CSAPs
Northeast Center for the Application of Prevention Technologies
Funded
by the Center for Substance Abuse Prevention (CSAP), Substance
Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration Grant # UD1SPO8999-01.
©
2001 Education Development Center, Inc. All rights reserved.
POLICY
FACT SHEET
Public
policieslaws and regulationscan be designed to limit
access to substances and to decrease the problems associated with
their use. One reason policies work is that they create a change
in the environment itself (in contrast to efforts that aim at
individual behavior change). Policy strategies are most likely
to be effective if they do one or more of the following:
- Increase
the price of alcohol or tobacco
- Set
the legal blood alcohol content (BAC) limit to 0.08
- Set
the legal BAC limit to 0.00 (or no higher than 0.02) for people
under the age of 21
- Provide
deterrents to using alcohol or provide incentives for not using
- Limit
the location and density of alcohol retail outlets
- Restrict
the use of tobacco in public and private workplaces
Some
environmental policies are developed and implemented by the government,
usually at the State level. But many other regulations can be
put into place at the community level to achieve similar goals.
For instance:
- Restrictions
on smoking in public places (e.g., movie theaters and restaurants)
- Open-container
laws prohibiting alcohol consumption in public places
- Limits
on the location, density, and hours of operation of liquor stores
- Rules
governing the use and placement of cigarette vending machines
- Regulations
on advertising and billboard placement in the community
- Institutions
or organizations can implement certain environmental policies;
for example, companies can declare themselves to be smoke-free
workplaces, and universities can decline to serve alcohol at
their functions.
POLICY
ILLUSTRATION
Officials
Pass Ordinances Restricting Outdoor Tobacco and Alcohol Advertising2
A
stroll through almost any inner-city neighborhood demonstrates
what researchers know to be true: Alcohol and tobacco billboards
saturate many communities, particularly urban and less affluent
communities that lack the zoning regulations or neighborhood mobilization
to keep such billboards out. On one of these walks, it would be
hard to miss the images of attractive people, often people of
color, portrayed as sexy, wealthy, and happy. You might also notice
amusing, friendly characters, such as the Budweiser Frogs or,
until recently, Joe Camel.
It
is impossible to shield children from these images. Unlike television
or radio, billboards cannot be turned off. And, unlike print ads,
they cannot be restricted to adult-targeted magazines. In fact,
many activists charge that alcohol and tobacco billboards deliberately
target children by using cartoon characters and talking animals.
One study in an urban Latino community found that children passed
as many as 60 alcohol advertisements on their way to school every
day.3
Baltimore,
one of the first communities to implement local ordinances against
outdoor advertising of alcohol and tobacco, became the target
of a lawsuit by Anheuser-Busch, the worlds largest brewer.
A company spokesperson warned that the brewer would "vigorously
defend our right to advertise to adult consumers throughout the
nation and in all media." Anheuser-Buschs lawyers argued
that alcohol is a legal product, and therefore its advertising
should not be treated differently from any other form of advertising.
The court disagreed, basing its decision on a precedent set by
the U.S. Supreme Court in 1980, allowing regulations to restrict
commercial speech under certain conditions. The ruling in Anheuser-Busch
v. Schmoke found that the ordinance was legal for several
reasons, including the following:
- Baltimores
goal of protecting the welfare and temperance of children was
in the governments interest.
- The
ban was limited to areas in the city where children were likely
to be present.
- The
regulations did not limit the companys ability to advertise
in other venues.
- Billboards
are an appropriate target for regulation because of their intrusiveness
in a community.
- Children
deserve special protections from aggressive marketing practices.
Anheuser-Busch
appealed the decision in Anheuser-Busch v. Schmoke,
but it was upheld by the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals. The
brewer then appealed to the Supreme Court, which refused to hear
the case. It is likely that the Supreme Court will eventually
hear a case on the rights of commercial speech with respect to
products that are illegal for children. For now, however, two
lower courts have stood in favor of Baltimore, and other cities
are following its lead.