August 1, 2007
Contact: Josh Golin (617.278.4172;
jgolin@jbcc.harvard.edu)
For Immediate Release
Nation’s Strongest School Commercialism Bill Advances Out
of Committee
CCFC Lauds Joint Committee on Public Health
BOSTON – The Campaign for a
Commercial-Free Childhood (CCFC) lauded the Massachusetts’s
Joint Committee on Public Health for recommending approval of
the nation’s strongest school commercialism bill. H. 489,
An Act Relative to the Public Health Impact of Commercialism
in Schools, would prohibit advertising on public school
grounds.
“We are pleased that the Committee
recognizes the need for schools to be commercial-free zones
that provide children with a much-needed safe-haven from the
harmful marketing that permeates their lives,” said CCFC’s
co-founder, Dr. Susan Linn. “If passed, this legislation
would place Massachusetts at the forefront of the growing
movement to protect children from commercialism. We hope that
other states will follow suit.”
School-aged children are bombarded with
advertisements. They see an average of nearly 30,000
commercials on television alone, and television is only one of
the myriad ways children are exposed to advertising. While
marketers spent $100 million annually in the early 1980s
targeting children, they now spend approximately $17 billion.
Marketing is known to be a factor in many childhood ills,
including obesity, youth violence, precocious and
irresponsible sexuality, eating disorders, family conflict,
and increased materialism among youth.
In 2000, the U.S General Accounting
Office identified marketing in schools as a growth industry.
Schools are an increasingly popular venue for companies to
market their products to a captive audience of students as
many cash-strapped school districts use advertising revenue in
an attempt to plug budget gaps. But research has shown that
schools make little money from their participation in
advertising, and that most schools’ programs would not be
reduced if advertising were eliminated. In Massachusetts,
schoolchildren are exposed to advertising in their hallway,
sports fields, and cafeterias, as well as through
corporate-sponsored teaching materials and newscasts like
Channel One
Representative Peter Koutoujian’s “An Act
Relative to the Public Health Impact of Commercialism in
Schools,” would prohibit companies from advertising their
products on public school grounds. It would also prohibit
companies from providing any type of promotional items or
gifts – other than their primary products – which bear the
mark or brand name of the manufacturer’s products.
“We have our children in schools 6-8
hours a day and while they are in there, they are a captive
audience. We should be using that precious learning time for
education, not bombarding our children with ads,” Koutoujian
said. “The tools schools should be using should involve
blackboards - not billboards.”
Click here
for more information on the legislation.
The Campaign for a Commercial-Free
Childhood is a national coalition of health care
professionals, educators, advocacy groups and concerned
parents who counter the harmful effects of marketing to
children through action, advocacy, education, research, and
collaboration among organizations and individuals who care
about children. CCFC supports the rights of children to grow
up – and the rights of parents to raise them – without being
undermined by rampant commercialism. For more information,
please visit:
http://www.commercialfreechildhood.org.