Posted on 01/30/2018 6:44:40 AM PST by markomalley
In 1986, Californias Proposition 65 (the Safe Drinking Water & Toxic Enforcement Act) was passed, placing restrictions on toxic discharges into drinking water and required that people be notified who were exposed to carcinogens and reproductive toxins.
While the idea sounded wonderful at the time, the implementation of the rules has created a plethora of warning labels that get ignored and an astonishing number of revenue-generating lawsuits targeting businesses selling products that contain trace amounts of substances unlikely to be harmful, given the dose and the typical use situation of the consumer.
Because coffee contains a trace amount of a chemical known as acrylamide (known to the State of California to cause cancer, birth defects, or other reproductive harm), it may be subject to these warnings and the coffee sellers may be facing fines:
A judge in California will soon decide whether coffee should carry warnings stating that it contains chemicals known to the state to cause cancer.
A long-running lawsuit that claims Starbucks and about 90 other companies, including grocery stores and retail shops, failed to follow a state law requiring warning signs about hazardous chemicals found everywhere from household products to workplaces to the environment.
At the center of the dispute is acrylamide, a carcinogen found in cooked foods such as French fries that is also a natural byproduct of the coffee roasting process. The coffee industry has acknowledged the presence of the chemical but asserts it is at harmless levels and is outweighed by benefits from drinking coffee.
A verdict in favor of the little-known Council for Education and Research on Toxics could send a jolt through the industry with astronomical penalties possible and it could wake up a lot of consumers, though its unclear what effect it would have on coffee-drinking habits.
It turns out that this is not the Council for Education and Research on Toxics first legal rodeo, either.
Council for Education and Research on Toxics (CERT) v. McDonalds and Burger King. In 2002, the Metzger Law Group filed the first Proposition 65 case regarding acrylamide on behalf of the Council for Education and Research on Toxics to require fast food companies such as McDonalds and Burger King to warn consumers of the acrylamide hazard in french fries.
Eventually the California Attorney General joined the suit and the Metzger Law Group co-litigated the case with the Attorney General. After 6 years of litigation and several months of expert depositions, the case settled in 2008 when McDonalds and Burger King agreed to provide cancer hazard warnings regarding acrylamide in their french fries, agreed to pay civil penalties to CERT and the Attorney General, and paid attorneys fees to the Metzger Law Group for protecting public health.
As a result of this lawsuit, fast food companies in California now give consumers such cancer hazard warnings regarding acrylamide in french fries. The lawsuit also prompted potato chip manufacturers such as Frito Lay to improve their production process to reduce the acrylamide content of their potato chips to safe levels.
The lawyer spear-heading the attack on Big Coffee is pursuing the case for entirely noble reasons.
Im addicted like two-thirds of the population, attorney Raphael Metzger said. I would like the industry to get acrylamide out of the coffee so my addiction doesnt force me to ingest it.
I would argue that CERT is addicted to the monies they get in the civil penalties.
The biggest problem with the implementation of Proposition 65 is that the level of no significant risk is difficult to define. As an example, what is the actual dose of acrylamide in coffee?
You need to drink 64 liters of roasted coffee brew a day to reach carcinogenic levels. Safe daily intake level of acrylamide before neurotoxic level is even higher at 40 μg/kg per day, equivalent to 6222 cups or 995 liters of roasted coffee brew a day. As you can see, the acrylamide levels found in coffee are safe.
I consume a lot of coffee while I blog, but I have yet to hit 64 liters daily.
What is really toxic is the effect of Proposition 65 on small businesses, as explained in this video.
(video at link)
I guess when the coffee shops close, Californians can head over to the pot-shop for the carcinogen-free marijuana.
When coffee is outlawed...
No doubt they will also want to make it illegal to dump old coffee down the drain.
California is a sanity risk.
Unless illegals drink it. Then its OK.
Hey, they want to fine food servers who give you a plastic straw without being asked. So why should we be surprised by this latest revelation?
Every day, in every way, Caliph-phony-a lives down to my tagline.
There are traces of arsenic in many foods,including rice-————will CA ban them next?
.
So much for the “coffee party”
They’ll probably look to throw on a $1/cup tax or something, to “discourage use” of coffee.
A quick google search reveals the harmful effects of pot. Leftist states are rushing to make pot easily available, and free, to all who want it. Those states must be held responsible for the damage they are doing to people. Their legislatures and governors need to do jail time.
But they won’t. Meanwhile, those leftist a$$holes want to criminalize coffee.
Over my cold, dead hands.
Wrong! I resent that. I am sane. It's the politicians and bureaucrats in Sacramento that are the sanity risk.
Mmmmm....this is a good cup of cancer.
Fascists looking for tax revenue, because they can’t govern.
Shouldnt the ruling hacks in Sacto be more concerned about providing more drinking water to the state than worrying about liquid bean juice hazards? Lieberlism mental disease strikes again.
There are 2821 Starbucks in CA. This ain’t going to pass.
Re: Theyll probably look to throw on a $1/cup tax or something, to discourage use of coffee.
Yes most likely. I also expect they will tax hotels and motels that have in room coffee makers. Restaurants. Fast food establishments that serve coffee. Grocery stores that sell coffee. The sky is the limit for new sources of tax dollars.
I foresee people smuggling coffee into the state. What next, speakeasies for coffee drinkers in California?
They must have some kind of think tank in Sacramento grabbing at any straw no matter how ludicrous to dream up these new taxes on things normal people wouldn’t even dream of.
Soon we’ll have to wear those things that count your footsteps so they can tax every step we take and every breath we take.
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