"Alcohol-related fatal crashes are not only a national tragedy causing
more than 17,000 deaths yearly, but represent a significant public
health problem in this country costing society over $45 billion a year
in direct costs. It is essential that the youth of this country be
made aware of the tragic consequences of alcohol use and abuse to
compete with messages from the industry that alcohol is synonymous
with popularity, success and the good life."
The petition asks that the FCC require any broadcast licensee
that airs alcoholic beverage ads to air a "significant amount" of
counter ads and that these counter ads be run within reasonable
proximity to the alcoholic beverage ads. Broadcasters also would be
required to air the counter ads free of charge though concerned
organizations would be responsible for producing them. Drafted by
attorneys at the Institute forPublic Representation, the petition
cites a 1967 rule by the FCC requiring broadcasters to air tobacco
counter ads--upheld in federal court--as a precedent.
The move to draft the petition came in response to the decision
late last year by the Distilled Spirits Council of the United States
to lift its voluntary ban on the use of radio and television
advertising. While that controversial decision has resulted in calls
for a federal ban on distilled spirits advertising, NCADD and MADD have
taken the position that counter advertising offers a better solution
because it would provide a powerful vehicle to inform the public about
the health and safety risks associated with problem drinking and because
it is free of First Amendment concerns.
Alcohol poses enormous short-term health risks to the nation's
youth who currently use it in significantly higher numbers than any
other drug, including tobacco. For example, one in ten eighth graders
report they have been drunk in the past month; by the time they are
seniors in high school, this percentage has increased to one in three.
These teenagers are more likely to be involved in alcohol-related fatal
car crashes, or the victims of suicide and homicide. In addition,
drinking increases the chances of date rape for girls and violence,
including criminal activity, for boys. It also causes the academic and
athletic performances of both sexes to suffer.
The National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence, Inc.
provides education, information, help and hope in the fight against the
chronic and often fatal disease of alcoholism, and other drug addictions. Founded in 1944, NCADD, with its nationwide network of Affiliates, advocates prevention, intervention and treatment and is committed to ridding the disease of its stigma and its sufferers from their denial and shame.
5/14/97
Federal Communications Commission Petitioners for a Rulemaking to Require Counter-Advertisments to Address Alcohol Advertising in Broadcast Media
American Academy of Pediatrics
American College of Nurse Midwives
American Council on Alcohol Problems
American Society of Addiction Medicine
Center for Science in the Public Interest
Central Nebraska Council on Alcoholism
Christian Life Commission
Commonwealth Prevention Alliance
General Boards of Global Ministries and Church & Society
United Methodist Church
Latino Council on Alcohol and Tobacco
Manocherian Foundation
Marin Institute for the Prevention of Alcohol and Other Drug Problems
Maryland Underage Drinking Prevention Coalition
Mothers Against Drunk Driving
National Association of Alcoholism and Drug Abuse Counselors
National Association of Public Health Professionals Council on Alcohol Policy
National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence, Inc.
National Organization for Victim Assistance
National PTA
National Women's Christian Temperance Union
St. Vincent College Prevention Projects
Temperance League of Kentucky
Trauma Foundation/Center on Alcohol Advertising
Victims' Rights Political Action Committee
(list as of 5/13/97)
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National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence, Inc.
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244 East 58th Street, 4th Floor, New York, NY 10022
phone: 212/269-7797 fax: 212/269-7510
email: national@ncadd.org http://www.ncadd.org
HOPE LINE: 800/NCA-CALL (24-hour Affiliate referral)
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