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NCADD News Release
For More Information, Contact:
Jeffrey Hon, Director for Public Information
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For Immediate Release:
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Hurricane Malt Liquor Threatens Inner City Youth; Public Health Groups Ask Federal Government to Intervene
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Twenty-five public health groups today (September 9) requested that the
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (BATF) rescind approval for use of the name "Hurricane" on a malt liquor because it connotes strength, which is a violation of federal regulations governing alcoholic beverage
labelling. Hurricane is produced by Anheuser Busch, the nation's largest brewer.
"Our inner cities are being devastated by a 'hurricane' of man's own
making," said Stacia Murphy, president of the National Council on
Alcoholism and Drug Dependence, Inc. (NCADD), the organization which is
leading the effort as part of its "Shame on Anheuser Busch" campaign. "By naming this product after one of nature's most powerful storms, Anheuser Busch clearly is trying to convey a sense of potency to minority consumers, many of whom are underage and disenfranchised."
The groups signing the letter asserted that the use of the name Hurricane on a label illustrated with windblown palm trees violates Section 27CFR 7.29 (f) of BATF regulations. These regulations prohibit malt beverage labels from using the words "strong, "full strength" or similar words, statements, designs or devices which are likely to be interpreted as statements of alcoholic content. Hurricane contains 5.9% alcohol by volume; the alcohol content of malt liquor generally ranges from 5.6% to 8%, but labels frequently do not include this information (by contrast, regular beers usually average 4.6% alcohol by volume).
According to a recent federal government survey, malt liquor is especially popular among current African American drinkers who are four times as likely to consume it as the general population. African Americans ages 18 to 24 are nearly five times as likely to drink malt liquor as the general population. Typically sold in 24 or 40 ounce containers (which exceed the federal government's standard of moderate alcohol consumption), malt liquor is widely available in minority communities and commonly mentioned in rap lyrics that characterize inner-city or "gangsta" life.
Introduced in 1996, Hurricane accounts for less than 1% of malt liquor
sold in the United States. However, a recent advertising campaign in
the New York City subway system, which first brought the beverage to the
attention of NCADD, indicates that Anheuser Busch is trying to increase
its market share. The new advertising campaign also includes a contest
with cash prizes and other premiums that appeal to inner-city youth.
NCADD inaugurated its "Shame On Anheuser Busch" campaign in May when it
urged the nation's leading retailers to stop selling "Frank and Louie's
Greatest Hits," a compact disk featuring the famous Budweiser lizards
which encourages underage drinking. The campaign seeks to expose
alcoholic beverage marketing practices that threaten the health of the
American public as seriously as those used by tobacco companies.
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.
9/9/99
List of Organizations Calling for BATF to Rescind Approval For Use of the Name "Hurricane" on a Malt Beverage
American Academy of Pediatrics
American College of Nurse Midwives
American Medical Association
American Medical Student Association
American Public Health Association
American Society of Addiction Medicine
Center on Alcohol Advertising
Center for Science in the Public Interest
Central Nebraska Council on Alcoholism
General Board of Church and Society, The United Methodist Church
International Commission for the Prevention of Alcoholism and Drug Dependency
Latino Council on Alcohol and Tobacco
The Marin Institute
Maryland Underage Drinking Prevention Coalition
National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence
National Association of Alcoholism and Drug Abuse Counselors
National Woman's Christian Temperance Union
Palavra Tree, Inc.
Phase: Piggy Back, Inc.
Pennsylvania Council on Alcohol Problems
PRIDE of St. Tammany
PRIDE-Omaha, Inc.
Public Citizen
RID-USA: Remove Intoxicated Drivers
Southern Baptist Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission
Temperance League of Kentucky
Trauma Foundation
(as of 9/9/99)
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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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