Food Labeling; Nutrition Labeling of Standard Menu Items in Restaurants and Similar Retail Food Establishments, 71155-71259 [2014-27833]
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Vol. 79
Monday,
No. 230
December 1, 2014
Part II
Department of Health and Human Services
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Food and Drug Administration
21 CFR Parts 11 and 101
Food Labeling; Nutrition Labeling of Standard Menu Items in Restaurants
and Similar Retail Food Establishments; Calorie Labeling of Articles of
Food in Vending Machines; Final Rule
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 230 / Monday, December 1, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Food and Drug Administration
21 CFR Parts 11 and 101
[Docket No. FDA–2011–F–0172]
RIN 0910–AG57
Food Labeling; Nutrition Labeling of
Standard Menu Items in Restaurants
and Similar Retail Food
Establishments
AGENCY:
Food and Drug Administration,
HHS.
ACTION:
Final rule.
To implement the nutrition
labeling provisions of the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act of
2010 (Affordable Care Act or ACA), the
Food and Drug Administration (FDA or
we) is requiring disclosure of certain
nutrition information for standard menu
items in certain restaurants and retail
food establishments. The ACA, in part,
amended the Federal Food, Drug, and
Cosmetic Act (the FD&C Act), among
other things, to require restaurants and
similar retail food establishments that
are part of a chain with 20 or more
locations doing business under the same
name and offering for sale substantially
the same menu items to provide calorie
and other nutrition information for
standard menu items, including food on
display and self-service food. Under
provisions of the ACA, restaurants and
similar retail food establishments not
otherwise covered by the law may elect
to become subject to these Federal
requirements by registering every other
year with FDA. Providing accurate,
clear, and consistent nutrition
information, including the calorie
content of foods, in restaurants and
similar retail food establishments will
make such nutrition information
available to consumers in a direct and
accessible manner to enable consumers
to make informed and healthful dietary
choices.
DATES: Effective date: December 1, 2015.
Compliance date: Covered
establishments must comply with the
rule by December 1, 2015. See section
XXIII for more information on the
effective and compliance dates.
Comment Date: Submit comments on
information collection issues under the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 by
December 31, 2014 (see section XXVI,
the ‘‘Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995’’
section of this document).
ADDRESSES: To ensure that comments on
the information collection are received,
the Office of Management and Budget
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SUMMARY:
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(OMB) recommends that written
comments be faxed to the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs,
OMB, Attn: FDA Desk Officer, FAX:
202–395–7285, or emailed to oira_
submission@omb.eop.gov. All
comments should be identified with the
OMB control number 0910-New and
title ‘‘Food Labeling: Nutrition Labeling
of Standard Menu Items in Restaurants
and Similar Retail Food
Establishments.’’ Also include the FDA
docket number found in brackets in the
heading of this document.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Daniel Y. Reese, Center for Food Safety
and Applied Nutrition (HFS–820), Food
and Drug Administration, 5100 Paint
Branch Pkwy., College Park, MD 20740,
240–402–2371, email: Daniel.Reese@
fda.hhs.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
Executive Summary
Purpose and Coverage of the Final Rule
Summary of the Major Provisions of the
Final Rule
Costs and Benefits
I. Background
II. Legal Authority
III. General Comments on the Proposed Rule
A. Introduction
B. Description of General Comments and
FDA Response
IV. Comments and FDA Response on
Proposed Conforming Amendments
A. Section 11.1(g)—Electronic Signatures
B. Sections 101.9(j)(1)(i), (j)(2), and (j)(3)—
Nutrition Labeling of Food
C. Section 101.10—Nutrition Labeling of
Restaurant Foods Whose Labels or
Labeling Bear Nutrient Content Claims or
Health Claims
V. Key Terms That FDA Proposed to Define
(Proposed § 101.11(a))
VI. Comments and FDA Response on the
Proposed Definitions of Terms Related to
the Scope of Establishments Covered by
the Rule (Proposed § 101.11(a))
A. Introduction
B. Restaurant or Similar Retail Food
Establishment
C. Restaurant Food and Restaurant-Type
Food
D. Part of a Chain With 20 or More
Locations
E. Doing Business Under the Same Name
F. Offering for Sale Substantially the Same
Menu Items
G. Authorized Official of a Restaurant or
Similar Retail Food Establishment
H. Covered Establishment
I. Revisions to Several Provisions to Clarify
the Applicability of the Rule to Those
Restaurants and Similar Retail Food
Establishments That Are Covered
Establishments
VII. Comments and FDA Response on the
Proposed Definition of Menu or Menu
Board (Proposed § 101.11(a))
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VIII. Comments and FDA Response on the
Proposed Definition of Terms Related to
Foods Covered by the Rule (Proposed
§ 101.11(a))
A. Restaurant Food and Restaurant-Type
Food
B. Standard Menu Item
C. Combination Meal
D. Variable Menu Item
E. Food on Display
F. Self-Service Food
G. Custom Order
H. Daily Special
I. Food That Is Part of a Customary Market
Test
J. Temporary Menu Item
IX. Comments and FDA Response on
Proposed § 101.11(b)(1)(i)—Food Subject
to the Labeling Requirements
X. Comments and FDA Response on
Proposed § 101.11(b)(1)(ii)—Food Not
Subject to the Labeling Requirements
A. The Proposed Requirements
B. Alcohol
C. Condiments
D. Daily Specials, Temporary Menu Items,
Custom Orders, and Food That Is Part of
a Customary Market Test
E. Additional Comments on Food That Is
Part of a Customary Market Test
XI. Comments and FDA Response on
Proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1) to
(b)(2)(i)(A)(3)—General Requirements for
Calorie Declaration on Menus and Menu
Boards
XII. Additional Format Requirements That
Apply When Declaring Calories on
Menus and Menu Boards for Variable
Menu Items, Combination Meals, and
Toppings (Final § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4)
Through (b)(2)(i)(A)(8))
A. Proposed Format for Declaring Calories
for Variable Menu Items
B. Decision To Require Option 4
C. Requirements That Apply to Individual
Variable Menu Items (Final
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4))
D. Requirements That Apply to a Variable
Menu Item That Is Offered for Sale With
the Option of Adding Toppings Listed on
the Menu or Menu Board (Final
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(5))
E. Requirements That Apply to a
Combination Meal (Final
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6))
F. Format Requirements for Declaring
Calories for an Individual Variable Menu
Item, a Combination Meal, and Toppings
as a Range, if Applicable (Final
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(7))
G. Exception for a Variable Menu Item
When There Is No Clearly Identifiable
Upper Bound to the Range of Calories
(Final § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(8))
H. Declaring Calories Using Interactive
Menus or New Technology
XIII. Additional Requirements That Apply to
Beverages That Are Not Self-Service or
on Display (Final § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(9))
XIV. Comments and FDA Response on
Proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B)—Succinct
Statement That Must Be on Menus and
Menu Boards To Provide Context About
Calories in a Daily Diet
A. The Proposed Requirements
B. Principles for Establishing the Succinct
Statement
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C. Wording of the Succinct Statement
D. Succinct Statement on Menus Targeted
to Children
E. Requirements for the Succinct Statement
To Be Prominent, Clear, and
Conspicuous
F. Placement of the Succinct Statement on
Menus and Menu Boards
XV. Comments and FDA Response on
Proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C)—Statement
That Must Be on Menus and Menu
Boards About Availability of Written
Nutrition Information
A. Proposed Wording of the Statement of
Availability
B. Requirements for the Statement of
Availability To Be Prominent and
Conspicuous
C. Placement of the Statement of
Availability
XVI. Comments and FDA Response on
Proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(ii)—Nutrition
Information That Must Be Made
Available in Written Form
A. Required Nutrients
B. Manner of Presentation of the Written
Nutrition Information
C. Nutrients in Insignificant Amounts
D. Variable Menu Items
E. Form of the Written Nutrition
Information
XVII. Comments and FDA Response on
Proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(iii)—
Requirements for Food That Is SelfService or on Display
A. Applicability of § 101.11(b)(2)(i) to Food
That Is Self-Service or on Display
B. Placement of Calories for Self-Service
Foods and Foods on Display
C. Declaring Calories ‘‘Per Item’’ or ‘‘Per
Serving’’
D. Declaring Calories ‘‘Per Serving’’ for
Self-Service Beverages
E. Manner of Declaring Calories for SelfService Foods and Foods on Display
F. Applicability of Requirements for
Written Nutrition Information, Succinct
Statement, and Statement of Availability
to Self-Service Foods and Foods on
Display
G. Succinct Statement and Statement of
Availability for Self-Service Foods and
Foods on Display
H. The Written Nutrition Information That
Must Be Provided for Food That Is SelfService or on Display
XVIII. Comments and FDA Response on
Proposed § 101.11(c)(1) to (c)(5)—
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Determination of Nutrient Content (Final
§ 101.11(c)(1) to (c)(2))
XIX. Comments and FDA Response on
Proposed § 101.11(c)(6)—Substantiation
Documentation (Final 101.11(c)(3))
XX. Comments and FDA Response on
Proposed § 101.11(d)—Voluntary
Registration to Elect To Be Subject to the
Rule
XXI. Comments and FDA Response on
Proposed § 101.11(e)—Signatures
XXII. Comments and FDA Response on
Proposed § 101.11(f)—Misbranding
XXIII. Comments and FDA Response on
Effective Date
A. Proposed Effective Date and Request for
Comment
B. Comments on Proposed Effective Date
C. Effective Date and Compliance Date for
This Rule
XXIV. Comments and FDA Response on
Compliance
XXV. Final Regulatory Impact Analysis
XXVI. Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
XXVII. Federalism
XXVIII. Environmental Impact
XXIX. References
Executive Summary
Purpose and Coverage of the Final Rule
More than two thirds of adults and
about a third of children in the United
States are overweight or obese.
Overconsumption of calories is one of
the primary risk factors for overweight
and obesity. About half of consumers’
annual food dollars are spent on, and a
third of total calories come from, foods
prepared outside the home, including
foods from restaurants and similar retail
food establishments. Many people do
not know, or underestimate, the calorie
and nutrient content of these foods. To
help make nutrition information for
these foods available to consumers in a
direct, accessible, and consistent
manner to enable consumers to make
informed and healthful dietary choices,
section 4205 of the ACA requires that
calorie and other nutrition information
be provided to consumers in restaurants
and similar retail food establishments
that are part of a chain with 20 or more
locations doing business under the same
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name and offering for sale substantially
the same menu items (chain retail food
establishment). Section 4205 of the ACA
also provides that a restaurant or similar
retail food establishment that is not a
chain retail food establishment may
elect to be subject to section 4205’s
nutrition labeling requirements by
registering every other year with FDA.
To be covered by this rule, an
establishment must satisfy several
criteria. First, the establishment must be
a restaurant or similar retail food
establishment. Under this rule, that
means a retail establishment that offers
for sale restaurant-type food, except if it
is a school as defined in 7 CFR 210.2 or
220.2. Restaurants and similar retail
food establishments include bakeries,
cafeterias, coffee shops, convenience
stores, delicatessens, food service
facilities located within entertainment
venues (such as amusement parks,
bowling alleys, and movie theatres),
food service vendors (e.g., ice cream
shops and mall cookie counters), food
take-out and/or delivery establishments
(such as pizza take-out and delivery
establishments), grocery stores, retail
confectionary stores, superstores, quick
service restaurants, and table service
restaurants.
The rule defines ‘‘restaurant-type
food’’ in a way that both focuses on the
food most like the food offered for sale
in restaurants and reflects the statutory
context of section 4205 of the ACA. The
table that follows provides examples of
foods that generally would be
considered restaurant-type food (e.g.,
foods that are usually eaten on the
premises, while walking away, or soon
after arriving at another location), as
well as examples of foods that generally
would be not be considered restauranttype food (e.g., foods that are grocerytype items that consumers often store
for use at a later time or customarily
further prepare), for the purposes of this
rule.
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EXAMPLES OF FOODS THAT GENERALLY WOULD OR WOULD NOT BE CONSIDERED RESTAURANT-TYPE FOOD
Examples of foods that generally would not be considered
restaurant-type food
• Food for immediate consumption at a sit-down or quick service restaurant.
• Food purchased at a drive-through establishment ...............................
• Food purchased at a drive-through establishment ...............................
• Take-out and delivery pizza; hot pizza at grocery and convenience
stores that is ready to eat; pizza slice from a movie theater.
• Hot buffet food, hot soup at a soup bar, and food from a salad bar ...
• Foods ordered from a menu/menu board at a grocery store intended
for individual consumption (e.g., soups, sandwiches, and salads).
• Self-service foods and foods on display that are intended for individual consumption (e.g., sandwiches, wraps, and paninis at a deli
counter; salads plated by the consumer at a salad bar; cookies from
a mall cookie counter; bagels, donuts, rolls offered for individual
sale).
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Examples of foods that generally would be considered
restaurant-type food
• Certain foods bought from bulk bins or cases (e.g., dried fruit, nuts)
in grocery stores
• Foods to be eaten over several eating occasions or stored for later
use (e.g., loaves of bread, bags or boxes of dinner rolls, whole
cakes, and bags or boxes of candy or cookies)
• Foods that are usually further prepared before consuming (e.g., deli
meats and cheeses)
• Foods sold by weight that are not self-serve and are not intended
solely for individual consumption (e.g., deli salads sold by unit of
weight such as potato salad, chicken salad), either prepacked or
packed upon consumer request
Consistent with the statute, to be
covered by the rule, a restaurant or
similar retail establishment must be
‘‘part of a chain with 20 or more
locations doing business under the same
name (regardless of the type of
ownership of the locations) and offering
for sale substantially the same menu
items.’’ A restaurant or similar retail
food establishment that does not satisfy
these criteria may choose to be covered
by the rule by registering with FDA
using a process established in the rule.
Under the rule, ‘‘location’’ means a
fixed position or site. Transportation
venues such as trains and airplanes are
not covered by the rule because they do
not have a fixed position or site. ‘‘Doing
business under the same name’’ means
a restaurant or similar retail food
establishment must share the same
name as other establishments in the
chain (regardless of the type of
ownership of the locations, e.g.,
individual franchises). The term
‘‘name’’ refers to either the name of the
establishment presented to the public
or, if there is no name of the
establishment presented to the public
(e.g., an establishment with the generic
descriptor ‘‘concession stand’’), the
name of the parent entity of the
establishment. ‘‘Offering for sale
substantially the same menu items’’
means offering for sale a significant
proportion of menu items that use the
same general recipe and are prepared in
substantially the same way with
substantially the same food
components, even if the name of the
menu item varies.
The nutrition labeling requirements of
the rule apply to standard menu items
offered for sale in covered
establishments. ‘‘Standard menu item’’
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means a restaurant-type food that is
routinely included on a menu or menu
board or routinely offered as a selfservice food or food on display. The
nutrition labeling requirements are not
applicable to certain foods, including
foods that are not standard menu items,
such as condiments, daily specials,
temporary menu items, custom orders,
and food that is part of a customary
market test; and self-service food and
food on display that is offered for sale
for less than a total of 60 days per
calendar year or fewer than 90
consecutive days in order to test
consumer acceptance. In addition, the
rule exempts alcohol beverages that are
food on display and are not self-service
food (e.g., bottles of liquor behind the
bar used to prepare mixed drinks) from
the labeling requirements that apply to
food on display.
Summary of the Major Provisions of the
Final Rule
The rule includes provisions that:
• Define terms, including terms that
describe criteria for determining
whether an establishment is subject to
the rule;
• Establish which foods are subject to
the nutrition labeling requirements and
which foods are not subject to these
requirements;
• Require that calories for standard
menu items be declared on menus and
menu boards that list such foods for
sale;
• Require that calories for standard
menu items that are self-service or on
display be declared on signs adjacent to
such foods;
• Require that written nutrition
information for standard menu items be
available to consumers who ask to see
it;
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• Require, on menus and menu
boards, a succinct statement concerning
suggested daily caloric intake (succinct
statement), designed to help the public
understand the significance of the
calorie declarations;
• Require, on menus and menu
boards, a statement regarding the
availability of the written nutrition
information (statement of availability);
• Establish requirements for
determination of nutrient content of
standard menu items;
• Establish requirements for
substantiation of nutrient content
determined for standard menu items,
including requirements for records that
a covered establishment must make
available to FDA within a reasonable
period of time upon request; and
• Establish terms and conditions
under which restaurants and similar
retail food establishments not otherwise
subject to the rule could elect to be
subject to the requirements by
registering with FDA.
Costs and Benefits
The statute requires nutrition labeling
for standard menu items on menus and
menu boards for certain restaurants and
similar retail food establishments and
calorie labeling for food sold from
certain vending machines. FDA is
issuing two separate final rules (one for
menu labeling and one for vending
machine labeling) to implement those
labeling requirements. Taken together
the labeling requirements (of the menu
labeling and vending machine labeling
rules combined) are estimated to have
benefits exceeding costs by $477.9
million on an annualized basis (over 20
years discounted at 7 percent).
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71159
SUMMARY OF COSTS AND BENEFITS OF MENU LABELING AND VENDING MACHINE RULES
[In millions]
Potential benefits
Rate
Total for Labeling (menu and vending rules) over 20 years* ....................................
Annualized for Labeling (menu and vending rules) over 20 years* ..........................
Total for Menu Labeling over 20 years .....................................................................
Annualized for Menu Labeling over 20 years ............................................................
3
7
3
7
3
7
3
7
$9,221.3
6,752.8
601.9
595.5
9,221.3
6,752.8
601.9
595.5
Estimated
costs
$1,697.9
1,333.9
110.8
117.6
1,166.8
932.8
76.9
84.5
Net benefits
$7,523.4
5,418.9
491.1
477.9
8,054.5
5,820.0
525.01
510.99
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* Benefits for the vending machine labeling rule are not quantified and are not counted in these values.
I. Background
More than two thirds of adults and
about a third of children in the United
States are overweight or obese (Refs. 1
and 2). Overconsumption of calories is
one of the primary risk factors for
overweight and obesity (Ref. 3). About
half of consumers’ annual food dollars
are spent on, and a third of total calories
come from, foods prepared outside the
home, including foods from restaurants
and similar retail food establishments
(Refs. 4 to 6). Research indicates that
many people do not know, or
underestimate, the calorie and nutrient
content of these foods (Ref. 7).
Since the early 1990s, the Nutrition
Labeling and Education Act of 1990
(NLEA) and our regulations in § 101.9
(21 CFR 101.9) implementing the NLEA
have required that the labeling for many
foods bear nutrition information,
including calorie information. However,
as we noted in the proposed rule (76 FR
19192 at 19193; April 6, 2011), the
NLEA left a gap in the Federal
requirements for nutrition labeling
through certain exemptions. The NLEA
included an exemption for nutrition
labeling for food that is ‘‘served in
restaurants or other establishments in
which food is served for immediate
human consumption’’ or ‘‘sold for sale
or use in such establishments’’ (section
403(q)(5)(A)(i) of the FD&C Act) (21
U.S.C. 343(q)(5)(A)(i)). The NLEA also
included an exemption for food of the
type described in section 403(q)(5)(A)(i)
that is primarily processed and prepared
in a retail establishment, ready for
human consumption, ‘‘offered for sale to
consumers but not for immediate
human consumption in such
establishment and which is not offered
for sale outside such establishment’’
(section 403(q)(5)(A)(ii) of the FD&C
Act). However, these exemptions were
contingent on there being no nutrient
content claims or health claims made on
the label or labeling, or in the
advertising, for the food. Current
provisions in § 101.10 (21 CFR 101.10)
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require restaurants and other
establishments in which food is offered
for human consumption that make
either a nutrient content claim (defined
in § 101.13 (21 CFR 101.13)) or health
claim (defined in 21 CFR 101.14) to
provide certain nutrition information
upon request. For example, if a menu
lists an entree as being low in fat,
information about the amount of fat in
the entree must be available upon
request (§ 101.10).
Section 101.9(j)(2) of our regulations
implementing the NLEA includes
examples of restaurants or other
establishments in which food sold for
immediate human consumption
generally was exempted from nutrition
labeling requirements under the NLEA.
Section 101.9(j)(3) of these regulations
includes examples of food sold in
establishments in which food is
processed and prepared, ready for
human consumption, offered for sale to
consumers but not for immediate
consumption, and not offered for sale
outside of the establishments.
Several State and local governments
enacted their own laws requiring
nutrition labeling on menus and menu
boards to fill the gap in the Federal
requirements. However, these State and
local requirements vary significantly in
their substantive requirements and the
set of establishments to which they
apply.
On March 23, 2010, the ACA (Pub. L.
111–148) was signed into law. Section
4205 of the ACA amends section 403(q)
of the FD&C Act, which governs
nutrition labeling requirements, and
section 403A of the FD&C Act (21 U.S.C.
343–1), which governs Federal
preemption of State and local food
labeling requirements. As amended,
section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act
requires chain retail food establishments
with 20 or more locations to provide
calorie information for standard menu
items, including food on display and
self-service food, and to provide, upon
consumer request, additional written
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nutrition information for standard menu
items (21 U.S.C. 343(q)(5)(H)(i) to (iii)).
Section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act
also provides that a restaurant or similar
retail food establishment not otherwise
subject to the requirements of section
403(q)(5)(H) (e.g., a restaurant that is not
part of a chain with 20 or more
locations) may elect to be subject to the
requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H) by
registering every other year with FDA
(21 U.S.C. 343(q)(5)(H)(ix)). Thus,
‘‘covered establishments’’ include both
chain retail food establishments and
other restaurants or similar retail food
establishments that voluntarily register
to be subject to the rule. A standard
menu item offered for sale in a covered
establishment is deemed to be
misbranded if the requirements of
section 403(q)(5)(H) are not met.
Section 4205 of the ACA became
effective on the date the law was signed,
March 23, 2010; however, FDA must
issue rules before some provisions can
be required. On July 7, 2010, we
published a notice in the Federal
Register to solicit comments and
suggestions on the new law (2010
docket notice) (75 FR 39026). On August
25, 2010, we published for public
comment a draft guidance entitled
‘‘Draft Guidance for Industry: Questions
and Answers Regarding Implementation
of the Menu Labeling Provisions of
Section 4205 of the Patient Protection
and Affordable Care Act of 2010’’ (draft
implementation guidance) (Ref. 8) (75
FR 52426), describing which provisions
became requirements upon enactment of
the law, which provisions we would
implement through rulemaking, and
draft interpretations of certain
provisions, including a broad
interpretation of the scope of
establishments covered. On January 25,
2011, we published in the Federal
Register a notice withdrawing the draft
implementation guidance (76 FR 4360)
and announcing our intent to exercise
our enforcement discretion until we
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complete the notice and comment
rulemaking process.
In the Federal Register of April 6,
2011 (76 FR 19192), we issued a
proposed rule (proposed rule) to
implement the requirements of section
4205 of the ACA for the nutrition
labeling of standard menu items in
certain restaurants and similar retail
food establishments. We requested
public comments on the proposed
requirements and some alternatives by
June 6, 2011. In the Federal Register of
May 24, 2011 (76 FR 30050), we issued
a document (correction document)
correcting errors in the proposed rule,
including errors in cross-references, an
incomplete address, and a typographical
error in the codified section of the
document. In the Federal Register of
May 24, 2011 (76 FR 30051), we
extended the comment period until July
5, 2011.
In the proposed rule, we described
both the provisions that became
requirements upon enactment (i.e., they
are self-executing) and the provisions
that depend on FDA to issue rules
before they can become effective (76 FR
19192 at 19194). We also noted that we
had published the draft implementation
guidance and described the issues
addressed by the draft implementation
guidance. In the proposed rule, we
reiterated that we intended to exercise
enforcement discretion for the selfexecuting provisions of section 4205 of
the ACA and described our reasons for
doing so (76 FR 19192 at 19194).
After considering comments to the
proposed rule, we are issuing this final
rule to implement the requirements of
section 4205 of the ACA for the
nutrition labeling of standard menu
items in certain chain restaurants and
similar retail food establishments.
In addition to the nutrition labeling
requirements for standard menu items,
other amendments made by section
4205 of the ACA to the FD&C Act
(specifically, section
403(q)(5)(H)(viii)(I)) establish calorie
disclosure requirements for certain
articles of food sold from vending
machines. We published a proposed
rule to implement the vending machine
provisions of section 403(q) of the FD&C
Act on April 6, 2011 (76 FR 19238; the
proposed vending machine rule).
Elsewhere in this issue of the Federal
Register, we are issuing a final rule to
implement the vending machine
provisions of section 403(q)(5)(H)(viii)(I)
of the FD&C Act.
II. Legal Authority
On March 23, 2010, the ACA was
signed into law. Section 4205 of the
ACA amended section 403(q)(5) of the
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FD&C Act by amending section
403(q)(5)(A) and by creating new clause
(H), which requires, in relevant part,
covered establishments to provide
certain nutrient declarations for
standard menu items in the labeling for
such foods. Under section 403(f) of the
FD&C Act, any word, statement, or other
information required by or under
authority of the FD&C Act to appear on
the label or labeling of a food is required
to be prominently placed thereon with
such conspicuousness (as compared
with other words, statements, designs,
or devices, in the labeling) and in such
terms as to render it likely to be read
and understood by the ordinary
individual under customary conditions
of purchase and use. Under section
403(a)(1) of the FD&C Act, food labeling
must be truthful and non-misleading.
Because food that is not in compliance
with section 403 is deemed misbranded,
food to which these requirements apply
is deemed misbranded if these
requirements are not met. In addition,
under section 201(n) of the FD&C Act
(21 U.S.C. 321(n)), the labeling of a food
is misleading if it fails to reveal facts
that are material in light of
representations made in the labeling or
with respect to consequences that may
result from use. Section 403(q)(5)(H)(x)
of the FD&C Act requires that the
Secretary of Health and Human Services
(Secretary) issue regulations to carry out
requirements in section 403(q)(5)(H).
Section 701(a) of the FD&C Act (21
U.S.C. 371(a)) vests the Secretary with
the authority to issue regulations for the
efficient enforcement of the FD&C Act.
Thus, we have the authority to issue this
final rule under sections 201(n),
403(a)(1), 403(f), 403(q)(5)(H), and
701(a) of the FD&C Act.
We have revised our labeling
regulations by adding new § 101.11 to
require that covered establishments
provide calorie and other nutrition
information for standard menu items,
including food on display and selfservice food. Also, we are establishing
the terms and conditions for voluntary
registration by establishments that are
not otherwise subject to the
requirements of section 4205 of the ACA
but elect to become subject to such
requirements.
III. General Comments on the Proposed
Rule
A. Introduction
We received approximately 900
submissions on the proposed rule by the
close of the comment period, each
containing one or more comments. We
received submissions from consumers;
consumer groups; trade organizations;
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industry (including restaurants,
entertainment venues, food service
operations, and grocery stores); public
health organizations; public advocacy
groups; contractors; Congress; Federal,
State, and local Government Agencies;
and other organizations.
We describe and respond to the
comments in sections III, IV, VI through
XXIV, and XXVII of this document. To
make it easier to identify comments and
our responses, the word ‘‘Comment,’’ in
parentheses, appears before the
comment’s description, and the word
‘‘Response,’’ in parentheses, appears
before our response. We have also
numbered each comment and response
to help distinguish between different
comments and responses. The number
assigned to each comment is purely for
organizational purposes and does not
signify the comment’s value or
importance or the order in which it was
received.
B. Description of General Comments
and FDA Response
Many comments made general
remarks supporting or opposing the rule
and did not focus on a particular section
of the rule. The majority of these
comments expressed general support for
nutrition labeling of standard menu
items in covered establishments, and we
do not discuss them in detail. In the
following paragraphs, we discuss
general comments that did not support
the rule as proposed.
(Comment 1) Some comments stated
that people do not need to be told what
to eat. Some comments asserted that
calorie disclosure on menus will either
cause eating disorders or affect those
with eating disorders. Other comments
asserted that the menu labeling
requirements will not affect consumer
behavior, there will be information
overload, and people will ignore the
information. Some comments
considered that the menu labeling
requirements will promote healthier
choices, whereas other comments
considered that the menu labeling
requirements will not promote healthier
choices. Some comments supported the
menu labeling requirements but
considered that education is needed to
fight obesity.
(Response 1) The rule does not tell
consumers what they should or should
not eat. The nutrition labeling required
by section 4205 of the ACA will provide
nutrition information to consumers in
covered establishments in a direct,
accessible, and consistent manner to
enable consumers to make informed
choices about the foods they purchase
in such establishments.
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About half of consumers’ annual food
dollars are spent on, and a third of total
calories come from, foods prepared
outside of the home, including foods
from restaurants or similar retail food
establishments (Refs. 4 to 6). Further,
research indicates that many people do
not know, or underestimate, the calorie
and nutrient content of these foods (Ref.
7). Accordingly, providing direct access
to nutrition information for these foods
will enable consumers to make
informed decisions within the context
of nutrition regarding the foods they
purchase in restaurants or similar retail
food establishments. Providing nutrition
information to consumers for standard
menu items offered for sale in covered
establishments will give consumers
much needed access to essential
nutrition information for a large and
growing number of the foods they
purchase and consume. In addition, it
will allow consumers to make informed
nutritional comparisons between
different foods and informed purchase
decisions. Further, section 4205 of the
ACA and this rule require covered
establishments to post, on menus and
menu boards, a succinct statement
concerning suggested daily caloric
intake designed to enable consumers to
understand, in the context of a total
daily diet, the significance of the calorie
information provided on menus and
menu boards. This statement, along
with the required calorie information,
will enable consumers to better
understand the significance of the
calorie information provided on menus
and menu boards and the potential
impacts of overconsumption of calories.
As a result, the information will enable
consumers to assess their calorie intake
during short- or long-term settings and
better understand how the foods that
they purchase at covered establishments
fit within their daily caloric and other
nutritional needs.
The comments provided no evidence
that the provision of nutrition labeling
at the point of purchase causes or
adversely affects those with eating
disorders. For nearly two decades,
consumers have had access to this type
of information on the labels of packaged
foods that bear the Nutrition Facts label
in accordance with § 101.9. We are not
aware of data or other information
demonstrating that the availability of
nutrition information through the
Nutrition Facts Panel has either caused
eating disorders or negatively impacted
persons with eating disorders. In
addition, Congress, through section
4205 of the ACA, requires covered
establishments to provide calorie and
other nutrition information for standard
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menu items. This rulemaking
implements that Congressional
mandate.
(Comment 2) Some comments
considered that the requirements are
unnecessary because most ‘‘fast food’’
restaurants have the information
already. One comment considered that
the proposed requirements constitute a
tax increase designed to relieve the
individual of personal responsibility.
(Response 2) Section 4205 of the ACA
requires covered establishments to
provide calorie and other information
for standard menu items on menus,
menu boards, signs adjacent to selfservice foods and foods on display and
additional nutrition information for
standard menu items in written form,
available on the premises, to consumers
on request. Therefore, section 4205 of
the ACA requires covered
establishments to provide nutrition
information to consumers in a direct,
accessible, and consistent manner,
typically at points of purchase, where
consumers make order selections. While
some ‘‘fast food’’ establishments may
already have some nutrition information
available to consumers in some fashion,
these establishments are a subset of the
establishments required to comply with
the requirements of this rule, and these
establishments may not be providing
nutrition information to consumers in
the manner required by section 4205 of
the ACA.
Regarding the comment asserting that
the proposed requirements somehow
negate personal responsibility, we
reiterate that the requirements do not
tell consumers what they should or
should not eat or otherwise interfere
with a consumer’s ability to purchase
foods. In fact, as we noted previously,
this rule requires covered
establishments to provide accurate
nutrition information to consumers in a
direct and accessible manner to enable
consumers to make informed and
healthful dietary choices.
(Comment 3) Some comments
addressed concerns related to
enforcement. One comment expressed
concern that the proposed rule did not
set forth a clear ‘‘chain of liability’’ for
food that is misbranded under the rule
and related provisions of the FD&C Act,
specifically sections 201(n), 403(a), or
403(q) of the FD&C Act. The comment
stated that it is unclear whether FDA
might impose vicarious liability on the
franchisor or licensor of a restaurant for
such misbranded food, particularly
where the franchisor or licensor retains
power over the menus and menu boards
used by the restaurants. The comment
also expressed concern that restaurants
that ‘‘unwittingly ’misbrand’ their menu
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offerings’’ will be held liable for their
food that is misbranded under this rule
and related provisions of the FD&C Act.
(Response 3) Persons exercising
authority and supervisory responsibility
over a restaurant or similar retail food
establishment can be held responsible
for violations under the FD&C Act. See
United States v. Park, 421 U.S. 658, 659
(1978). (‘‘The Act imposes upon persons
exercising authority and supervisory
responsibility reposed in them by a
business organization not only a
positive duty to seek out and remedy
violations but also, and primarily, a
duty to implement measures that will
insure that violations will not occur
. . . .’’) (citing United States v.
Dotterweich, 320 U.S. 277 (1943)).
Agency decisions regarding enforcement
actions will be determined on a case by
case basis.
(Comment 4) Some comments
addressed issues unrelated to the
specific nutrition labeling requirements
of section 4205 of the ACA, such as
labeling of genetically engineered foods,
allergens, gluten, food additives
(including preservatives), artificial
sweeteners, ingredients, pesticides, and
organic foods; labeling to indicate
whether a food has been irradiated;
labeling of alcohol as a toxin; labeling
the country of origin; and labeling the
‘‘gender of meat products.’’
(Response 4) Section 4205 of the ACA
requires covered establishments to
provide certain nutrition information for
standard menu items. It does not
address the labeling issues raised in
these comments. Therefore, we do not
address these issues in this document.
(Comment 5) Some comments
directed to what establishments would
be covered by the rule pointed to a
report submitted by a U.S. House of
Representatives Appropriations
Committee explaining an appropriations
bill for Agriculture, Rural Development,
Food and Drug Administration, and
Related Agencies for fiscal year 2012
(Ref. 9). The comments quoted an
excerpt from the report (‘‘. . . and the
Committee believes that the FDA should
define the term restaurant to mean only
restaurants doing business marketed
under the same name or retail
establishments where the primary
business is the selling of food for
immediate consumption . . .’’) to
signify Congressional intent on the
scope of establishments subject to
section 4205 of the ACA or as evidence
supporting their own recommendations
regarding the establishments that should
be covered by the rule. (We note that
some comments reported the date of the
report as June 3, 2011, and one
comment reported the date of the report
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as May 27, 2011. We identified a report
dated June 3, 2011 (Ref. 9), but did not
identify a report dated May 27, 2011.
For the purpose of this document, we
assume that the comments are referring
to the report dated June 3, 2011.)
(Response 5) We disagree that an
Appropriations Committee report from a
Congress subsequent to the Congress
that passed section 4205 of the ACA can
be used as evidence of the intent of the
previous Congress that passed section
4205. The Appropriations Committee
report cited by the comments is dated
after the ACA was passed, so it is not
part of the relevant legislative history
and carries no interpretive weight on
this issue (see, e.g., Bruesewitz v. Wyeth,
131 U.S. 1068, 1081 (2011)).
IV. Comments and FDA Response on
Proposed Conforming Amendments
A. Section 11.1(g)—Electronic
Signatures
Proposed § 11.1(g) (21 CFR 11.1(g))
would provide that 21 CFR part 11
regarding electronic signatures does not
apply to electronic signatures obtained
under the voluntary registration
provision for covered restaurants and
similar retail food establishments at
proposed § 101.11(d).
We received no comments on this
proposed provision and are finalizing it
without change.
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B. Sections 101.9(j)(1)(i), (j)(2) and
(j)(3)—Nutrition Labeling of Food
Our proposed amendment to
§ 101.9(j)(1)(i) would specify that claims
or other nutrition information subject
the food to the nutrition labeling
provisions of § 101.11 as well as § 101.9
or § 101.10 (nutrition labeling of
restaurant foods), as applicable.
Our proposed amendments to
§ 101.9(j)(2) and (j)(3) would change the
introductory text of paragraphs (j)(2)
and (j)(3) to add the phrase ‘‘Except as
provided in § 101.11, food products that
are:’’.
We received no comments on these
proposed provisions and are finalizing
them without change. However, we also
are adding a conforming amendment to
add the phrase ‘‘Except as provided in
§ 101.11’’ to the beginning of the first
sentence in § 101.9(j)(4). As with
§ 101.9(j)(2) and (j)(3), § 101.9(j)(4)
needs to be revised to exclude standard
menu items sold in covered
establishments and reference the special
labeling requirements for those foods in
§ 101.11 (see § 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)).
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C. Section 101.10—Nutrition Labeling of
Restaurant Foods Whose Labels or
Labeling Bear Nutrient Content Claims
or Health Claims
Our proposed amendment to § 101.10
would provide that the information in
the written nutrition information
required by § 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(A) for
standard menu items that are offered for
sale in covered establishments (as
defined in § 101.11(a)) will serve to
meet the requirements of § 101.10.
We received no comments on this
proposed provision. Given our removal
of the term ‘‘restaurant food’’ and our
revision of the term ‘‘restaurant-type
food’’ in § 101.11, we are adding a
conforming amendment to ensure that
the use of the term ‘‘restaurant foods’’ in
§ 101.10, which predates the ACA, is
not confusing. We are inserting three
sentences between the current first and
second sentences of § 101.10, to clarify
that the scope of § 101.10 includes those
foods described in section
403(q)(5)(A)(i) and (ii) of the FD&C Act.
These sentences describe that, for the
purposes of § 101.10, restaurant food
includes two categories of food. The
first category of food is that which is
served in restaurants or other
establishments in which food is served
for immediate human consumption or
which is sold for sale or use in such
establishments. The second category of
food is that which is processed and
prepared primarily in a retail
establishment, which is ready for
human consumption, which is of the
type described in the first category, and
which is offered for sale to consumers
but not for immediate consumption in
such establishment and which is not
offered for sale outside such
establishment. This scope is reflected in
numerous prior Agency statements,
including in the preamble to our final
rule entitled ‘‘Food Labeling: Nutrient
Content Claims, General Principles,
Petitions, Definition of Terms;
Definitions of Nutrient Content Claims
for the Fat, Fatty Acid, and Cholesterol
Content of Food’’ (58 FR 2302, 2386,
January 6, 1993), and in our 2008
‘‘Guidance for Industry: A Labeling
Guide for Restaurants and Other Retail
Establishments Selling Away-FromHome Foods’’ (Ref. 10). This change
does not alter the meaning or
applicability of § 101.10.
V. Key Terms That FDA Proposed To
Define (Proposed § 101.11(a))
To establish the scope of
establishments, labeling, and food
covered by section 4205 of the ACA, we
proposed to define key terms (proposed
§ 101.11(a)). We also proposed to
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establish that the definitions in section
201 of the FD&C Act apply when used
in § 101.11 (proposed § 101.11(a)). We
received no comments regarding the use
of statutory definitions in section 201 of
the FD&C Act, and we are finalizing that
provision without change.
In the next section of this document,
we discuss the final definitions and
related comments, organized into three
categories: (1) Terms related to the
scope of establishments covered by the
rule, (2) the terms menu and menu
board, and (3) terms related to foods
covered. This organization is consistent
with our discussion of our proposed
terms in the preamble to the proposed
rule.
VI. Comments and FDA Response on
the Proposed Definitions of Terms
Related to the Scope of Establishments
Covered by the Rule (Proposed
§ 101.11(a))
A. Introduction
To specify establishments that would
be subject to the nutrition labeling
requirements of section 4205 of the
ACA, we proposed to define ‘‘covered
establishment’’ to mean a restaurant or
similar retail food establishment that is
a part of a chain with 20 or more
locations doing business under the same
name (regardless of the type of
ownership, e.g., individual franchises)
and offering for sale substantially the
same menu items, as well as a restaurant
or similar retail food establishment that
is registered to be covered under section
403(q)(5)(H)(ix) of the FD&C Act.
(Emphasis added).
Importantly, the definition of
‘‘covered establishment’’ includes
several terms, identified in italics, that
are defined in the rule. In addition, the
proposed definition of one of these
terms—i.e., ‘‘restaurant or similar retail
food establishment’’—includes other
terms we proposed to define—i.e.,
‘‘restaurant food’’ and ‘‘restaurant-type
food.’’ Thus, any revisions we make to
the proposed definitions of any of these
terms may affect whether a particular
establishment is a ‘‘covered
establishment’’ for the purposes of this
rule. As discussed more fully in sections
VI.B, VI.C, VI.D, VI.E, and VI.F:
• We have revised the definition of
‘‘restaurant or similar retail food
establishment’’ to mean a retail
establishment that offers for sale
restaurant-type food, except if it is a
school as defined in 7 CFR 210.1 or
220.2;
• We have revised the definition of
the term ‘‘restaurant-type food’’ to focus
on the food most like the food offered
for sale in restaurants;
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• We are adding a definition of
‘‘locations’’ to clarify our interpretation
of ‘‘part of a chain with 20 or more
locations’’;
• We have revised the definition of
‘‘doing business under the same name’’
so that the term ‘‘name’’ refers to either
(1) the name of the establishment
presented to the public or (2), if there is
no name of the establishment presented
to the public (e.g., an establishment
with the generic descriptor ‘‘concession
stand’’), the name of the parent entity of
the establishment; and
• We have revised the definition of
‘‘offering for sale substantially the same
menu items’’ to add a qualitative
description of the number of menu
items that must be shared in order for
the criterion of ‘‘offering for sale
substantially the same menu items’’ to
be met.
We proposed to define the term ‘‘gross
floor area’’ because we proposed that it
be used in the definition of restaurant or
similar retail food establishment. While
we received comments on this proposed
definition, as discussed in section
VI.B.2 the definition of restaurant or
similar retail food establishment in this
rule no longer considers gross floor area.
Therefore, we are deleting the proposed
definition of ‘‘gross floor area’’ because
it is no longer relevant to the scope of
establishments covered by this rule.
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B. Restaurant or Similar Retail Food
Establishment
1. The Proposed Definition
Proposed § 101.11(a) would define
‘‘restaurant or similar retail food
establishment’’ as a retail establishment
that offers for sale restaurant or
restaurant-type food, where the sale of
food is the primary business activity of
that establishment. Proposed § 101.11(a)
would provide that the sale of food is
the retail establishment’s primary
business activity if the establishment
presents itself, or has presented itself
publicly as a restaurant (primary
purpose 1), or a total of more than 50
percent of that retail establishment’s
gross floor area is used for the
preparation, purchase, service,
consumption, or storage of food
(primary purpose 2). (See Figure 1 in the
proposed rule (76 FR 19192 at 19201),
in which we coined the terms ‘‘primary
purpose 1’’ and ‘‘primary purpose 2.’’
We did not include these coined terms
in the regulatory text of the definition.
In this document, we are using these
coined terms to simplify the discussion.
We also are coining the term ‘‘primary
business test’’ to simplify the discussion
of the criterion for the primary business
activity of the establishment.) Under an
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alternative approach we discussed in
the proposed rule (76 FR 19192 at
19197) (the alternative revenue
approach), ‘‘primary purpose 2’’ would
be that more than 50 percent of the
retail establishment’s gross revenues are
generated by the sale of food rather than
that more than 50 percent of the retail
establishment’s gross floor area is used
for the preparation, purchase, service,
consumption, or storage of food.
In the proposed rule (76 FR 19192 at
19198), we also discussed an alternative
(the restaurant-type food alternative) in
which the sale of restaurant or
restaurant-type food (rather than the
sale of food in general) would be the
primary business activity of the
establishment. Under the restauranttype food alternative, ‘‘primary purpose
2’’ would be that a total of more than 50
percent of a retail establishment’s gross
floor area is used for the preparation,
purchase, service, consumption, or
storage of restaurant or restaurant-type
food or its ingredients.
In the proposed rule (76 FR 19192 at
19198), we acknowledged that many
facilities that sell restaurant or
restaurant-type food are located within
larger retail establishments, such as
coffee shops in bookstores or concession
stands in movie theaters. We considered
that some of these facilities would be
separate retail establishments, while
others would be part of their larger retail
establishments. We explained that if a
facility that is inside a larger
establishment is part of a chain with
locations outside of the chain of the
larger establishment, the facility would
be considered a separate establishment.
For example, if a coffee shop in a
bookstore is part of a chain of coffee
shops with locations outside of the
chain of bookstores, the coffee shop
would be considered a separate retail
establishment. By contrast, if a facility
is not part of a chain with locations
outside of the chain of the larger
establishment, the facility would be
considered part of the larger
establishment. Thus, a movie theater
concession stand that appears only in
other movie theaters in that particular
chain of movie theaters would not be
considered a separate establishment for
the purposes of this proposed rule.
As an example of how all of the
elements of the proposed definition of
restaurant or similar retail food
establishment fit together, movie
theaters would not have met the
proposed definition of restaurant or
similar retail food establishment. Movie
theaters usually do not present
themselves as restaurants. In addition,
movie theaters usually neither dedicate
more than 50 percent of their gross floor
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71163
area to the sale of food, nor generate
more than 50 percent of their gross
revenues from the sale of food. Thus,
under the proposed definition of
‘‘restaurant or similar retail food
establishment,’’ movie theater
concession stands generally would not
have been covered regardless of whether
‘‘primary purpose 2’’ is based on the
percent of gross floor area dedicated to
the sale of food or on the alternative
revenue approach based on the percent
of gross revenues from the sale of food.
In the proposed rule (76 FR 19192 at
19197 to 19199), we acknowledged that
the statutory language is ambiguous
with respect to the scope of
establishments covered by section 4205
of the ACA, and asked for comments on:
• Whether we should use ‘‘primary
business activity,’’ or a different test, as
a basis for determining whether an
establishment is a restaurant or similar
retail food establishment;
• Whether we should use the sale of
food in general, or the sale of restauranttype food, as the criterion for ‘‘primary
business activity’’;
• Whether we should use the
alternative revenue approach, rather
than a floor space approach, in ‘‘primary
purpose 2’’;
• Whether we should choose a
different number for the cutoff for the
percent of gross floor area for
determining the primary business
activity of the retail establishment;
• Whether we should choose a
different criteria for determining
primary business activity, such as
whether the consumer pays for
admission to the establishment; and
• Whether a facility selling restaurant
or restaurant-type food that is not part
of a chain with locations outside of the
chain of a larger retail establishment
should be included within the
definition of restaurant or similar retail
food establishment. We particularly
requested comment on this approach
with respect to larger retail
establishments such as movie theaters,
other entertainment-type venues, and
superstores that offer restaurant or
restaurant-type food.
In the following paragraphs, we
discuss comments on the proposed
definition of ‘‘restaurant or similar retail
food establishment.’’ After considering
these comments, we have revised the
proposed definition to eliminate the
primary business test.
Importantly, the proposed definition
of ‘‘restaurant or similar retail food
establishment’’ included the terms
‘‘restaurant and restaurant-type food’’
and, thus, revisions to those terms also
may affect whether a particular
establishment is a ‘‘restaurant or similar
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retail food establishment’’ for the
purposes of this rule. As discussed more
fully in section VI.C, we are deleting the
term ‘‘restaurant food’’ throughout the
rule and establishing a revised
definition of ‘‘restaurant-type food’’ that
better reflects the food most like the
food offered for sale in restaurants.
With these changes, in this rule
‘‘restaurant or similar retail food
establishment’’ means a retail
establishment that offers for sale
restaurant-type food, except if it is a
school as defined in 7 CFR 210.2 or
220.2. Establishments such as bakeries,
cafeterias, coffee shops, convenience
stores, delicatessens, food service
facilities located within entertainment
venues (such as amusement parks,
bowling alleys, and movie theatres),
food service vendors (e.g., ice cream
shops and mall cookie counters), food
take-out and/or delivery establishments
(such as pizza take-out and delivery
establishments), grocery stores, retail
confectionary stores, superstores, quick
service restaurants, and table service
restaurants would be restaurants or
similar retail food establishments if they
sell restaurant-type food.
2. Primary Business Test
(Comment 6) A few comments
generally opposed having any primary
business test within the definition of
‘‘restaurant or similar retail food
establishment.’’ One of these comments
recommended that the primary purpose
of the definition be related to ‘‘whether
the establishment optimizes the nation’s
health through their food distribution
channels, rather than a profit/commerce
approach.’’ This comment
acknowledged that a ‘‘profit/commerce
approach’’ may be more tangibly
measured but believed that the
definition of restaurant or similar retail
food establishment should reflect what
the comment considered to be the
purpose of the ACA: To inform
consumers on healthy food choices.
Another comment considered that the
floor space test we proposed as
‘‘primary purpose 2’’ is not a rational
basis for defining a restaurant or similar
retail food establishment. Another
comment asserted that both the
proposed definition of ‘‘restaurant or
similar retail food establishment’’ and
the ‘‘alternative revenue approach’’
would have covered grocery stores but
not superstores, putting grocery stores at
a competitive disadvantage.
One comment recommended that we
define a restaurant or similar retail food
establishment as any chain
establishment selling restaurant or
restaurant-type food. The comment
asserted that this broader interpretation
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is consistent with the language in the
statute. The comment pointed out that
the statute does not include text to
suggest that in order to qualify as a retail
food establishment, an entity must have
the sale of food as its primary business
activity.
One comment recommended that the
definition cover all of the
establishments exempted from nutrition
labeling by the NLEA. Some comments
referred to examples of covered
establishments that we had included in
our draft implementation guidance
(which we withdrew on January 25,
2011) and agreed that these types of
establishments should be covered by the
rule. The examples in the draft
implementation guidance included table
service restaurants, quick service
restaurants, coffee shops, delicatessens,
food take-out and/or delivery
establishments (e.g., pizza take-out and
delivery establishments), grocery stores,
convenience stores, movie theaters,
cafeterias, bakeries/retail confectionary
stores, food service vendors (e.g., lunch
wagons, ice cream shops, mall cookie
counters, and sidewalk carts), and
transportation carriers (e.g., airlines and
trains). These examples reflected the
establishments that sell certain food
previously exempted from nutrition
labeling by the NLEA under sections
403(q)(5)(A)(i) and (ii) of the FD&C Act,
including those mentioned in
§ 101.9(j)(2) and (j)(3) as well as some
additional examples (i.e., similar food
served in coffee shops, grocery stores,
and movie theaters). Some of the
establishments that would have been
covered under the draft implementation
guidance (such as transportation carriers
and facilities located within movie
theaters) would be excluded under a
definition that includes any primary
business test presented in the proposed
rule (i.e., regardless of whether the
criterion is the proposed criterion based
on the sale of food in general or the
restaurant-type food alternative based
on the sale of restaurant-type food, and
regardless of whether ‘‘primary purpose
2’’ relates to gross floor area or gross
revenue). Other examples (such as
grocery stores and convenience stores)
would be excluded from coverage under
the restaurant-type food alternative but
not under the proposed criterion based
on the sale of food in general.
Several comments recommended that
we define a restaurant or similar retail
food establishment using the restauranttype food alternative. Some comments
that opposed coverage of grocery and
convenience stores asserted that selling
prepared foods does not make grocery
stores similar to restaurants or food
court facilities that have on-premises
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consumption. According to some of
these comments, the primary purpose of
grocery stores is to sell packaged food,
which is already labeled with nutrition
information. One comment that opposed
covering convenience stores considered
that the proposed criterion for a primary
business activity based on the sale of
food in general, including prepackaged
food, is an activity in which restaurants
do not engage. The comment
recommended that we view the phrase
‘‘similar retail food establishment’’ as a
single cohesive term and define those
that are in fact similar to restaurants.
Some comments opposed ‘‘primary
purpose 1’’ of the proposed primary
business test because it would be
difficult to enforce. One comment
asserted that some bowling alleys list
themselves as restaurants in the phone
book or have signs indicating that they
serve as a restaurant, whereas others do
not. The comments maintained that
FDA and State and local inspectors
would have to determine how many
establishments in the chain present
themselves as restaurants, which would
make enforcement difficult.
One comment agreed with the
proposed criterion for ‘‘primary purpose
2’’—i.e., that greater than 50 percent of
a retail establishment’s gross floor area
is used for the preparation, purchase,
service, consumption, or storage of food.
One comment asserted that the amount
of floor space used for the preparation,
purchase, service, consumption, or
storage of food would be difficult to
determine. Another comment
considered that ‘‘primary purpose 1’’ is
sufficient for determining whether an
establishment is covered, but
considered that the floor space criterion
would be a more accurate approach than
the alternative revenue approach if a
second approach for ‘‘primary business
activity’’ is needed. One comment asked
us to clarify that ‘‘gross floor area’’
includes outdoor space for parks as part
of the calculation of the percentage of
gross floor area used for the preparation,
purchase, service, consumption, or
storage of food. A few comments
recommended that seating areas,
including outside seating, be included
in the floor space.
A few comments preferred the
alternative revenue approach for
‘‘primary purpose 2.’’ One comment
reported that the Internal Revenue
Service uses revenue to determine a
business’s primary activity. One
comment suggested that we add to the
proposed definition ‘‘or a total of more
than 50 percent of that retail
establishment’s revenues are generated
by the sale of food.’’
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A few comments opposed the
alternative revenue approach for
‘‘primary purpose 2.’’ These comments
considered that it would be difficult for
FDA and the States to ascertain the
revenue of a restaurant or similar retail
food establishment and the revenue may
change from day to day. One comment
noted that the proposed rule did not
include a defined time period for
revenue. Another comment asserted that
basing ‘‘primary purpose 2’’ on revenue
would be complicated when a primary
non-food related service or good is
paired with an ancillary service such as
the sale of food in one price. The
comment asserted that it would be
difficult to distinguish or separate the
percentage of the fee for the non-food
related service or good from the
percentage of the fee for the food.
A few comments suggested a lower
cutoff (20 to 25 percent) for the
alternative revenue approach but
provided no rationale for the lower
cutoff. One comment, which also
supported the coverage of movie
theaters, stated that movie theaters
derive much of their revenue from food
in concession stands.
Some comments agreed with our
discussion in the proposed rule that a
facility within a larger facility should
not be considered to be a separate
establishment if it is not part of a chain
outside that establishment. Some
comments specifically agreed that
facilities located within movie theaters
and other entertainment venues should
not be covered by the provisions of
section 4205 of the ACA. However,
many comments opposed a definition of
‘‘restaurant or similar retail food
establishment’’ that would exclude
facilities located within a larger facility,
specifically facilities in movie theaters
and other entertainment venues. Some
of these comments provided the
following reasons for including such
facilities:
• Excluding facilities located within
movie theaters removes information
from consumers, which defeats the very
purpose of the law.
• Food in entertainment venues is
high in calories and some of these
venues cater to children and have many
less healthy options (e.g., fries, ice
cream, cotton candy).
• Covering facilities located within
movie theaters would not be
burdensome for them because they have
limited menu options and many
packaged foods that have Nutrition
Facts.
• Movie theaters derive large revenue
from the sale of food; some much more
than chain restaurants. It is
irresponsible to send the message that
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consumption of calories in popcorn
offered for sale at movie theaters is not
as important as consumption of calories
in menu items offered for sale at drivethrough restaurants.
• Movies attract sedentary people.
• Congress intended that the law
apply to movie theaters, bowling alleys,
bookstore cafes, and other
establishments; the phrase ‘‘and similar
retail establishments’’ was used to reach
beyond restaurants.
• Excluding facilities located within
movies theatres and other entertainment
venues is unfair to competing venues.
• Providing other services or
entertainment does not affect the need
for nutrition information.
• Menu labeling is feasible in venues
not covered by the proposed rule. Movie
theaters in California, New York City,
and counties in New York are providing
this information with no problem. To
capriciously exempt movie theaters
defeats the purpose of the law. One
comment asserted that there is 98
percent compliance for menu labeling
by movie theaters in New York City.
• Excluding such venues raises equal
protection concerns (U.S. Const. 14
Amend. section 1 for similarly situated
entities).
One comment considered that we
would have to broaden the scope of
covered establishments to include other
places (such as bowling alleys, airlines,
trains, and hotels), regardless of whether
they fit the proposed definition of a
restaurant or similar retail food
establishment, if the rule covered
establishments such as facilities located
within movie theaters. This comment
argued that there is no mention in the
legislative history, committee reports, or
Congressional floor debates of facilities
located within movie theaters being
covered. The comment considered that
no one would associate ‘‘chain retail
food establishment’’ with movie theaters
because the primary purpose of going to
movies or other entertainment venues is
not to eat food and noted that many
States and localities do not include
these establishments in their laws.
Another comment suggested that we
add the following statement to our
proposed definition: ‘‘This definition
does not include businesses or
establishments that sell food incidental
to their primary purpose of providing or
hosting entertainment at venues such as
movie and live theaters, arenas,
amusement parks, sports facilities,
concert venues, and other similar
establishments.’’
(Response 6) We have revised the
definition of ‘‘restaurant or similar retail
food establishment’’ to eliminate the
primary business test. Most of the
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comments opposed one or more aspects
associated with our proposal to include
a primary business test, and we are
persuaded by them. The comments we
received were diverse and raised
important considerations, including
issues related to fairness; public health
impact; accessibility of nutrition
information; enabling informed
decision-making; statutory purpose and
Congressional intent; enforcement
challenges; and feasibility of complying
with the rule. We are convinced that
any primary purpose test presented in
the proposed rule will be problematic.
Congress did not define the term
‘‘restaurant or similar retail food
establishment’’ in section 4205 of the
ACA or elsewhere in the FD&C Act. As
we stated in the proposed rule, we look
to statutory context as a starting point
for the regulatory definition of
‘‘restaurant or similar retail food
establishment.’’ As we noted, the 1990
NLEA amendments exempted two
categories of food relevant for this
discussion: (1) Food ‘‘which is served in
restaurants or other establishments in
which food is served for immediate
human consumption or which is sold
for sale or use in such establishments,’’
(termed ‘‘restaurant food’’ in the
proposed rule); and (2) food ‘‘which is
processed and prepared primarily in a
retail establishment, which is ready for
human consumption, which is of the
type described in [(1)] and which is
offered for sale to consumers but not for
immediate human consumption in such
establishment and which is not offered
for sale outside such establishment’’
(termed ‘‘restaurant-type food’’ in the
proposed rule). Section 4205 of the ACA
amended both of these statutory
exemptions. In determining the scope of
section 4205 of the ACA, we must
determine which of these foods should
remain wholly exempt from Federal
nutrition labeling requirements and
which should be covered by the new
nutrition labeling requirements in this
rule.
Instead of using a primary purpose
test within the definition of restaurant
or similar retail food establishment to
set the scope of the new law, we are
finalizing a broader definition of
restaurant or similar retail food
establishment, consistent with many of
the comments. In response to concerns
about overreaching in establishments
that sell a significant amount of food
that is not typical of food sold in
restaurants, such as grocery and
convenience stores (see also discussion
in section VI.B.3), we are narrowing the
set of food covered by removing the
term ‘‘restaurant food’’ from this rule
and redefining ‘‘restaurant-type food’’ to
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include only the set of food described in
sections 403(q)(5)(A)(i) and (ii) of the
FD&C Act that is most like the food
served in restaurants (see discussion in
section VI.C). Retail food establishments
that offer for sale this type of food are
either restaurants or are relevantly
similar to restaurants in that they offer
for sale the kind of food that restaurants
do. Therefore, the final definition
focuses on those establishments that
offer for sale food that is most like food
served in restaurants; overall, it is
generally broader than the definition
provided in the proposed rule, but
narrower than what we put forward in
the draft implementation guidance.
Most of the comments that addressed
the floor space approach or the
alternative revenue approach to
‘‘primary purpose 2’’ expressed a
preference for one or the other without
providing strong and convincing
arguments as to why their preferred
alternative is superior to the alternative
that they opposed. Several comments
identified challenges to enforcing the
rule if the definition of ‘‘restaurant or
similar retail food establishment’’
included either the floor space approach
or the alternative revenue approach.
We agree with several points made by
the comments about facilities within
entertainment venues such as movie
theaters and amusement parks—e.g.,
that providing nutrition information to
consumers at such venues will make
such nutrition information available to
consumers in a direct and accessible
manner to enable consumers to make
informed and healthful dietary choices;
food in entertainment venues is similar
to food offered for sale in other
restaurants or similar retail food
establishments; and covering
entertainment venues would create a
level playing field. Under the revised
definition of ‘‘restaurant or similar retail
food establishment,’’ such facilities in
entertainment venues will be covered by
the rule if they offer for sale restauranttype food and satisfy the other criteria
in the definition of ‘‘covered
establishment’’—i.e., part of a chain
with 20 or more locations, doing
business under the same name, and
offering for sale substantially the same
menu items. Similarly, some superstores
that may not have been covered under
the proposed definition likewise may be
considered a ‘‘restaurant or similar retail
food establishment’’ under the final
definition established in the rule. Under
the definition of ‘‘restaurant or similar
retail food establishment’’ in this rule, a
superstore, like a grocery store, would
be covered if it sells restaurant-type
food and is part of a chain with 20 or
more locations, doing business under
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the same name, and offering for sale
substantially the same menu items.
Hotel restaurants are another type of
establishment that we stated generally
would not have been covered under the
proposed rule (76 FR 19192 at 19198),
but would be covered under the final
rule if they sell restaurant-type food and
are part of a chain of hotel restaurants
with 20 or more fixed locations, doing
business under the same name, and
offering for sale substantially the same
menu items.
We disagree that the legislative
history of section 4205 of the ACA
demonstrates any express intent of
Congress to exclude facilities located
within entertainment venues such as
movie theaters and bowling alleys from
the rule. The legislative history of
section 4205 of the ACA is very sparse;
the section was discussed on few
occasions, and when it was discussed,
few specifics were mentioned, including
specifics about the scope of the law.
We discuss transportation venues
later in this document (see Response
27).
(Comment 7) One comment
considered the proposed requirement
that the sale of food be the retail
establishment’s primary business to be
at odds with the approach taken in the
proposed vending machine rule. The
comment pointed out that we concluded
that only 5,000 of 10,000 vending
machine operators operate vending
machines as their primary business, yet
the proposed vending machine rule
would apply to those with 20 or more
machines, which includes all 10,000 of
the vending machine operators.
(Response 7) The provisions of the
proposed vending machine rule,
including criteria for determining
coverage of that rule, are not relevant to
the criteria for determining coverage of
this rule. Regardless, this comment is
moot because the definition of
‘‘restaurant or similar retail food
establishment’’ established in this rule
no longer includes a primary business
test.
(Comment 8) A few comments
recommended that we separately define
‘‘restaurant’’ and ‘‘similar retail food
establishment.’’ One of these comments
recommended that we define
‘‘restaurant’’ separately from ‘‘similar
retail food establishment’’ because
Congress uses the word ‘‘or’’ in the
phrase ‘‘restaurant or similar retail food
establishment,’’ and thus ‘‘restaurants’’
and ‘‘similar retail food establishments’’
are clearly two separate things. Another
comment recommended that we define
a restaurant as one that uses greater than
50 percent gross floor space for
preparation, purchase, service,
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consumption of restaurant food and a
similar retail food establishment as an
establishment that meets the same
standard but does not present itself as
a restaurant.
(Response 8) We disagree that we
should separately define ‘‘restaurant’’
and ‘‘similar retail food establishment.’’
As an initial matter, while Congress
does use the word ‘‘or’’ between
‘‘restaurant’’ and ‘‘similar retail food
establishment’’ in some places, it also
uses the word ‘‘and’’ between them in
others. For example, section
403(q)(5)(H)(i) of the FD&C Act contains
both constructions (‘‘General
requirements for restaurants and similar
retail food establishments’’ and ‘‘the
restaurant or similar retail food
establishment shall disclose’’). We
interpret the choice of the words ‘‘and’’
and ‘‘or’’ in section 403(q)(5)(H) of the
FD&C Act to be a function of
appropriate grammar, not to indicate
Congressional intent to conceptualize
‘‘restaurants’’ separately from ‘‘similar
retail food establishments.’’ Moreover,
given that the requirements in section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act are the
same for restaurants and similar retail
food establishments, we see no practical
reason to create separate regulatory
definitions.
(Comment 9) One comment
recommended that we include as part of
the regulation table 1 from the proposed
rule to help the public interpret the
regulation.
(Response 9) In the proposed rule (77
FR 19192 at 19198 and 19199), tables 1
and 2 identify establishments that
generally would, or would not, be a
‘‘restaurant or similar retail food
establishment’’ for the purposes of this
rule. We included these tables to
demonstrate the likely impact for many
establishments of the proposed and
alternative criteria for a ‘‘primary
business test’’ within the definition of
‘‘restaurant or similar retail food
establishment.’’ The definition of
‘‘restaurant or similar retail food
establishment’’ established in this rule
no longer has a primary business test.
Any establishment that sells restauranttype food is a ‘‘restaurant or similar
retail food establishment’’ for the
purposes of this rule. Therefore, we see
no value added in including such tables
in this final rule.
3. Coverage of Grocery Stores and
Convenience Stores
(Comment 10) Several comments
recommended that grocery stores be
covered. Some of these comments
considered that grocery stores should be
covered because they sell a great deal of
food for immediate consumption. One
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of these comments referred to the ‘‘Food
Marketing Institute’s 2010 U.S. Grocery
Shopper Trends’’ (Ref. 11) as evidence
that the number of consumers who
express interest in supermarket readyto-eat food is at its highest point in 4
years. One comment asserted that the
law does not exempt grocery stores or
take-out food.
(Response 10) We agree with these
comments. Grocery stores that sell
restaurant-type food and are part of a
chain with 20 or more locations doing
business under the same name and
offering for sale substantially the same
menu items are covered by the rule.
(Comment 11) One comment argued
that the plain meaning of section 4205
of the ACA precludes including grocery
stores as ‘‘restaurants and similar retail
food establishments.’’ The comment
stated that Congress used other words
elsewhere in the FD&C Act to refer to
the set of establishments that include
grocery stores, such as ‘‘food retailer’’
and ‘‘retail establishment’’ in section
403(q) of the FD&C Act. In addition, our
regulation at 21 CFR 1.227 defines
‘‘retail food establishment’’ to include
grocery stores for the purposes of food
facility registration. Given that Congress
chose a different term here, the
comment argued that we must assume
‘‘similar retail food establishments’’ has
a different meaning.
(Response 11) We disagree with this
comment. We do interpret the phrase
‘‘similar retail food establishment’’ to
have a different meaning than the terms
‘‘food retailer’’ and ‘‘retail
establishment’’ that appear elsewhere in
section 403(q) of the FD&C Act or ‘‘retail
food establishment’’ in 21 CFR 1.227.
Both our proposed and final definitions
are different from the definitions of
these other terms. If a retail food
establishment does not offer for sale
restaurant-type food, it would not be a
‘‘restaurant or similar retail food
establishment’’ for the purposes of
section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act,
even though it could be a ‘‘food retailer’’
or a ‘‘retail establishment’’ or ‘‘retail
food establishment.’’
(Comment 12) One comment argues
that the heading of section 4205 of the
ACA, ‘‘Nutrition Labeling of Standard
Menu Items at Chain Restaurants,’’
indicates that ‘‘restaurants or similar
retail food establishments’’ is an
ambiguous term, and should be
interpreted narrowly to exclude grocery
stores.
(Response 12) We disagree with this
comment. First, while we recognize that
the heading of a statute may be
considered part of a section’s legislative
history, the heading is not part of the
law itself (Ref. 12). Second, it is clear
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that the heading is not meant to describe
the scope of the requirements in section
4205 of the ACA, given that section
4205 includes requirements for
‘‘restaurants and similar retail food
establishments’’ and requirements for
vending machine operators.
(Comment 13) One comment argued
that the legislative history of section
4205 of the ACA demonstrates that
grocery stores should not be included in
the menu labeling requirements. The
comment cited a floor speech by Senator
Harkin where he favorably compares the
nutrition information available in
grocery stores to the lack of nutrition
information available at restaurants. For
example, ‘‘It makes no sense that
American consumers can go to a grocery
store and find nutrition information on
just about anything, but then they are
totally in the dark when they go to a
restaurant for dinner.’’ (Ref. 13) The
comment also argued that the legislative
history does not include any hearing or
debate indicating that we were being
given authority to regulate chain grocery
stores through section 4205 of the ACA.
Some comments stated that some
State and local jurisdictions did not
cover grocery stores. One comment
remarked that State and local laws
related to menu labeling referred to in
the legislative history of section 4205 of
the ACA did not cover grocery stores.
Specifically, the comment mentions that
the New York City Health Code
provisions on menu labeling, which the
comment characterizes as the first and
most extensively discussed law cited by
Senator Harkin, does not regulate
supermarkets.
(Response 13) We disagree that the
legislative history demonstrates that
grocery stores should not be included in
the nutrition labeling requirements of
this rule. First, the most straightforward
interpretation of Senator Harkin’s
statements is that the food in grocery
stores he had in mind was packaged
food already required to bear nutrition
information under Federal law.
Second, the fact that none of the State
or local jurisdictions with menu
labeling requirements explicitly covered
grocery stores does not mean that
Congress did not intend to cover grocery
stores under the Federal law. Many
State and local jurisdictions with menu
labeling requirements predating the
ACA did not cover self-service food or
food on display, which is most likely to
be the type of food in grocery stores
covered by this rule. However, it is clear
that Congress intended for self-service
food and food on display to be covered,
because section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii)
explicitly establishes statutory
requirements specific to self-service
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food and food on display. In addition,
for at least some local governments,
including New York City, the regulation
of grocery stores fell outside of their
jurisdiction (Ref. 14). So, the fact that
grocery stores were not covered by New
York City cannot be assumed to be a
choice by local authorities.
Finally, we recognize that the
legislative history of section 4205 of the
ACA does not include any hearing or
debate indicating specifically
mentioning chain grocery stores.
However, this does not imply that
Congress intended for grocery stores to
be excluded. As already noted, the
legislative history of section 4205 of the
ACA is very sparse; the section was
discussed on few occasions, and when
it was discussed, few specifics were
raised, including specifics about the
scope of the law. The comment does not
provide evidence to the contrary. Our
final rule represents a reasonable
interpretation of the statute, given the
language of section 4205 of the ACA and
the scant legislative history.
(Comment 14) Some comments
asserted that if Congress had intended
broad application, it would have
overhauled 21 U.S.C. 343(q)(5)(A)(i) and
(ii) of the FD&C Act rather than letting
those stand and adding 21 U.S.C.
343(q)(5)(H). Further, these comments
stated that if Congress had wanted to
include all establishments exempted by
the NLEA, it would have crossreferenced to the NLEA exemption or
just removed the exemption.
(Response 14) We agree with some of
these comments and disagree with
others. We agree that Congress did not
intend for all establishments exempted
by the NLEA to be covered by section
4205 of the ACA. Under the rule, there
are many establishments, including
establishments that meet the regulatory
definition of restaurant or similar retail
food establishment, that will not be
covered. For example, food described in
section 403(q)(5)(A)(i) of the FD&C Act
served in certain sit-down restaurants
that are not part of a chain of 20 or more
locations will continue to be exempt
from the Federal nutrition labeling
requirements in sections 403(q)(1) to (4).
In addition, section 403(q)(5)(A)(i) and
(ii) of the FD&C Act continue to exempt
all food that is described in sections
403(q)(5)(A)(i) and (ii), including food
offered for sale in restaurants and
similar retail food establishments, from
the nutrition labeling requirements in
sections 403(q)(3) and (4). Therefore,
irrespective of the breadth of section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act, Congress’s
amendment to sections 403(q)(5)(A)(i)
and (ii) leaves a large portion of the
exemption intact. Congress could not
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have removed the exemption in sections
403(q)(5)(A)(i) and (ii) of the FD&C Act
and achieved the same result.
Instead, Congress amended sections
403(q)(5)(A)(i) and (ii) of the FD&C Act
to cross-reference section 403(q)(5)(H).
The cross-references to section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act in sections
403(q)(5)(A)(i) and (ii) indicate that the
requirements in 403(q)(5)(H) must apply
to at least a subset of those foods
described in both sections
403(q)(5)(A)(i) and (ii). Congress did not
provide a statutory definition of
‘‘restaurant or similar retail food
establishment’’ in section 403(q)(5)(H)
of the FD&C Act, leaving ambiguity in
the statute as to the breadth of the set
of establishments covered. Our
definition of restaurant or similar retail
food establishment is a reasonable
interpretation of this ambiguous term,
and is consistent with section 4205’s
amendments to section 403(q)(5)(A)(i)
and (ii) of the FD&C Act.
(Comment 15) One comment argued
that the restaurant industry supported
section 4205 of the ACA, because the
law would provide them with a
nationally uniform regulatory scheme.
The comment asserted that grocery
stores ‘‘did not ask for this law,’’ and
should therefore not be covered.
(Response 15) In general, whether an
industry asks to be regulated is not
determinative of whether that industry
should be regulated. In addition, grocery
stores are increasingly offering for sale
restaurant-type food, including food for
immediate consumption that is
prepared and processed on the
premises.
(Comment 16) A few comments
maintained that there is too much
variability in grocery store food because
food is seasonal and grocery stores make
prepared food from food in the store.
Some comments also noted that some
grocery stores offer unique menu items,
such as a unique chicken salad based on
the personal recipe of a chef at a
particular grocery store’s location, that
are not available at all grocery stores in
the chain. These comments asserted that
it would be difficult to calculate the
nutrient information if grocery stores
were covered under the final rule.
(Response 16) A grocery store is
required to make calorie declarations for
its standard menu items if it meets the
definition of ‘‘covered establishment’’ in
this rule; including, in relevant part,
that the grocery store is ‘‘offering for
sale substantially the same menu items’’
as other grocery stores in the chain (see
section VI.F for discussion on ‘‘offering
for sale substantially the same menu
items’’). However, if a food is not
routinely included on a menu or menu
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board or routinely offered as a selfservice food or food on display at a
covered establishment, it is not a
standard menu item at that
establishment and therefore not covered
by this rule (see section VIII.B for
discussion on the definition of standard
menu item). For example, if a food’s
ingredients and recipe changes daily
based on food available in the store, it
is likely that such food would not be a
standard menu item. However, for food
offerings that are standard menu items,
even if unique to only one location in
the chain, a covered establishment has
many options for determining nutrient
content, including, for example,
calculating the required nutrient
information from the recipe for the food
offering using nutrient databases (see
§ 101.11(c)). Per the statute, in those
cases where seasonal availability is
limited to less than 60 days, the food
offering may be exempt from the
nutrition labeling requirements of this
rule as a temporary menu item or a selfservice food and food on display that is
offered for sale for less than a total of
60 days per calendar year.
(Comment 17) One comment
maintained that menu labeling is
needed in small grocery stores and
convenience stores because of the
disparity in low-income neighborhoods
that do not have many large grocery
stores or superstores but do have small
grocery stores and convenience stores.
According to the comment, grocery
stores, convenience stores, and drug
store chains have expanded their
businesses to include ready-to-eat food
offerings. The comment maintained that
these establishments are in direct
competition with restaurants and have
grown so rapidly over the past decade
that some are being called ‘‘grocerants.’’
(Response 17) Small grocery stores
and convenience stores are covered by
the rule if they sell restaurant-type food
and are part of a chain with 20 or more
locations, doing business under the
same name, and offering for sale
substantially the same menu items.
(Comment 18) One comment
considered that grocery stores should
not be covered by the menu labeling
requirements because they do not have
menus and menu boards.
(Response 18) We disagree with this
comment. First, the comment suggests
that no grocery stores have menus or
menu boards. However, some grocery
stores do have menus and menu boards,
including for example, menus and menu
boards for sandwiches that are prepared
upon the consumer’s request. Second,
the comment implies that a restaurant or
similar retail food establishment must
have a menu or menu board in order to
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be covered by this rule. This is not the
case. Consistent with section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act, this rule
requires that covered establishments
provide certain nutrition information for
standard menu items, even the standard
menu items that do not appear on
menus or menu boards. For example,
section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii) of the FD&C Act
requires nutrition labeling for standard
menu items that are self-service foods
and foods on display, irrespective of
whether they are listed on a menu or
menu board.
4. Confectionery Stores
(Comment 19) A few comments
recommended that confectionery stores
not be covered because they do not sell
restaurant food. According to one of
these comments, most candy sold in
retail confectionery stores is not
generally consumed immediately where
purchased or while walking away.
Instead, the comment stated, most
candy sold in retail confectionery stores
is either prepackaged (e.g., boxed
chocolates) or selected by the consumer
and placed in a box or other packaging
for consumption at a later time. Thus,
according to this comment, food served
in retail confectionery stores without
facilities for consumption on the
premises would continue to be covered
by the nutrition labeling requirements
in § 101.9. Another comment
acknowledged that some confectionary
stores do sell some restaurant-type
foods, such as chocolate from display
cases, shakes, and specialty items
dipped in chocolate, but that the
primary focus of the business was the
sale of packaged food such as ‘‘gift box’’
packaged chocolates.
(Response 19) We disagree that
confectionery stores, as a class of retail
food establishments, should not be
covered. Based on these comments,
some foods sold in some confectionery
stores are restaurant-type foods. As
discussed in section VI.C, we are
establishing a revised definition of
‘‘restaurant-type food’’ that would cover
food that is usually eaten on the
premises, while walking away, or soon
after arriving at another location (see
Response 24). A prepackaged box of
candy sold in a confectionery store is
not likely to be a restaurant-type food,
because a box of candy is not usually
eaten on the premises, while walking
away, or soon after arriving at another
location. However, individual pieces of
candy sold to a consumer from a display
case, shakes, and specialty items dipped
in chocolate likely would be restauranttype foods, because they are generally
consumed on the premises, while
walking away, or soon after arriving at
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another location. Under this rule, a
confectionery store that sells restauranttype food would be covered if it is part
of a chain with 20 or more locations
doing business under the same name
and offering for sale substantially the
same menu items. We note that the only
foods covered by this rule in a covered
establishment are restaurant-type foods
that are standard menu items.
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5. Facilities Within Facilities
(Comment 20) One comment asked us
to clarify that the independent franchise
restaurant that operates within an
amusement park is liable for adherence
to the final regulation, not the park. The
comment maintained that the park
would have no way of knowing if the
franchisee is compliant.
(Response 20) The covered
establishment bears the responsibility to
comply with the rule. In addition, see
Response 3.
6. Schools
(Comment 21) One comment asked us
to clarify whether a school food service
contractor that uses a central kitchen or
cooks the same food for 20 schools
would be covered. One comment stated
that these establishments should
provide calories on menu boards, online
menus, and menus sent home to
parents.
(Response 21) We have decided not to
include schools in the definition of
‘‘restaurant or similar retail food
establishment’’ for the purposes of this
rule. As previously discussed (see
Response 6) Congress did not define the
term ‘‘restaurant or similar retail food
establishment’’ in section 4205 of the
ACA or elsewhere in the FD&C Act. The
term is ambiguous, and we look to
statutory context as a starting point for
our regulatory definition. As discussed
in section I of this document, while the
NLEA required that the labeling of many
foods bear nutrition information, it
exempted certain food from such
nutrition labeling requirements,
including food that is ‘‘served in
restaurants or other establishments in
which food is served for immediate
human consumption’’ (section
403(q)(5)(A)(i) of the FD&C Act). In
FDA’s regulations implementing the
NLEA, we included schools among the
list of examples of ‘‘other
establishments in which food is served
for immediate human consumption’’
(§ 101.9(j)(2)) Section 4205 of the ACA
amended this statutory exemption,
among others, to account for new
nutrition labeling requirements for
standard menu items in restaurants and
similar retail food establishments.
Therefore, we must determine whether
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standard menu items in schools should
remain wholly exempt from FDA
nutrition labeling requirements or
whether they should be eligible to be
covered by the new nutrition labeling
requirements in this rule.
Traditionally, the U.S. Department of
Agriculture (USDA) has exercised a
primary role in setting the standards for
foods served in schools through school
lunch and breakfast programs. USDA
regulates such foods, under various
Federal statutes, including the Child
Nutrition Act of 1996 and the Richard
B. Russell National School Lunch Act.
Given the traditional and long-standing
role of USDA in setting standards,
including nutrition requirements, for
foods served in schools through school
lunch and breakfast programs, as
established by Federal legislation and
implemented by Federal Agencies, we
conclude that it is reasonable to
interpret the term ‘‘restaurant or similar
retail food establishment’’ to not include
schools. Therefore, we have revised the
definition ‘‘restaurant or similar retail
food establishment’’ to mean a retail
establishment that offers for sale
restaurant-type food, except if it is a
school as defined in 7 CFR 210.2 or
220.2.
C. Restaurant Food and RestaurantType Food
A key term in the final definition of
‘‘restaurant or similar retail food
establishment’’ is the term ‘‘restauranttype food.’’ The terms ‘‘restaurant food’’
and ‘‘restaurant-type food’’ also were
important to the proposed definition of
‘‘restaurant or similar retail food
establishment.’’ Proposed § 101.11(a)
would define ‘‘restaurant food’’ as food
that is served in restaurants or other
establishments in which food is served
for immediate human consumption, i.e.,
to be consumed either on the premises
where that food is purchased or while
walking away; or which is sold for sale
or use in such establishments. (As a
typographical error, the proposed rule
incorrectly stated ‘‘where that the food
is purchased’’ rather than ‘‘where that
food is purchased.’’) Proposed
§ 101.11(a) would define ‘‘restauranttype food’’ as food of the type described
in the definition of ‘‘restaurant food’’
that is ready for human consumption,
offered for sale to consumers but not for
immediate consumption, processed and
prepared primarily in a retail
establishment, and not offered for sale
outside of that establishment.
In the following paragraphs, we
discuss comments on these proposed
definitions. After considering
comments, we are deleting the proposed
definition of ‘‘restaurant food’’ and
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establishing a revised definition of
‘‘restaurant-type food’’ that better
reflects the food most like the food
offered for sale in restaurants. As
conforming amendments, we are
deleting the term ‘‘restaurant food’’ from
other proposed definitions that had
included this term—i.e., the proposed
definitions for ‘‘food on display,’’
‘‘restaurant or similar retail food
establishment,’’ ‘‘self-service food,’’ and
‘‘standard menu item.’’
(Comment 22) One comment
recommended that food be covered if
prepared for immediate human
consumption regardless of whether
consumers choose to consume on or off
the premises. The comment
recommended that we remove the term
‘‘walking away’’ from the definition of
restaurant food because it would be
clearer to state simply that foods that are
served in restaurants or similar retail
food establishments and are prepared
for immediate human consumption are
covered, whether customers choose to
consume them on or off the premises.
The comment considered that whether
foods are actually consumed on or off
the premises should not be a
determining factor as to whether a food
or facility is covered by the rule. The
comment asked us to clarify that food
from facilities serving take-away food
that meet the other criteria are covered.
(Response 22) We decline the specific
suggestion that we replace our proposed
criterion that food may be ‘‘consumed
either on the premises where the food
is purchased or while walking away’’
with a criterion mentioning that
consumers may consume the food ‘‘on
or off the premises.’’ The comment did
not disagree that restaurant food should
include food that is consumed while
walking away but rather suggested
communicating this differently.
While restaurants do offer for sale
food that is consumed off the premises,
in general that food is consumed while
walking away or upon arriving at
another location. Other foods, like
groceries, are also consumed ‘‘off the
premises’’ of the store that sells them
(e.g., a grocery or convenience store),
but they are often consumed at a later
time or over a period of days. Our aim
is to cover the food most like the food
offered for sale in restaurants, and not
food that is more similar to food
traditionally thought of as groceries.
Therefore, the phrase ‘‘on or off the
premises’’ is too broad for our final
definition of restaurant-type food.
In general, take-away food is
consumed while walking away or upon
arriving at another location. Therefore,
take-away food is likely to be
‘‘restaurant-type food,’’ and retail
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establishments that offer for sale takeaway food are likely to meet the
definition of restaurant or similar retail
food establishment. Take-away food that
satisfies the definition of ‘‘restauranttype food’’ established in this rule
would be subject to the nutrition
labeling requirements of this rule if it is
a standard menu item that is offered for
sale in a covered establishment.
(Comment 23) One comment
recommended that the phrase ‘‘not
offered for sale outside that
establishment’’ be deleted from the
definition of restaurant food because
some restaurants market frozen meals
from their restaurants.
(Response 23) We are retaining the
phrase ‘‘not offered for sale outside such
establishment’’ in the definition of
restaurant-type food. This phrase comes
from section 403(q)(5)(A)(ii) of the
FD&C Act. FDA previously has
interpreted this phrase (see 58 FR 2079
at 2146 (January 6, 1993)). The frozen
meals described by the comment appear
to be packaged foods. Most packaged
foods are subject to the labeling
requirements of § 101.9. The sale of
such packaged, frozen food outside of a
restaurant, e.g., in a grocery store, will
not affect whether the food in a
restaurant is covered by this rule.
(Comment 24) One comment urged us
to remove the term ‘‘restaurant-type
food’’ from the rule and recognize that
the sale of food to consumers for
immediate consumption is a primary
distinguishing factor of a restaurant. The
comment contended that our definition
of restaurant or similar retail food
establishment is overly broad because it
includes an establishment that sells not
only restaurant food but also restauranttype food. The comment maintained
that we did not explain our rationale for
including restaurant-type food in the
proposed rule, especially when our
existing regulation on restaurants refers
only to restaurant food.
A few comments were concerned that
because of the definition of restauranttype food grocery stores would have to
label prepared foods for immediate
consumption as well as every loaf of
bread, roll, cookie and deli item except
cold cuts; these comments estimated
that approximately 6,400 service deli,
prepared foods, and bakery items would
be included, which would be very
costly. One comment contended that the
increase in cost may limit the items that
grocery stores would carry, which
would limit sales growth. According to
a few comments 95 percent of items in
grocery stores have Nutrition Facts and
the costs to cover the remaining 5
percent vastly outweighs benefits.
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(Response 24) We agree that sale of
food to consumers for immediate
consumption is a common characteristic
of restaurants but disagree that it
follows that only ‘‘restaurant food’’ is
relevant to this rulemaking. In the
proposed rule, we explained that
section 4205 of the ACA amended both
sections 403(q)(5)(A)(i) and (ii) of the
FDA&C Act. Under section
403(q)(5)(A)(ii) of the FD&C Act, except
as provided in section
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act (i.e.,
the requirement for written nutrition
information for food covered by this
rule) the nutrition labeling requirements
of section 403(q)(1), (2), (3), and (4) of
the FD&C Act shall not apply to food
which is processed and prepared
primarily in a retail establishment,
which is ready for human consumption,
which is of the type described in section
403(q)(5)(A)(i), and which is offered for
sale to consumers but not for immediate
human consumption in such
establishment and which is not offered
for sale outside such establishment
(emphasis added). To implement the
phrase ‘‘except as provided in section
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III)’’ of the FD&C Act,
some set of food described in section
403(q)(5)(A)(ii)—that is not for
immediate consumption—is covered by
this rule.
We acknowledge that the proposed
definition of restaurant-type food
includes some foods that are sold in
grocery or convenience stores that are
not generally offered for sale in
restaurants, foods that are more like
groceries, and we have amended that
definition in the final rule. After
considering all of the comments
directed to the proposed definitions of
‘‘restaurant food’’ or ‘‘restaurant-type
food,’’ in addition to the comments
related to the scope of the rule more
generally, given the relationship
between these terms and the definition
of restaurant or similar retail food
establishment, we are convinced that
this rule should cover only those foods
described in sections 403(q)(5)(A)(i) and
(ii) of the FD&C Act that are most like
the food sold in restaurants and should
not cover foods that are more commonly
considered to be groceries. Therefore,
we are deleting the proposed definition
of ‘‘restaurant food’’ and establishing a
revised definition of ‘‘restaurant-type
food’’ that reflects the food most like the
food offered for sale in restaurants.
Under that new definition, restauranttype food means food that is (1) usually
eaten on the premises, while walking
away, or soon after arriving at another
location; and (2) either (i) served in
restaurants or other establishments in
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which food is served for immediate
human consumption or which is sold
for sale or use in such establishments;
or (ii) processed and prepared primarily
in a retail establishment, ready for
human consumption, of the type
described in (i), and offered for sale to
consumers but not for immediate
human consumption in such
establishment and which is not offered
for sale outside such establishment. The
first part of this definition focuses on
the food most like the food offered for
sale in restaurants, while the second
part of this definition reflects the
statutory context of sections
403(q)(5)(A)(i) and (ii) of the FD&C Act.
The new definition includes food for
immediate consumption at a sit-down or
quick service restaurant; food purchased
at a drive-through establishment; takeout and delivery pizza; hot pizza at
grocery and convenience stores that is
ready to eat; pizza slice from a movie
theater; hot buffet food, hot soup at a
soup bar, and food from a salad bar;
foods ordered from a menu/menu board
at a grocery store intended for
individual consumption (e.g., soups,
sandwiches, and salads); and selfservice foods and foods on display that
are intended for individual
consumption (e.g., sandwiches, wraps,
and paninis at a deli counter; salads
plated by the consumer at a salad bar;
cookies from a mall cookie counter;
bagels, donuts, rolls offered for
individual sale). Foods that are similar
to grocery items that may be ready for
immediate consumption but that
consumers usually store for use at a
later time or customarily further prepare
would not be included within the
meaning of ‘‘restaurant-type food.’’
Foods that we therefore would not
consider to be within the meaning of
‘‘restaurant-type food’’ include foods to
be eaten over several eating occasions or
stored for later use (e.g., loaves of bread,
bags or boxes of dinner rolls, whole
cakes, and bags or boxes of candy or
cookies); foods sold by weight that are
not self-serve and are not intended
solely for individual consumption (e.g.,
deli salads sold by unit of weight such
as potato salad, chicken salad), either
prepacked or packed upon consumer
request; and foods that are usually
further prepared before consuming (e.g.,
deli meats and cheeses).
(Comment 25) One comment asked us
to clarify that only food offered ‘‘for
sale’’ in a restaurant or similar retail
food establishment should be
considered in determining whether an
establishment is a covered
establishment. The comment noted that
the statute expressly limits the
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application of food labeling to items that
are ‘‘offered for sale,’’ and considered
that the menu labeling regulations
should adopt a similar limitation.
(Response 25) The rule only applies to
food offered for sale.
D. Part of a Chain With 20 or More
Locations
In the proposed rule (76 FR 19192 at
19195), we noted that we did not
propose a definition of the statutory
criterion ‘‘part of a chain with 20 or
more locations’’ and that we were
assuming the common meaning of the
words in the phrase. However, we
requested comment on whether the
phrase should be defined in the final
rule, and particularly on whether the
terms ‘‘chain’’ and ‘‘location’’ should be
defined in context of the various types
of corporate or other business
arrangements that may be relevant,
including contracting arrangements.
In the following paragraphs, we
discuss comments on the terms ‘‘chain’’
and ‘‘location.’’ After considering these
comments, we are adding a definition of
‘‘locations’’ to clarify our interpretation
of ‘‘part of a chain with 20 or more
locations.’’
(Comment 26) A few comments
responded to our request for comment
on the term ‘‘chain.’’ One comment
recommended that we define ‘‘chain’’ as
a covered establishment doing business
under the same name as those that share
the same name under the ownership,
control, and operation of a single
corporate entity. This comment
considered that this is consistent with
the commonly accepted dictionary
definition of a chain as ‘‘a group of
enterprises or institutions of the same
kind or function under a single
ownership, management, or control.’’
Another comment cited the following
dictionary definition for ‘‘chain’’: ‘‘A
range of retail outlets which share a
brand and central management, usually
with standardized business methods’’.
This comment also cited the following
dictionary definition for ‘‘restaurant
chain’’: ‘‘A set of restaurants, usually
with the same name in many different
locations either under shared corporate
ownership or franchising agreements.
Typically, the restaurants within a chain
are built to a standard format and offer
a standard menu.’’
(Response 26) Section 4205 of the
ACA covers restaurants or similar retail
food establishments that are part of a
chain with 20 or more locations doing
business under the same name
‘‘regardless of the type of ownership of
the locations.’’ Both definitions
suggested by comments refer to
management structure, corporate
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control, and/or ownership. Because the
statute directs us to disregard the type
of ownership of the locations when
determining whether an establishment
is ‘‘part of a chain with 20 or more
locations doing business under the same
name,’’ neither of these definitions for
the word ‘‘chain’’ is appropriate.
According to the dictionary
definitions, the word ‘‘chain’’ means,
among other things, ‘‘a group of
enterprises, establishments, institution,
or constructions of the same kind or
function linked together into a single
system’’ (Ref. 15), a ‘‘series or group of
things or people that are connected to
each other in some way’’ (Ref. 15), and
‘‘a series of closely linked or connected
things’’ (Ref. 16). In section
403(q)(5)(H)(i) of the FD&C Act,
Congress provides the ways in which
restaurants or similar retail food
establishments must be connected to or
linked to each other in order to be
covered by the new law: They must be
doing business under the same name
and offering for sale substantially the
same menu items, and there must be 20
or more locations of them. Therefore, we
continue to use the common meaning of
the word ‘‘chain’’ and do not consider
an additional regulatory definition
necessary for this broad term. The
statute specifies the particular criteria
for the set of chains that are relevant for
this rulemaking, and we provide
regulatory definitions for those criteria
specifically.
(Comment 27) One comment
recommended that we not rely solely on
the terms ‘‘chain’’ and ‘‘location’’
because some restaurants and food
establishments have locations at the
same address, such as a mall. The
comment asked us to either use the term
‘‘selling post’’ or to clarify that the
location includes chains with
restaurants in the same physical
building. Another comment asked us to
clarify that mobile facilities (such as
food trucks) are covered. Some
comments noted that transportation
venues have menus that look like those
in sandwich shops. Other comments
noted that it is feasible for
transportation venues to comply with
the rule.
(Response 27) We disagree that we
should add the term ‘‘selling post’’ to
the definition to specify restaurants and
similar retail food establishments that
are part of the same chain and are
located in the same shopping mall or
otherwise in the same physical building.
However, this comment demonstrates
that there is a need to define the term
‘‘locations,’’ even assuming its common
meaning. Unlike ‘‘chain,’’ where a
definition is unnecessary given that we
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71171
are establishing definitions for more
specific, relevant criteria, we are
convinced that establishing a regulatory
definition of ‘‘locations’’ would provide
clarity and facilitate a better
understanding of regulatory
expectations.
The dictionaries define ‘‘location’’ to
mean, among other things, ‘‘a position
or site occupied . . . a tract of land
designated for a purpose’’ (Ref. 17); ‘‘an
area or tract of land’’ (Ref. 18); ‘‘a place
where something is or could be located;
a site . . . a tract of land that has been
surveyed and marked off’’ (Ref. 19). This
evidences that the common meaning of
the word ‘‘location’’ involves a specific
or fixed position on land or portion of
land. For clarity, we are defining
‘‘location’’ to mean ‘‘a fixed position or
site.’’ Therefore, for the purposes of
determining whether an establishment
is part of a chain with ‘‘20 or more
locations,’’ we would consider each of
the establishments occupying separate
fixed positions or sites within the same
shopping mall or physical building as
separate establishments. One result of
this definition of ‘‘location’’ is to
exclude food facilities that do not have
a fixed position or site, such as trains
and airplanes. Additionally, mobile
food operations such as food trucks
without a fixed position or site are not
covered by the rule.
E. Doing Business Under the Same
Name
Proposed § 101.11(a) would define
‘‘doing business under the same name’’
as sharing the same name, where ‘‘same
name’’ would include names that are
either exactly the same, or are slight
variations of each other, for example,
due to the region, location, or size (e.g.,
‘‘New York Ave. Burgers’’ and
‘‘Pennsylvania Ave. Burgers’’ or ‘‘ABC’’
and ‘‘ABC Express’’). In the proposed
rule (76 FR 19192 at 19199), we
requested comment on whether the term
should be understood to refer to the
underlying name of ownership such as
the name of the parent company, or the
name of the entity conducting corporate
business on behalf of the establishment,
e.g., the name of a contractor operating
the establishment, regardless of the
public name used by the individual
establishment.
In the following paragraphs, we
discuss comments on this proposed
definition. After considering comments,
we have revised the definition to clarify
that the term ‘‘name’’ refers to either (a)
the name of the establishment presented
to the public or (b), if there is no name
of the establishment presented to the
public (e.g., an establishment with the
generic descriptor ‘‘concession stand’’),
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the name of the parent entity of the
establishment.
(Comment 28) Several comments
supported the proposed definition. One
comment recommended that the
definition be broadened to include those
with the same underlying name of
ownership (parent company or
contractor). A few comments
recommended that the definition not be
based on the underlying name of
ownership. Based on the language of the
statute, the comments considered that
‘‘regardless of . . . ownership’’ means
that the ownership is not determinative
and, therefore, the term should refer to
the name used when doing business
with the public and not the parent
company, franchise owner, or other
ownership entity. One comment argued
that the phrase ‘‘regardless of . . .
ownership’’ means that the corporate
structure should not be considered
when determining coverage; instead, the
determining factor should be whether
the name of the restaurant is the same.
Another comment maintained that to
include the underlying name of
ownership in the definition would stifle
investment in smaller locally based
restaurants, i.e., it would place a cap on
the number of restaurants an investor or
entity could have before subjecting them
to menu labeling.
One comment recommended that the
definition not be based on the name of
the parent company because the name
of the parent company has no bearing
on the similarity of menu offerings. The
comment argued that to do so would
ignore the plain language of the statute,
which clearly meant the public name of
the location. One comment asserted that
our proposed definition would expand
the definition beyond the statutory
language and Congress’ express intent
by covering smaller restaurant chains
that offer creative menus and, thus,
thwart the purpose and intent behind
thoughtfully designed restaurants.
(Response 28) We agree with
comments that considered that the
statutory phrase ‘‘regardless of the type
of ownership of the locations’’ means
that the type of ownership is not
determinative. We also agree that
‘‘doing business under the same name’’
should, in general, refer to the name
used when doing business with the
public (e.g., the branded name that
appears on the establishment’s signage)
rather than the name of the person or
legal entity that owns the establishment.
However, we are aware that some
establishments have no specific name
presented to the public. For example,
concession stands in entertainment
venues or cafeterias in office buildings
may simply have a sign with a general
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descriptor, such as ‘‘Hot Dogs’’ or
‘‘Concession Stand’’ or ‘‘Building 1
´
Cafe,’’ or they may have no sign at all.
In instances where there is no specific
name presented to the public, we find
it reasonable to conclude that the name
under which they are doing business is
the name of the parent entity of the
facility. Consequently, we have revised
the definition of the term ‘‘doing
business under the same name’’ in
§ 101.11(a) to add that the term ‘‘name’’
refers to the name of the facility
presented to the public or, if there is no
name of the facility presented to the
public (e.g., a facility with the generic
descriptor ‘‘concession stand’’), the
name of the parent entity of the facility.
(Comment 29) One comment
addressed the examples we included in
the proposed definition of
establishments doing business under the
same name. As discussed in the
proposed rule (76 FR 19192 at 19199),
these examples include names that are
slight variations on each other due, for
example, to the region, location, or size.
The comment asserted that it is
inappropriate to imply that same name
means slight variation. Another
comment recommended that the rule
apply to facilities in grocery stores with
20 or more locations even if the
facilities’ names vary from store to store.
(Response 29) We disagree that the
examples we included in the proposed
definition of establishments doing
business under the same name are
inappropriate. Establishments that are
part of large chains have slight
variations in the name, e.g., to reflect a
limited menu based on the space that
the establishment occupies. For
example, ‘‘XYZ’’ chain may have ‘‘XYZ’’
restaurant in a free-standing store and
‘‘XYZ Express’’ in an airline terminal,
food court in a shopping mall, or
grocery store. Even though the names
are slight variations of each other, they
are sufficiently similar that it is clear
that the establishments are affiliated
with one another. Generally, these
establishments also have the same trade
dress (e.g., trade name, logo, graphics
and other distinctive elements of a
brand) as the other establishments in the
chain.
(Comment 30) One comment
recommended that we require that a
chain remain covered if it initially is
subject to the rule but the parent
company changes the name of some
locations to get below 20.
(Response 30) Individual restaurants
and similar retail food establishments
would be subject to the rule if they
satisfy the criteria for a ‘‘covered
establishment.’’ If a restaurant or similar
retail food establishment satisfies all the
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criteria for a covered establishment, and
subsequently changes its name, it must
reconsider whether it continues to
satisfy all the criteria for a covered
establishment, including whether it ‘‘is
part of a chain with 20 or more locations
doing business under the same name.’’
We anticipate that the benefits to an
establishment to continue to do
business under the same name as other
establishments in the chain will keep
establishments from changing their
names in order to avoid being covered
by this rule.
F. Offering for Sale Substantially the
Same Menu Items
Proposed § 101.11(a) would define
‘‘offering for sale substantially the same
menu items’’ as offering for sale menu
items that use the same general recipe
and are prepared in substantially the
same way with substantially the same
food components, even if the name of
the menu item varies (e.g. ‘‘Bay View
Crab Cake’’ and ‘‘Ocean View Crab
Cake’’). Under the proposed definition,
‘‘menu items’’ would refer to food items
that are listed on a menu or menu board
or that are offered as self-service food or
food on display. The proposed
definition would also provide that
restaurants and similar retail food
establishments that are part of a chain
can still be offering for sale substantially
the same menu items if the availability
of some menu items varies within the
chain.
In the following paragraphs, we
discuss comments on this proposed
definition. After considering comments,
we have revised the definition to:
• Add a qualitative description of the
number of menu items that must be
shared in order for the criterion of
‘‘offering for sale substantially the same
menu items’’ to be met; and
• Add a statement that having the
same name may indicate, but does not
necessarily guarantee, that menu items
are substantially the same.
(Comment 31) Several comments
supported the definition. One comment
asserted that the proposed rule was not
clear on what ‘‘substantially’’ the same
menu items means quantitatively and
suggested that it could mean anywhere
between 51 and 99 percent. Another
comment asked us to clarify what
constitutes ‘‘offering for sale menu items
that use the same general recipe and are
prepared with substantially the same
food components even if the name
varies.’’ This comment pointed out that
some restaurants in a chain may have
some unique items or may vary the
recipes and therefore, it is not clear if
the restaurant is ‘‘offering for sale
substantially the same menu items.’’
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The comment gave as an example a
kosher restaurant that uses the same
name as non-kosher restaurants that are
part of the same chain. The comment
noted that due to the kosher restaurant’s
following of the kosher laws, the kosher
restaurant may offer for sale some menu
items that vary from the menu items
offered for sale in a non-kosher
restaurant in the chain. In addition, the
comment noted that the kosher
restaurant may offer for sale unique
menu items, such as schwarma, that are
not offered for sale in the non-kosher
restaurants in the chain. This comment
requested an exemption for franchise
restaurants that offer specialty menu
items or items altered to accommodate
a specific dietary practice (e.g., kosher).
One comment pointed out that menu
items in chain restaurants and similar
retail food establishments vary between
States and within States to
accommodate local tastes, even if the
menu items have the same name. The
comment cited chili as an example,
stating that in Cincinnati it is common
for chili to be made with cocoa and
cinnamon thinned out with finely
ground meat over spaghetti, whereas in
Texas, chili is made with large chunks
of meat, often with beans, served alone
in a bowl.
One comment stated that some food
service contractors provide clients with
menus that may change daily, weekly,
or monthly and with rotating cycle
menus that can use up to several
hundred recipes with cycle menus that
vary from 3, 4, or 5 week cycles and
from 5, 6, or 7 day service weeks. Due
to the variability in menus in locations
that rely on contract food services, the
comment recommended that the
definition of ‘‘offering for sale
substantially the same menu item’’ be
changed to ‘‘establishments in a chain
that offer standard menus comprised of
menu items that use the same general
recipes and are prepared in
substantially the same ways with
substantially the same food
components, even if the name of the
menu item varies.’’
(Response 31) We decline to name a
proportion or percentage of menu items
that must be shared between
establishments. Restaurants and similar
retail food establishments regularly offer
new and reformulated menu items in
their establishments. It would be
burdensome and impractical for
establishments and inspectors to
continually evaluate all of the
establishments in the chain to count the
numbers of standard menu items in
common in order to determine whether
a given establishment is covered. In
addition, some establishments that are
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part of a large chain may not offer for
sale all of the standard menu items
offered in other locations of that chain.
For example, some chains have a
handful of locations in airports or other
venues notated by the term ‘‘Express’’
added to the name, that sell a subset of
the foods that are carried by the larger
establishments in the chain. Finally, as
the comments point out, some
restaurants that are part of large chains
have some unique or regional items or
may vary recipes in a unique way.
These types of minor variations should
not exclude establishments from the
requirements of this rule.
Based on the comments and on the
considerations discussed previously in
this document, we are not finalizing a
specific proportion or percentage of
menu items that covered establishments
within a chain must share. However, we
understand from the comments that our
definition should speak to the number
of menu items that must be shared more
clearly. Therefore, we are adding a
qualitative, not quantitative, description
of the number of menu items that must
be shared in order for the criterion of
‘‘offering for sale substantially the same
menu items’’ to be met. Given the
statutory language, along with the
practicalities of and variations within
the industry, we are adding ‘‘offering for
sale a significant proportion of menu
items’’ to the definition of ‘‘offering for
sale substantially the same menu
items.’’ For example, if establishments
only share one or two menu items, those
establishments would not meet the
criterion of ‘‘offering for sale
substantially the same menu items.’’
We recognize that some
establishments in a chain may have
some menu items with ingredients that
vary based on regional taste or source.
Some menu items may be designed or
prepared to meet certain dietary
practices (e.g., Kosher or Halal) or
contain a ‘‘secret ingredient.’’ This is
why our definition of ‘‘offering for sale
substantially the same menu items’’
includes the criteria ‘‘us[ing] the same
general recipe, prepared in substantially
the same way, with substantially the
same food components.’’ By ‘‘the same
general recipe,’’ we mean that the
establishments share a recipe, even if
one establishment subsequently tweaks
that recipe due to regional tastes or
dietary practices. By ‘‘prepared in
substantially the same way,’’ we mean
to include slight deviations from the
recipe, because of, for example, food
service worker variability. By ‘‘with
substantially the same food
components,’’ we mean to include
situations where ingredients may vary
based on local availability or sourcing,
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including those used to conform to
certain dietary practices (e.g., Kosher
meat).
We also agree with comments that
having the same name may indicate that
the menu items are substantially the
same, but it does not always do so. As
comments pointed out, menu items that
reflect regional differences may be so
different that the name of the menu item
sheds little light on whether the menu
items use the same general recipe and
are prepared in substantially the same
way with substantially the same food
components. For example, in some
regions of the United States a menu item
named ‘‘barbecue’’ may refer to a food
prepared from pulled pork, whereas in
other regions a menu item named
‘‘barbecue’’ may refer to a food prepared
from beef ribs. Therefore, we have
revised the definition to add a new
sentence stating that having the same
name may indicate, but does not
necessarily guarantee, that menu items
are substantially the same.
The definition for ‘‘substantially the
same menu items’’ would also apply to
establishments relying on food
contractors. If such an arrangement
caused menu rotations, the relevant
question would still be whether those
establishments are offering for sale
substantially the same menu items,
including whether they are selling a
significant proportion of menu items
that use the same general recipe and are
prepared in substantially the same way
with substantially the same food
components, even if not necessarily at
the same time. In other words, the focus
is on whether the menu items are
substantially the same, not on whether
the menus or menu boards are
substantially the same. We decline to
accept the suggestion from the comment
to revise the definition to include
‘‘establishments in a chain that offer
standard menus comprised of menu
items that . . .’’ because it reflects a
misunderstanding that an establishment
needs to have a menu, or a ‘‘standard
menu’’ more specifically, to be covered
by the new law.
(Comment 32) One comment
maintained that convenience stores in a
chain do not have identical business
plans and the same food; the food varies
per establishment and is not prepared to
corporate policy as it is in restaurants.
(Response 32) As explained
previously in this document,
establishments can be ‘‘offering for sale
substantially the same menu items’’
even if not all of their menu items are
exactly the same. Depending on the
extent to which the menu items vary, a
convenience store may or may not meet
the criterion of offering for sale
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substantially the same menu items as
defined in the rule.
(Comment 33) One comment
described itself as a family-owned
restaurant operator with 25 restaurants
located entirely within a single State.
Two of its restaurants also contain sushi
operations, each under a different name
and with entirely different menus than
the larger establishment. The comment
asked us to confirm that the rule would
not apply to these sushi operations.
(Response 33) Based on the
information in the comment, the two
sushi operations do not appear to be
covered by the rule because they are
neither doing business under the same
name (see section VI.E) nor offering for
sale substantially the same menu items
as 18 other establishments.
establishment,’’ revising the definition
of ‘‘restaurant-type food,’’ revising the
definition of ‘‘doing business under the
same name,’’ and revising the definition
of ‘‘offering for sale substantially the
same menu items’’) affect the overall set
of covered establishments.
1. General Comments on the Definition
of Covered Establishment
(Comment 34) One comment
considered that our proposed definition
would make it conceivable for the
requirements to apply to a single,
completely unique ‘‘restaurant concept’’
that is owned by a chain with 20 or
more other restaurants. The comment
described a ‘‘restaurant concept’’ as
separate and distinct operations by
virtue of the individual restaurant’s
menu offerings or recipes, name, decor,
G. Authorized Official of a Restaurant or and other distinguishing characteristics
Similar Retail Food Establishment
such as different dining experiences
Proposed § 101.11(a) would define
with higher quality food and different
‘‘Authorized official of a restaurant or
menu items that may be unrecognizable
similar retail food establishment’’ as the to the average diner as being operated
owner, operator, agent in charge, or
by the larger chain. This comment also
considered that applying the menu
other person authorized by the owner,
labeling requirements to these
operator, or agent in charge to register
individual ‘‘restaurant concepts’’ would
the restaurant or similar retail food
not be consistent with the statute or
establishment, which is not otherwise
intent of Congress. Another comment
subject to section 403(q)(5)(H) of the
FD&C Act, with FDA for the purposes of expressed concern that a person who
operates more than 20 chain retail food
§ 101.11(d). (Section 101.11(d) pertains
establishments and wants to start a
to voluntary registration to become
‘‘new concept’’ would be required to
subject to the requirements of section
provide nutrition information if this
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act.)
‘‘new concept’’ is only in one location.
We received no comments on the
(Response 34) We disagree that we
proposed definition and are finalizing it
need to revise the definition of a
without change.
covered establishment to prevent a
H. Covered Establishment
misinterpretation that a single,
As already noted in section VI.A,
completely unique ‘‘restaurant concept’’
proposed § 101.11(a) would define
that is owned by a chain with 20 or
‘‘covered establishment’’ as a restaurant more other restaurants generally would
or similar retail food establishment that be covered by the rule. An
is a part of a chain with 20 or more
establishment that is ‘‘single’’ and a
locations doing business under the same ‘‘completely unique restaurant concept’’
is unlikely to have ‘‘20 or more
name (regardless of the type of
locations’’ and be ‘‘offering for sale
ownership, e.g., individual franchises)
substantially the same menu items’’ as
and offering for sale substantially the
same menu items, as well as a restaurant 20 or more other restaurants. Thus, such
an establishment is unlikely to satisfy
or similar retail food establishment that
is registered to be covered under section the criteria in the proposed definition to
be a ‘‘covered establishment’’ as it is
403(q)(5)(H)(ix) of the FD&C Act.
currently written. Likewise, if a person
(Emphasis added).
operates more than 20 chain retail food
In the following paragraphs, we
establishments and starts a ‘‘new
discuss general comments on this
concept,’’ that ‘‘new concept’’
proposed definition. We are finalizing
establishment would not be a covered
the definition of ‘‘covered
establishment unless it is part of a chain
establishment’’ without change, except
with 20 or more locations doing
to refer to § 101.11(d) instead of section
business under the same name and
403(q)(5)(H)(ix) of the FD&C Act.
offering for sale substantially the same
However, as already discussed (see
menu items. We are retaining our
sections VI.B, VI.C, VI.D, VI.E, and
definition, which, as we described in
VI.F), changes we are making to other
the proposed rule, is derived from
terms (i.e., adding a definition of
sections 403(q)(5)(H)(i) and (xi)(I) of the
‘‘location,’’ revising the definition of
FD&C Act (76 FR 19192 at 19195).
‘‘restaurant or similar retail food
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(Comment 35) One comment
recommended that we revise the
definition of covered establishment to
use the following language from its
State’s regulation: ‘‘A food
establishment that: (1) Is engaged in the
business of preparing and selling food
items for immediate human
consumption on the premises or off the
premises, . . . and (2) offers for sale
substantially the same menu items,
utilizing menus, menu boards or food
item tags, in servings that are
standardized for portion size and
content, and (3) is one of a group of . . .
food establishments . . . that (a)
operates under common ownership or
control, or (b) operates as franchised
outlets of a parent business, or (c) does
business under the same name.’’ The
comment cited only those portions of its
regulation relevant to the questions
raised by the definition of covered
establishment in our proposed rule, and
used ellipses to indicate text that was in
the State regulation but not being
offered as part of the definition of
‘‘covered establishment’’ in this rule.
(Response 35) We disagree with this
comment and are not revising the
definition of ‘‘covered establishment’’ to
incorporate its suggestions. Our
definition of covered establishment is
derived from the Federal statutory
language. The only basis offered by the
comment was that the suggestions are
used in a State law; the comment did
not state why these changes were
necessary from a policy perspective or
legally justified under the Federal law.
(Comment 36) One comment
recommended that the rule apply to
most restaurants, and not just those with
more than 20 locations, possibly
excluding only establishments with a
very small seating capacity. The
comment contended that consumers
already know that fast food is ‘‘bad for
you’’ and they need to know the
nutrition information about the food in
other restaurants.
(Response 36) This rule implements
section 4205 of the ACA, which, in
general, covers only restaurants and
similar retail food establishments that
are part of a chain with 20 or more
locations. Section 4205 of the ACA
allows other restaurants and similar
retail food establishments to register
with FDA to become subject to the
Federal requirements, but it does not
require them to do so.
(Comment 37) One comment asked us
to clarify whether the rule would apply
to foreign establishments of a particular
chain that has 20 or more
establishments in the United States, and
also has an establishment located in a
foreign location, such as Italy.
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(Response 37) The rule applies to
locations in the United States, including
any State or Territory of the United
States, the District of Columbia, and the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico. This
geographic scope is consistent with the
definitions of ‘‘State’’ and ‘‘Territory’’ in
section 201(a) of the FD&C Act.
(Comment 38) A few comments asked
us to clarify that contractors and
managed food service operations would
be covered if they offer for sale
substantially the same menu items.
(Response 38) Whether any other
specific contractor or managed food
service would be subject to the rule
would depend on whether it satisfied all
criteria established within the definition
of ‘‘covered establishment.’’ Thus, to be
a covered establishment, an
establishment operated by a contractor
or managed food service must be a
restaurant or similar retail food
establishment that is a part of a chain
with 20 or more locations doing
business under the same name and
offering for sale substantially the same
menu items. We expect that some
establishments operated by contractors
and managed food services will satisfy
all of these criteria.
2. Cooperatives
(Comment 39) Some comments
addressed cooperatives and discussed
multiple aspects related to the
definition of ‘‘covered establishment,’’
including ‘‘part of a chain,’’ ‘‘doing
business under the same name,’’ and
‘‘offering for sale substantially the same
menu items.’’ One comment considered
that cooperatives should not be exempt
because the law expressly states
‘‘regardless of . . . ownership.’’ One
comment considered that the type of
ownership of grocery stores, such as a
cooperative, is irrelevant to whether a
store is part of a chain. This comment
maintained that the law clearly requires
chains operating under the same name
to disclose calories, regardless of the
type of ownership. This comment also
maintained that grocery store
cooperatives face a similar situation as
that faced by independent franchise
owners of chain restaurants.
Other comments generally expressed
the view that cooperatives should not be
covered by the rule. One comment
asserted that establishments associated
with the same wholesaler or cooperative
should not be considered ‘‘part of a
chain’’ regardless of whether they
operate under the same ‘‘banner’’ or
under a different ‘‘banner.’’ The
comment considered that cooperatives
are the opposite of chains because they
are owned by individual members,
operate independently, and are not
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bound by franchise agreements, whereas
chains are centrally controlled with
little say or choice by participants. The
comment asked us to recognize that
independent grocers are not part of a
chain of 20, doing business under same
name and selling the same items, even
if we believe cooperatives are similar
retail food establishments.
A few comments maintained that the
definition for ‘‘doing business under the
same name’’ does not apply to
cooperatives because they are
independent and exercise their
independence more than franchised
restaurants. According to one comment,
independent retailers own, control, and
operate their stores independently as
customers of voluntary wholesalers and
members of cooperatives. The comment
explained that the food distribution
system allows independent retailers to
take advantage of economies of scale
when procuring goods and services, as
well as marketing and advertising, thus
helping independent operators
effectively compete with large national
chain stores. The comment also
explained that these entities are
independently owned and operated
businesses that often compete with
other stores under the same banner
name, and that menu items can have
different general recipes and be
prepared in substantially different ways
with substantially different food
components.
One comment asked us to recognize
that members of cooperatives are not
‘‘doing business under the same name.’’
For example, the comment considered
that ‘‘Fred’s Thriftway’’ is not the same
as ‘‘Bob’s Thriftway.’’ The comment
considered that ‘‘Thriftway’’ signals that
these establishments are part of a
cooperative but maintained that they are
two different stores.
One comment contended that the
term ‘‘offering for sale substantially the
same menu items’’ may not apply to
some foods, such as brownies or potato
salad, made in grocery store
cooperatives, although those foods may
be offered for sale under the same name
in those stores. According to the
comment, ‘‘Bob’s Thriftway’’ and
‘‘Mike’s Thriftway’’ may both sell
brownies made from the same general
recipe, (e.g., flour, sugar, eggs, chocolate
and butter); however, because
independent grocers compete with each
other, each is likely to include a secret
ingredient, and as a result, the brownies
are not the same.
(Response 39) We agree with some
comments that the type of ownership of
an establishment is not relevant to
whether it is covered. To be subject to
the rule, a cooperative must satisfy all
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71175
the criteria in the definition of ‘‘covered
establishment.’’ In other words, to be
subject to the rule a cooperative must be
a restaurant or similar retail food
establishment that sells restaurant-type
food and is a part of a chain with 20 or
more locations doing business under the
same name (regardless of the type of
ownership, e.g., individual franchises)
and offering for sale substantially the
same menu items. As we explain in
section VI.D., we are not defining the
term ‘‘chain’’ in this rulemaking. In
addition, for the reasons we provide in
section VI.E., we continue to define
doing business under the same name to
include names that are slight variations
of each other. Independent businesses
that are cooperatives, even those that are
similarly named, are not covered
establishments if, for example, they are
only connected insofar as they take
advantage of economies of scale when
procuring goods and services, or for
marketing and advertising purposes, but
are not ‘‘offering for sale substantially
the same menu items.’’
However, given the way cooperatives
generally are structured, we do not
expect that two cooperatives would be
offering for sale substantially the same
menu items. Unless a food such as a
brownie offered for sale in Bob’s
Thriftway has the same general recipe,
prepared in substantially the same way,
with substantially the same food
components as a brownie offered for
sale in Mike’s Thriftway, the two
cooperatives’ brownies would not be
‘‘substantially the same.’’ However, if
Bob’s Thriftway and Mike’s Thriftway
share a recipe such as a brownie recipe,
and the only difference between the two
brownie recipes is that Mike’s Thriftway
has added a ‘‘secret ingredient,’’ the
brownies could be considered
substantially the same menu item,
depending on the importance of that
ingredient. Note that even in this
circumstance, Bob’s Thriftway and
Mike’s Thriftway would not be ‘‘offering
for sale substantially the same menu
items’’ if the brownie is the only menu
item that the two cooperatives share.
In addition, we note that a
cooperative that is a restaurant or
similar retail food establishment and
does not satisfy all of the criteria to be
a covered establishment, but voluntarily
registers to be covered in accordance
with § 101.11(d), would be subject to the
rule.
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I. Revisions to Several Provisions To
Clarify the Applicability of the Rule to
Those Restaurants and Similar Retail
Food Establishments That Are Covered
Establishments
This rule applies to restaurants and
similar retail food establishments that
satisfy the definition of ‘‘covered
establishment’’ in this rule. Several
provisions of the proposed rule that
would apply to ‘‘covered
establishments’’ used the term
‘‘restaurant or similar retail food
establishment’’ rather than ‘‘covered
establishment.’’ To make clear that
those provisions only apply to those
restaurants and similar retail food
establishments that satisfy the definition
of ‘‘covered establishment,’’ we are
replacing the term ‘‘restaurant or similar
retail food establishment’’ with
‘‘covered establishment’’ in those
provisions. The affected provisions are:
• The definition of ‘‘custom order’’
(§ 101.11(a));
• The definition of ‘‘menu or menu
board’’ (§ 101.11(a));
• The introductory text of
§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii) regarding nutrition
information for a standard menu item
that must be available in written form;
• The introductory paragraph of
proposed § 101.11(c)(6) (which we are
establishing in § 101.11(c)(3)) regarding
information that must be provided to
FDA substantiating nutrient
information; and
• A subparagraph of proposed
§ 101.11(c)(6) regarding specific
substantiation documentation (i.e.,
proposed paragraph (c)(6)(ii)(D), which
we are establishing as paragraph
(c)(3)(ii)(D)).
We note these changes in our
discussion of each of these specific
provisions.
VII. Comments and FDA Response on
the Proposed Definition of Menu or
Menu Board (Proposed § 101.11(a))
Proposed § 101.11(a) would define
‘‘menu or menu board’’ as the primary
writing of the restaurant or similar retail
food establishment from which a
customer makes an order selection,
including, but not limited to, breakfast,
lunch, and dinner menus; dessert
menus; beverage menus; children’s
menus; other specialty menus;
electronic menus; and menus on the
Internet. The proposed definition would
also provide that menus may be in
different forms, e.g., booklets,
pamphlets, or single sheets of paper and
that menu boards include those inside
a restaurant or similar retail food
establishment as well as drive-through
menu boards at restaurants or similar
retail food establishments.
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In the proposed rule, we stated that
given the importance for all consumers
to have access to nutrition information
when making order selections, ‘‘primary
writing’’ should be interpreted from a
consumer’s vantage point (76 FR 19192
at 19202). For example, while a printed
menu may be the ‘‘primary writing’’ of
a restaurant used by a customer ordering
food while dining inside the restaurant
itself, a menu mailed as a flyer to
another customer’s home could be the
‘‘primary writing’’ of the restaurant used
by that customer ordering take-out or
delivery from the same restaurant. Both
the printed menu and the menu flyer
would meet the definition of ‘‘menu’’ or
‘‘menu board’’ under proposed
§ 101.11(a).
In the following paragraphs, we
discuss comments on this proposed
definition. We have revised the
definition by replacing the term
‘‘restaurant or similar retail food
establishment’’ with ‘‘covered
establishment’’ in three locations in the
definitions for clarity (see explanation
in section VI.I). We are also including
factors used to determine whether a
writing is or is part of the primary
writing from which a consumer makes
an order selection.
(Comment 40) Many comments
supported the proposed definition and
agreed that ‘‘primary writing’’ should be
interpreted from the perspective of
consumers, so that each writing of the
establishment that is the primary
writing used by consumers in making
order selections would be considered a
menu or menu board. Several comments
asserted that consumers need to see
calorie information when making order
selections in order for the information to
be useful to them. One comment noted
that Congress did not intend for covered
establishments to only provide calorie
declarations on a single medium in each
establishment, as evidenced by the fact
that section 4205 of the ACA requires
calorie declarations on drive-through
menu boards and menus and menu
boards located inside establishments.
Another comment suggested that we
emphasize that any list or display of a
standard menu item that is primary to
the consumer placing an order would
constitute a menu or menu board.
One comment considered that a single
store that has multiple menus or menu
boards should be able to select the menu
on which the calories must be disclosed.
For example, a single store might have
more than one menu board—with one
such board being handwritten and
highlighting specific special options. As
long as every food offered for sale in the
establishment is listed on one menu
board and that menu board includes the
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necessary information, the comment
considered that requiring calories on
that one menu board should be
sufficient. Alternatively, the comment
suggested that the calorie declaration be
required on the ‘‘menu board of
prominence,’’ which the comment
considered to be the menu board from
which the order is placed.
Another comment similarly asserted
that covered establishments must post
the required information on the menu
used most often rather than on all
menus. Alternatively, the comment
suggested that we provide an exemption
for menus not commonly used by
customers. In support of its suggestion,
the comment pointed out that the
statute uses the singular term ‘‘writing’’
and not a plural term. The comment
stated that 90 percent of pizza
customers order over the phone or the
Internet or may order from memory. The
comment asserted that to require
nutrient information on every menu,
menu board, Internet menu, or other
writing is expensive, time consuming,
and burdensome. The comment stated
that it already uses in-store brochures to
provide nutrition information to the
small percentage of in-store customers.
Although each franchisee in the
applicable chain is required to carry
certain menu items, the comment
considered that each franchisee has the
latitude to add items to the menu.
Because the franchisee can add menu
items to its menu, the comment asserted
that it would be costly to a franchisee
to change menu boards, because the
franchisee will be required to order new
menu boards and request calorie
information for the new menu items.
One comment referred to an ‘‘industry
proposal’’ for posting calories only on
menus and menu boards that have the
highest percentage of sales for that
particular establishment, e.g., Web sites
used for Internet ordering and paper
menus for phone ordering. This
comment was opposed to any such
proposal. The comment asserted that
this approach would be an unfair
business advantage for certain
restaurants because it would allow some
restaurants to provide calorie
declarations on less expensive menus
such as paper take-out menus or
Internet Web sites while others would
have to provide calorie declarations for
more expensive in-restaurant menus
and menu boards. The comment also
expressed concern that any requirement
for a covered establishment to declare
calories on only the menus that listed
substantially all menu items would
exclude children’s menus and dessert
menus.
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(Response 40) We agree with the
comments in support of the proposed
definition. We disagree that the required
information should only be posted on
the menu or menu board most often
used by consumers in a covered
establishment, the ‘‘menu board of
prominence,’’ or only on the menus and
menu boards that have the highest
percentage of sales for a particular
covered establishment. The critical
factor is whether written material is or
is part of the primary writing of a
covered establishment from which a
customer makes an order selection. It is
not a matter of physical prominence of
a menu, or the proportion of customers
who order from a menu. Some
consumers may want to select from a
subset of standard menu items sold in
the covered establishment. For example,
if a consumer wanted to order only a
dessert, he or she may ask for a dessert
menu. As raised by one comment, if
calorie information is listed only on the
dinner menu, the consumer would not
have access to the calorie information
for the desserts if he or she is ordering
from the dessert menu. As we stated in
the proposed rule, given the importance
for all consumers to have access to
nutrition information when making
order selections, we believe that the
term ‘‘primary writing’’ should be
interpreted from a consumer’s vantage
point (76 FR 19192 at 19202).
In addition, in the proposed rule, we
tentatively concluded that a ‘‘menu’’ or
‘‘menu board’’ includes any writing of
the covered establishment that is the
primary writing from which a consumer
makes an order selection (76 FR 19192
at 19201). We affirm this conclusion.
The ‘‘primary writing’’ of an
establishment can include more than
one form of written material, such as a
paper menu, a delivery menu, and a
menu board; the critical factor is
whether the written material is or is part
of the primary writing of a covered
establishment from which a customer
makes an order selection. Further, we
clarify that determining whether a
writing is or is part of the primary
writing from which a consumer makes
an order selection depends on a number
of factors, including whether the
writing, such as a paper menu, delivery
menu, or sign, lists the name of a
standard menu item (or an image
depicting the standard menu item) and
the price of the standard menu item,
and whether the writing can be used by
a consumer to make an order selection
at the time the consumer is viewing the
writing (e.g., the writing is posted at the
cash register in a covered establishment,
or the writing lists the phone number or
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email address of a covered
establishment for purposes of placing an
order).
Accordingly, a writing of a covered
establishment that contains the name (or
image) and price of a standard menu
item, and that can be used by a
consumer to make an order selection
from the establishment at the time the
consumer is viewing the writing would
be a menu or menu board regardless of
whether, for example, the writing is not
the menu used most often by
consumers. Another writing, such as a
poster on a storefront, a banner or
billboard located along a road or
highway, or a tray-liner or table-tent at
a quick-service restaurant, could be
considered a ‘‘secondary’’ writing
within this context and would not meet
the definition of a ‘‘menu or menu
board,’’ provided that such writing does
not contain the name (or image) and
price of a standard menu item, and
cannot be used by a consumer to make
an order selection at the time the
consumer is viewing the writing.
We interpret the comment asserting
that section 403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of the FD&C
Act uses the singular term ‘‘writing’’ in
defining the term ‘‘menu or menu
board’’ as raising the question of what
Congress intended ‘‘primary writing’’ to
mean within the context of section
403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of the FD&C Act. In
construing section 403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of
the FD&C Act, FDA is confronted with
two questions. First, has Congress
directly spoken to the precise question
presented (Chevron step one)? (Chevron,
U.S.A., Inc. v. NRDC, Inc., 467 U.S. 837,
842 (1984).) If the ‘‘intent of Congress is
clear,’’ an Agency ‘‘must give effect to
the unambiguously expressed intent of
Congress.’’ (Id. at 843.) However, if
‘‘Congress has not directly addressed
the precise question at issue,’’ and the
statute is ‘‘silent or ambiguous with
respect to the specific issue,’’ then our
interpretation of the term ‘‘primary
writing’’ will be upheld as long as it is
based on a ‘‘permissible construction of
the statute (Chevron step two).
(Chevron, 467 U.S. at 842–43; FDA v.
Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp, 529
U.S. 120, 132 (2000).) To find no
ambiguity, Congress must have clearly
manifested its intention with respect to
the particular issue. (See e.g., Young v.
Community Nutrition Institute, 476 U.S.
974, 980 (1986).)
We have determined that, in enacting
section 403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of the FD&C Act,
Congress did not speak directly and
precisely to the meaning of ‘‘primary
writing’’ within the definition of ‘‘menu
or menu board.’’ In conducting the
Chevron step one analysis, we began
with the language of section
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71177
403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of the FD&C Act. (See
e.g., Touche Ross & Co. v. Redington,
442 U.S. 560, 568 (‘‘[A]s with any case
involving the interpretation of a statute,
our analysis must begin with the
language of the statute itself.’’).) The
term ‘‘primary writing’’ is not defined in
section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act or
elsewhere in the FD&C Act. In general,
a term that is undefined in a statute
carries its ordinary meaning. (See e.g.,
Perrin v. United States, 444 U.S. 37, 42
(1979) (‘‘A fundamental canon of
statutory construction is that, unless
otherwise defined, words will be
interpreted as taking their ordinary
contemporary, common meaning.’’).)
One common definition of the term
‘‘writing’’ is ‘‘something written,
especially (a) meaningful letters or
characters that constitute readable
matter . . . (b) a written work,
especially a literary composition’’ (Ref.
20). Similarly, another common
definition of the term ‘‘writing’’ is
‘‘something written: As (a) letters or
characters that serve as visible signs of
ideas, words, or symbols; (b) a letter,
note, or notice used to communicate or
record; (c) a written composition.’’ (Ref.
21; see also Ref. 22).
One common definition of the term
‘‘primary’’ is ‘‘first or highest in rank or
importance; principal’’ (Ref. 23; see also
Refs. 24 and 25). Another common
definition of the term ‘‘primary’’ is
‘‘functioning or transmitting without
intermediary: Direct’’ (Ref. 25; see also
Ref. 24).
Where, as here, the statutory language
on its face does not clearly establish
Congressional intent, it is appropriate to
also consider other traditional tools of
statutory construction, including other
language in the section, the language,
design, and purpose of the statute as
whole, and legislative history. (See e.g.,
Pharmaceutical Research &
Manufacturers of America v. Thompson,
251 F.3d 219, 224 (D.C. Cir. 2001); Davis
v. Michigan Department of Treasury,
489 U.S. 803, 809 (1989); Martini v.
Federal National Mortgage Association,
178 F.3d 1336, 1345 (D.C. Cir. 1999).)
The other language in section
403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of the FD&C Act
indicates that the writing at issue is
writing of the establishment ‘‘from
which a consumer makes an order
selection.’’ Further, other provisions
within section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C
Act indicate that requirements apply to
more than one form of writing within a
covered establishment. (See sections
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I) and (II) of the FD&C
Act.) In addition, a general purpose of
section 4205 of the ACA is to make
calorie and other nutrition information
available to consumers in a direct and
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accessible manner to enable consumers
to make informed and healthful dietary
choices. Lastly, the legislative history
does not suggest that Congress intended
to limit the term to only one writing of
the establishment.
Having determined that the meaning
of ‘‘primary writing’’ in section
403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of the FD&C Act is
ambiguous, we have determined that the
final rule’s interpretation of ‘‘primary
writing’’ is a permissible construction of
the statute (Chevron step two). In
conducting the Chevron step two
analysis, the same tools of statutory
construction are available as those for
the step one analysis.
First, the interpretation in the final
rule is consistent with the plain
meaning of the statute (Ref. 26). (See
also Perrin v. United States, 444 U.S. 37,
42 (1979).) Under the final rule, a
‘‘primary writing’’ is ‘‘something
written,’’ such as letters or characters on
a sign or board. Further, determining
whether the ‘‘writing’’ is ‘‘primary,’’
meaning of the most relevance or
importance within this context or
functioning without intermediary, or
direct, depends on a number of factors,
including whether the writing lists the
name of a standard menu item (or an
image depicting the standard menu
item) and the price of the standard
menu item, and whether the writing can
be used by a consumer to make an order
selection at the time the consumer is
viewing the writing. In developing these
factors, we considered other language in
section 403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of the FD&C Act,
specifically that the writing of the
establishment is one ‘‘from which a
consumer makes an order selection.’’
We also considered other language
within section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C
Act, including sections 403(q)(5)(H)(i)
and (ii)(I) and (II) of the FD&C Act,
which together require a covered
establishment to post calorie and other
information on a menu and menu board.
Further, in considering the general
purpose of the section 4205 of the ACA,
we determined that construing the term
‘‘primary writing’’ within the meaning
of section 403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of the FD&C
Act so as to include more than one form
of writing, dependent on specific
factors, would better serve the purposes
of section 4205.
For all of these reasons, § 101.11(a)
continues to specify that a menu or
menu board is defined as the primary
writing of the restaurant or similar retail
food establishment from which a
consumer makes an order selection.
In response to the comment regarding
costs related to adding new menu items
to a menu or menu board, we first note
that section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii) of the FD&C
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Act requires covered establishments to
declare calories on menus and menu
boards for standard menu items listed
on such menu and menu boards.
Therefore, to the extent a covered
establishment adds a new standard
menu item to the establishment’s menu
or menu board, the establishment would
be required to declare calories on the
menu or menu board for the new
standard menu item. Further, a covered
establishment that decides to add a new
menu item to a menu or menu board has
already decided to incur the cost of
redesigning or replacing the menu or
menu board for such change—i.e., to
display the new standard menu item. In
this situation, the additional cost to the
establishment is the cost for
determining the calorie information that
must be declared for the new standard
menu item.
Regarding costs related to determining
nutrition information for standard menu
items, we note that this rule also
provides flexibility in order to minimize
such costs. As discussed in section
XVIII, section 403(q)(5)(H)(iv) of the
FD&C Act provides that a restaurant or
similar retail food establishment must
have a reasonable basis for its nutrient
content disclosures. As also discussed
in section XVIII, this rule provides that
a covered establishment can satisfy the
requirements of 403(q)(5)(H)(iv) of the
FD&C Act by various means, including
use of nutrient databases, cookbooks,
laboratory methods, and other
reasonable means, including the use of
Nutrition Facts on labels on packaged
foods that comply with the nutrition
labeling requirements of section
403(q)(1) of the FD&C Act and § 101.9,
FDA nutrient values for raw fruits and
vegetables in Appendix C of part 101
(21 CFR part 101), or FDA nutrient
values for cooked fish in Appendix D of
part 101 (see § 101.11(c)(1)). In addition,
this rule provides that a covered
establishment can satisfy the
requirements of 403(q)(5)(H)(iv) of the
FD&C Act by relying on nutrition
information for a standard menu item
determined by the establishment’s
corporate headquarters or parent entity
(see § 101.11(c)(3)(i)(F), (c)(3)(iii)(D),
and (c)(3)(iv)(D)). In some cases, a
corporate headquarters or parent entity
could decide to maintain a nutrient
database and use it to determine
nutrition information for specialty
standard menu items offered for sale by
one or a few individual establishments
in the chain. Therefore, this rule
provides flexibility for covered
establishments in order to minimize
costs while also helping to ensure that
calorie and other nutrition information
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is made available to consumers in a
direct and accessible manner to enable
consumers to make informed and
healthful dietary choices.
(Comment 41) A few comments
appeared to believe that the proposed
rule would require covered
establishments to post or otherwise have
menu boards for disclosing calorie
information. These comments asked for
other options for disclosing calories.
One comment suggested that large menu
boards should not be required because
they will obscure the consumers’ view
of the preparation of their food and
thereby create a food safety issue. One
comment suggested that we consider
‘‘technological solutions’’ instead of
menu boards, e.g., use of a kiosk near
the point of sale. The comment also
suggested that we provide flexibility to
cover alternative sources such as a daily
feature board.
One comment asked us to provide
flexibility for facilities that operate in
locations too small to display a menu
board by allowing establishments to
choose among several different options
for display methods. As one alternative
to the traditional menu board, the
comment asked us to permit the use of
a display terminal to provide nutrition
information for menu items or allow
‘‘menu identifiers’’ (a term the comment
did not define) at the point of selection,
and to permit nutrition information to
be displayed adjacent to the food item
in cafeteria and buffet type settings.
(Response 41) Some comments may
have misinterpreted the proposed rule.
We did not propose to require that
covered establishments post or
otherwise have menu boards. Rather,
within this context, we proposed to
define the terms ‘‘menu’’ and ‘‘menu
board,’’ based on the statutory definition
at section 403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of the FD&C
Act, and to provide direction regarding
what information must be disclosed on
menus and menu boards for covered
establishments that have menus and
menu boards. That proposed definition
relies on the concept of a primary
writing. If an electronic display is the
primary writing of the covered
establishment from which a customer
makes an order selection, it would
satisfy our definition of a menu or menu
board. As such, electronic menus may
be used by covered establishments, and
we have retained electronic menus as an
example of menus in the definition of
menu or menu board in § 101.11(a).
Standard menu items offered for sale
in covered establishments with
cafeteria- and buffet-type settings are
most likely foods on display or selfservice foods. As discussed in section
XVII.B, for a food on display or a self-
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service food, section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii) of
the FD&C Act and § 101.11(b)(2)(iii)
require covered establishments to place
a sign adjacent to the food listing
calories per displayed food item or per
serving. This rule provides flexibility for
covered establishments by providing a
number of options for meeting the
requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii)
of the FD&C Act and § 101.11(b)(2)(iii).
For example, covered establishments are
permitted to declare calories for a food
on display or a self-service food by
posting calorie declarations on signs
adjacent to the food, on a sign attached
to a sneeze guard, or on a single sign or
placard (§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)).
Therefore, this rule provides flexibility,
as requested by some comments, for
covered establishments to choose among
several options for declaring calorie
information for standard menu items,
including self-service foods or foods on
display in cafeteria and buffet-type
settings.
(Comment 42) In the proposed rule,
we noted that many consumers order
restaurant-type food from restaurants or
similar retail food establishments over
the phone or Internet. We tentatively
concluded that if consumers can order
from a covered establishment online,
over the phone, or by fax, using a
writing of the covered establishment on
the Internet as the primary writing from
which he or she makes his or her order
selection, then the writing on the
Internet is a menu for the purposes of
section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act (76
FR 19192 at 19202). Some comments
asked us to keep in mind the need to
keep up with technology and not have
a rigid standard.
(Response 42) The definition of
‘‘menu or menu board’’ clearly specifies
that menus may be in different forms
and does not establish a standard for the
technology used on a menu or menu
board. The definition lists a number of
examples of primary writings that may
be menus or menu boards, including
electronic menus and menus on the
Internet, that are not meant to be allinclusive, as indicated by use of the
terms ‘‘including, but not limited to’’
before the examples. Because a menu or
menu board is defined as the primary
writing of the covered establishment
from which a customer makes an order
selection, the definition is adequate to
capture methods and media other than
those specifically listed in that
definition, so long as such methods and
media otherwise satisfy the criteria in
the definition.
(Comment 43) Several comments
noted that some local zoning laws do
not permit restaurants with drivethrough windows to build larger menu
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boards. These comments expressed
concern about how to comply with the
new requirements for menu boards in
light of State or local size restrictions.
One comment asked us to provide more
flexibility for compliance, including
permitting the use of a pamphlet next to
the drive-through menu board. Some
comments suggested that we allow
nutrition information on a large poster
adjacent to the menu board.
A few comments supported the use of
stanchions (i.e., free-standing boards
that are not connected to the menu
board and are often placed near drivethrough menu boards) to post calorie
information. One comment maintained
that restaurants and similar retail food
establishments have a vested interest in
customer satisfaction in the context of
drive-through windows and have
concluded that clear and organized
space, presented within the framework
of a known brand, is the most critical
success factor in presenting information
to consumers on menu boards. This
comment considered that stanchions
adjacent or close to menu boards are
‘‘complete thoughts’’ if the information
is relevant, well organized, and clearly
marked, and that such stanchions will
help consumers with their menu
choices. The comment considered that
in many cases information on
stanchions is more clear and
conspicuous than on menu boards. The
comment noted that calorie information
is provided on stanchions in some
jurisdictions that require nutrition
labeling on menus and menu boards,
including Montgomery County
(Maryland), New York City,
Philadelphia, and certain counties in
New York. The comment maintained
that the current use of stanchions in
some jurisdictions is evidence of its
effectiveness, and noted that some
States and localities permit stanchions
because information is hard to read on
already crowded drive-through menu
boards.
A comment from a quick-service
restaurant chain asserted that
stanchions are less costly to update and
replace than menu boards. The chain
had conducted a consumer survey of
customers who purchased food from the
chain’s drive-through windows in 13 of
the chain’s restaurants that use
stanchions, as permitted in King
County, Washington, and submitted a
report of this survey to the docket for
this rule (Ref. 27). For the 128 customers
surveyed, the comment reported that 92
percent felt it was easy to find calories,
98 percent felt calories were easy to
understand, 95 percent thought the
stanchion location was clearly visible to
consumers, 95 percent noted nothing
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blocked view of stanchion, and 76
percent felt they had adequate time to
review before ordering.
One comment considered that while
‘‘the statute’’ refers to menus and menu
boards, it also gives us authority to
define those terms. (We assume this
comment is referring to section 4205 of
the ACA.) The comment stated that we
could include stanchions as a method to
communicate calorie information that is
clear and conspicuous.
Several comments agreed with our
tentative conclusion that stanchions
inadequately convey calorie
information. The comments asserted
that it is challenging for consumers to
read different information in different
locations at a drive-through window
especially when trying to read the
information from a car, where
consumers have limited mobility and a
limited field of vision. The comments
also asserted that, even with different
zoning laws, drive-through menu boards
have enough room for calories, although
photos and other marketing information
may need altering. One comment
pointed out that separate stanchions
would not comply with section
403(q)(5)(H)(ii) of the FD&C Act, which
requires that calories be on the menu
board itself.
(Response 43) We disagree that the
rule should provide for declaration of
calorie information in pamphlets or on
posters or stanchions, rather than on the
menu board at a drive-through in a
covered establishment. In the proposed
rule, we tentatively concluded that
stanchions inadequately convey calorie
information because a situation in
which customers need to look to one
board (the menu board) for important
food-selection information, such as
price, and another (the stanchion) for
calories, is likely to be more difficult for
customers attempting to use the
declared calorie information at the point
of selection (76 FR 19192 at 19206). We
also tentatively concluded that this is
particularly true in the drive-through
context, where customers have a
restricted field of vision from their car
windows, and may have a relatively
short time to consider the menu board
prior to ordering, because customers
often cannot view the full menu while
waiting in line. As discussed further in
the following paragraphs, the comments
provide insufficient basis for us to
conclude otherwise, and as a result, we
affirm our conclusion from the proposed
rule.
In addition, section
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(II)(aa) of the FD&C Act
requires the number of calories
contained in standard menu items to be
disclosed on the menu board itself.
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Section 403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of the FD&C Act
defines ‘‘menu’’ or ‘‘menu board’’ as
‘‘the primary writing of the restaurant or
similar retail food establishment from
which a customer makes an order
selection.’’ Because a stanchion is a freestanding board that is not connected to
a drive-through menu board and
therefore typically is not used by
consumers to make order selections, we
do not consider it to meet the definition
of ‘‘menu’’ or ‘‘menu board’’ as defined
in this rule and section 403(q)(5)(H)(xi)
of the FD&C Act. Accordingly, we
concluded that a stanchion cannot be
the means by which a covered
establishment discloses calorie
declarations on menus and menu boards
as required under section
403(q)(5)(H)(ii) of the FD&C Act and this
rule.
We considered the consumer survey
results provided with one comment and
did not find the information adequate to
overcome the concerns we raised in the
proposed rule regarding the use of
stanchions (Ref. 28). Although the
participants expressed favorable
impressions of the stanchions, the
survey data:
• Did not provide a comparison with
other calorie displays, including calorie
declarations on drive-through menu
boards without stanchions;
• Did not show whether participants
would have more or less favorable
impressions of calorie declarations on
drive-through menu boards without
stanchions.
• Only showed that the participants
liked the display and not whether the
display was useful for them in making
their order selections; and
• Did not assess the use of stanchions
in situations where the consumer needs
to make quick decisions because other
consumers are in the drive-through line
behind them.
For all of the reasons discussed in
response to this comment, this rule does
not provide for declaration of calories in
a pamphlet or on a stanchion at a drivethrough of a covered establishment as a
means of satisfying the requirement that
the number of calories contained in a
standard menu item be disclosed on the
menu and the menu board, as required
by section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii) of the FD&C
Act and § 101.11(b)(2)(i).
(Comment 44) Some comments
asserted that the proposed rule allows
the Secretary to amend the nutrition
information that must be disclosed and
that this will further burden restaurants
to replace drive-through and interior
menu boards multiple times.
(Response 44) We interpret the
comments as referring to section
403(q)(5)(H)(vi) of the FD&C Act. Under
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section 403(q)(5)(H)(vi) of the FD&C Act,
the Secretary (and, by delegation, FDA)
may, by regulation, require the
disclosure of a nutrient, other than a
nutrient required under section
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act, in
the written nutrition information that is
available to consumers upon request if
FDA determines that the nutrient
information should be disclosed for the
purpose of providing information to
assist consumers in maintaining healthy
dietary practices. If this is indeed what
the comments mean, the comments
appear to have confused section
403(q)(5)(H)(vi) of the FD&C Act with
the requirements in section
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I)(aa) related to the
disclosure of calories on a menu or
menu board. The statutory authority in
section 403(q)(5)(H)(vi) of the FD&C Act
for FDA to require disclosure in the
written nutrition information of a
nutrient other than one required under
section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C
Act does not address the calories
declarations that must be on a menu or
menu board.
(Comment 45) In the proposed rule,
we stated that we recognize that some
establishments may send menus as a
form of advertising. We tentatively
concluded that advertisements for food
fall outside the scope of section 4205 of
the ACA. However, take-out and
delivery menus, which include all or a
significant portion of items offered for
sale and serve as the primary writing
from which consumers make their order
selections, would be menus under the
proposed rule (76 FR 19192 at 19201).
Several comments considered that the
proposal did not adequately distinguish
between menus and menu boards and
advertisements or promotional material.
One comment considered that it is not
appropriate to require calorie disclosure
in advertising, such as a postcard
announcing a new restaurant that has
pictures of a few sample dishes.
However, the comment also considered
that when the advertising is the menu
itself and can be used as the ‘‘primary
writing’’ a customer uses to make an
order, calorie disclosure should be
required. The comment recommended
that the test be whether customers can
use the menu as a primary writing for
making their selection, not the way in
which the menu is presented or
delivered to the customers by the
restaurant or similar retail food
establishment. One comment asked us
to clarify that calorie disclosure should
be on any menu regardless of whether
the menu also serves as a marketing
tool. One comment stated that any list
of covered food items that is the primary
vehicle from which a customer places
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his or her order constitutes a menu. The
comment noted that in some instances,
an in-store sign that looks like an
advertisement (e.g., promotional poster)
for a menu item is the primary vehicle
from which the customer orders the
menu item when the menu item is not
included on the menu but is included
only on that sign. This comment asked
us to make clear that a sign listing a
menu item that is only listed on that
sign makes it a menu board.
One comment asked us to make clear
that covered menus include
individualized order sheets used at
certain restaurants. Another comment
asked us to make clear that take-out
menus are included and suggested that
a take-out menu be added as an example
to the definition in the regulation.
Some comments asked us to make a
clear statement that advertisements and
promotional material such as table top
stands, newspaper advertisements and
flyers, tray liners and point of purchase
marketing materials are not menus, even
if they list some names and prices. One
comment noted that, in the proposed
rule, we tentatively concluded that
‘‘advertisements for food fall outside the
scope of section 4205’’ but did not
include this statement in the proposed
definition. The comment asserted that
we hinted at potential grounds for
excluding some menus from coverage,
when we stated that ‘‘take-out and
delivery menus, which include all or a
significant portion of items offered for
sale and serve as the primary writing
from which consumers make their order
selections, would be menus under the
proposed rule’’ (76 FR 19192 at 19202;
emphasis added by comment). The
comment expressed concern that,
without specific language in the final
regulation that advertisements are not
menus and thus fall outside the scope
of section 4205 of the ACA, the terms
‘‘menu’’ or ‘‘menu board’’ could be
construed to encompass materials that
list menu items but that are in fact used
as advertisements. The comment
maintained that this clarity is needed to
ensure consistent enforcement. The
comment also recommended that we
expand on our statement that such
promotional materials are menus subject
to the menu labeling requirements if
they ‘‘include all or a significant portion
of items offered for sale.’’ The comment
asserted that limiting labeling
requirements, for example, to only
menus listing more than a certain
percentage of standard menu items sold
by the restaurant would have the
practical effect of limiting the number of
pieces covered, excluding many
promotional items (such as door hangers
and pizza box tops) and creating an
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objective standard that could guide both
restaurant behavior and enforcement.
The comment considered that requiring
calorie disclosures on promotional
material is especially burdensome for
some of the franchises who pay for this
promotional material.
One comment stated that circular
advertisements should not be menus.
Another comment recommended that
grocery store signs that highlight the
attributes of a food in the store not be
considered a menu or menu board. One
comment supported including nutrition
information on any food advertisement
that makes a health claim.
(Response 45) As discussed
previously in this document, the term
‘‘menu’’ or ‘‘menu board’’ includes any
writing of the covered establishment
that is the primary writing from which
a consumer makes an order selection.
As discussed in Response 40,
determining whether a writing is or is
part of the primary writing from which
a consumer makes an order selection
depends on a number of factors,
including whether the writing, such as
a take-out menu, sign, or poster, lists the
name of a standard menu item (or an
image depicting the standard menu
item) and the price of the standard
menu item, and whether the writing can
be used by a consumer to make an order
selection at the time the consumer is
viewing the writing (e.g., the writing is
posted at the cash register in a covered
establishment, or the writing lists the
phone number or email address of a
covered establishment for purposes of
placing an order). Accordingly, a
writing of a covered establishment that
contains the name (or image) and price
of a standard menu item, and that can
be used by a consumer to make an order
selection from the establishment at the
time the consumer is viewing the
writing would be a menu or menu board
regardless of whether, for example, the
writing is mailed to a consumer’s home
or is posted inside a covered
establishment. In contrast, written
material of an establishment that does
not satisfy this criteria, such as a poster
on a storefront, a coupon or other
promotional material, banners, tray
liners, billboards, and stanchions, could
be considered a ‘‘secondary writing’’ of
an establishment.
We recognize that, in the proposed
rule, we tentatively concluded that takeout and delivery menus would be
considered menus within the meaning
of section 403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of the FD&C
Act to the extent that such menus
include all or a significant portion of
items offered for sale (76 FR 19192 at
19201). However, we are not affirming
this conclusion for a number of reasons.
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First, we agree with the comment
asserting that the critical factor should
be whether the take-out or delivery
menu is or is part of the primary writing
from which a consumer makes an order
selection, not the way in which the
menu is presented or delivered to
consumers.
Second, as discussed previously in
this document, in this rule we clarified
the factors to be considered in
determining whether a writing is or is
part of the primary writing from which
a consumer makes an order selection,
and these factors help clarify whether a
writing constitutes a menu or menu
board or an advertisement or
promotional material, as requested by
several comments. Further, in light of
these factors, if we were to conclude
that delivery or take-out menus would
only be considered menus if they
included all or a significant portion of
items offered for sale, that conclusion
would be inconsistent with how we will
be determining whether other written
material constitutes a primary writing of
an establishment from which a
consumer makes an order selection,
particularly since consumers can use
take-out and delivery menus to make
order selections in generally the same
way as they would use dine-in menus.
In addition, menus vary in size and
selection. A covered establishment that
has a single menu for daily use,
including menu offerings for breakfast,
lunch, and dinner, may nonetheless
have separate take-out menus directed
only to breakfast, lunch, or dinner. We
see no reason to treat a take-out menu
that only includes menu offering for
breakfast any differently than we would
treat a breakfast menu used by
consumers to order and consume
breakfast while seated at the
establishment.
For these reasons, in this rule we are
not affirming the proposed rule’s
tentative conclusion that take-out and
delivery menus would be considered
menus within the meaning of section
403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of the FD&C Act to the
extent that such menus include all or a
significant portion of items offered for
sale. Instead, in this document we
identify factors we would use to
determine whether a writing is the
primary writing from which a consumer
makes an order selection—i.e., the name
(or image) and price of the standard
menu item food and a means to make
an order selection at the time the
consumer is viewing the writing.
Accordingly, determining whether a
writing is a menu or menu board does
not depend on how many items are
listed. If a writing constitutes a menu or
menu board within the meaning of
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71181
section 403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of the FD&C Act
and § 101.11(a), it must contain the
information required under section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act and
§ 101.11(b), regardless of the number of
items on that menu or menu board.
Any written material that is or is part
of the primary writing from which a
consumer makes an order selection,
whether it is an individualized order
sheet or a take-out menu, would be a
menu for purposes of this rule if it
includes the name (or image) and price
of a standard menu item and a means by
which a consumer can make an order
selection from the establishment at the
time the consumer is viewing the
writing. Providing calorie and other
required information on menus and
menu boards will make such
information available to consumers in a
direct and accessible manner to enable
consumers to make informed and
healthful dietary choices.
Using these factors, other writings of
a covered establishment, such as
newspaper ads, circular advertisements,
banners, or postcards that announce a
new restaurant and provide pictures of
sample dishes generally would not be
menus or menu boards. Although it is
possible that such writings could
include the name (or image) and price
of standard menu items, they generally
would not provide a means by which a
consumer can make an order selection
at the time the consumer is viewing the
writing and therefore such a writing
would not constitute a primary writing
from which a consumer makes an order
selection within the meaning of section
403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of the FD&C Act.
Likewise, a sign in a grocery store that
highlights attributes of a standard menu
item (e.g., by the name or image of the
menu item), without including the
price, would not be a menu or menu
board.
While a writing may constitute a
menu or menu board, not all of the
menu items listed on such writing
would require calorie declarations. For
example, if the requirements of section
4205 of the ACA do not apply to a food
(e.g., as a daily special, temporary menu
item, or customary market test item), a
covered establishment would not be
required to declare calories or other
nutrition information for such food
under this rule, meaning that a writing
listing a daily special or temporary
menu item would not be required to
bear a calorie declaration for such item.
Further, as discussed later in this
document (see Response 79), for certain
‘‘mix and match’’ situations, where the
menu or menu board describes an
opportunity for a consumer to combine
standard menu items for a special price
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(e.g., ‘‘Combine Any Sandwich with
Any Soup or Any Salad for $8.99’’), and
the calories for each standard menu
item, including each size option if
applicable, available for the consumer to
combine are declared elsewhere on the
menu or menu board, a covered
establishment would not be required to
declare the calories for such item (see
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(iv)).
The comment supporting nutrition
information on any food advertisement
that makes a health claim is outside the
scope of this rule, which establishes
requirements for declaring nutrition
information for standard menu items
offered for sale in establishments
covered by the requirements of section
4205 of the ACA. We note, however,
that material that constitutes food
labeling within the meaning of section
201(m) of the FD&C Act would be
subject to the requirements in § 101.10.
Under section 201(m) of the FD&C Act,
the term ‘‘labeling’’ means all labels and
other written, printed, or graphic matter
(1) upon any article or any of its
containers or wrappers, or (2)
accompanying such article.
(Comment 46) One comment
recommended that menu labeling
requirements apply to airline magazines
that include menus.
(Response 46) In the proposed rule,
we tentatively concluded that most
airplanes would not satisfy the
definition of ‘‘restaurant or similar retail
food establishment’’ because, in general,
they do not present themselves to the
public as restaurants, nor are they likely
to meet the floor space (or revenue)
threshold. As discussed in section VI.D,
under the definition of ‘‘covered
establishment’’ established in this rule
airplanes are not covered establishments
that must comply with the rule.
Therefore, the nutrition labeling
requirements of this rule do not apply
to airline magazines that include menus.
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VIII. Comments and FDA Response on
the Proposed Definition of Terms
Related to Foods Covered by the Rule
(Proposed § 101.11(a))
A. Restaurant Food and RestaurantType Food
As discussed in section VI.C, after
considering comments, we are deleting
the proposed definition of ‘‘restaurant
food’’ and establishing a revised
definition of ‘‘restaurant-type food’’ that
better reflects the food most like the
food offered for sale in restaurants. We
discussed these changes to two terms
related to foods covered by the rule
within section VI because the definition
of ‘‘restaurant-type food’’ established in
this rule is one of several terms related
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to the scope of establishments covered
by the rule.
B. Standard Menu Item
Proposed § 101.11(a) would define
‘‘standard menu item’’ as a restaurant or
restaurant-type food that is routinely
included on a menu or menu board or
routinely offered as a self-service food
or food on display. In the following
paragraphs, we discuss comments on
this proposed definition. We are
finalizing it without change, except to
revise ‘‘restaurant or restaurant-type
food’’ to ‘‘restaurant-type food’’ to
conform with our deletion of the term
‘‘restaurant food’’ throughout the rule
(see section VI.C).
(Comment 47) Several comments
supported the proposed definition. One
comment opposed the proposed
definition because it is ‘‘incomplete’’
and misunderstands the meaning of
‘‘standard’’ within the context of a chain
of 20 or more restaurants and similar
retail food establishments doing
business under the same name and
offering for sale substantially the same
menu items. The comment argued that
it is not the regularity with which a
menu item is sold at a given restaurant
that renders the item ‘‘standard’’ within
the context of a restaurant chain; rather,
it is the fact that the menu item is
offered across many establishments in
the chain, in substantially the same
form, and is prepared according to the
same recipe and using the same
ingredients. The comment maintained
that when foods are standardized,
nutrition information can be derived.
On the other hand, according to the
comment, if foods do not have a
common recipe, nutrition information
would be determined case-by-case,
which is impractical and cost
prohibitive. The comment suggested the
following definition: ‘‘A menu item that
appears on the menus of substantially
all restaurants in a chain that uses the
same general recipe and that is prepared
in substantially the same way with
substantially the same food
components, even if the name of the
menu item varies.’’
The comment also recommended that,
for a chain that prints a single
standardized menu for all its restaurants
or establishments or for those in a given
region, the term ‘‘standard menu item’’
be interpreted to refer to menu items
that appear on those centrally printed
and distributed menus. The comment
maintained that adopting this definition
would harmonize the terms ‘‘standard
menu item’’ and ‘‘covered
establishment’’ and ensure that the
requirements apply to the foods that are
subject to the type of standardization
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that would allow them to be
consistently prepared. The comment
also requested that a covered
establishment be allowed but not
required to provide the nutrition
information in writing at the point of
sale for menu items offered for sale in
only some establishments in a chain if
we decide to include such menu items
within the definition of standard menu
item in the final rule. Otherwise, the
comment considered that a chain retail
food establishment would have to
include, in nutrition brochures,
information on many menu items that
are sold in a small percentage of stores,
which could be confusing and costly.
(Response 47) We disagree that the
definition of ‘‘standard menu item’’
should be based on whether the menu
item is offered across substantially all of
the establishments within the chain, in
substantially the same form, and is
prepared according to the same recipe
and using the same ingredients. Section
403(q)(5)(H)(i) of the FD&C Act
provides, in relevant part, that ‘‘in the
case of food that is a standard menu
item that is offered for sale in a
restaurant or similar retail food
establishment that is part of a chain
with 20 or more locations doing
business under the same name . . . and
offering for sale substantially the same
menu items, the restaurant or similar
retail food establishment shall disclose
the [required] information. . . .’’. The
statutory language does not indicate that
a menu item must be offered for sale in
all of the restaurants or similar retail
food establishments within a chain in
order for it to be a ‘‘standard menu
item’’ at a particular covered
establishment. Indeed, it would be
burdensome and impractical for
establishments and inspectors to
continually evaluate all of the menu
items offered by a chain to determine
which items are offered by all
establishments in the chain in order to
determine whether a given menu item is
a standard menu item subject to
requirements of this rule. In addition,
we have no evidence that it would be
impractical and cost prohibitive to
require covered establishment to
provide the nutrition required by this
rule for menu items that they routinely
offer. We continue to believe that it is
reasonable to interpret ‘‘standard menu
item’’ to mean a restaurant-type food
routinely included on a menu or menu
board or routinely offered as a selfservice food or food on display in a
given covered establishment.
We would not object to central
printing of a single, standardized menu
for use by all covered establishments
within a chain, provided that the
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centrally printed menu complies with
the requirements of this rule and
applicable provisions of the FD&C Act.
However, if an individual covered
establishment offers for sale an
additional standard menu item that is
not offered by every establishment in
the chain and, therefore, is not included
on the centrally printed menu, that
establishment still must comply with all
applicable requirements of this rule for
that standard menu item, including
where and how the nutrition
information must be disclosed.
We disagree that a covered
establishment would have to include, in
nutrition brochures, information on
many menu items that are sold in a
small percentage of stores. A covered
establishment need only provide the
required information for the standard
menu items it offers for sale.
(Comment 48) A few comments stated
that grocery stores use items from other
departments within the grocery store
(e.g., meat department, produce
department) to make its prepared food
items. The ingredients for a given
prepared food can vary significantly
depending on the availability of items in
the store. These comments argued that
labeling and determining calorie
information for these items would be
difficult.
(Response 48) If a prepared food item
varies significantly depending on what
ingredients a covered establishment
happens to have available, the item may
not meet the definition of standard
menu item. For example, if a grocery
store with a hot soup bar offers a
different vegetable soup every day based
on whatever vegetables the store
happens to have in surplus (e.g.,
cabbage and tomatoes soup one day,
carrots and leeks the next, spinach and
squash on a third day), and if none of
these vegetable soups is offered for sale
routinely, then none of the vegetable
soups would meet the definition of
standard menu item. Even if the grocery
store names each version of the soup as
‘‘vegetable soup,’’ the item would not be
considered a standard menu item,
because the soup’s ingredients
significantly differ daily.
C. Combination Meal
Proposed § 101.11(a) would define
‘‘combination meal’’ as a standard menu
item that consists of more than one food
item, for example a meal that includes
a sandwich, a side dish, and a drink.
The proposed definition would further
provide that a combination meal may be
represented on the menu or menu board
in narrative form, numerically, or
pictorially. Some combination meals
may include a variable menu item (or be
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a variable menu item as defined in
§ 101.11(a)) where the components may
vary. For example, the side dish may
vary among several options (e.g., fries,
salad, or onion rings) or the drinks may
vary (e.g., soft drinks, milk, or juice) and
the customer selects which of these
items will be included in the meal.
Comments that addressed the
proposed definition agreed with it.
Therefore, we are finalizing it without
change, except to correct a
typographical error by removing an
open parenthesis mark between ‘‘may
include a variable menu item’’ and ‘‘or
be a variable menu item . . .’’
D. Variable Menu Item
Proposed § 101.11(a) would define
‘‘variable menu item’’ as a standard
menu item that comes in different
flavors, varieties, or combinations, and
is listed as a single menu item. In the
following paragraphs, we discuss
comments on this proposed definition.
We are finalizing it without change.
(Comment 49) Several comments
considered that the term ‘‘variable menu
item’’ does not include items listed on
a menu that can be assembled in varying
combinations, such as pizza. These
comments suggested that the definition
of variable menu item be revised to ‘‘a
standard menu item that comes in
different flavors, varieties, or
combinations, and is listed as a single
menu item. It does not include foods,
beverages, or meals that are listed as
separate menu items but could be
combined in a variety of combinations
or that are different sizes of the same
menu item.’’
Several comments asked that we
clarify that the definition for ‘‘variable
menu item’’ does not mean different
sizes. They maintained that each size
should be accompanied by a calorie
declaration. In contrast, one comment
opposed the posting of calories for
different sizes, maintaining that
providing calorie information for each
size would take too much space and
might force the reduction in font size.
This comment asked us to permit
covered establishments to provide a
range of calories to reflect the calorie
content range from the smallest to the
largest size for beverages offered as
standard menu items. This comment
considered that the statute provides us
discretion to allow covered
establishments to provide calorie
information for different sized beverages
using ranges, as long as the calorie
information is clear and conspicuous.
(Response 49) We disagree that
variable menu items do not include
foods such as pizza. Our proposed
definition is consistent with section
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403(q)(5)(H)(v) of the FD&C Act, which
expressly includes pizza as an example
of a standard menu item that comes in
different flavors, varieties, or
combinations, but is listed as a single
menu item. For example, a menu or
menu board can list a pizza with a
particular price and up to four toppings.
This is an example of a food that comes
in different varieties because the
consumer has the choice of various
toppings.
We agree with the comments asserting
that different sizes of a standard menu
item are not variable menu items, but
disagree with the comment opposing the
posting of calories for different sizes.
Section 403(q)(5)(H)(v) of the FD&C Act
provides, in relevant part, that FDA
shall establish by regulation standards
for disclosing the nutrient content for
standard menu items that come in
different flavors, varieties, or
combinations, but which are listed as
single menu items. When a standard
menu item, including a beverage, is
listed on a menu or menu board by
name with different sizes, or each size
has its own price, each size would
constitute a standard menu item rather
than a different flavor, variety, or
combination, and each standard menu
item must include a calorie declaration.
E. Food on Display
Proposed § 101.11(a) would define food
on display as restaurant or restauranttype food that is visible to the customer
before the customer makes a selection,
so long as there is not an ordinary
expectation of further preparation by the
consumer before consumption. In the
following paragraphs, we discuss
comments on this proposed definition.
After considering comments, we are
finalizing the definition without
changes, except to revise ‘‘restaurant or
restaurant-type food’’ to ‘‘restauranttype food’’ to conform with our deletion
of the term ‘‘restaurant food’’
throughout the rule (see section VI.C).
(Comment 50) A few comments
agreed with the proposed definition.
Other comments suggested
modifications to the definition. Some
comments recommended that the
definition clarify that the food can be
self-serve or served by the restaurant
staff and that the food could be in the
open or behind glass. The comments
suggested that the following language be
added to the proposed definition: ‘‘It
includes food that is served by
restaurant staff or self-served by
customers and foods with Nutrition
Facts labels that customers cannot
examine without assistance. Food on
display can be behind glass or other
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material or in an open display
accessible to consumers.’’
(Response 50) We decline the requests
to revise the proposed definition. The
definition applies regardless of whether
the food is self-serve or served by the
restaurant staff, whether it is in the open
or behind glass, or whether it has a
Nutrition Facts label that can be
examined by a consumer without
assistance. In addition, we do not want
to appear to limit the definition to only
those foods described in the language
suggested by the comment.
(Comment 51) One comment asserted
that food on display, such as deli meats
and cheeses, should be covered even if
there is an expectation that there will be
further preparation before consuming. A
few comments asked that we clarify that
foods on display and self-service food
do not include fresh breads, cheese
wheels, bulk olives, bulk sauces,
condiments, and salads sold by the
pound like ‘‘tuna salad, egg salad,
chicken salad, etc.’’ One comment
recommended that grocery stores
provide calories for bakery items,
prepared deli foods such as salads and
sandwiches, prepared meals and side
dishes, freshly cooked pizza, fountain
drinks, salad bars, and other foods sold
for immediate consumption. One
comment requested an exemption for
certain food items prepared for home
consumption, such as fruit slices, fruit
cups, fruit salads, containers of fresh-cut
fruit, fresh squeezed juices, bulk or
packaged nuts, seeds, or dried fruit, and
similar items that are packaged (or in
the case of bulk products, are sold in
containers that are available for selfpackaging).
(Response 51) As discussed in section
VI.C, we are establishing a revised
definition of ‘‘restaurant-type food’’ that
better reflects the food most like the
food offered for sale in restaurants (see
Comment 24 and Response 24). Because
restaurants typically sell food that is
fully prepared, deli meats and cheese
generally will not meet the definition of
‘‘restaurant-type food,’’ and therefore
generally will not be covered. However,
certain foods offered for sale in grocery
stores that are visible to the consumer
before the consumer makes a selection,
such as prepared sandwiches, freshly
cooked pizza, and salad and hot food
bars would meet the definition of
restaurant type food and do not have an
ordinary expectation of further
preparation by the consumer before
consumption. These foods meet the
definition of foods on display. Other
foods commonly offered for sale by
grocery stores are not within the
definition of ‘‘restaurant-type food’’ and
would not be subject to the nutrition
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disclosure requirements of this rule
(e.g., foods such as dried fruit and nuts
bought from bulk bins or cases; foods
such as loaves of bread, bags or boxes
of dinner rolls, whole cakes, bags or
boxes of candy or cookies to be eaten
over several eating occasions or stored
for later use; foods such as deli salads
sold by unit of weight that are not selfserve and are not intended solely for
individual consumption, either
prepacked or packed upon consumer
request).
F. Self-Service Food
Proposed § 101.11(a) would define
‘‘self-service food’’ as restaurant or
restaurant-type food that is available at
a salad bar, buffet line, cafeteria line, or
similar self-service facility and that is
served by the customers themselves.
Self-service food also includes selfservice beverages. Comments that
addressed the proposed definition
supported it. We are finalizing it
without changes, except to revise
‘‘restaurant or restaurant-type food’’ to
‘‘restaurant-type food’’ to conform with
our deletion of the term ‘‘restaurant
food’’ throughout the rule (see section
VI.C).
G. Custom Order
Proposed § 101.11(a) would define
‘‘custom order’’ as a food order that is
prepared in a specific manner based on
an individual customer’s request, which
requires the restaurant or similar retail
food establishment to deviate from its
usual preparation of a menu item, e.g.,
a club sandwich without the bacon if
the establishment usually includes
bacon in its club sandwich. In the
following paragraphs, we discuss
comments on this proposed definition.
We are finalizing it without change,
except for two clarifications. First, we
are clarifying that the deviation is from
the usual preparation of a standard
menu item (emphasis added). Second,
we are replacing the term ‘‘restaurant or
similar retail food establishment’’ with
‘‘covered establishment’’ to clarify the
applicability of the definition (see the
discussion in section VI.I).
(Comment 52) Several comments
agreed with the proposed definition.
Some comments considered that the
custom order exemption should apply
to custom birthday cakes and
sandwiches made to order, because they
have no standard preparation from
which to deviate.
One comment maintained that
supermarkets often preprint labels or
previously affix them to packaging (e.g.,
a paper bag for a sandwich or bread) to
improve efficiency or to save costs.
Because consumers may request that
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toppings be added or removed from a
food item that is sold in the prelabeled
packaging, the comment considered that
this would be a custom order that would
be exempt from the menu labeling
requirements. The comment asked us to
clarify that the product would not be
misbranded if the packaging contained
nutrition information based on the
standard preparation.
(Response 52) If a custom birthday
cake that is made to order is not
routinely included on a menu or menu
board or routinely offered as a selfservice food or food on display, it would
not be covered by the rule, because it is
not a standard menu item.
We agree that a sandwich that is made
to order can be a custom order if the
sandwich is prepared in a specific
manner based on an individual
customer’s request, which requires the
covered establishment to deviate from
its usual preparation of a standard menu
item. However, some sandwiches that
are made to order can be variable menu
items, depending on how the food is
depicted on a menu or menu board or
otherwise offered for sale. We discuss
the definition of variable menu item in
section VIII.D.
We also agree that if a customer asks
that toppings be changed or removed
from a standard menu item, and the
standard menu item normally includes
certain toppings, the customer’s order is
a custom order. In response to the
question regarding the use of a
preprinted label on a food product,
which is subject to modification, we
first note that a food order that is
prepared in a specific manner based on
an individual customer’s request, which
requires a covered establishment to
deviate from its usual preparation of a
standard menu item, is a custom order
and is not subject to the requirements of
section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act
and this rule. Nevertheless, food
labeling, including nutrition labeling,
for a food must be truthful and not
misleading (section 403(a)(1) of the
FD&C Act). If a label on a food bears
nutrition information for such food that
is false or is otherwise misleading, the
food would be misbranded under
section 403(a)(1) of the FD&C Act.
Accordingly, if a custom order, such as
a club sandwich without the bacon if
the establishment usually includes
bacon in its club sandwich, bears
nutrition information in a preprinted
label that is false or is otherwise
misleading, such food could be
misbranded under the FD&C Act. We
recommend that covered establishments
refrain from affixing preprinted labels
on custom orders unless the information
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included on such labels is truthful and
not misleading.
H. Daily Special
Proposed § 101.11(a) would define
‘‘daily special’’ as a menu item that is
prepared and offered for sale on a
particular day, that is not routinely
listed on a menu or offered by the
covered establishment, and that is
promoted by the covered establishment
as a special menu item for that
particular day.
Comments that addressed the
proposed definition agreed with it.
Therefore, we are finalizing it without
change, except to add ‘‘or menu board’’
after ‘‘not routinely listed on a menu.’’
We inadvertently omitted ‘‘or menu
board’’ in the proposed definition.
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I. Food That Is Part of a Customary
Market Test
Proposed § 101.11(a) would define
‘‘food that is part of a customary market
test’’ as food that is marketed in a
covered establishment for fewer than 90
consecutive days in order to test
consumer acceptance of the product.
Comments that addressed the proposed
definition agreed with it. Therefore, we
are finalizing it without change, except
for changes to clarify that food that is
part of a customary market test is food
‘‘that appears on a menu or menu board
for less than 90 consecutive days’’ rather
than food ‘‘that is marketed in a covered
establishment for fewer than 90
consecutive days.’’ These changes are
consistent with section
403(q)(5)(H)(vii)(I)(cc) of the FD&C Act,
our description of ‘‘food that is part of
a customary market test’’ in the
proposed rule (76 FR 19192 at 19205),
and with the definition for ‘‘temporary
menu item’’ in § 101.11(a).
J. Temporary Menu Item
Proposed § 101.11(a) would define
‘‘temporary menu item’’ as a food that
appears on a menu or menu board for
less than a total of 60 days per calendar
year. Proposed § 101.11(a) would
explain that the 60 days includes the
total of consecutive and nonconsecutive days the item appears on
the menu. In the following paragraphs,
we discuss comments on this proposed
definition. We are finalizing it without
change.
(Comment 53) Several comments
agreed with the proposed definition.
One comment agreed that the 60 days
need not be consecutive, but considered
that seasonal items (such as the
pumpkin-flavored latte example we
included in the proposed rule (76 FR
19192 at 19205)) should not be exempt
if they are routinely offered each year.
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One comment recommended that we
change the definition for temporary
menu item to shorten the time period
from 60 to 45 days, to discourage
restaurants from continuously changing
menus to avoid calorie disclosure.
(Response 53) The proposed
definition for ‘‘temporary menu item’’
focused on the explicit statutory
language in section 403(q)(5)(H)(vii) of
the FD&C Act, which provides in
relevant part that the requirements of
section 403(q)(5)(H)(i) through (vi) of
the FD&C Act do not apply to
‘‘temporary menu items appearing on
the menu for less than 60 days per
calendar year.’’ Accordingly, we decline
to shorten the 60-day time period for
temporary menu items to 45 days, as
suggested by the comment, because
doing so would not be consistent with
section 403(q)(5)(H)(vii) of the FD&C
Act. We did not propose to go beyond
the language of section 403(q)(5)(H)(vii)
of the FD&C Act by developing a new
category of foods called ‘‘seasonal
items.’’ We disagree that seasonal items
should not be exempt if they are
routinely offered each year. Whether a
‘‘seasonal item’’ would be exempt
would be determined by whether the
seasonal item satisfied the definition of
a ‘‘temporary menu item’’ as determined
by the total number of consecutive and
non-consecutive days per calendar year
that the menu item appears on the menu
or menu board.
IX. Comments and FDA Response on
Proposed § 101.11(b)(1)(i)—Food
Subject to the Labeling Requirements
Proposed § 101.11(b) would establish
requirements for nutrition labeling of
food sold in covered establishments.
Proposed § 101.11(b)(1)(i) would
provide that the labeling requirement
would apply to standard menu items
offered for sale in covered
establishments. We are finalizing it
without change.
Most comments we received about
how the nutrition labeling requirements
of the rule apply to standard menu
items addressed specific labeling
requirements (e.g., the provisions of
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i) for what must be
provided on menus and menu boards),
and we discuss these comments as they
relate to such specific requirements.
Immediately following, we discuss one
comment more generally directed to the
applicability of the labeling
requirements of this rule.
(Comment 54) One comment
recommended that foods that are
preordered and picked up at a later date,
such as birthday cakes, boxed lunches,
deli trays, and sandwich platters, not be
covered by the menu labeling
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requirements because they are not foods
on display, standard menu items,
restaurant-type foods, or ordered from a
menu or menu board. The comment
asserted that restaurant foods are
ordered for consumption within a
proximate time from when they are
ordered, and the person ordering the
food intends to eat a portion of the food,
whereas catered foods are ordered on
behalf of a larger group of people and
further ahead of time.
(Response 54) The rule applies to
standard menu items offered for sale in
covered establishments. The rule
defines standard menu item as
restaurant-type food that is routinely
included on a menu or menu board or
routinely offered as a self-service food
or food on display (see § 101.11(a)). The
definition of ‘‘restaurant-type food’’ in
§ 101.11(a) captures the time when the
food will be eaten relative to when it is
purchased or picked up (i.e., usually
eaten on the premises, while walking
away, or soon after arriving at another
location) but when the food is ordered
in relation to when it is picked up, and
how many people will share the food,
have no bearing on the applicability of
the rule.
X. Comments and FDA Response on
Proposed § 101.11(b)(1)(ii)—Food Not
Subject to the Labeling Requirements
A. The Proposed Requirements
Proposed § 101.11(b)(1)(ii) would
provide that the labeling requirements
would not apply to alcohol beverages;
items such as condiments that are
placed on the table for general use; daily
specials; temporary menu items; custom
orders; and food that is part of a
customary market test. In sections X.B
through X.E of this document, we
discuss comments on this proposed
provision. After considering comments,
we are:
• Narrowing the proposed exemption
of alcohol beverages from all of the new
requirements for nutrition labeling;
• Clarifying that the exemption
applies to condiments that are for
general use, including those placed on
the table or on or behind the counter;
and
• Clarifying that the labeling
requirements of paragraph (b) do not
apply to self-service food and food on
display that is offered for sale for less
than a total of 60 days per calendar year
or fewer than 90 consecutive days in
order to test consumer acceptance.
B. Alcohol
1. Alcoholic Beverages
(Comment 55) Some comments agreed
with our proposal that alcoholic
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beverages should not be covered. Some
comments stated that alcoholic
beverages should not be considered food
within the context of menu labeling.
Some comments supporting FDA’s
proposal to exclude alcoholic beverages
referenced Alcohol and Tobacco Tax
and Trade Bureau’s (TTB’s) oversight of
alcoholic beverage labels, which
includes premarket approval. One
comment referred to the district court
decision cited in FDA’s proposed rule
(76 FR 19192 at 19203), Brown-Forman
Distillers Corp. v. Mathews, 435 F.
Supp. 5 (W.D.Ky. 1976), as evidence
that TTB has jurisdiction over the
labeling of alcoholic beverages under
the Federal Alcohol Administration Act
(FAA Act). Another comment argued
that requiring calorie declarations for
alcoholic beverages will not affect
obesity, because obesity is the result of
years of poor diet and lack of exercise.
Another comment mentioned a 2011
survey of adult consumers and stated
that it showed that most consumers do
not want to see calorie counts on drink
menus and want to order what they
want. The comment did not include or
provide a reference for the survey.
In contrast, many comments argued
that alcoholic beverages should be
covered in the final rule. Some
comments asserted that it was not the
intent of Congress to exclude alcoholic
beverages from the menu labeling
requirements. According to these
comments, Congress excluded some
foods from menu labeling, but did not
exclude alcoholic beverages. One
comment, referring to a press release of
two Senators (Ref. 29), contended that
Congress rejected lobbyists who wanted
to exclude alcoholic beverages.
Several comments argued that FDA
has jurisdiction to require menu
labeling for alcoholic beverages and not
TTB. According to these comments,
Congress directed FDA to require menu
labeling for all food, including alcoholic
beverages. Some comments maintained
that FDA currently has exclusive
authority to regulate labeling of certain
alcoholic beverages (such as wines
containing less than 7 percent alcohol
by volume and some beers), and another
comment stated that FDA had asserted
its authority over alcoholic beverages
when FDA and the Federal Trade
Commission took action on caffeinated
alcohol drinks. One comment
maintained that in the absence of a
specific prohibition or direct conflict,
each Agency can regulate alcoholic
beverages in line with its mandate.
Another comment stated that the U.S.
Supreme Court has noted, ‘‘The courts
are not at liberty to pick and choose
among congressional enactments, and
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when two statutes are capable of
coexistence, it is the duty of the courts,
absent a clearly expressed congressional
intention to the contrary, to regard each
as effective,’’ citing Morton v. Mancari,
417 U.S. 535, 551 (1974). Thus, this
comment asserted that there is no need
to pick and choose between the FAA
Act and section 4205 of the ACA
because these statutes are capable of
coexistence in that they apply to
different groups and different practices.
Several comments questioned the
applicability of the Brown-Forman
Distillers v. Matthews case to section
4205 of the ACA and contended that
Brown-Forman addressed the FAA Act
and FDA’s authority to impose
ingredient labeling on alcoholic
beverage labels, not nutrition labeling
on menus.
Some comments also argued that
FDA’s proposed position with regard to
alcoholic beverage menu labeling
contrasts markedly with its position on
meat and poultry menu items, the labels
for which are regulated by the USDA.
One comment remarked that alcohol
used in non-beverage foods, such as
bananas foster, would be covered under
the proposed rule, so not covering
alcohol in foods that are beverages
would not be consistent.
Comments supported covering
alcoholic beverages on public health
grounds. Some comments argued that
excluding alcoholic beverages is
problematic because it may give the
false impression that alcoholic drinks
do not contribute to the overall caloric
consumption of consumers, working
against the underlying goal of section
4205 of the ACA. Other comments
remarked that alcoholic beverages
contribute a substantial portion of
average total calories consumed by
Americans, representing the fifth
leading source of calories in American
adults’ diets. One comment stated that
alcoholic beverages provide more
calories per day on average than many
of the food items required to be labeled
under this law including pizza,
hamburgers, and fried potatoes. Another
comment argued that calories in
alcoholic beverages count toward
overweight and obesity just like calories
in foods and other beverages.
According to some comments, if some
drinks are labeled and some are not,
consumers might be confused, and they
would not have the information to
compare beverage options and make
informed choices. Comments also stated
that the calorie content of alcoholic
beverages can vary widely and cited
studies indicating that consumers are
likely to have difficulty identifying
lower calorie options. Comments argued
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that failing to provide consumers with
calorie information for alcoholic
beverages will make it more difficult for
them to follow the 2010 Dietary
Guidelines’ advice to control total
calorie intake to manage body weight.
(Response 55) The final rule does not
provide a general exemption for
alcoholic beverages. As we stated in the
proposed rule, alcoholic beverages are
‘‘food’’ under the FD&C Act. Section 201
of the FD&C Act defines ‘‘food’’ to
include ‘‘articles used for . . . drink for
man,’’ ‘‘for the purposes of this Act.’’
The nutrition labeling requirements of
section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act
apply to ‘‘food that is a standard menu
item.’’ In addition, as some comments
indicated, section 403(q)(5)(H)(vii) of
the FD&C Act deems the requirements
of section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act
inapplicable to certain foods, and
alcoholic beverages are not one of them.
While section 4205 of the ACA
amends section 403(q) of the FD&C Act,
which generally provides nutrition
labeling requirements for certain foods,
the nutrition labeling requirements in
section 4205 are directed specifically
toward standard menu items sold in
covered restaurants or similar retail food
establishments. Within this context,
providing nutrition information for an
alcoholic beverage for which other
labeling is also regulated by TTB
provides the same public health benefit
as providing the information for other
foods. The provisions of section 4205 of
the ACA do not apply to and have no
effect on the labels of food products sold
in packaged form, including alcoholic
beverages regulated by TTB.
Thus, we conclude that the nutrient
content disclosure requirements in
amended section 403(q)(5) of the FD&C
Act for standard menu items offered for
sale in covered establishments apply to
alcoholic beverages, even though the
labeling of alcoholic beverage containers
under the FAA Act is regulated by TTB.
FDA’s decision to include alcoholic
beverages in the menu labeling
regulations is not inconsistent with the
Brown-Forman decision, which
addressed the labeling of containers of
distilled spirits, wines, and malt
beverages subject to the requirements of
the FAA Act. This conclusion will not
subject the regulated alcohol beverage
industry ‘‘to ‘duplication and
inconsistent standards,’ ’’ a key basis for
the Brown-Forman decision. (BrownForman at 14, citing United States v.
National Ass’n of Securities Dealers,
422 U.S. 694, 735 (1975)). The
requirements we are finalizing here do
not directly conflict with any TTB
requirements. As comments pointed
out, the nutrition labeling requirements
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of section 4205 of the ACA do not apply
to and have no effect on the labels of
alcoholic beverage containers. In
addition, this final rule applies to
covered establishments, while the FAA
Act’s labeling and advertising
regulations generally apply to distillers,
brewers, rectifiers, blenders, producers,
importers, wholesalers, bottlers, and
warehousemen of alcoholic beverages
(see 27 U.S.C. 205). In short, the two
regulatory schemes address different
labeling and different actors; they are
‘‘capable of coexistence.’’ (See Manconi,
cited previously in this document.)
We also recognize that applying this
final rule to alcoholic beverages also
regulated by TTB is more consistent
with the inclusion of meat, poultry, and
egg products that are also regulated by
USDA.
From a public health perspective, we
agree that requiring nutrition labeling of
alcoholic beverages that are standard
menu items is more likely to enable
consumers to compare beverage options
and make informed order selections in
covered establishments. In addition,
while obesity may be related to poor
diet generally and a lack of exercise,
calories in alcoholic beverages
contribute to obesity and overweight
just like calories in other foods.
Alcoholic beverages contribute a
substantial portion of average total
calories consumed by American adults
(Ref. 3). Table 2–2 in the 2010 Dietary
Guidelines for Americans (‘‘2010
Dietary Guidelines’’), jointly developed
and issued by HHS and the USDA,
reports that alcoholic beverages rank
sixth in a list of the top 25 food sources
of calories among Americans ages 2
years and older, and fifth in a list of the
top 25 food sources of calories among
adult Americans ages 19 years and older
(Ref. 3). The 2010 Dietary Guidelines
also discuss alcohol in Chapter Three,
entitled ‘‘Foods and Food Components
to Reduce’’ (Ref. 3).
As to the 2011 survey mentioned in
one comment, FDA is unable to draw
regulatory conclusions from such a
survey without being able to evaluate
the survey itself.
(Comment 56) Several comments
argued that providing calorie and other
nutrition labeling for alcoholic
beverages on menus is feasible, and one
comment provided an example of a
menu which included nutrient content
disclosures for alcoholic beverages.
(Response 56) We agree with these
comments. We see no basis for why
providing calorie and other nutrient
content information for alcoholic
beverages on menus would be less
feasible for covered establishments than
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providing that same information for
most other standard menu items.
(Comment 57) Some comments noted
that TTB and FDA currently work
together through a Memorandum of
Understanding (MOU) and asserted that
under this MOU, TTB ensures adequate
and non-misleading labeling, and FDA
ensures safety. One comment that
mentioned this MOU indicated that
FDA should not begin to regulate the
labeling of alcoholic beverages, while
another comment that mentioned the
MOU indicated that FDA’s coverage of
alcoholic beverages would not be
inconsistent with the specific language
of the MOU.
(Response 57) We agree that FDA’s
coverage of alcoholic beverages in this
context does not affect the delineation
of responsibilities between FDA and
TTB articulated in the MOU. FDA and
TTB continue to work together under
the MOU, and FDA has consulted with
TTB during this rulemaking.
(Comment 58) A few comments
maintained that establishing menu
labeling requirements for alcoholic
beverages could lead to inconsistencies
with TTB requirements. One comment
pointed out that TTB has rulemaking
underway for ‘‘serving facts’’ on
alcoholic beverage labels and asserted
that, if FDA establishes menu labeling
requirements for alcoholic beverages,
there could be inconsistencies between
nutrition information on labels and
menus.
At the time that the proposed rule was
issued, alcoholic beverages subject to
the labeling regulations under the FAA
Act were required to include a
statement of average analysis if the label
or advertisement made a claim with
regard to the calorie or carbohydrate
content of the product, and were
allowed to include a statement of
average analysis for any product. The
statement of average analysis listed the
number of calories and the number of
grams of carbohydrates, fat, and protein
per serving (see TTB Ruling 2004–1). In
the Federal Register of July 31, 2007 (72
FR 41860), TTB published a proposed
rule to amend its regulations to require
a Serving Facts statement, which would
include a statement of calories,
carbohydrates, fat, and protein per
serving, on alcohol beverage labels. As
of December 1, 2014, the TTB proposed
rule has not been finalized. On May 28,
2013, TTB issued a ruling (TTB Ruling
2013–2) (Ref. 30) that allows alcohol
beverage industry members to provide
consumers with nutritional information
on alcoholic beverage container labels
by using the format of a statement of
average analysis or a Serving Facts
statement.
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The comment stated that TTB’s
rulemaking should be completed before
FDA takes further action or FDA should
exclude alcoholic beverages from the
menu labeling requirements
permanently. According to another
comment, the labels currently approved
by TTB with a statement of average
analysis apply to a small portion of the
total volume of beers produced by small
brewers. The comment stated that the
format is not consistent with FDA’s
proposed rule, because TTB only
requires the disclosure of calories,
carbohydrates, protein, and fat, while
FDA’s proposed rule would require
disclosure of additional nutrients.
Without agreement on formats, the
comment asserted, compliance with
FDA proposed menu labeling could
contradict TTB guidance. This comment
also stated that without a final rule from
TTB, beer sold in bottles and cans on
display in covered establishments will
not be required to bear nutrition
information. Comments stated that if
FDA decides to cover alcoholic
beverages in its menu labeling rule, FDA
should coordinate with TTB to ensure
consistency.
Some comments that were against
including alcoholic beverages
maintained that the cost of laboratory
analysis for alcoholic beverages, which
they assumed would fall on the
alcoholic beverage manufacturers,
would be significant, especially for
alcoholic beverage manufacturers that
are small businesses. One comment
asserted that the number of brands and
styles of beer produced by small
brewers varies dramatically in
comparison to large brewers, and
without in-house laboratories, which
the comment believed large breweries
would have, covering alcoholic
beverages would have a
disproportionate effect on small
brewers. Several comments argued that
sufficiently accurate calorie values for
various types of alcohol are readily
available from easily accessible
databases, such as the USDA’s National
Nutrient Database for Standard
Reference. One comment suggested
allowing covered establishments to list
estimated or approximate calorie values
by category on wine lists rather than by
each brand, recognizing that some types
of alcoholic beverages, like red or white
wines, contain substantially the same
calories regardless of variety.
(Response 58) We agree with some
comments and disagree with others. As
previously mentioned, the nutrition
labeling requirements finalized here do
not apply to and have no effect on the
labels of alcoholic beverage containers.
In addition, the new requirements apply
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to covered establishments, not to
alcoholic beverage manufacturers. In
contrast, TTB’s ‘‘Serving Facts’’
rulemaking would establish new
requirements for disclosures on
alcoholic beverage labels and would
apply to alcoholic beverage bottlers and
importers.
Under this final rule, covered
establishments have significant
flexibility in choosing a reasonable basis
for their nutrient content disclosures,
which can include a database such as
the USDA’s National Nutrient Database
for Standard Reference (see § 101.11(c)
and the discussion in sections XVIII and
XIX). The USDA’s National Nutrient
Database for Standard Reference
includes the categories, ‘‘alcoholic
beverage, wine, table, red,’’ ‘‘alcoholic
beverage, wine, table, white,’’ among
several other general categories for
alcoholic beverages. Consistent with our
treatment of other standard menu items
(see section XVIII of this document), we
will allow covered establishments to use
these entries as the bases for their
nutrient content disclosures for
alcoholic beverages that are standard
menu items.
In addition, we recognize that
statements of average analysis and
nutrient content disclosures under
current TTB guidance include four
nutrients, and our final rule requires
that covered establishments make
additional nutrient content disclosures
for most standard menu items. However,
we do not see these differences as
conflicts. Nutrient content information
on alcoholic beverage labels that is
required by or consistent with TTB
regulations or guidance could be a
reasonable basis for a covered
establishment’s corresponding nutrient
content disclosures. In addition, many
alcoholic beverages will be eligible for
the simplified format (see discussion re:
§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)(2)). As provided in
§ 101.11(c)(1), covered establishments
may also choose to use a database such
as the USDA National Nutrient Database
for Standard Reference as the reasonable
basis for making their nutrient content
disclosures, including disclosures for
nutrients that do not currently appear
on alcoholic beverage labels. This
should address the comment’s concerns
about malt beverages or other alcoholic
beverages that do not currently include
nutrient information. FDA has
consulted with TTB on this rulemaking
and intends to continue to consult with
TTB in the future.
(Comment 59) Some comments
recommended that drinks that are
ordered by customers at the bar and that
are not listed on the menu should be
exempt from this rule.
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(Response 59) We agree with these
comments. The final rule covers
alcoholic beverages that are standard
menu items that are listed on a menu or
menu board. However, we are finalizing
the proposed exemption for a subset of
alcoholic beverages that are not listed
on a menu or menu board. Specifically,
§ 101.11(b)(1)(ii)(B) of the final rule
provides that the labeling requirements
of § 101.11(b)(2)(iii) do not apply to
those alcoholic beverages that are food
on display. Our reasons follow. Because
these reasons do not apply equally to
alcoholic beverages that are self-service
foods, § 101.11(b)(1)(ii)(B) of the final
rule clarifies that alcoholic beverages
that are self-service foods are covered.
First, it is unclear whether covered
establishments could provide nutrient
content disclosures for alcoholic
beverages on display behind a bar that
would assist consumers in making
informed and healthful order selections.
Covered establishments often serve such
beverages in mixed drinks, and the
amount of each alcoholic beverage and
other mixers they serve to consumers
may vary depending on the drink
ordered. Section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii) of the
FD&C Act requires that calories for selfservice food and food on display be
declared per serving or per item.
Examples of other food on display
include: Burrito fillings behind a
counter at a burrito restaurant where
burritos are made to order and salad
ingredients behind a counter at a quickservice salad restaurant where salads are
made to order. An employee generally
adds a standard serving of each burrito
filling or salad ingredient when asked
by the customer, e.g., a standard
measured weight of meat or a standard
spoonful of beans. Nutrient content
declarations based on those
standardized servings are directly
applicable to consumers’ order
selections.
Even for some foods on display that
have servings that vary, e.g., ice cream
(where a customer can order one, two,
or three scoops) or burrito fillings
(where a customer can order extra
cheese), the amount the customer
receives is generally a simple multiple
of a base serving. Ice cream would likely
be labeled per scoop and cheese would
likely be labeled per standard portion,
with extra cheese being double the
standard portion.
In contrast, covered establishments
with bottles of alcoholic beverages on
display behind a bar generally serve
varying amounts of alcohol and mixers
depending on the establishment’s
recipes for the various beverages
ordered. For example, at a given covered
establishment, a martini recipe might
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have 2 ounces (oz.) of gin and 0.5 oz.
vermouth; a cosmopolitan recipe might
have 3.5 oz. vodka, a dash of triple sec,
a dash of cranberry juice, 1 tsp of sugar,
and 1 oz. of lime juice; and a
grasshopper recipe might have 1 oz.
`
`
white creme de cacao, 1 oz. green creme
de menthe, and milk or cream to fill the
glass (Ref. 31). As a result, the covered
establishment does not have a standard
serving on which to base a nutrient
content declaration for each ingredient
that will be directly applicable to all
routinely ordered mixed drinks. In
addition, recipes for even well-known
drinks, like margaritas, may differ from
one chain of restaurants to another, and
consumers are unlikely to know a
particular establishment’s recipe while
ordering (Ref. 31). It is difficult to see
how a consumer would use an
establishment’s nutrient content
disclosure on a bottle of alcohol behind
a bar in choosing which mixed drink to
order.
Section 403(q)(5)(H)(x)(II)(aa) of the
FD&C Act requires FDA to ‘‘consider
standardization of recipes and methods
of preparation’’ and ‘‘variations in
ingredients’’ in issuing these
regulations. Therefore, in finalizing the
exemption for alcoholic beverages that
do not appear on menus or menu
boards, we considered that recipes and
methods of preparation for alcoholic
mixed drinks are not standardized
throughout the industry. In addition, we
considered the variations of the
amounts of alcoholic beverages and
other mixers served in mixed drinks in
a given covered establishment.
Alcoholic beverages that are on
display differ from other food on
display in additional relevant ways.
Alcoholic beverages that are on display,
particularly bottles of alcohol that are
behind a bar, often appear to be on
display primarily for decoration or
storage, not to aid consumers in
selecting among food options. This
contrasts with most food that is on
display, which is on display in order to
aid consumers in selecting among food
options (e.g., food choices at a salad bar,
cookie varieties at a mall cookie
counter). Once covered establishments
comply with these new regulations,
consumers in covered establishments
who look at food on display to decide
which displayed food they would like to
consume will be able to consider calorie
information on signs adjacent to the
food and adjust their selection if they
choose.
In contrast, bottles of alcoholic
beverages often are displayed very close
together, layered on top of each other,
staged in low lighting or back lighting,
or placed very high. In other words,
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they are displayed in a manner that does
not enable consumers to easily identify
the particular alcoholic beverages
available to assist them in making their
selections. In addition, bartenders often
use bottles of alcoholic beverages under
the bar—that are not on display—to mix
alcoholic drinks. Finally, at many
covered establishments that serve
alcoholic beverages, mixed drinks and
other alcoholic beverages that are not on
menus or menu boards are ordered by
customers sitting at tables, from which
the bar could be completely out of sight.
Based on the above considerations,
we are exempting alcoholic beverages
that are food on display and are not selfservice food. Because these
considerations do not apply readily to
self-service alcoholic beverages (e.g.,
bottles of beer in a cooler near the
register at a quick service restaurant),
self-service alcoholic beverages are
covered by the final rule. Therefore,
§ 101.11(b)(1)(ii)(B) of the final rule
provides that the labeling requirements
of § 101.11(b)(2)(iii) for standard menu
items that are self-service or on display
do not apply to alcoholic beverages that
are foods on display and are not selfservice foods.
C. Condiments
(Comment 60) Several comments
recommended that covered
establishments provide calorie
information for all condiments. Other
comments maintained that calorie
information should be provided for
condiments if they are part of the
standard menu item. One comment
recommended that the following be
added to the provision: ‘‘Condiments
and sauces included as an ingredient or
standard accompaniment to a menu
item must be included in the nutrition
information calculated for that item.’’
Another comment asked us to clarify
that if condiments are provided for
optional use, they should not be
included in the calorie declaration. As
an example, if a container of ketchup is
provided on the side with a hamburger
and the consumer can decide whether to
use it, the container of ketchup should
be treated the same as a bottle on the
table and be exempted from calorie
declaration. Another comment asked
that the words ‘‘on the table’’ be
removed from the provision and that the
statute be interpreted to encompass
condiments and other items kept behind
the counter for general use. This
comment explained that its
establishment does not typically have
tables as most of the business is takeout, and the condiments are kept behind
the counter and available to the
consumer upon request.
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One comment suggested that the
exemption for condiments include only
those self-serve items that are calorie
free or that have a Nutrition Facts label.
Another comment recommended that
self-serve restaurants have the flexibility
to determine which items can
reasonably be considered condiments
for general use, noting that many of its
restaurants have an extensive ‘‘spice
bar’’ that contains dozens of different
spices, seasonings, and other
condiments that any customer can use,
regardless of that customer’s order or
food selections. The comment
maintained that the regulation should
be clear that all spices and seasonings
fall in this exempt category.
(Response 60) We are clarifying the
exemption for condiments. Section
403(q)(5)(H)(vii)(I)(aa) of the FD&C Act
provides that the requirements of
section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act do
not apply to ‘‘items that are not listed
on a menu or menu board (such as
condiments and other items placed on
the table or counter for general use).’’
We affirm our tentative conclusion in
the proposed rule that, given the phrase
‘‘for general use,’’ it is reasonable to
interpret section 403(q)(5)(H)(vii)(I)(aa)
of the FD&C Act to apply to foods, such
as many condiments, that are available
for use by any customer in the covered
establishment, regardless of the
customer’s particular order or food
selection (76 FR 19192 at 19205). For
example, it is reasonable to apply
section 403(q)(5)(H)(vii)(I)(aa) of the
FD&C Act to maple syrup that is
provided in a bulk container or bottles
of ketchup that are available for any
customer to add to his or her food.
However, we agree that the calorie
declaration for a standard menu item
must include the number of calories in
the condiment if the condiment is used
as a component in the standard menu
item, as usually prepared and offered for
sale. In such situation, the nutrient
declarations for the standard menu item
in the written nutrition information
required by section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III)
of the FD&C Act and § 101.11(b)(2)(ii)
must also include the nutrient amounts
from the condiment because the
condiment is used as a component in
the standard menu item. The exemption
in section 403(q)(5)(H)(vii)(I)(aa) of the
FD&C Act does not apply to condiments
that are part of a standard menu item,
as the standard menu item is usually
prepared and offered for sale. For
example, if a covered establishment
ordinarily offers for sale burgers
containing ketchup and mayonnaise
added by the establishment, the ketchup
and mayonnaise would be part of the
standard menu item as usually prepared
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71189
and offered for sale, and the calorie
declaration for the standard menu item
would include the calories in the
ketchup and mayonnaise. Likewise, if a
covered establishment ordinarily
provides each customer who orders
pancakes with a single serving container
of maple syrup, the maple syrup would
be part of the standard menu item as
usually prepared and offered for sale,
and the calorie declaration for the
standard menu item would include the
calories in the single serving container
of maple syrup. Similarly, as noted
previously in this document, in these
situations, the nutrient declarations for
the standard menu item in the written
nutrition information required by
section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C
Act and § 101.11(b)(2)(ii) must also
include the nutrient amounts from the
condiment because the condiment is
used as a component in the standard
menu item.
We see no difference between a
condiment brought to the table for
general use and a condiment kept
behind the counter for general use (and
then provided to a customer who
requests it), provided that such
condiments are not listed on the menu
or menu board separately or as part of
a standard menu item. Therefore, we
agree that condiments that are behind
the counter for general use are exempt
from the nutrition labeling requirements
of section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act
under section 403(q)(5)(H)(vii)(I)(aa) of
the FD&C Act. For clarity, we have
revised § 101.11(b)(1)(ii) to explicitly
provide that the labeling requirements
in paragraph (b) do not apply to items
such as condiments that are for general
use, including those placed on the table
or on or behind the counter. (Emphasis
added.) As revised, § 101.11(b)(1)(ii)
includes condiments placed ‘‘on’’ the
counter in accordance with section
403(q)(5)(H)(vii)(I)(aa) of the FD&C Act
and in order to take into account
varying business practices.
We disagree that the exemption for
condiments should include only those
self-serve items that are calorie free or
that have a Nutrition Facts label. The
exemptions under § 101.11(b)(1)(ii) are
based on the language of section
403(q)(5)(H)(vii) of the FD&C Act.
Section 403(q)(5)(H)(vii) of the FD&C
Act generally provides that the nutrition
labeling requirements of section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act do not
apply to certain foods, including certain
condiments. Section 403(q)(5)(H)(vii) of
the FD&C Act does not qualify such
exemptions based on the caloric content
of the food or the fact that some food
would be available in packaged form
that provides a Nutrition Facts label.
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However, we note that under
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(C), a covered
establishment would not be required to
provide the written nutrition
information required by section
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act and
§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii) for a self-service food
or food on display that is a packaged
food insofar as it bears nutrition labeling
information required by and in
accordance with § 101.11(b)(2)(ii) and
the packaged food, including its label,
can be examined by a consumer before
purchasing the food.
We also note that spices and
seasonings (such as crushed dried
peppers) are considered condiments
that are exempt from the requirements
of section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act
under section 403(q)(5)(H)(vii)(I)(aa) of
the FD&C Act, provided that they are for
general use by customers regardless of
their particular order selection.
D. Daily Specials, Temporary Menu
Items, Custom Orders, and Food That Is
Part of a Customary Market Test
(Comment 61) Several comments
agreed with the proposed exemption for
daily specials. One comment disagreed
with the proposed exemption because
the burden to calculate the calories and
other nutrition information is not so
great for daily specials to justify this
exemption. The comment maintained
that consumers often buy what is on
sale and that excluding daily specials
from the requirements of section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act would
undermine the purpose of the statute.
One comment opposed the proposed
exemption for temporary menu items
because temporary menu items
represent a large portion of what is
ordered on a single day at some
establishments.
Several comments agreed with the
proposed exemption for food that is part
of a customary market test. One
comment opposed the proposed
exemption because chain restaurants
test market their menu items carefully
before they mass market menu items
and the determination of the nutrient
content should be part of that process.
The comment asserted that disclosing
the calorie content of the food may
impact the consumer’s decision to
purchase the food and may impact the
establishment’s decision whether to
include that food on the regular menu.
(Response 61) We are retaining in
§ 101.11(b)(1)(ii) the exemptions for
daily specials, temporary menu items,
custom orders, and food that is part of
a customary market test. Section
403(q)(5)(H)(vii) of the FD&C Act
specifically exempts such items from
the requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H)
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of the FD&C Act regardless of the factors
identified by the comments, such as
how the burden to calculate calories for
these items compares to the burden to
calculate calories for standard menu
items; the tendency of consumers to buy
what is on sale; and whether a chain
restaurant could determine nutrition
information.
Section 403(q)(5)(H)(vii) of the FD&C
Act generally provides that the nutrition
labeling requirements of section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act do not
apply to certain foods, including daily
specials, temporary menu items
appearing on the menu for less than 60
days per calendar year, custom orders,
and food that is part of a customary
market test appearing on the menu for
less than 90 days under terms and
conditions established by FDA.
Accordingly, § 101.11(b)(1)(ii) provides
that the labeling requirements of
§ 101.11(b) do not apply to such foods
and § 101.11(a) defines the terms for
such foods. We note that, as discussed
in Response 62, self-service food and
food on display that are temporary
menu items or part of a customary
market test, but do not appear on a
menu, are also exempt from the
requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H) of
the FD&C Act because these foods are
not standard menu items.
However, neither section 403(q)(5)(H)
of the FD&C Act nor this rule would
prevent a covered establishment from
voluntarily declaring calories or
providing written nutrition information
for condiments, daily specials,
temporary menu items, or food that is
part of a customary market test.
Regarding daily specials, we note that
we would not consider an item that is
offered every week on a particular day
(e.g., the Monday special) to be a ‘‘daily
special’’ because it is being routinely
offered for sale (i.e., every Monday). In
addition, we would not consider a
standard menu item, as defined in this
rule, to be a ‘‘daily special’’ if it is
offered at a discounted price on a
particular day (e.g., a turkey club
sandwich that is a standard menu item
and normally costs 5 dollars, but is
specially advertised as costing only 4
dollars on Fridays).
(Comment 62) In the proposed rule
(76 FR 19192 at 19205), we noted that
self-service food and food on display
that do not appear on menus or menu
boards would not be considered
temporary menu items or food that is
part of a customary market test.
Therefore, even if a self-service food or
food on display that does not appear on
a menu or menu board is only offered
by a covered establishment for a limited
time, such as a pumpkin spice muffin
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available only in November, we
tentatively concluded that the nutrition
information declaration requirements in
section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act
would still apply.
Several comments that addressed the
exemption in proposed § 101.11(b)(1)(ii)
for temporary menu items and food that
is part of a customary market test
considered that this exemption should
apply to self-service food and food on
display even though such foods may not
‘‘appear[ ] on a menu’’ as described in
section 403(q)(5)(H)(vii) of the FD&C
Act. These comments said that Congress
excluded temporary menu items and
customary market test items from the
nutrition labeling requirements of
section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act
because it recognized that restaurants
should be able to test products (many of
which fail and are discontinued
quickly) without incurring the
significant costs associated with
changing their menu and compiling
nutritional information. The comments
considered that this same reasoning
applies to temporary menu items and
customary market test items offered in
self-service restaurants (whether the
restaurant displays items on a menu,
menu board, or individual signs). The
comments asserted that for buffet-type
restaurants, there would be significant
costs in attempting to improve and
change their menus for temporary menu
items and food that is being market
tested and that these costs would not be
incurred by other kinds of non-buffettype restaurants.
(Response 62) We agree with these
comments that the statutory exemptions
for temporary menu items appearing on
the menu for less than 60 days per
calendar year and customary market test
items appearing on the menu for less
than 90 days apply to self-service foods
and foods on display that fall into those
categories, as defined in § 101.11(a). We
also agree that a self-service food and
food on display that does not appear on
a menu or menu board but otherwise
meets the definition for temporary menu
items or food that is part of a customary
market, in that the food is offered for
sale in a covered establishment for less
than a total of 60 days per calendar year
or fewer than 90 consecutive days in
order to test consumer acceptance,
should not be required to comply with
the requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H)
of the FD&C Act and § 101.11. The
requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H) of
the FD&C Act and § 101.11 apply to
foods that are standard menu items.
However, self-service foods and foods
on display that do not appear on a menu
or menu board, but otherwise meet the
definitions for temporary menu items or
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food that is part of customary market
test, along with the foods described in
section 403(q)(5)(H)(vii) of the FD&C
Act, do not meet the definition for a
standard menu item in § 101.11(a)
because such self-service foods and
foods on display are neither ‘‘routinely
included on a menu or menu board’’ nor
‘‘routinely offered as a self-service food
or food on display.’’ Like temporary
menu items or food that is part of a
customary market test appearing on a
menu or menu board, as described in
section 403(q)(5)(H)(vii) of the FD&C
Act, self-service foods and foods on
display that do not appear on a menu
or menu board but otherwise meet the
definitions for temporary menu items or
food that is part of a customary market
are offered for a limited time and are
subject to variation and discontinuation
depending on the seasonality and
consumer response. Thus, these foods,
like the foods described in section
403(q)(5)(H)(vii) of the FD&C Act, are
not standard menu items and the
requirements of this rule do not apply
to such foods.
For these reasons, we are modifying
§ 101.11(b)(1)(ii)(A). First, we are
specifying in § 101.11(b)(1)(ii)(A) that
the labeling requirements in paragraph
(b) do not apply to foods that are not
standard menu items. Second, we are
specifying in § 101.11(b)(1)(ii)(A)(1) that
such foods that are not standard menu
items include items such as condiments
that are for general use, including those
placed on the table or on or behind the
counter; daily specials; temporary menu
items; custom orders; and food that is
part of a customary market test. Third,
we are specifying in
§ 101.11(b)(1)(ii)(A)(2) that such foods
that are not standard menu items also
include self-service food and food on
display that is offered for sale for less
than a total of 60 days per calendar year
or fewer than 90 consecutive days in
order to test consumer acceptance.
E. Additional Comments on Food That
Is Part of a Customary Market Test
(Comment 63) Some comments asked
us to clarify that if a food is tested in
more than one location, the 90-day
period is applied to each location. These
comments maintained that it is common
for restaurants and similar retail food
establishments to conduct iterative tests
to evaluate the performance of a menu
item and change the menu in light of
test results. For example, the results of
iterative tests may lead to ‘‘changes in
product makeup, including size, shape,
taste profile, and preparation,’’ with
accompanying changes to the
underlying nutrient content. The
comment asked us to clarify that a food
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that changes in such a manner during a
market test is a new food, and the 90day period would begin again. One
comment asked us to confirm that a
market test may be conducted in
multiple locations and that the 90-day
period starts when the testing begins in
a particular location.
(Response 63) As we discussed in the
proposed rule (76 FR 19192 at 19205)
and as suggested by the comments, in
some cases, a chain of restaurants and
similar retail food establishments may
test a new product in different locations
within the chain and in more than one
region of the country at different times.
We conclude that a ‘‘customary market
test,’’ for the purposes of § 101.11, refers
to a test in a single covered
establishment. Therefore, we agree with
the comments that the 90-day period for
the food that is part of a customary
market test applies to each covered
establishment that offers for sale food
that is part of a customary market test.
Further, we recognize that restaurants
and similar retail food establishments
may change the foods that they are
market testing in an iterative process.
Therefore, we agree that if a food
changes in ways such as those noted in
the comments (e.g., changes in product
makeup, including size, shape, taste
profile, and preparation), it would be a
new food and the 90-day period would
begin again. We would consider the
food to be a new food if it is not made
with the same general recipe or same
ingredients or otherwise has a
significant change in the nutrient profile
during the market test. For example, we
would consider a soup prepared
without meat, and a soup prepared with
added sausage, to be different foods and
would expect differences between the
nutrient profiles of these different foods.
XI. Comments and FDA Response on
Proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1) to
(b)(2)(i)(A)(3)—General Requirements
for Calorie Declaration on Menus and
Menu Boards
Proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1) to
(b)(2)(i)(A)(3) would require that
covered establishments declare the
number of calories contained in each
standard menu item listed on the menu
or menu board, as usually prepared and
offered for sale in the following manner:
• The number of calories must be
listed adjacent to the name or the price
of the associated standard menu item, in
a type size no smaller than the name or
the price of the associated standard
menu item, whichever is smaller, in the
same color, or a color at least as
conspicuous as the name of the
associated standard menu item, and
with the same contrasting background
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as the name of the associated standard
menu item (proposed
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1)).
• The calories must be declared to the
nearest 5-calorie increment up to and
including 50 calories and to the nearest
10-calorie increment above 50 calories,
except that amounts less than 5 calories
may be expressed as zero (proposed
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(2)).
• The term ‘‘Calories’’ or ‘‘Cal’’ must
appear as a heading above a column
listing the number of calories for each
standard menu item or adjacent to the
number of calories for each standard
menu item. If the term ‘‘Calories’’ or
‘‘Cal’’ appears as a heading above a
column of calorie declarations, the term
must be in a type size no smaller than
the smallest type size of the name or
price of any menu item on that menu or
menu board in the same color or a color
at least as conspicuous as that name or
price and in the same contrasting
background as that name or price. If the
term ‘‘Calories’’ or ‘‘Cal’’ appears
adjacent to the number of calories for
the standard menu item, the term
‘‘Calories’’ or ‘‘Cal’’ must appear in the
same type size and in the same color
and contrasting background as the
number of calories (proposed
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(3)).
In the following paragraphs, we
discuss comments on these proposed
provisions. After considering the
comments, we are:
• Revising § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A) to
specify that in the case of multipleserving standard menu items, the calorie
declaration must be for the whole menu
item as listed on the menu or menu
board, as usually prepared and offered
for sale (e.g., ‘‘pizza pie: 1600 calories’’),
or per discrete serving unit as long as
the discrete serving unit (e.g., pizza
slice) and total number of discrete
serving units are declared on the menu
or menu board, and the menu item is
usually prepared and offered for sale
divided in discrete serving units (e.g.,
‘‘pizza pie: 200 cal/slice, 8 slices’’).
• Revising § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1) to
provide additional flexibility for the
contrasting background used for the
calorie declaration;
• Making a conforming editorial
change to the requirement for the color
used for the calorie declaration for
grammatical consistency; and
• Making an editorial correction for
clarity to insert ‘‘the type size of’’
between ‘‘no smaller than’’ and ‘‘the
name or the price’’ in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1).
(Comment 64) Many comments
regarding the proposed requirement that
the number of calories contained in
each standard menu item listed on the
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menu or menu board be declared as
usually prepared and offered for sale
addressed the discussion in the
proposed rule regarding how the calorie
labeling requirements on menus and
menu boards would apply to multipleserving foods that are standard menu
items (76 FR 19192 at 19203–19204).
Many comments agreed with the view
we expressed in the proposed rule that
section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act
requires that calories be declared for
standard menu items regardless of how
many servings are included in the item
(76 FR 19192 at 19203). The comments
asserted that servings vary by product
and by portions taken by consumers.
One comment considered that if a menu
item is to be shared, it would be easier
for consumers to determine how many
people will share the item and divide
the calories accordingly than for the
restaurant to choose how many servings
are in a menu item. The comment said
that we should not allow restaurants to
choose how many servings are in a
menu item.
Many other comments opposed listing
the calories for the entire standard menu
item and instead supported the listing of
calories per serving. Some comments
asserted that listing calories per serving
would be less confusing, would be
consistent with calorie declarations on
packaged food, and would not require
consumers to do a calculation. One
comment agreed with our determination
that a multiple-serving food is a
standard menu item but disagreed with
our tentative conclusion that the calorie
declaration should be for the entire
multiple-serving food because providing
calories for the entire multiple-serving
food would not be helpful and would be
detrimental for those who need the
information per serving (e.g., diabetics).
A few comments asked us to provide an
option to permit either the declaration
of calories for the entire multipleserving menu item, or the declaration of
the number of servings and the calories
per serving. As an example, one
comment suggested that a restaurant
selling a four-serving family-style platter
of pasta could comply either by
disclosing that the whole menu item
contains 2,000 calories, or by disclosing
that the menu item consists of 4
servings, 500 calories per serving.
One comment pointed out that if we
required calorie declaration for an entire
multiple-serving food, nutrition
information would be inconsistent in
some instances. For example, a
cheesecake from a display case would
have different nutrition information
than the same cheesecake in
prepackaged form, because the first
would list calories for the entire item
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whereas the second would list calories
per serving. One comment suggested
that, for foods that are not appetizers or
desserts that are intended to serve more
than one person, calorie disclosure
should include the number of persons
intended to be served and the calorie
content per serving.
A few comments recommended that
calories for pizza be listed per slice. One
comment reported that it received
complaints when it provided calorie
information for the entire listed pizza.
The comment provided a report of
consumer research showing that 60
percent of consumers preferred calorie
information per slice. The report of this
survey was submitted with the comment
(Ref. 32). Some comments referred to
our previous statements that nutrition
information should be declared per
serving. For example, in our proposed
rule on ‘‘Food Labeling: Serving Sizes,’’
we stated that for ‘‘[f]oods in large
discrete units,’’ ‘‘the household measure
most meaningful for these products is a
fraction of the whole unit.’’ (56 FR
60394 at 60410, November 27, 1991).
Another comment referred to statements
in our 2008 ‘‘Guidance for Industry: A
Labeling Guide for Restaurants and
Other Retail Establishments Selling
Away-From-Home Foods (the 2008
restaurant labeling guide) (Ref. 10) that
generally the nutrition information
should be presented on a per serving
basis. For example, the 2008 restaurant
labeling guide states that ‘‘[i]t is
especially important that the basis be
declared when a food is available in
more than one size serving (e.g., pizza
that is available whole and by
slice). . . . The restaurant may provide
additional information, such as ‘8 slices
per medium 16-inch pizza, 1 slice
contains . . .’ to help consumers put
nutrition information in context.’’
Other comments urged us to clarify
that a covered establishment can
voluntarily provide nutrition
information per serving. These
comments suggested that we revise the
rule to indicate that fact. These
comments suggested adding the
following to § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A): ‘‘(5) For
items that could serve more than one
person, such as a large pizza or a bucket
of chicken, calories must be listed per
standard menu item as offered for sale
and listed on the menu or menu board
or as placed on display. In addition,
restaurants and similar retail food
establishments may also voluntarily
provide nutrition information per
serving.’’
(Response 64) Listing calories for
multiple-serving standard menu items
as usually prepared and offered for sale
by a covered establishment is consistent
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with section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C
Act. As discussed in the proposed rule,
section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act
requires covered establishments to
disclose calorie information for standard
menu items as usually prepared and
offered for sale, regardless of how many
servings are included in the menu item
(76 FR 19192 at 19203).
Based on the comments that
supported calorie declarations for
multiple-serving standard menu items
‘‘per serving,’’ the complexity of
consumer eating habits and preferences
described by the comments, and the
variety of ways that covered
establishments may choose to usually
prepare and offer their foods for sale, we
have revised the rule’s calorie
declaration requirements for multipleserving standard menu items on menus
and menu boards.
Where a multiple-serving standard
menu item is usually prepared and
offered for sale divided in discrete
serving units (e.g., slices of pizza), we
are allowing covered establishments to
provide the calorie declaration per
discrete serving unit, subject to some
additional requirements. If a covered
establishment declares calories for a
multiple-serving standard menu item
per discrete serving unit, the
establishment must also declare the
discrete serving unit and the total
number of discrete serving units in the
menu item on the menu or menu board
so that the consumer can make a fullyinformed decision before selecting the
item.
We are allowing calorie declarations
per discrete serving unit for multipleserving standard menu items that are
usually prepared and offered for sale
divided in discrete serving units
because such division will likely enable
consumers to easily identify the discrete
serving unit (e.g., pizza slice) and
therefore keep track of the number of
serving units consumed. Pizza slices
that come in a pie, or breadsticks that
come in a bunch (e.g., ‘‘pizza pie: 200
cal/slice, 8 slices;’’ ‘‘breadsticks: 150
cal/stick, 5 sticks’’) are examples of
multiple-serving standard menu items
that are usually prepared and offered for
sale divided in discrete serving units. If
consumers share such a menu item, the
discrete serving units provide a distinct
division along which portions can be
divided, thereby allowing consumers to
keep track of calories consumed by
either adding or multiplying the per
discrete serving unit calorie declaration
based on the number of serving units
consumed. Providing the number of
calories per discrete serving unit and
the total number of discrete serving unit
contained in the menu item for
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multiple-serving standard menu items
that are usually prepared and offered for
sale divided in discrete units enables
consumers to determine the number of
calories they may actually consume and
therefore enables consumer to make
informed dietary choices.
However, where a multiple-serving
standard menu item is not usually
prepared and offered for sale divided in
discrete serving units, covered
establishments must declare calories for
the entire menu item listed on the menu
or menu board, as usually prepared and
offered for sale. We disagree with the
comment that said a calorie declaration
for a whole multiple-serving standard
menu item would be unhelpful or
detrimental. If consumers decide to
share a multiple-serving standard menu
item, they can divide the total number
of calories by the number of individuals
sharing it. We clarify—as one comment
suggested—that for multiple-serving
standard menu items that are not
usually prepared and offered for sale
divided in discrete serving units, we
would not object if a covered
establishment decided to voluntarily
declare calories per serving, in addition
to the calories for the entire standard
menu item.
(Comment 65) A few comments
recommended that calories be declared
per reference amount customarily
consumed (RACC) or by household
measure. A RACC represents the
amount of food customarily consumed
at one eating occasion (§ 101.12 (21 CFR
101.12)). A few comments considered
that listing calories per serving based on
the RACC would be consistent with the
labeling of packaged food. One
comment noted that customers are used
to seeing information per serving even
though actual consumption may not be
aligned with the RACC.
(Response 65) We assume that
‘‘household measure’’ refers to measures
such as ‘‘cups’’ or ‘‘tablespoons.’’
RACCs represent the amount of food
customarily consumed at one eating
occasion and are calculated for a variety
of foods purchased by consumers in
establishments such as grocery stores
(see § 101.12). RACCs are based on data
set forth in national food consumption
surveys and other sources of
information on serving sizes of food,
including serving sizes used in dietary
guidance recommendations or
recommended by other authoritative
systems or organizations, serving sizes
used by manufacturers and grocers, and
serving sizes used by other countries
(§ 101.12(a)). We developed RACCs as
the basis for determining serving sizes
for specific products for the purpose of
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declaration of nutrition information on
product labels.
We disagree that calories for standard
menu items should be declared per
RACC or by household measure. Section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act requires
covered establishments to disclose the
number of calories contained in a
standard menu item ‘‘as usually
prepared and offered for sale.’’ Although
many standard menu items may have an
associated RACC, others may not. Even
if some standard menu items have an
associated RACC, each covered
establishment is free to choose the
amount of food offered for sale in its
standard menu items, and section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act does not
require covered establishments to
prepare and offer standard menu items
in particular amounts, such as RACCs.
(Comment 66) Some comments
considered that calories should be
declared for each size of a menu item
(such as ‘‘upgrades’’ or ‘‘upsized
options’’ and ‘‘downsized options’’)
offered on menus and menu boards.
Some comments linked the requirement
to declare calories for different sizes to
different prices—e.g., by considering
that calories must be declared for any
size option that has a distinct price on
the menu or menu board. Some
comments specifically addressed fixed
combination meals and considered that
calories should be declared for fixed
combination meals available in multiple
sizes.
One comment asked us to allow the
restaurant to list calories for a 6-inch
version of a sandwich and provide a
statement on the menus and menu
boards that the 12-inch sandwich is
double that amount.
(Response 66) The calorie labeling
requirements of § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)
apply to each standard menu item listed
on the menu or menu board, as usually
prepared and offered for sale. Thus, if a
standard menu item (such as fries or
onion rings) is listed on the menu or
menu board in more than one size (such
as ‘‘small’’ and ‘‘large’’), the menu or
menu board must provide calories for
each size, following the format
requirements of § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1),
(b)(2)(i)(A)(2), and (b)(2)(i)(A)(3).
Likewise, if a fixed combination meal
(i.e., a meal consisting of components
that are not subject to a consumer’s
selection, such as a burger and fries) is
listed on the menu or menu board in
more than one size (e.g., a hamburger
with small fries or large fries), the menu
or menu board must provide calories for
each size of the fixed combination meal,
also following the format requirements
of § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1), (b)(2)(i)(A)(2),
and (b)(2)(i)(A)(3).
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If a 6-inch sandwich and a 12-inch
sandwich are both standard menu items
listed on a menu or menu board, or are
on display in a covered establishment,
the establishment must disclose the
number of calories for each sandwich
size, following the format requirements
of § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1), (b)(2)(i)(A)(2),
and (b)(2)(i)(A)(3) or § 101.11(b)(2)(iii)
as applicable, unless the sandwich is
exempt from the nutrition labeling
requirements under section
403(q)(5)(H)(vii) of the FD&C Act.
(Comment 67) One comment
interpreted the phrase ‘‘as usually
prepared’’ within ‘‘as usually prepared
and offered for sale’’ in proposed
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A) to be a ‘‘standard
formula,’’ ‘‘recommended formula,’’
‘‘standard build,’’ or any other term that
means a predetermined method of
preparation designed to ensure that all
menu offerings are nutritionally
consistent and uniform throughout all
covered establishments in a chain.
One comment agreed that the number
of calories for a standard menu item
should be measured based on how the
standard menu item is usually prepared
and offered for sale, but expressed
concern about build-as-you-go menu
items. The comment explained that, a
covered establishment might post the
number of calories for a build-as-you-go
menu item as an ‘‘undressed’’ sandwich
(the comment did not define this term),
giving the false impression that the
sandwich has fewer calories than it may
actually contain as prepared by the
covered restaurant and then consumed
by a customer. This comment contended
that this type of sandwich should be
considered a variable menu item with
calories posted as a range (i.e., in
accordance with proposed
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4)) that includes the
undressed sandwich and the fully built
one, because there is standardization
with respect to the specific amount of
each particular food item or condiment
that consumers can add to the build-asyou-go menu item. As evidence for this
view, the comment referred to the
standard extra charge for items such as
an extra scoop of guacamole.
(Response 67) We agree that
‘‘standard build’’ or ‘‘recommended
formula’’ is consistent with the term ‘‘as
usually prepared and offered for sale.’’
However, it is the build that is standard
to any given covered establishment,
rather than recommendations or
standards by or from the chain as a
whole, that dictates the nutrition
information that would be required to
be declared for standard menu items in
a particular covered establishment.
Regarding the comment expressing
concern about build-as-you-go menu
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items, we first note that a build-as-yougo menu item, such as a sandwich with
the option of adding different fixings,
that is a standard menu item, likely
would be considered a variable menu
item. As discussed previously in this
document (see sections VIII.B and
VIII.D), § 101.11(a) defines the terms,
‘‘standard menu item’’ and ‘‘variable
menu item.’’ A variable menu item is
defined in § 101.11(a) as a standard
menu item that comes in different
flavors, varieties, or combinations, and
is listed as a single menu item. A
variable menu item is one type of
standard menu item. In the proposed
rule, we provided examples of
‘‘standard menu items’’—e.g., a
hamburger, a combination meal, a
specific type of pizza (e.g., deluxe
pizza), potato salad that is routinely
offered at a salad bar, pancakes that are
routinely offered at a buffet, and
pudding that is routinely offered at a
cafeteria line (76 FR 19192 at 19203).
We also provided examples of variable
menu items—i.e., foods that may have
flavoring options (e.g., a milkshake that
is available in vanilla, chocolate, or
strawberry flavors) or topping options
(e.g., pizza prepared with a selection of
toppings) (76 FR 19192 at 19204). In the
following paragraphs, we provide
additional examples relevant to buildas-you-go menu items and explain how
the calorie labeling requirements of
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A) would apply.
A standard menu item that is listed on
a menu or menu board that is not a
variable menu item, in that it does not
come in different flavors, varieties, or
combinations that are listed as a single
menu item, (e.g., a turkey and Swiss
cheese sandwich on whole wheat bread
with mustard), would be subject to the
calorie declaration format requirements
of § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1) to
(b)(2)(i)(A)(3), but would not be subject
to the additional format requirements
for variable menu items (proposed
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4)), established in
this rule as § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4)
through (b)(2)(i)(A)(8); see the
discussion of the additional format
requirements for variable menu items in
section XII). However, a standard menu
item that comes in different flavors,
varieties, or combinations, and is listed
as a single menu item on a menu or
menu board (e.g., a ‘‘turkey and cheese
sandwich,’’ with different options for
the type of bread (e.g., whole wheat or
white), cheese (e.g., Swiss, provolone,
cheddar), fixings (e.g., onions, lettuce,
tomato), and condiments (mustard,
ketchup, mayonnaise)) would be a
variable menu item subject to both the
general calorie declaration format
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requirements of § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1) to
(b)(2)(i)(A)(3) for all standard menu
items and the additional format
requirements for variable menu items as
applicable in § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4)
through (b)(2)(i)(A)(8).
(Comment 68) Several comments
agreed with proposed
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(2) and the flexibility
in proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(3) to
permit the abbreviation ‘‘Cal’’ for
calories.
Several comments addressed the
placement provisions for the calorie
declarations in proposed
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1) and (b)(2)(i)(A)(3).
A few comments agreed that the number
of calories be posted next to the name
or price of the menu item (proposed
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1)) and that the term
‘‘Calories’’ or ‘‘Cal’’ be next to the
number of calories (proposed
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(3)). One comment
found that customers in its restaurants
confused calorie declarations with price
declarations and noted that declaring
calories in the same font, size, and
contrast as the price would create
confusion, even if the color is different.
Another comment from a chain
restaurant found that consumers in its
restaurants were confused when calories
were posted next to the name of the
menu item and thought the number of
calories was the order number; to
address this confusion, the restaurant
put the number of calories after the
price and in a different color, font, and
size. This comment emphasized its 3
years of experience with posting calorie
declarations and provided examples of
its menu boards to demonstrate how it
communicates calorie information about
its menu offerings. This comment
agreed that calorie information should
be listed in a manner that allows the
customer to easily identify the calories
associated with a particular menu item,
but disagreed that listing calories
adjacent to a menu item is the only way
(or even the best way) for customers to
understand the information associated
with their menu choice. This comment
asserted that it had specifically learned
from practical application and guest
feedback that this generally is not the
most useful method of providing caloric
information. This comment suggested
that the rule require a logical and clear
association between the menu item and
calorie declaration, but provide
flexibility for how that logical and clear
association occurs.
(Response 68) We appreciate
receiving the sample menu boards from
the comment as a means of sharing
experience with us. However, we are
retaining in § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1) the
requirement that the number of calories
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be listed adjacent to the name or the
price of the associated standard menu
item. This requirement is consistent
with section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I)(aa) of the
FD&C Act, which requires that the
calorie declaration be ‘‘adjacent to the
name of the standard menu item, so as
to be clearly associated with the
standard menu item.’’ Placing calorie
declarations adjacent to the names of
standard menu items provides a clear
and logical association between the
standard menu item and the calorie
declaration and helps to ensure that
consumers are able to see the
declarations. In addition,
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(3) provides that the
term ‘‘Calories’’ or ‘‘Cal’’ must appear as
a heading above a column listing the
number of calories for each standard
menu item or adjacent to the number of
calories for each standard menu item.
As such, § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(3) helps to
further ensure that the calorie
declaration is clearly associated with a
particular standard menu item, and the
required use of the term ‘‘Calories’’ or
‘‘Cal’’ will help inform consumers that
the number listed refers to calories.
Section 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1) also
provides flexibility by requiring a
covered establishment to declare
calories adjacent to either the name or
the price of the standard menu item.
This flexibility is consistent with what
one comment described doing in a
restaurant. As finalized,
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1) also provides
sufficient flexibility to accommodate
different types of menus and menu
boards and the various ways that
standard menu items may be listed on
menus and menu boards. Specifically,
in this rule § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1):
• Provides flexibility to use a color
‘‘at least as conspicuous’’ as that of the
name of the associated standard menu
item and, thus, allows for the use of a
different color;
• Provides flexibility to use a
contrasting background ‘‘at least as
conspicuous’’ as that used for the name
of the associated standard menu item
and, thus, allows for the use of a
different contrasting background (see
Response 73);
• Provides flexibility to use a type
size ‘‘no smaller than the type size of
the name or price’’ of the associated
standard menu item and, thus, allows
for the use of a different type size; and
• Does not restrict the font style.
We also note that the sample menu
boards of the chain restaurant provided
in the comment generally followed the
provisions of the proposed rule in terms
of type size and placement of calorie
declarations. For example, the menu
boards listed calorie declarations
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adjacent to the names of standard menu
items in a type size no smaller than the
name or the price of the associated
standard menu item, whichever is
smaller, in a column with a heading
‘‘Calories.’’ Therefore, while the
comment opposed the requirement that
calorie declarations be placed adjacent
to the names of standard menu items on
menus and menu boards, the menu
boards of the chain restaurant,
nevertheless, generally used the same
method of calorie declaration on menus
and menu boards as required by this
rule.
(Comment 69) In the proposed rule,
we tentatively concluded that some
packaged foods offered for sale in
covered establishments are covered by
the menu labeling requirements (see 76
FR 19192 at 19217, proposed
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(C)). For example, a
covered establishment may list ‘‘chips’’
on its menu board, referring to packaged
bags of chips that are available as selfservice foods or foods on display within
the establishment. In this situation, the
establishment would be required to
disclose on the menu board calorie
information for the packaged chips. In
addition, if a covered establishment lists
on its menu or menu board a
combination meal that includes a
packaged food, the establishment would
be required to disclose the total calorie
information for the combination meal,
including the packaged food.
One comment agreed with requiring
the total calorie information of a
combination meal that includes a
packaged food to include the calories for
the packaged food. Another comment
disagreed that calories should be
declared on a menu or menu board for
packaged foods, particularly packaged
soft drinks.
(Response 69) As required by section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act, covered
establishments must provide calorie
information for all standard menu items,
including foods that are packaged. In
addition, sections 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I)(aa)
and (II)(aa) of the FD&C Act requires
that covered establishments disclose the
number of calories contained in a
standard menu item, ‘‘as usually
prepared and offered for sale.’’ As such,
we agree that a covered establishment
that lists on its menu or menu board a
combination meal that includes a
packaged food must disclose the total
number of calories in the combination
meal, including the calories for the
packaged food.
(Comment 70) One comment stated
that the total calorie declaration for a
standard menu item must include all
ingredients of a standard menu item, as
it is usually prepared and offered for
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sale, e.g., for a teaspoon of sugar added
to oatmeal and salad dressings served
on or with salad.
(Response 70) We agree that the total
calorie declaration for a standard menu
item must include all ingredients of the
standard menu item, as it is usually
prepared and offered for sale, e.g., for a
teaspoon of sugar added to oatmeal and
salad dressings served on or with salad.
As with the scenario discussed in
Response 69 for a combination meal that
includes a packaged food, doing so is
required by section 403(q)(5)(H) of the
FD&C Act and by sections
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I)(aa) and (II)(aa) of the
FD&C Act.
(Comment 71) One comment
suggested that we require that covered
establishments provide the Reference
Daily Intakes (RDIs) of calories, fat,
cholesterol, and ‘‘salt’’ on menus and
menu boards. The comment
acknowledged that there is no RDI for
sugar, but requested that it nonetheless
be included on menus and menu
boards. The comment also
recommended that menus and menu
boards only list percent Daily Value
(DV) of calories, fat, cholesterol, sugar,
and ‘‘salt’’ and not list vitamins and
minerals because ‘‘too many details may
lead to information overload and defeat
the purpose.’’
(Response 71) We disagree with the
comment’s suggestions, and we are not
requiring covered establishments to
include RDIs or percent DVs for certain
nutrients on menus and menu boards.
On menus and menu boards, we are
requiring the number of calories
contained in standard menu items, as
usually prepared and offered for sale,
and a succinct statement concerning
suggested daily caloric intake, as
required by sections 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I)
and (II) of the FD&C Act. The succinct
statement will adequately enable the
public to understand, in the context of
a total daily diet, the significance of the
caloric information provided on menus
or menu boards. We further note that
percent DVs cannot be expressed for
sugar or calories because Daily
Reference Values (DRVs) have not been
established for these nutrients. (See
§ 101.9(c)(9), which lists DRVs for fat,
cholesterol, sodium, and other food
components.) The term Reference Daily
Intake (RDI) applies to a vitamin or
mineral but does not apply to calories,
fat, cholesterol, sugar, or salt. (See
§ 101.9(c)(8)(iv), which lists the RDIs for
vitamins and minerals that are essential
for human nutrition.) For the Nutrition
Facts Label, the amount of a nutrient is
calculated as a percentage of the RDI or
DRV, as appropriate, and expressed
using the same term—i.e., percent DV.
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Because ‘‘salt’’ can be either a general
term applicable to substances such as
calcium chloride or potassium chloride,
or a synonym for the specific food
substance ‘‘sodium chloride,’’ and
because nutrition information generally
is directed to information about the
sodium content of food, we considered
the request of the comment to be
directed to the declaration of percent
DV for ‘‘sodium’’ rather than to ‘‘salt.’’
(Comment 72) A few comments
agreed with the proposed requirement
(in proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1)) that
the type size for the calorie disclosure
be no smaller than the name or the price
of the associated standard menu item,
whichever is smaller. Other comments
considered that the proposed type size
requirements are too prescriptive and
recommended that we require only that
the type size be ‘‘clear and
conspicuous.’’ One comment stated that
restaurants located in one State have
already complied with a clear and
conspicuous standard; therefore, to
move to a type size no smaller than the
smaller of the name or price of the menu
item would require changes. Another
comment asked us to provide guidance
that if the calorie declaration is as large
as the name, price, or description of the
menu item, whichever is smaller, it is
presumptively clear and conspicuous
and complies with section 4205 of the
ACA, rather than require a specific font
size relative to the price or name; as an
alternative, the type size of the calorie
declaration could be the same size as
the description of the menu item (rather
than the name of the menu item)
(emphasis added). One comment
recommended that any required
minimum type size for the calorie
declaration be half the size of the name
or price, whichever is smaller. Another
recommended that the calorie
declaration be the same size and font as
either the name or price.
A few comments recommended that
we require that the calorie declaration
be at least as large as (or no smaller
than) the name or price, whichever is
larger. One comment recommended that
the type size of the calorie declaration
be no less than 10 point font on menus
and no less than 22 point font on menu
boards or a type size equal to the type
size of the food listed.
(Response 72) We are retaining the
type size requirements for the calorie
declaration without change. We disagree
that the requirements for the type size
of the calorie declaration are too
prescriptive. Some type size
requirements suggested in the
comments would be more restrictive
than what we proposed. This would be
true for those comments specifying a
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type size at least as large as (or no
smaller than) the name or price,
whichever is larger; a type size the same
as the type size of the name or price; a
type size the same size as the
description of the menu item; or a
specific type size. Such type size
requirements would not take into
consideration the various types and
sizes of menus and menu boards that
may be used in covered establishments.
We have concerns that a type size that
is half the size of the name or price,
whichever is smaller, would result in a
calorie declaration that is not clear and
conspicuous and, therefore, not
compliant with sections
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I) and (II) and 403(f) of
the FD&C Act. Sections
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I) and (II) of the FD&C
Act require, in relevant part, that calorie
declarations required on menus and
menu boards be clear and conspicuous
and clearly associated with the
corresponding standard menu item.
Further, section 403(f) of the FD&C Act
provides that a food shall be deemed
misbranded ‘‘if any word, statement, or
other information required by or under
authority of this Act to appear on the
label or labeling is not prominently
placed thereon with such
conspicuousness (as compared with
other words, statements, designs, or
devices, in the labeling) and in such
terms as to render it likely to be read
and understood by the ordinary
individual under customary conditions
of purchase and use.’’ The calorie
declaration specified in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1) is tied to the name
and price of the standard menu item,
which typically are included on menus
and menu boards and are two primary
features of a menu or menu board
typically used by consumers to make
order selections. The type size
requirements for calorie declarations
balance the statutory requirements of
sections 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I) and (II) and
403(f) of the FD&C Act that calorie
declarations be clear and conspicuous
with the mandate in section
403(q)(5)(H)(x)(II)(aa) of the FD&C Act to
consider space on menus and menu
boards and, thus, provide flexibility for
different covered establishments.
(Comment 73) A few comments
discussed the proposed requirements (in
proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1)) for the
color and contrasting background of the
calorie declaration. Some comments
suggested changes to the proposed
requirements for color and contrasting
background. One comment emphasized
that some menus and menu boards may
have different contrasting background
colors and provided two suggestions to
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accommodate such menus and menu
boards. One suggestion was that we
require that the calorie declaration have
the same contrasting background, or a
background at least as contrasting as the
background used for the name of the
associated standard menu item on the
menu or menu board. As an alternative,
the comment suggested that we could
require that the calorie declaration have
a background at least as contrasting as
that used for the price and that menus
using the same contrasting background
as the price of the standard menu item
will be presumed to comply.
One comment asserted that the color
and contrast requirements are too
restrictive and maintained that many
menu boards have a variety of colors to
enhance customer experiences. One
comment suggested that the color of the
calorie declaration should not be fainter
or less obvious than that of the other
items on the menu. Another comment
asked us to permit the calorie
declaration to be in the same color as
the subtext that lists ingredients. One
comment that opposed the proposed
requirement for color asserted that ‘‘the
eye becomes overwhelmed’’ when all
copy is the same size and color, and the
consumer misses the information or
gives up looking for the information.
This comment requested flexibility in
color and ‘‘weight of calorie
information’’ (a term the comment did
not define). This comment also asked us
to clarify whether ‘‘type’’ is limited to
font type (e.g., Arial) or whether it also
includes text effects (e.g., bold, italics,
color).
One comment stated that the proposal
was written with menu boards in mind
and noted that some restaurants use
translites (lighted boxes) where the
name and price are in ‘‘oversized type’’
for marketing purposes. It asked us to
permit the use of ‘‘reverse type’’ (which
is white or light colored type printed on
a dark background) and varied
backgrounds if translites are used.
(Response 73) We have revised the
contrasting background portion of
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1) to require that the
number of calories be in the same
contrasting background, or a
background at least as contrasting as
that used for the name of the associated
standard menu item. We agree that this
revision provides additional flexibility
related to the prominence requirements
to take into account that there may be
different backgrounds on a single menu
or menu board.
We disagree that the color
requirements of the calorie declarations
should be revised. Section
403(q)(5)(H)(ii) of the FD&C Act requires
that the calories be disclosed in a clear
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and conspicuous manner and clearly
associated with the standard menu item.
Further, section 403(f) of the FD&C Act
provides that a food shall be deemed
misbranded ‘‘if any word, statement, or
other information required by or under
authority of this Act to appear on the
label or labeling is not prominently
placed thereon with such
conspicuousness (as compared with
other words, statements, designs, or
devices, in the labeling) and in such
terms as to render it likely to be read
and understood by the ordinary
individual under customary conditions
of purchase and use.’’ Requiring the
calorie declaration to be in the same
color, or in a color at least as
conspicuous as the color of the name of
the associated standard menu item
helps ensure that the calorie
declarations are clear and conspicuous,
prominently placed on the menu or
menu board with such conspicuousness
as compared to other words on the
menu or menu board and likely to be
read and understood by the ordinary
individual under customary conditions
of purchase and use, and clearly
associated with the standard menu item.
However, to match the grammatical
construction of the revised requirement
for the contrasting background used for
the calorie declaration, we are making a
conforming editorial change to require
that the color used for the calorie
declaration be in the same color, or a
color at least as conspicuous as that
used for the name of the associated
standard menu item (emphasis added).
In addition, we are not requiring
calorie declarations to be in a specific
font or to include particular text effects
because we recognize that menus and
menu boards come in a variety of sizes
and include different fonts and type
sizes. We are providing flexibility by
taking into consideration the space on
menus and menu boards (see section
403(q)(5)(H)(x)(II)(aa) of the FD&C Act),
along with the fonts and type sizes
already in use by the covered
establishments, while also establishing
requirements that help ensure calorie
declarations are disclosed in a manner
that is clear and conspicuous and that
otherwise satisfies the requirements of
applicable sections of the FD&C Act.
We would not object to reverse type
and varied backgrounds on translites,
provided that the calorie declarations
are clear and conspicuous and satisfy
the requirements of applicable sections
of the FD&C Act and § 101.11. Calorie
declarations on translites would be
subject to the same general requirements
as disclosures on other types of menu
boards, as specified in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A).
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(Comment 74) Some comments asked
us to require a comma for declaring
more than 1,000 calories because
consumers are accustomed to seeing a
comma in numbers of one thousand or
greater. The comments suggested that
we revise proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)
to include a new subparagraph to state
‘‘(4) Calorie numbers over 1,000 must
include a comma after the thousands
place.’’
(Response 74) We would not object to
the voluntary use of a comma for calorie
declarations of 1,000 or more, but
decline to revise the rule to require a
comma. The requirements we have
established in § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)
adequately ensure that calorie
declarations are disclosed in a clear and
conspicuous manner, as required by
section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act,
and render the calorie declarations
likely to be read and understood by the
ordinary individual under customary
conditions of purchase and use, as
required by section 403(f) of the FD&C
Act. A covered establishment may
choose to declare numbers over 1,000
with or without a comma.
(Comment 75) One comment
suggested that we accommodate visionimpaired consumers by providing for
alternate menus and availability of other
nutrition information. This comment
asserted that vision-impaired consumers
suffer more from hypertension, heart
problems, and diabetes.
(Response 75) We recognize that
vision-impaired consumers should have
access to nutrition information for
standard menu items in covered
establishments. However, we are only
implementing the nutrition labeling
requirements specified in section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act, at this
time. Covered establishments may
voluntarily provide visually impaired
individuals with nutrition information
for standard menu items in a way that
is accessible to them. For example, we
would not object to a covered
establishment providing nutrition
information for standard menu items
through a Braille menu or a menu that
gives information about menu items
orally, in addition to providing nutrition
information in accordance with
§ 101.11.
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XII. Additional Format Requirements
That Apply When Declaring Calories on
Menus and Menu Boards for Variable
Menu Items, Combination Meals, and
Toppings (Final § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4)
Through (b)(2)(i)(A)(8))
A. Proposed Format for Declaring
Calories for Variable Menu Items
Section 403(q)(5)(H)(v) of the FD&C
Act requires FDA to establish by
regulation standards for determining
and disclosing the nutrient content for
variable standard menu items that are
listed as a single menu item ‘‘through
means determined by the Secretary,
including ranges, averages, or other
methods.’’ (See the discussion of the
definition of the term ‘‘variable menu
item’’ in section VIII.D) In the proposed
rule, we considered five options for
implementing this statutory provision,
and selected Option 2 (76 FR 19192 at
19207–19209). Consistent with Option
2, proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4)
would require, in relevant part, that for
variable menu items, the calories must
be declared as a range, in the format
‘‘xx-yy’’ where ‘‘xx’’ is the caloric
content of the lowest calorie variety,
flavor, or combination, and ‘‘yy’’ is the
caloric content of the highest calorie
variety, flavor, or combination. The
other options we considered were as
follows:
• Option 1. Single value; either in the
form of an average (obtained by
summing up the calorie content of all
options and then dividing by the
number of options) or a median of all
options (obtained by determining the
‘‘middle’’ number of calories from the
list of options).
• Option 3. Hybrid combining
averages and ranges; declaration of a
single average value for variable menu
items whose calorie ranges fall within
specified bounds and declaration of a
range for variable menu items whose
calorie ranges fall outside those bounds.
• Option 4. If only 2 options are
available for an item (e.g., a sandwich
with fries or with fruit), provide both
numbers with a forward slash between
(e.g., 450/350). If three or more options
are available, provide the range in
calories.
• Option 5. If only 2 options are
available for an item (e.g., a sandwich
with fries or with fruit), provide both
numbers with a forward slash between
(e.g., 450/350). If three or more options
are available, use one of the hybrid
approaches outlined in Option 3.
We also proposed specific
requirements that would apply when a
variable menu item appears on the
menu or menu board and is a selfservice food or food on display, and
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71197
there is no clearly identifiable upper
bound to the range, e.g., all-you-can-eat
buffet. In the following paragraphs, we
discuss comments on these proposed
provisions. After considering these
comments, we have revised the
provisions to:
• Require Option 4 instead of
Option 2;
• Specify additional format
requirements that apply when declaring
calories on menus and menu boards for
variable menu items, combination
meals, and toppings
(§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4) through
(b)(2)(i)(A)(7)); and
• Redesignate the requirements that
apply to a variable menu item when
there is no clearly identifiable upper
bound to the range of calories to
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(8) and clarify that
such item is otherwise exempt from the
requirements of § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A) for
what must be provided on menus and
menu boards.
B. Decision To Require Option 4
(Comment 76) Several comments
supported our proposal to require
Option 2 because they considered that
ranges provide more detailed
information. Several comments
addressed one or more of the other four
options we described. One comment
stated that the use of ranges does not
require customers to make calculations
as would be the case for medians and
means. This comment asserted that
declaring calories in mixed options and
hybrids would be confusing because
consumers would need to understand
why and when a single value (e.g.,
mean) is used rather than a range. One
comment asserted that if single calorie
values for each flavor and size were
used rather than ranges, the menu board
would be unreadable and consumers
would be confused by too much
information or would ignore the
information. Another comment asserted
that without a range, a single value
calorie declaration for a variable menu
item would be false.
Other comments supported the use of
hybrid approaches (such as in Options
3 and 5) that would provide calorie
information in both ranges and averages.
One comment recommended that
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4) be revised to
include specific exceptions that would
limit the use of ranges—i.e., (1) very low
or no calorie beverages should be listed
separately from other beverages; (2) the
mean must be used for menu items that
come in different flavors, varieties, or
combination meals if all options are
within 40 calories of each other and all
of the options contain fewer than 400
calories, or if all options are within 80
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calories of each other and one or more
options contain more than 400 calories;
and (3) if there is a fixed or default
option for a combination meal, calories
should be posted for that option. This
comment explained that it suggested the
40-calorie range because 40 calories is
used as the basis for low calorie claims,
and that it suggested a cut-off of 400
calories because 400 is 20 percent of a
2,000 calorie diet and is high according
to our labeling principles.
One comment recommended that a
covered establishment be able to declare
one range for a variable menu item that
comes in different sizes only if the
difference between the upper and lower
limits is less than 5 percent. This
comment did not explain the basis for
its recommendation to use 5 percent to
limit the use of ranges.
One comment stated a preference for
Option 4, but also requested that we
limit the use of calorie ranges, within
the constraints of Option 4. This
comment considered that ranges are not
particularly useful to customers in
putting their choices into context.
Several other comments opposed
Option 4 because they considered that
it would be confusing.
(Response 76) After considering all
five options in light of the totality of the
comments and the advantages and
disadvantages of each option as
described in the proposed rule (76 FR
19192 at 19207 through 19209), we are
requiring Option 4, rather than Option
2, as the format for declaring calories for
variable menu items on menus and
menu boards.
Option 4 is similar to proposed
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4) in that it
continues to provide for the declaration
of calories using a range, which some
comments supported. However, Option
4 also provides for the use of a different
communication tool—i.e., a slash (e.g.,
110/230)—that is more tailored to a
situation in which there are only two
options available for a variable menu
item. Using a slash instead of a dash
(e.g., 110–230) better reflects the fact
that there are only two options for a
variable menu item available (see the
discussion in 76 FR 19192 at 19209),
and more accurately informs consumers
about the calories for each of the two
options, whereas using a range
represented by a dash is more
appropriate when there are more than
two options. As we discussed in the
proposed rule, we recognize that in
some instances, a calorie range may be
so wide that a consumer may still need
the calorie information for the particular
menu item before he or she can make a
fully informed purchase decision (76 FR
19192 at 19209). For example, the
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potential calorie range for a variable
menu item that is offered for sale with
the option of adding toppings (e.g.,
pizza) may be very wide. We are
establishing specific requirements for
such variable menu items when the
toppings are listed on a menu or menu
board in § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(5), in part
to address the potentially large variation
in calories and to provide more specific
calorie information to consumers
regarding their order selections.
In general, however, we agree with
the comments that use of a range is less
confusing than hybrids and single
values where consumers may not
understand how a single value is
derived if a median or mean is used.
Requiring a range for variable menu
items where three or more options are
available gives consumers a consistent
format across such variable menu items
and may allow covered establishments
to save some space on menus and menu
boards.
We disagree that we should limit the
use of ranges to calorie declarations for
variable menu items where the
difference between the upper and lower
limits is less than 5 percent. While this
approach may provide for smaller range
variations, such limitations likely would
require additional calorie declarations
on menus and menu boards and
significant redesigns of menus and
menu boards. Taking into consideration
the space on menus and menu boards
and the fact that calorie declarations for
individual variable menu items will be
included in the written nutrition
information required under section
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act and
§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii), we are not requiring
limits on the use of ranges where the
difference between the upper and lower
limits is less than 5 percent, at this time.
Further, the comment provided no basis
to use 5 percent to limit the use of
ranges.
For these reasons, we have revised
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4) to require Option
4 for the declaration of calories on the
menu or menu board for variable menu
items. Requiring the declaration of
calories of each option for a variable
menu by using a slash where only two
options are available will reduce or
limit the number of times that calories
are declared as a range, as requested by
some comments, while also providing
specific calorie information about each
option. If there are three or more options
available, the calories must be provided
in a range in the format ‘‘xx–yy,’’ where
‘‘xx’’ is the caloric content of the lowest
calorie variety, flavor, or combination,
and ‘‘yy’’ is the caloric content of the
highest calorie variety, flavor, or
combination. The use of a slash to
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declare calories for each option for a
variable menu item where only two
options are available and the use of a
range where three or more options are
available satisfy the requirements of
section 403(q)(5)(H)(v) of the FD&C Act.
We have revised
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4) to specify, in
subparagraphs (b)(2)(i)(A)(4) through
(b)(2)(i)(A)(7):
• Specific requirements that apply to
individual variable menu items
(§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4));
• Specific requirements that apply to
a variable menu item that is offered for
sale with the option of adding toppings
listed on the menu or menu board
(§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(5));
• Specific requirements that apply to
a combination meal
(§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)); and
• Specific format requirements for
declaring calories for an individual
variable menu item, a combination
meal, and toppings as a range, if
applicable (§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(7)).
We discuss these specific
requirements in sections XII.C through
XII.F.
We note that variable menu items that
are self-service food or food on display
are subject to the calorie declaration
requirements, in § 101.11(b)(2)(iii), for
food that is self-service or on display, as
discussed in section XVII.B.
C. Requirements That Apply to
Individual Variable Menu Items (Final
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4))
(Comment 77) One comment stated
that the proposed rule suggests that a
calorie range is only appropriate when
a general term such as ‘‘soda’’ is used
for a set of beverages, but not when
specific flavors or brands are also
named. The comment considered that
the proposed rule therefore would
require a calorie declaration for each
specific size or each specific brand of a
beverage listed on the menu. The
comment referred to a discussion in the
proposed rule (76 FR 19192 at 19216)
where we compared individually listed
beverages to individually listed flavors
of ice cream and indicated that calorie
declarations must be provided on
menus and menu boards for the
individually listed flavors. The
comment contended that there is not
enough space to list the calorie content
for each size of each beverage offered for
sale in the required type size. The
comment also stated that this
requirement will force covered
establishments to refrain from listing the
beverage options.
(Response 77) We are establishing in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4)(i) through
(b)(2)(i)(A)(4)(iii) requirements for
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declaring calories on the menu or menu
board for individual variable menu
items. First, we are establishing in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4)(i) the principle,
discussed in the proposed rule, that
calorie declarations must be provided
on menus and menu boards for the
individually listed flavors (76 FR 19192
at 19216). Section 403(q)(5)(H)(v) of the
FD&C Act provides, in relevant part,
that FDA shall establish by regulation
standards for disclosing the nutrient
content for standard menu items that
come in different flavors, varieties, or
combinations, but which are listed as a
single menu item through means
determined by FDA, including ranges,
averages, or other methods.
Accordingly, § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4)(i)
specifies that when the menu or menu
board lists flavors or varieties of an
entire individual variable menu item
(such as soft drinks, ice cream,
doughnuts, dips, and chicken that can
be grilled or fried), the calories must be
declared separately on the menu or
menu board for each listed flavor or
variety.
We acknowledge the comment’s
concern about space on menus and
menu boards. However, a covered
establishment could group together
varieties or flavors that have the same
number of calories (after rounding in
accordance with § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(2))
and declare the calories for that group
as a single calorie declaration,
specifying that the calorie declaration
represents the calorie amount for each
individual flavor or variety (e.g., ‘‘Diet
Lemon Lime or Diet Cola (0 cal); Cola
or Lemon Lime (150 cal)’’). We have
revised § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4)(i) to
include this option for grouping flavors
and varieties that have the same calorie
amounts. We discuss in more detail the
specific requirements for calorie
declarations for self-service beverages in
section XVII.E.3.
Flavors or varieties of variable menu
items such as soft drinks, ice cream,
doughnuts, dips, and chicken are not
always listed on the menu or menu
board. When the menu or menu board
does not list flavors or varieties for an
entire individual variable menu item,
and only includes a general description
of the variable menu item (e.g. ‘‘soft
drinks’’), § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4)(ii)
specifies that the calories must be
declared for each option with a slash
between the two calorie declarations
where only two options are available
(e.g., ‘‘150/250 calories’’) or as a range
in accordance with the requirements of
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(7) where more than
two options are available (e.g., ‘‘100–250
calories’’). As discussed in section XII.F,
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(7) specifies the
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format requirements for declaring
calories as a range.
Some menus or menu boards describe
flavors or varieties for only part of an
individual variable menu item (such as
different types of cheese offered in a
sandwich). To address these types of
variable menu items,
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4)(iii) specifies that
when the menu or menu board
describes flavors or varieties for only
part of an individual variable menu item
(such as different types of cheese offered
in a grilled cheese sandwich (e.g.,
‘‘Grilled Cheese (Cheddar or Swiss)’’)),
the calories must be declared for each
option with a slash between the two
calorie declarations where only two
options are available (e.g., ‘‘450/500
calories’’) or as a range in accordance
with the requirements of
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(7) where more than
two options are available (e.g., ‘‘450–550
calories’’).
D. Requirements That Apply to a
Variable Menu Item That Is Offered for
Sale With the Option of Adding
Toppings Listed on the Menu or Menu
Board (Final § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(5))
(Comment 78) A few comments
recommended that the calories either be
declared as a range as proposed or be
declared for the basic preparation of the
item together with a separate calorie
declaration for each topping. These
comments supported separate calorie
declarations for sauces and dressings
served on the side.
One comment appeared to believe
that covered establishments must list a
range providing calories for pizzas with
no toppings and pizzas with everything
on them. The comment asserted that
this calorie range would be too wide
and ‘‘useless.’’ The comment also
asserted that measuring toppings is not
an ‘‘exact science.’’ The comment
recommended that calories be disclosed
on menus and menu boards for the
standard build pizzas but not for
toppings, because the nutrient
information for the toppings would be
required in the written nutrition
information. However, the comment
suggested that a single calorie listing for
all toppings as a range from lowest to
highest would be appropriate if we
require calorie disclosures for pizza
toppings on menus and menu boards.
One comment recommended that
ranges not be the only option for pizza.
The comment asserted that pizzas can
have up to 34 million combinations
with a range as wide as 1,610 calories.
The entity submitting the comment said
it had received complaints from
consumers in one jurisdiction where
calorie information for pizza is provided
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71199
by a range and found that the customers
questioned the usefulness of a wide
range of calories for a whole pizza. This
comment stated that some jurisdictions
have attempted to address this problem
by requiring that the covered
establishments list calories per each
component or topping. The comment
asserted that listing calories for each
component or topping would not be
useful for pizza because each topping
has a different portioning based on the
size of the pizza and the total number
of toppings on the pizza. The comment
explained that the amount of an
individual topping selection (e.g.,
pepperoni, sausage, mushrooms, green
peppers) added to a pizza is reduced
based on the total number of individual
toppings selections ordered. For
example, a one-topping medium pizza
where ham is the topping may have 10
grams of ham per slice (adding 10
calories from the ham per slice) whereas
a medium pizza with ham as a topping
and three other toppings may have 6
grams of ham per slice (adding 5
calories from the ham per slice).
Therefore, the comment contended that
individual labeling of toppings would
lead to large calorie ranges that would
not be useful information for the
consumer. This comment stated that
under one State law, pizza is a custom
order and nutrition information is not
required for toppings. The comment
maintained that the best way to make
calorie declarations for pizza is to
declare calorie information for the
standard build and provide calorie
information for other customizations in
a brochure or an online calculator.
One comment noted that, in the
proposed rule, we discussed the
possibility of listing calories for both the
standard preparation of pizza and for
each topping (76 FR 19192 at 19207) but
did not codify this as we did for the
written nutrition information. One
comment asked us to clarify that
calories should be listed for each
separate pizza topping. Another
comment recommended that calories for
items such as pizzas and sundaes be
posted for the standard preparation only
if calories for each topping or option are
also listed.
(Response 78) In
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(5)(i) through
(b)(2)(i)(A)(5)(iv), we are specifying
format requirements that apply to a
variable menu item that is offered for
sale with the option of adding toppings
listed on the menu or menu board.
Doing so is consistent with section
403(q)(5)(H)(v) of the FD&C Act,
responds to the comments making
specific suggestions for how to declare
calories for toppings such as those used
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We note that if the general term,
‘‘toppings’’ is used on a menu or menu
board, but the individual toppings are
not listed, then the format requirements
of § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4)(ii) would apply
(i.e., the calories must be declared for
each option with a slash between the
two calorie declarations where only two
options are available (e.g., ‘‘150/250
calories’’) or as a range where more than
two options are available (e.g., ‘‘100–250
calories’’).
Foods such as pizza and ice cream are
often offered for sale in different sizes
(e.g., a small, medium, or large pizza
pie, and ice cream dishes that contain
one, two, or three scoops of ice cream).
As mentioned by a comment, the
amount of a topping added to a variable
menu item may vary based on the size
of the variable menu item ordered by a
consumer. The calorie content of each
topping will likely vary accordingly,
depending on the size of the variable
menu item ordered. To account for the
potential variability in calorie content of
each topping based on the size of the
variable menu item ordered,
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(5)(iii) specifies that
the calories for the basic preparation of
the menu item must be declared for
each size of the menu item, and the
calories for each topping listed on the
menu or menu board must either be
declared separately for each size of the
menu item, or declared using a slash
between the two calorie declarations for
each topping where only two sizes of
the menu item are available (e.g., ‘‘adds
150/250 cal’’) or as a range for each
topping in accordance with the
requirements of paragraph (b)(2)(i)(A)(7)
of the rule where more than two sizes
of the menu item are available (e.g.,
‘‘adds 100–250 cal’’). If a slash between
ICE CREAM SCOOP: 300 CAL
two calorie declarations or a range of
Toppings
Added cal
calorie declarations is used, the menu or
menu board must indicate that the
Almonds ................................
25 variation in calories for each topping
Fudge ....................................
50
arises from the size of the menu item to
which the toppings are added. For
Furthermore, a covered establishment example:
could group toppings that have the same
calorie amounts (after rounding in
PLAIN PIZZA PIE: SMALL (12″) 500 CAL
accordance with § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(2)),
* MEDIUM (14″) 750 CAL * LARGE
and declare the calories for such
(16″) 1000 CAL
toppings as a single calorie declaration
adjacent to the toppings, specifying that
Added cal
the calorie declaration represents the
Toppings
calorie amount for each individual
Small
Med
Large
topping (e.g., ‘‘Red Peppers or sweet
Pepperoni ...
200
300
400
onions (adds 10 cal);’’ ‘‘Red peppers,
Sausage ......
250
350
450
sweet onions (adds 10 cal per
Green Peptopping)’’). We have revised
pers .........
15
20
25
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(5)(ii) to include this
option for grouping toppings that have
the same calorie amounts.
or
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on pizza and sundaes, and
acknowledges some of the unique
characteristics of such toppings (e.g.,
that the amount of each topping added
to a menu item such as pizza may
decrease with the total number of
toppings ordered).
As noted by the comments, the
proposed rule acknowledged that some
comments received in response to the
2010 docket notice recommended that
the calorie information for items such as
pizza be displayed for the standard
preparation of the item, with the
standard preparation of the item clearly
noted on the menu, menu board, or food
tag or next to the food on display. The
calorie content for each additional food
component would then be displayed on
the menu, menu board, food tag, or next
to the food on display for each food
component (76 FR 19192 at 19207). In
light of these comments to the 2010
docket notice and the comments
received to the proposed rule,
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(5)(i) specifies that
when the menu or menu board lists
toppings that can be added to a menu
item (such as pizza or ice cream), the
calories must be declared for the basic
preparation of the menu item as listed
(e.g., ‘‘small pizza pie,’’ or ‘‘single scoop
ice cream’’). Section
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(5)(ii) specifies that the
calories must be separately declared for
each topping listed on the menu or
menu board (e.g., pepperoni, sausage,
green peppers, onions on pizza; fudge,
almonds, sprinkles on ice cream), and
the menu or menu board must specify
that the calories are added to the
calories contained in the basic
preparation of the menu item. For
example:
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PLAIN PIZZA PIE: SMALL (12″) 500 CAL
* MEDIUM (14″) 750 CAL * LARGE
(16″) 1000 CAL
Toppings
Pepperoni .............................
Sausage ................................
Green Peppers .....................
Added cal
(S/M/L pie)
200–400
250–450
15–25
In the proposed rule, we requested
comment on complexities that may be
raised by certain variable menu items,
such as those offered for sale with the
option of adding toppings (such as pizza
or ice cream) (76 FR 19192 at 19209). As
mentioned by the comments, the
amount of a topping added to a variable
menu item, and therefore the calorie
content of each topping, may vary not
only based on the size of the menu item,
but also based on the total number of
toppings ordered by a consumer.
Specifically, the amount of each topping
added to a variable menu item may
decrease as the total number of toppings
ordered by a consumer increases.
Therefore, to address this complexity,
we have established a specific calorie
declaration requirement in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(5)(iv) for variable
menu items offered for sale with the
option of adding toppings listed on the
menu or menu board, where the amount
of the topping included on the basic
preparation of the menu item decreases
based on the total number of toppings
ordered (such as sometimes is the case
with pizza toppings). In such situation,
the calories for each topping listed on
the menu or menu board must be
declared as single values representing
the calories for each topping when
added to a one-topping menu item, and
the menu or menu board must specify
that the calorie declaration is for the
topping when added to a one-topping
menu item. The following table
provides an example of calorie
declarations that would satisfy the
requirements of § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(5)(i)
through (iv):
PLAIN PIZZA PIE: SMALL (12″) 500 CAL
* MEDIUM (14″) 750 CAL * LARGE
(16″) 1000 CAL
Toppings
Pepperoni .............................
Sausage ................................
Green peppers ......................
Added cal
(single topping
S/M/L pie)
200–400
250–450
15–25
Structuring the requirement in this
way helps ensure that consumers are
given accurate and consistent
information about the calories of each
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topping that are added to the calories
contained in the basic preparation of the
menu item. We would not object if a
covered establishment voluntarily
includes a statement on the menu or
menu board explaining how the calories
per topping might fluctuate if ordering
multiple toppings; for example, for a
pizza pie, the statement might say,
‘‘Calories per topping may decrease as
the number of toppings per pizza
increases.’’
In § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(5)(i) through
(b)(2)(i)(A)(5)(iv), we are establishing
requirements for declaring calorie
information for variable menu items
with toppings listed on a menu or menu
board, and specifying the format and
manner of such declarations, as required
by sections 403(q)(5)(H)(v) and
(x)(II)(bb) of the FD&C Act. Because the
requirements in § 101.11
(b)(2)(i)(A)(5)(iii) and (b)(2)(i)(A)(5)(iv)
address the potential variability in
calorie content of each topping based on
the size of the menu item, and the total
number of toppings ordered, the
required calorie declarations will
provide accurate calorie information to
consumers regarding the calorie content
of each topping they order. In addition,
the requirement in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(5)(iii) for toppings
added to menu items that come in
different sizes provides covered
establishments with flexibility to choose
one of two options that best fits their
establishments and menus and menu
boards. Allowing covered
establishments to use a range for each
topping to represent the added calories
across various sizes of the menu item
may save some space on menus and
menu boards while still providing the
necessary calorie information for
consumers to make informed dietary
choices.
We disagree that pizza with toppings
generally would be a custom order for
the purposes of this rule and that
nutrition information is not required for
such foods for a number of reasons.
First, the requirements of section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act and this
rule apply to standard menu items. This
rule defines a standard menu item as
restaurant-type food that is routinely
included on a menu or menu board or
routinely offered as a self-service food
or food on display. To the extent a pizza
with toppings meets the definition of a
standard menu item, the requirements
of section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act
and § 101.11(b) would apply to such
pizza.
Second, while section
403(q)(5)(H)(vii) of the FD&C Act
exempts from the nutrition labeling
requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H) of
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the FD&C Act items that are custom
orders, a pizza with toppings that meets
the definition of a standard menu item
would not be a custom order within the
meaning of § 101.11. Under the
definition of ‘‘custom order’’ in
§ 101.11(a), a custom order is a food
order that is prepared in a specific
manner based on an individual
consumer’s request, which requires the
covered establishment to deviate from
its usual preparation of a menu item.
For example, if a covered establishment
offers a ‘‘Meat Lovers’’ pizza containing
ground meat and sausage as a standard
menu item, and a customer orders a
‘‘Meat Lover’s’’ pizza without sausage,
that order could be considered a custom
order. In contrast, a pizza with toppings
routinely listed on the menu or menu
board of a covered establishment would
meet the definition of a standard menu
item, and toppings can be added to a
pizza as part of the establishment’s
usual preparation of the menu item.
Third, pizza is explicitly identified in
section 403(q)(5)(H)(v) of the FD&C Act
as a variable menu item for which the
nutrition information must be disclosed.
If Congress had meant for pizza,
including pizza with toppings, not to be
covered by the requirements of section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act, it would
not have had reason to specifically
include pizza as an example of the foods
described in section 403(q)(5)(H)(v) of
the FD&C Act.
We also disagree that calorie
declarations for different toppings
should not be required on menus or
menu boards because these calorie
declarations will be provided in the
written nutrition information or can be
provided in a brochure. When toppings
are listed on a menu or menu board,
consumers can use such information to
make order selections. Accordingly,
when toppings are listed on a menu or
menu board, a covered establishment
must declare calories for each topping
on the menu or menu board in
accordance with
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(5)(ii) through
(b)(2)(i)(A)(5)(iv). Requiring calorie
declarations for toppings when they are
listed on the menu or menu board helps
to inform consumers’ decisions by
providing the calorie content of menu
items before consumers make their
order selections. Further, providing
such information will enable consumers
to make informed and healthful dietary
choices.
E. Requirements That Apply to a
Combination Meal (Final
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6))
(Comment 79) Some comments
recommended that, when practicable,
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calorie amounts for all components of a
variable menu item that is a
combination meal be listed on the menu
or menu board. One comment provided
an example of a variable menu item for
a pancake combination meal with a
choice of bacon strips or pork sausages
to accompany pancakes, eggs, and hash
browns. In the comment’s example, the
calories for the two options ranged from
1,200 to 1,420 calories, and the
comment stated that the covered
establishment could list the calories as
‘‘Two pancakes (600 calories) served
with two eggs (200 calories), hash
browns (300 calories) and your choice of
2 bacon strips (100 calories) or 2 pork
sausages (320 calories).’’
A few comments acknowledged that
ranges are a better mechanism for
presenting calorie information about
variable menu items that are
combination meals than are medians or
means, but also pointed out that ranges
have a disadvantage in that they do not
sufficiently convey the necessary
information to the consumer. One
comment maintained that its consumer
research shows that calorie ranges are
confusing and not informative for
variable menu items. Another comment
recommended that if calorie ranges are
used, the calories for the menu options
that are included in that range must be
disclosed, either on the menu, through
signs for foods on display, or through
the device used to provide the other
written nutrition information required
in section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the
FD&C Act.
Another comment provided sample
menu boards that offered for sale menu
items in a meal described as ‘‘You Pick
2’’ (YP2), such as a meal consisting of
a half sandwich and a half salad. For
each menu item, the sample menu
boards declared the number of calories
in the menu item when ordered by a
consumer individually and when
ordered as one of the components of the
‘‘You Pick 2’’ meal, if available as a
‘‘You Pick 2’’ component (e.g., ‘‘Chicken
Caesar Salad, YP2 360, Whole 720’’).
The comment asserted that declaring
calories for each menu item
individually, rather than declaring the
calories for all possible combinations of
its ‘‘You Pick 2’’ menu items in a range,
was the best way to ensure that
consumers have the necessary
information to make choices about their
calorie consumption.
(Response 79) We disagree that we
should require calories to be listed on a
menu or menu board for each
component of a variable menu item that
is a combination meal. In many cases,
one or more components of a variable
menu item (such as the pancakes, eggs,
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hash browns, bacon, and pork sausages
in the comment’s example) are also
included on a menu or menu board as
standard menu items, and the calories
for such components would already be
on the menu or menu board when this
is the case. However, we would not
object if a covered establishment
voluntarily lists the calories for each
component of a variable menu item that
is a combination meal, provided that the
covered establishment also complies
with the format requirements for
declaring calories for variable menu
items on menus and menu boards in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4) through
(b)(2)(i)(A)(7).
Section 403(q)(5)(H)(v) of the FD&C
Act provides, in relevant part, that FDA
shall establish standards for disclosing
the nutrient content for standard menu
items that come in different flavors,
varieties, or combinations, but which
are listed as a single menu item through
means determined by FDA, including
ranges, averages, or other methods.
Accordingly, § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(i)
through (b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(iii) require calorie
declarations for combination meals.
Consistent with our selection of Option
4 for declaring calories for variable
menu items generally (see discussion in
section XII.B), § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(i)
specifies that when the menu or menu
board lists two options for menu items
in a combination meal (e.g., a sandwich
with a side salad or chips), the calories
must be declared for each option with
a slash between the two calorie
declarations (e.g., ‘‘350/450 calories’’).
Section 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(ii) specifies
that when the menu or menu board lists
three or more options for menu items in
a combination meal (e.g., a sandwich
with chips, a side salad, or fruit), the
calories must be declared as a range in
accordance with the requirements of
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(7) (e.g., ‘‘350–500
calories’’).
As such, the requirements for calorie
declarations for combinations meals in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(i) through
(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(iii) are consistent with the
view of comments asserting that ranges
are a better mechanism for presenting
calorie information than are medians or
means. The requirements in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(i)
through(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(iii) also address
the concerns of other comments that
ranges do not sufficiently convey the
necessary information to the consumer
by limiting the use of a range to
combination meals with three or more
options, and providing specific calorie
information about each option of a
combination meal where only two
options are available. In addition, we
find that the small sample size (n = 127)
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of the consumer research submitted
with one comment limits it as support
for the comment’s assertion that calorie
ranges are confusing and not
informative for variable menu items
(Ref. 33). Further, although this small
study suggests possible consumer
preference among different declaration
formats, it does not provide evidence
about how consumers understand and
use the formats (Ref. 33).
Immediately following, in Response
80, we discuss the third provision we
are establishing in § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)
regarding the format of declaring
calories on the menu or menu board for
combination meals—i.e., for ‘‘upsize’’
and ‘‘downsize’’ options for
combination meals.
Regarding the ‘‘You Pick 2’’ meal
described by one comment, we note that
the sample menu board provided by the
comment had a separate section
describing an opportunity for a
consumer to combine standard menu
items for a special price, such as by
combining any half sandwich with any
half salad. The comment’s sample menu
board declared the number of calories
for each standard menu item available
for consumers to combine for a special
price (e.g., ‘‘Chicken Caesar Salad, YP2
360, Whole 720’’). Generally, the
calories for a combination meal must be
declared as a range in accordance with
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(7) as required by
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(ii) if the menu or
menu board lists three or more options
for the menu items in the combination
meal. However, in the sample menu
boards provided by the comment, the
section describing an opportunity for a
consumer to combine standard menu
items merely informed consumers of a
special price when standard menu items
separately listed on the menu board,
each with declared calories, are
combined in a ‘‘mix and match’’
situation. In this type of ‘‘mix and
match’’ situation, as displayed in the
sample menu board provided by the
comment, a consumer would have the
calorie information for each standard
menu item available for the consumer to
combine before he or she selects one or
more standard menu items. Because the
covered establishment would be
providing calorie declarations for each
standard menu item available for the
consumer to combine on the menu or
menu board that would be visible to
consumers when making order
selections, and taking into consideration
space on menus and menu boards, we
agree with the comment that requiring
the disclosure of additional calorie
ranges in such a situation, particularly
where there are a large number of
combinations available, likely would
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not be necessary. For these reasons, in
this type of ‘‘mix and match’’ situation,
where the menu or menu board
describes an opportunity for a consumer
to combine standard menu items for a
special price (e.g., ‘‘Combine Any
Sandwich with Any Soup or Any Salad
for $8.99’’), and the calories for each
standard menu item, including each size
option as described in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(iii) if applicable,
available for the consumer to combine
are declared elsewhere on the menu or
menu board, we would not require a
covered establishment to also declare
the calories for the combination in a
range. To make this clear,
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(iv) of the final
rule specifies that where the menu or
menu board describes an opportunity
for a consumer to combine standard
menu items for a special price (e.g.,
‘‘Combine Any Sandwich with Any
Soup or Any Salad for $8.99’’), and the
calories for each standard menu item,
including each size option as described
in § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(iii) if
applicable, available for the consumer to
combine are declared elsewhere on the
menu or menu board, the requirements
of § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(i), (ii), and
(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(iii) do not apply.
In establishing
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(iv), we have
considered space on menus and menu
boards and how to minimize the burden
on covered establishments to comply
with this rule while ensuring that the
requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H) of
the FD&C Act and other applicable
sections of the FD&C Act are satisfied
and nutrition information for standard
menu items is made available to
consumers in a direct and accessible
manner. Further, our approach to this
‘‘mix and match’’ situation is similar to
our approach to a situation where a
covered establishment includes
packaged food (such as chips) as part of
a combination meal. As discussed later
in this document (see section XVII.H), a
packaged food that is a food on display
that bears Nutrition Facts information,
including the nutrition information
specified in section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III)
of the FD&C Act and § 101.11(b)(2)(ii)
satisfies the calorie disclosure
requirement for self-service food or food
on display in section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii) of
the FD&C Act and § 101.11(b)(2)(iii), so
long as a consumer is able to examine
the calorie information on the label
prior to purchase.
(Comment 80) As another example of
complexities that may be raised by
certain variable menu items, we noted
in the proposed rule that some menus
with combination meals list an option to
increase the size of components of those
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meals for a discounted additional price
(76 FR 19192 at 19209). ‘‘Add 25 cents
to Upgrade to Large Fries & Large
Drink’’ is an example of such an option.
We stated that we were considering
whether those listings should be labeled
with the number or range of calories
they add to the standard combination
meal, and requested comment on this
issue.
Several comments responded to this
request for comment. In general, these
comments considered that calories
should be declared for each size of a
menu item (such as ‘‘upgrades’’ or
‘‘upsized options’’ and ‘‘downsized
options’’) offered on menus and menu
boards. Some comments linked the
requirement to declare calories for
different sizes to different prices—e.g.,
by considering that calories must be
declared for any size option that has a
distinct price on the menu or menu
board. Some comments addressed
combination meals, including fixed
combination meals and combination
meals that are variable menu items and
considered that calories should be
declared for fixed or variable
combination meals available in multiple
sizes.
(Response 80) We previously
addressed comments directed to
standard menu items other than variable
menu items when the menu or menu
board lists an option to change the size
of the standard menu item (see
Response 66). Here, we focus on calorie
declarations for ‘‘upsized options’’ and
‘‘downsized options’’ for combination
meals that are variable menu items.
Consistent with our selection of Option
4 (see discussion in section XII.B),
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(iii) specifies that
when the menu or menu board includes
a choice to increase or decrease the size
of a combination meal, the calorie
difference must be declared for the
increased or decreased size with a slash
between two calorie declarations (e.g.,
‘‘Adds 100/150 calories,’’ ‘‘Subtracts
100/150 calories’’) if the menu or menu
board lists two options for menu items
in the combination meal, or as a range
in accordance with the requirements of
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(7) (e.g., ‘‘Adds 100–
250 calories,’’ ‘‘Subtracts 100–250
calories’’) if the menu or menu board
lists three or more options for menu
items in the combination meal.
For example, if a covered
establishment offers for sale a
combination meal that is a variable
menu item consisting of a sandwich
with fries or with onion rings, and the
menu or menu board includes a choice
to increase the size of the fries or the
onion rings, the number of calories
added by the larger size must be
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declared using a slash (e.g., ‘‘Adds 250/
300 calories’’) since there are only two
options for menu items in the
combination meal (e.g., fries or onion
rings).
As another example, if a covered
establishment offers for sale a
combination meal that is a variable
menu item consisting of a sandwich
with fries, onion rings, or tater tots, and
the menu or menu board includes an
option to increase the size of the fries,
onion rings, or tater tots, the number of
calories added by the larger size must be
declared as a range in accordance with
the requirements of
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(7) (e.g., ‘‘Adds 250–
450 calories’’), because there are three
options for menu items in the
combination meal (e.g., fries, onion
rings, or tater tots).
(Comment 81) A few comments
requested flexibility and recommended
that the rule allow a covered
establishment to choose the option for
declaring calories for variable menu
items that best fits its business and
menu, and display calories for variable
menu items in the best way, as
determined by the establishment, that
allows consumers to choose healthier
options. One comment presented a
series of specific recommendations for
disclosing calories, including specific
recommendations that did not fit
squarely within any of the five options
for disclosing calories for variable menu
items discussed in the proposed rule.
This comment recommended that
calories for variable menu items be
disclosed by (1) providing an average or
range, for each size or price of the
variable menu item accompanied by the
term ‘‘Avg. Cal’’; (2) declaring calories
for the flavors, components, or toppings
that make up that variable menu item
elsewhere on the primary writing; or (3)
displaying the calorie amount for one
preset ‘‘build’’ of the variable menu
item. Under the comment’s third option,
the ‘‘build’’ would be representative of
a finished version of the typical order
and could not be a rarely ordered base
product to which additional fixings are
added. The comment also recommended
that a covered establishment declare the
calories for the additional options
available for the variable menu item in
a separate writing (such as an electronic
kiosk, a nutrition brochure, a menu
addendum, a nutrition poster, or an
online nutrition application) available
before or at the point of sale.
For combination meals that are fixed,
this comment recommended that
calories be disclosed by (1) providing
total calories for the fixed combination
meal or (2) providing calories for each
item or component of the fixed
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combination meal elsewhere on the
primary writing. For combination meals
that contain variable menu items, the
comment recommended that calories be
disclosed by (1) providing calories as a
range reflecting the lowest and highest
total meal calorie content among the
variations available; (2) providing a
median or average accompanied by the
term ‘‘Avg. Cal’’ if the calories for all
variations within a variable combination
meal are within 20 percent of the
median calorie value; (3) providing
calorie information for each item of the
variable combination meal elsewhere on
the primary writing; or (4) providing the
calories for one specified variation of
the variable combination meal. A
covered establishment that elects to
provide calories for one specified
variation of the combination meal
would identify the items in the variation
specified, and disclose calories for the
other variations of the variable
combination meal in a separate writing
available at the point of sale.
(Response 81) We decline the requests
of these comments to allow a covered
establishment to determine the method
for declaring calories for variable menu
items based on factors determined by
the establishment. While this rule
provides flexibility where appropriate,
taking into account different business
practices, standard menu items, and
menus and menu boards, it also
provides for uniform nutrition labeling
requirements to be applied in covered
establishments. Such consistency was
one of the primary purposes of section
4205 of the ACA (see e.g., section
4205(c)). Further, section 403(q)(5)(H)(v)
of the FD&C Act specifically directs
FDA to establish by regulation
requirements for disclosing nutrition
information for variable menu items
through means determined by FDA. In
addition, section 403(q)(5)(H)(x)(II)(bb)
of the FD&C Act directs FDA to issue
regulations specifying the format and
manner of the nutrition information
disclosure requirements of section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act. This rule
establishes requirements for disclosing
the nutrition information required
under section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C
Act while also providing flexibility. For
example, we are establishing specific
format requirements for calorie
declarations for individual variable
menu items, toppings listed on a menu
or menu board, and combination meals
(§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4) through
(b)(2)(i)(A)(7)), and we also are
providing an exemption from the
requirements for calorie declarations for
combination meals in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(i) through
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(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(iii) under the
circumstances described in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(iv). In addition,
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(3) provides
flexibility on where to place the term
‘‘Calories’’ or ‘‘Cal’’ on a menu or menu
board, and § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1)
provides flexibility for the color and
contrasting background of calorie
declarations. The calorie declaration
requirements for variable menu items in
this rule help ensure that consumers get
consistent information when ordering
from different covered establishments
and even when ordering within a single
covered establishment. For example, the
approach suggested by the comments
could lead to an inconsistent
presentation on the same menu or menu
board within a single establishment if a
covered establishment determined that
one approach worked best for some of
its menu items and another approach
worked best for other menu items.
(Comment 82) A few comments
recommended that calories for
combination meals be declared for the
standard, ‘‘default,’’ or most popular
build. As an example, one comment
recommended that calories declared for
a combination meal include the calories
for fries if the meal is depicted on a
menu board as including fries. As
another example, the comment
recommended that calories declared for
a combination meal include the calories
in a full-calorie drink if more than 50
percent of a covered establishment’s
combination meals are sold with a fullcalorie drink. One comment considered
that the standard or default is the meal
depicted that accounts for more than a
majority (51 percent) of the sales for that
meal.
(Response 82) We disagree with the
comments in part. A combination meal,
including those described by the
comments, could be listed on a menu or
menu board as a variable menu item,
meaning that it could be listed as a
single menu item that comes in different
flavors, varieties, or combinations.
Where a combination meal is listed on
a menu or menu board as a variable
menu item, the meal would not have a
typical ‘‘default build’’ because some
components that make up the meal (e.g.,
hamburger, fries or onion rings, soft
drink) come in different flavors,
varieties, or combinations that
consumers are able to select. Section
403(q)(5)(H)(v) of the FD&C Act
requires, in relevant part, that FDA
establish by regulation standards for
disclosing the nutrient content for
variable menu items, through means
determined by FDA, including ranges,
averages, or other methods.
Accordingly, we have established the
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requirements for calorie declarations for
variable menu items that are
combination meals in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(i) through
(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(iii). These calorie
declaration requirements communicate
the variability of calorie content in the
combination meal to consumers by
providing the calorie information for
each option when there are only two
options available or in a range when
there are three or more options
available. In contrast, the methods for
declaring calories for combination meals
that are variable menu items suggested
by the comments would not inform
consumers that the calorie content of
their order selection may vary based on
the options selected in the combination
meal.
Where a combination meal is not
listed on a menu or menu board as a
variable menu item, but is instead listed
as a menu item that comes in only one
flavor, variety, or combination, the
combination meal would have a
‘‘default build.’’ As with a combination
meal that comes in different sizes, in
this situation, § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)
requires a covered establishment to
provide the number of calories
contained in the combination meal
listed on the menu or menu board, as
usually prepared and offered for sale.
(See discussion about fixed combination
meals offered for sale in different sizes
in Response 66.)
F. Format Requirements for Declaring
Calories for an Individual Variable
Menu Item, a Combination Meal, and
Toppings as a Range, if Applicable
(Final § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(7))
As discussed previously in this
document (see section XII.B), we are
revising § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4) to require
Option 4. One such revision
(established in § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(7))
specifies the format requirements that
must be followed when declaring
calories as a range. Under
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(7), calories that are
declared as a range must be in the
format ‘‘xx-yy,’’ where ‘‘xx’’ is the
caloric content of the lowest calorie
variety, flavor, or combination, and
‘‘yy’’ is the caloric content of the highest
calorie variety, flavor, or combination.
We are establishing these specific
format requirements as a separate
subparagraph so that the rule does not
need to include this format information
each time the rule requires use of a
range.
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G. Exception for a Variable Menu Item
When There Is No Clearly Identifiable
Upper Bound to the Range of Calories
(Final § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(8))
Proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4) would
require, in relevant part, that if a
variable menu item appears on the
menu or menu board and is a selfservice food or food on display, and
there is no clearly identifiable upper
bound to the range, e.g., all-you-can-eat
buffet, then the menu or menu board
must include a statement, adjacent to
the name or price of the item, referring
customers to the self-service facility for
calorie information, e.g., ‘‘See buffet for
calorie declarations.’’ This statement
must appear in a type size no smaller
than the name or price of the variable
menu item, whichever is smaller, and in
the same color or a color at least as
conspicuous as that name or price, with
the same contrasting background as that
name or price.
Comments that addressed this
proposed provision supported it.
Therefore, we are finalizing it without
change, except to:
• Redesignate it as
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(8) and clarify that it
is an ‘‘exception’’ to the requirements of
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A) for calorie
declarations that must be provided on
menus and menu boards;
• Make a conforming change to
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A) to acknowledge the
exception in § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(8);
• Provide the same flexibility for the
contrasting background used for the
statement referring customers to the
self-service facility for calorie
declarations as for the calorie
declaration in § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1);
• Make the same conforming editorial
change to the requirement directed to
the color of this statement as for the
calorie declaration in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1);
• Make an editorial correction for
clarity to insert ‘‘the type size of’’
between ‘‘no smaller than’’ and ‘‘the
name or price.’’
Characterizing the provisions of
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(8) as an ‘‘exception’’
will clarify that the requirements of
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1) through
(b)(2)(i)(A)(7) do not apply when a
variable menu item appears on the
menu or menu board and is a selfservice food or food on display, and
there is no clearly identifiable upper
bound to the range of calories. Providing
the same flexibility for the contrasting
background as for the contrasting
backgrounds for calorie declarations in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1) will provide a
consistent approach to background
requirements on menus and menu
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boards. Making the conforming editorial
change to the requirement directed to
the color will promote consistency in
terminology in the rule.
With these changes,
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(8) specifies that if a
variable menu item appears on the
menu or menu board and is a selfservice food or food on display, and
there is no clearly identifiable upper
bound to the range, e.g., all-you-can-eat
buffet, the menu or menu board must
include a statement, adjacent to the
name or price of the item, referring
customers to the self-service facility for
calorie information, e.g., ‘‘See buffet for
calorie declarations.’’ This statement
must appear in a type size no smaller
than the type size of the name or price
of the variable menu item, whichever is
smaller, and in the same color or a color
at least as conspicuous as that used for
that name or price, with the same
contrasting background or a background
at least as contrasting as that used for
that name or price.
H. Declaring Calories Using Interactive
Menus or New Technology
(Comment 83) In the proposed rule,
we recognized that the Internet may
allow for the use of different methods
for disclosing calories, such as by
providing a calorie tracker in the
ordering frame to tally calories as
customers make order selections (76 FR
19192 at 19209). We requested comment
on whether different methods should be
used for nutrient content declarations
for interactive Internet menus in general
(76 FR 19192 at 19209). One comment
asked that we acknowledge the potential
for advances in technology and establish
a petition process to request alternative
methods of nutrition information
disclosure via technological
innovations, e.g., via smart phone
applications. The comment also asked
us to establish a process to approve
methods that reflect technological
advances that we did not anticipate but
that comply with the statute.
(Response 83) We are not establishing
a petition process to approve future
methods for calorie declarations at this
time. As suggested by the comment, we
specifically acknowledged that potential
technological advances may allow for
the use of different methods in
disclosing calories in covered
establishments and requested comments
on such methods. To the extent that the
technological advances described by the
comment provide methods for declaring
calorie information in accordance with
section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act
and § 101.11, such methods would be
permissible. We will continue to
consider whether specific advances in
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technology may result in alternative
methods for nutrient content
declarations under section 403(q)(5)(H)
of the FD&C Act.
Later in this document (see Comment
113 and Response 113 in section XVI.E),
we address a similar comment from the
perspective of new technologies for
providing written nutrition information.
XIII. Additional Requirements That
Apply to Beverages That Are Not SelfService or on Display (Final
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(9))
(Comment 84) One comment noted
that the proposed rule did not address
the issue of ice fill for the declaration of
calories for beverages. The comment
asked us to permit covered
establishments to calculate calories
based on their standard ice fill as long
as the level of ice fill is disclosed to
consumers. The comment recommended
that we expressly permit, regardless of
whether there is a standard ice fill, the
following statement regarding ice fill:
‘‘Calorie content may vary based on the
amount of ice used.’’
(Response 84) For beverages that are
standard menu items and are dispensed
by an employee of a covered
establishment (and, thus, are not selfservice), we acknowledge that some of
the beverage would be displaced by any
ice added by the covered establishment.
In addition, the amount of beverage
displaced may vary based on the
amount and type of added ice (e.g.,
crushed, cubed, shaved). Whereas some
covered establishments may dispense a
standard beverage fill (i.e., a fixed
amount that is less than the full volume
of the cup per cup size), others may not.
Likewise, whereas some covered
establishments may have a standard ice
fill (i.e., a fixed amount of ice per cup
size), others may not. Accordingly,
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(9) of the final rule
requires that, for beverages that are not
self-service, calories must be declared
based on the full volume of the cup
served without ice, unless the covered
establishment ordinarily dispenses and
offers for sale a standard beverage fill
(i.e., a fixed amount that is less than the
full volume of the cup per cup size) or
dispenses a standard ice fill (i.e., a fixed
amount of ice per cup size). If the
covered establishment usually prepares
and offers for sale a beverage using a
standard beverage fill or dispenses a
standard ice fill, the covered
establishment must declare calories
based on such standard beverage fill or
standard ice fill. Section
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(9) of the final rule
does not require a covered
establishment to set a standard beverage
fill or standard ice fill. Instead,
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§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(9) requires the
covered establishment to disclose the
number of calories contained in a
beverage with a standard beverage fill or
ice fill ‘‘as usually prepared and offered
for sale,’’ as required by section
403(q)(5)(H)(ii) of the FD&C Act. The
rule also does not specify how a covered
establishment should dispense a
standard beverage fill or standard ice
fill. A covered establishment may
choose a method that is suited to its
establishment—e.g., by using equipment
that automatically dispenses a volume
specified by the establishment, by using
cups that have markings that enable an
employee to manually add a certain
volume of beverage or ice, or by using
a particular ice scoop.
Section 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(9) is
consistent with section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)
of the FD&C Act, which requires
covered establishments to declare on
menus and menu boards the number of
calories contained in standard menu
items listed on such menus and menu
boards, as usually prepared and offered
for sale. In establishing
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(9), we considered
among other things, reasonable
variations in serving sizes used by
covered establishments, and therefore
are allowing covered establishments to
disclose calories based on the full
volume of the cup served without ice,
unless the covered establishment
ordinarily dispenses and offers for sale
a standard beverage fill or dispenses a
standard ice fill. We do not expect that
a statement that the calorie content of
the beverage may vary based on the
amount of ice used, such as the one
suggested by the comment, will be
necessary in light of the requirements of
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(9).
In section XVII.D, we discuss ice fill
for self-service beverages.
XIV. Comments and FDA Response on
Proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B)—Succinct
Statement That Must Be on Menus and
Menu Boards To Provide Context About
Calories in a Daily Diet
A. The Proposed Requirements
Proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B) would
require the following statement
designed to enable consumers to
understand, in the context of a total
daily diet, the significance of the calorie
information provided on menus and
menu boards: A 2,000 calorie daily diet
is used as the basis for general nutrition
advice; however, individual calorie
needs may vary.
In the proposed rule, we referred to
the statement in this provision as the
‘‘succinct statement’’ and discussed
principles that should be met to help
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ensure that the succinct statement is
designed to enable consumers to
understand, in the context of a total
daily diet, the significance of the calorie
information provided on menus and
menu boards (76 FR 19192 at 19210).
These principles are:
• The succinct statement should be
succinct;
• The succinct statement should be in
plain language that consumers can
understand;
• The total caloric value should be
framed appropriately so that it is not
viewed as a recommendation for daily
intake for every consumer;
• The succinct statement should give
consumers a means to compare the
calorie declaration for a menu item to
total calories; and
• The succinct statement should
inform consumers that individual needs
vary.
In the following paragraphs, we
discuss comments on this proposed
provision. After considering these
comments, we are:
• Revising the succinct statement;
and
• Providing for an optional succinct
statement (which this document refers
to as the ‘‘children’s succinct
statement’’) for use on menus and menu
boards targeted to children as a
substitute for, or in addition to, the
succinct statement.
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B. Principles for Establishing the
Succinct Statement
(Comment 85) Several comments
supported the principles we discussed
in the proposed rule for establishing the
succinct statement.
(Response 85) We acknowledge these
comments.
C. Wording of the Succinct Statement
(Comment 86) In the proposed rule,
we signaled an intent to conduct
consumer research to evaluate consumer
response to the proposed succinct
statement as well as to alternative
succinct statements (which we
discussed in the proposal) (76 FR 19192
at 19210). One comment supported such
research, but suggested that more
research should be done to assess if
there is a permanent behavioral change.
(Response 86) Although the proposed
rule contemplated consumer research to
guide the design of the succinct
statement, we are foregoing such
research at this time in light of the
number of comments providing useful
insight regarding the proposed succinct
statement, related principles, and
whether we should provide a succinct
statement for children.
(Comment 87) Several comments
supported the proposed wording of the
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succinct statement. Other comments
opposed the proposed wording of the
succinct statement. Some comments
considered that the information that
calorie needs vary should not be
included because it is obvious, it will
clutter menus and menu boards, and
there is no such phrase on packaged
food. Another comment expressed
concern about the use of 2,000 calories
in the succinct statement and
recommended that the succinct
statement be better phrased to
emphasize ‘‘individual needs may
vary,’’ e.g., by including information
that many adults need fewer than 2,000
calories. This comment opposed adding
phrases about the amount of exercise
needed to burn a particular number of
calories. One comment asserted that the
proposed succinct statement is not
specific enough and recommended that
it focus on suggested calorie intake
rather than on a typical caloric intake.
(Response 87) We are retaining the
use of 2,000 calories as an appropriate
reference value to include in the
succinct statement. As discussed in the
proposed rule, the Nutrition Facts on
packaged foods uses 2,000 calories as a
reference amount on which to base
recommended intake for some nutrients
for individuals 4 years of age and older,
and the Nutrition Facts on packaged
foods have been required for nearly 20
years. Moreover, a 2,000-calorie
reference value is close to the midpoint
of the range of energy requirements for
sedentary adults (76 FR 19192 at 19209).
We also are retaining information that
individual calorie needs may vary,
albeit in shortened form (calorie needs
vary). As discussed in the proposed rule
and emphasized by the comments,
although 2,000 calories is an
appropriate reference value, not
everyone should eat 2,000 calories per
day (76 FR 19192 at 19210). As a result,
a factor that FDA considered in
establishing a succinct statement was
whether the succinct statement should
be framed appropriately so that it is not
viewed as a recommendation for daily
intake for every consumer because
individual calorie needs vary. For these
reasons, we conclude that the succinct
statement should inform consumers that
calorie needs vary.
(Comment 88) Several comments
suggested specific revisions to the
succinct statement as follows:
• ‘‘Most adults should eat less than
2,000 calories a day, or less than 600
calories per meal.’’ (A few comments
cited New York State Department of
Health focus groups that showed
participants preferred per meal calorie
messages over daily calorie messages.
The comments stated that consumers
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could not calculate the distribution of a
daily calorie budget between meals.)
• ‘‘2,000 calories a day is an estimate
of what adults need, but individual
needs vary.’’
• ‘‘Consumption of 2,000 calories
each day is used as the basis for general
nutrition advice; however, individual
daily calorie needs may be higher or
lower.’’
• ‘‘The recommended caloric intake
for a day varies from ____ to ____ for
adolescents and adults, from ____
to ____ for school-age children, and
from ____ to _____ for preschool
children above age 2 years, although
diets may vary.’’
• ‘‘2,000 calories a day is used for
general nutrition advice, but calorie
needs vary.’’
• ‘‘A 2,000 calorie daily diet is
recommended for most adults; however,
individual needs vary depending on
age, gender, and physical activity.’’
• ‘‘To maintain a healthy diet, most
adults need no more than 2,000 calories
per day. Caloric needs for most children
and less active adults range from 1,200
to 1,600 calories.’’ One comment noted
that this statement reflects a separate
range for children and recommended
that the statement with the range for
children be on all menus, not only
children’s menus.
(Response 88) We have revised
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B) to require that the
following succinct statement be posted
on menus and menu boards: 2,000
calories a day is used for general
nutrition advice, but calorie needs vary.
Most of the suggested alternatives were
variations of the succinct statement we
proposed. The alternative we selected
captures the principles discussed in the
proposed rule in a more concise fashion
than the succinct statement that we
proposed.
We disagree that the succinct
statement should include the amount of
calories per meal because individuals
can choose many different ways to
distribute their caloric intake
throughout the day, and simply dividing
the total calories into three meals does
not acknowledge this variation or give
consumers flexibility to distribute their
own caloric intake. In addition, section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act applies to
standard menu items offered for sale in
a variety of covered establishments,
including establishments that do not
serve foods that may constitute meals,
such as chain ice cream shops and chain
pretzel vendors.
We disagree that the succinct
statement required on the menu or
menu board should include specific
reference calorie intake values or ranges
for different ages or should specify the
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types of factors (such as age, gender, and
physical activity) that impact the caloric
needs of individuals. Such details are
adequately captured by the phrase
‘‘calorie needs vary’’ and would
unnecessarily increase the wordiness of
the statement (i.e., make it less
‘‘succinct’’). Because the Nutrition Facts
label on packaged foods has been
required for nearly 20 years, and the
Nutrition Facts uses 2,000 calories as a
reference amount, consumers are
already familiar with this single
reference amount for daily calorie
consumption for individuals 4 years of
age and older. However, as discussed
later in this document (see Comment 90
and Response 90), we are providing for
the optional use of a children’s succinct
statement on a menu or menu board
targeted to children as a substitute for,
or in addition to, the succinct statement.
(Comment 89) One comment noted
that ‘‘a 2,000 calorie diet’’ may be
misleading without the terms ‘‘daily’’ or
‘‘per day.’’ The comment also
recommended adding a message that
calorie content alone is not the only
nutritional factor to consider when
choosing a diet for optimal health,
because a focus on calories may
incorrectly lead consumers to choose
options that are nutrient poor instead of
nutrient rich.
(Response 89) We agree that the
succinct statement should provide the
context that 2,000 calories refers to a
daily diet and the succinct statement we
are establishing in the final rule
provides this context by informing
consumers that ‘‘2,000 calories a day is
used for general nutrition advice.’’
However, we disagree that the succinct
statement should state that calorie
content alone is not the only nutritional
factor to consider. Sections
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I) and (II) of the FD&C
Act specifically require a covered
establishment to disclose the number of
calories contained in standard menu
items and post a ‘‘succinct statement
concerning suggested daily caloric
intake’’ on menus or menu boards. The
succinct statement we are establishing
in the final rule adequately enables
consumers to understand, in the context
of a total daily diet, the significance of
the calorie information provided on the
menu or menu board, as required by
sections 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I)(bb) and
(II)(bb) of the FD&C Act. By allowing
consumers to compare the caloric
content of a standard menu item to the
reference value of 2,000 calories a day,
the succinct statement will enable
consumers to make informed and
healthful dietary choices and highlight
the potential effects of additional calorie
consumption throughout the day.
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Further, as required by sections
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) and (IV) of the FD&C
Act, a covered establishment must also
provide, in a written form and upon
consumer request, additional nutrition
information, and post on the menu or
menu board a prominent, clear, and
conspicuous statement regarding the
availability of this additional nutrition
information. Consumers therefore will
have access to additional nutrition
information and are notified of the
availability of this information on the
menu or menu board so that they are
able to use the information to make
informed and healthful dietary choices.
D. Succinct Statement on Menus
Targeted to Children
(Comment 90) In the proposed rule,
we requested comment on whether we
should require a different succinct
statement on menus that are targeted to
children (76 FR 19192 at 19210). One
comment opposed a separate succinct
statement for children and a few
comments recommended such a
statement. One comment recommended
a separate children’s succinct statement
if there is a separate children’s menu.
Another comment recommended a
different succinct statement for
children’s menus to inform consumers
that calorie needs differ because of age,
sex, or activity (the comment stated that
calorie needs are about 1,000 to 1,400
calories for 2- to 3-year old children,
and can be up to 2,200 to 2,700 calories
for 14- to 18-year old active boys).
The comments suggested the
following succinct statements for
children:
• ‘‘Most children 4 to 8 years old
need 1,500 calories a day, or less than
500 calories a meal.’’
• ‘‘The daily calorie requirement for
children 4 to 8 years is about 1,500
calories, though individual needs vary.’’
• ‘‘Calorie needs for young children
range from 1,000 to 2,000 calories per
day and vary based on age and physical
activity levels.’’
• ‘‘Most children 4 to 8 years old
need about 1,500 calories a day
including snacks, or fewer than 500
calories a meal.’’
One comment suggested that we
conduct consumer research on the
following succinct statements:
• ‘‘Most children 4 to 8 years old
need 1,500 calories a day, or less than
500 calories a meal. Most children 2 to
3 years old need 1,200 calories a day, or
less than 400 calories a meal.’’
• ‘‘Children need smaller food
portions than adults. Calorie needs vary
by child. For information on healthy
eating, go to www.choosemyplate.gov.’’
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• ‘‘Children’s calorie needs vary by
age and the individual child’s nutrition
and health status. Please consult your
child’s physician or health care
professional.’’
(Response 90) We have revised
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B) to provide for the
optional use of either of the following
children’s succinct statements on menus
and menu boards targeted to children as
a substitute for, or in addition to, the
succinct statement:
• 1,200 to 1,400 calories a day is used
for general nutrition advice for children
ages 4 to 8 years, but calorie needs vary.
• 1,200 to 1,400 calories a day is used
for general nutrition advice for children
ages 4 to 8 years and 1,400 to 2,000
calories a day for children 9 to 13 years,
but calorie needs vary.
Under § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B), a covered
establishment may use one of these
children’s succinct statements on a
menu or menu board targeted to
children (e.g., on a standalone
children’s menu or menu board, or in
the children’s section of a general menu
or menu board) as a substitute for, or in
addition to, the succinct statement
required in § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B). To
ensure consistency, a covered
establishment that includes a children’s
succinct statement on a menu or menu
board may only use the children’s
succinct statements listed in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B). If the covered
establishment chooses not to use the
children’s succinct statements listed in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B), it must use the
succinct statement required in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B).
We realize that many covered
establishments offer food selections that
may only be purchased for children
under a certain age specified by the
covered establishment (e.g., under 9
years). Some of these children’s food
selections are offered on separate
children’s menus, while others are
included on the general menu or menu
board along with items for all
consumers. We have concluded that
covered establishments should have the
option of providing a succinct statement
more relevant to children on menus and
menu boards that provide food
selections targeted to children.
Childhood obesity is an important
public health concern, and a succinct
statement specifically targeted to the
calorie needs of children may enable
parents and children to make informed
dietary choices.
We considered whether covered
establishments should be required to
provide both the 2,000-calorie succinct
statement and an additional children’s
succinct statement on menus and menu
boards. Sections 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I)(bb)
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and (II)(bb) of the FD&C Act require that
covered establishments post on menus
and menu boards ‘‘a succinct statement
concerning suggested daily caloric
intake . . . designed to enable the
public to understand, in the context of
a total daily diet, the significance of the
[calorie] information’’ provided on
menus and menu boards. (Emphasis
added.) Therefore, it is reasonable to
interpret these sections to only require
one succinct statement on menus and
menu boards, and we are providing for
the optional use by a covered
establishment of a children’s succinct
statement on menus or menu boards
targeted to children. Accordingly, the
rule does not require that a covered
establishment that includes a children’s
succinct statement on a menu or menu
board targeted to children also include
the succinct statement required by
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B) on that menu or
menu board.
To develop the children’s succinct
statement, we used the 2010 Dietary
Guidelines as the reference for the
estimated calorie needs of children (Ref.
3). The 2010 Dietary Guidelines are
based on the review of scientific
evidence by a committee of scientific
experts. The 2010 Dietary Guidelines
provide information and advice for
choosing a healthy eating pattern that
focuses on nutrient-dense foods and
beverages, and that contributes to
achieving and maintaining a healthy
weight. One goal of the 2010 Dietary
Guidelines is to aid policymakers in
designing and carrying out nutritionrelated programs. As such, the 2010
Dietary Guidelines are well suited to
serve as the reference for the estimated
calorie needs of children for the purpose
of this rule.
As the comments noted, there is broad
variability in the daily caloric needs of
children, and this variability is captured
in table 2–3 in the 2010 Dietary
Guidelines. Table 2–3 reports the
estimated calorie needs per day by age,
gender, and physical activity level. The
relevant data and information in table
2–3, which we used to develop the
children’s succinct statement, covers
four age groups (ages 2 to 3 years, 4 to
8 years, 9 to 13 years, and 14 to 18
years) and three activity levels
(sedentary, moderately active, and
active). Male and female children are
grouped together in the group aged 2 to
3 years but reported separately in the
groups aged 4 to 8 years, 9 to 13 years,
and 14 to 18 years. Although most
comments suggesting specific wording
for the children’s succinct statement
focused on the calorie needs of children
ages 8 and younger, some covered
establishments may offer food selections
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targeted to somewhat older children—
e.g., for ‘‘kids under 12.’’ Therefore, we
focused on estimated caloric needs for
children aged 4 to 8 and children aged
9 to 13. We did not focus on the
estimated caloric needs for the youngest
age group (aged 2 to 3 years) and the
oldest age group (aged 14 to 18 years).
Although one comment suggested that
we include the youngest age group (aged
2 to 3 years), we considered a number
of factors and ultimately decided not to
include the youngest age group (aged 2
to 3 years) and the oldest age group
(aged 14 to 18 years). First, we
considered space on menus and menu
boards, the types of standard menu
items offered in covered establishments,
and different practices among covered
establishments. Second, we were
concerned that a children’s succinct
statement with four age groups would
cross a reasonable threshold for one of
the principles governing the succinct
statement—i.e., that it be succinct.
Third, we concluded that covered
establishments might be deterred from
voluntarily posting a children’s succinct
statement on menus and menu boards if
such statement was not succinct.
Fourth, children’s menus are typically
not targeted to the youngest and the
oldest age groups.
In developing the specific language of
the two options for the children’s
succinct statement, we considered the
principles that apply to the succinct
statement, the comments, data and
information discussed in the proposed
rule, and the wording established in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B) for the succinct
statement. As with the succinct
statement, we concluded that the
children’s succinct statement should be
directed to an estimated daily caloric
need rather than the amount of calories
per meal.
In contrast to the succinct statement,
which uses a single reference value
(2,000 calories) regardless of age group,
we concluded that the children’s
succinct statement needed to both
reflect a range of calories and link that
range of calories to a specific age group
to adequately enable parents and
possibly some children to understand
the significance of the calorie
information in the context of their total
daily diet. We focused on estimated
caloric needs for sedentary children and
did not focus on additional calories
consumed by active children. This is
consistent with our approach to the
succinct statement, where the 2,000
calorie daily diet does not take into
account additional calories consumed
by persons such as athletes or persons
with a regular fitness regime. As with
the succinct statement, the children’s
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succinct statement addresses the
differential caloric consumption
associated with activity and other
factors by informing consumers that
‘‘calorie needs vary.’’
Table 2–3 in the 2010 Dietary
Guidelines reports the same estimated
daily caloric needs for sedentary males
and females aged 4 to 8 years (i.e., 1,200
to 1,400 calories) and, thus, we selected
1,200 to 1,400 calories as the range to
include for children aged 4 to 8 years in
each of the two options listed in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B) for the children’s
succinct statements. Table 2–3 in the
2010 Dietary Guidelines reports
different estimated daily caloric needs
for sedentary males aged 9 to 13 years
(i.e., 1,600 to 2,000 calories) and
sedentary females aged 9 to 13 years
(i.e., 1,400 to 1,600 calories). For the
option listed in § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B) for a
children’s succinct statement that
includes the estimated caloric needs of
children aged 9 to 13 years, we simply
reported the range as the lowest
estimated caloric needs for sedentary
males and females aged 9 to 13 years
(i.e., 1,400 calories for females) and the
highest estimated caloric needs for
sedentary males and females aged 9 to
13 years (i.e., 2,000 calories for males).
Thus, the listed option that includes the
group aged 9 to 13 years reports the
range of estimated caloric needs as
1,400 to 2,000 calories.
(Comment 91) One comment
suggested that children’s menus may
benefit from a traffic light concept (e.g.,
green, yellow, and red signage) that
indicates which foods should be eaten
more or less frequently.
(Response 91) Section 403(q)(5)(H) of
the FD&C Act generally requires covered
establishments to provide calorie
declarations for standard menu items on
menus, menu boards, and signs adjacent
to self-service food and food on display,
and other nutrition information in a
written form. Section 403(q)(5)(H) also
requires covered establishments to post
on menus and menu boards a succinct
statement concerning daily caloric
intake and a statement regarding the
availability of the written nutrition
information. FDA is establishing
requirements to implement only what is
specified in section 403(q)(5)(H) of the
FD&C Act and information that is
necessary for the efficient enforcement
of such requirements.
E. Requirements for the Succinct
Statement To Be Prominent, Clear, and
Conspicuous
Proposed § 101.11(b)(i)(2)(B)(1) would
require that the succinct statement be
posted prominently and in a clear and
conspicuous manner in a type size no
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smaller than the smallest calorie
declaration appearing on the same menu
or menu board and in the same color or
in a color at least as conspicuous as the
calorie declarations and with the same
contrasting background as the calorie
declarations. In the proposed rule, we
recognized that some restaurants and
similar retail food establishments may
have menu boards that list very few
items in very large font. We asked for
comment on whether the succinct
statement and statement of availability
should be tied to the type size for some
menus that have few items and that may
be listed in large type size (76 FR 19192
at 19211).
In the following paragraphs, we
discuss comments on this proposed
provision. After considering these
comments, we are:
• Revising the proposed provision to
provide additional flexibility for the
contrasting background of the succinct
statement;
• Making a conforming editorial
change to the requirement for the color
used for the succinct statement for
grammatical consistency; and
• Making an editorial correction for
clarity to insert ‘‘the type size of’’
between ‘‘no smaller than’’ and ‘‘the
smallest calorie declaration.’’
(Comment 92) One comment
suggested that the size of the succinct
statement be ‘‘no smaller than the menu
description or what any ordinary person
can read without any trouble.’’ Due to
space limitations on menus, this
comment considered that the succinct
statement should not be tied to the type
size on menus that list relatively few
items that are listed in very large type
size. One comment asked us to permit
a type size smaller than the smallest
calorie declaration appearing on the
menu or menu board due to the limited
space on menu boards and the amount
of text required to be included in the
statement. Another comment
maintained that the succinct statement
takes up too much space and would
force covered establishments to decrease
the type size used for calories. A few
comments suggested that we require the
succinct statement to be no smaller than
the type size most frequently used
throughout the menu and in the same
color and contrast, or in color and
contrast at least as conspicuous and
contrasting as the color and contrast
most frequently used throughout the
menu for the names of standard menu
items.
(Response 92) We agree, in part, and
disagree, in part, with these comments.
As a practical matter, the type size of
the succinct statement would, as
requested by the comments, likely be no
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smaller than the menu description or
what any ordinary person can read
without any trouble, because
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B)(1) requires that the
type size for the succinct statement be
no smaller than the smallest type size of
any calorie declaration and, under
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1), the type size of
the calorie declaration would be in a
type size no smaller than the type size
of the name or the price of the
associated standard menu item,
whichever is smaller. Because
consumers typically view the name and/
or price of a standard menu item to
place an order, our decision to anchor
the type size of the succinct statement
to the type size of information already
on the menu or menu board acts, in
essence, as an objective and measurable
performance standard and helps ensure,
among other things, that the succinct
statement will be clear and conspicuous
to consumers and posted prominently,
as required by sections 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)
and 403(f) of the FD&C Act.
We disagree that the type size, color,
and contrast should be tied to the type
size, color, and contrast most frequently
used throughout the menu. Section
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1) provides flexibility
for the type size, color, and contrasting
background used for the calorie
declaration (and, accordingly,
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B)(1) provides
flexibility for the type size, color, and
contrasting background used for the
succinct statement), by anchoring these
three parameters to the name or price of
standard menu items. The suggestion in
this comment would establish an
additional burden for a covered
establishment, particularly when a
covered establishment has more than
one menu or menu board, to determine
the type size most frequently used. The
comment provided no basis, such as
apparent benefit for either the restaurant
or the consumer, to justify this
additional burden.
However, we agree that we should
provide additional flexibility for the
contrasting background of the succinct
statement by permitting the statement to
be in a background at least as
contrasting as that used for the calorie
declarations. Consequently, we have
revised § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B)(1) to do so.
We also are making a conforming
editorial change to the grammatical
construction of the requirement for the
color used for the succinct statement to
match the grammatical construction of
the revised requirement for the
contrasting background used for the
succinct statement. With these changes,
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B)(1) requires that the
succinct statement be posted
prominently and in a clear and
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conspicuous manner in a type size no
smaller than the smallest type size of
any calorie declaration appearing on the
same menu or menu board and in the
same color or in a color at least as
conspicuous as that used for the calorie
declarations, and with the same
contrasting background or a background
at least as contrasting as that used for
the calorie declarations (emphasis
added).
F. Placement of the Succinct Statement
on Menus and Menu Boards
For menus, proposed
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B)(2) would require that
the succinct statement appear on the
bottom of each page of the menu. On
menu pages that also bear the statement
regarding the availability of the written
nutrition information required in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C), proposed
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B)(2) also would require
that the succinct statement appear
directly above the statement of
availability required in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C). For menu boards,
proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B)(3) would
require that the succinct statement
appear on the bottom of the menu
board, immediately above the statement
of availability required in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C).
In the following paragraphs, we
discuss comments on these proposed
provisions. After considering these
comments, we have revised the
proposed provisions for placement of
the succinct statement to provide
additional flexibility for the succinct
statement to appear immediately above,
below, or beside the statement of
availability of the written nutrition
information.
(Comment 93) Several comments
agreed with the proposed placement
requirements for the succinct statement.
One comment recommended that
covered establishments be permitted to
put the succinct statement on a separate
sign near the menu boards because of
space constraints.
(Response 93) We are not revising the
rule to allow a covered establishment to
post the succinct statement on a
separate sign near a menu board as
suggested by the comment. First, we are
concerned that if a covered
establishment were to post the succinct
statement on a separate sign, the
statement would not be posted
prominently, and therefore, consumers
would not be able to use the statement
to understand, in the context of a total
daily diet, the significance of the calorie
information that is provided on the
menu board. Second, this rule provides
flexibility regarding posting calorie
declarations and other information on
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menus and menu boards, including
flexibility regarding the size of the
calorie declarations and placement of
the statement of availability of
additional written nutrition
information, such that covered
establishments have a number of ways
to satisfy the requirements based on
their menus and menu boards and
business operations. Lastly, sections
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I)(bb) and (II)(bb) of the
FD&C Act require that covered
establishments post the succinct
statement on menus and menu boards
prominently and in a clear and
conspicuous manner. The comment’s
request would be inconsistent with the
express requirements of sections
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I)(bb) and (II)(bb) of the
FD&C Act. Later in this document, we
discuss the requirements for placement
of the succinct statement on small signs
for self-service food and food on display
that may meet the definition of a
‘‘menu’’ or ‘‘menu board’’ in section
403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of the FD&C Act, in that
such signs are the primary writings of
the establishment from which
consumers make order selections (see
the discussion of § 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(B) in
section XVII.G).
(Comment 94) A few comments
expressed concern about the space that
the succinct statement would take on
menus and the proposed requirement
that the statement appear on every page,
in light of other statements on menus
(such as the advisory statements in our
Food Code, footnotes regarding daily
availability of various menu items, and
footnotes referencing ‘‘net weight before
cooking’’). The comments asserted that
menus would become cluttered. One
comment asserted that the message we
want to convey would ‘‘get lost in the
noise at the bottom of each page.’’ The
comments agreed that the succinct
statement should appear at the bottom
of menus and menu boards, but asked
us to clarify that it would appear only
once on each menu or menu board and
not on each page or panel. The
comments recommended that for
menus, the succinct statement must
appear either on the first or last page.
One comment suggested that the
succinct statement need only appear on
one panel of the main menu board that
is visible at all times to consumers.
One comment asserted that because
space is finite, adding the required
succinct statement to multiple pages of
a menu would lead to removal of
‘‘optional information,’’ such as some
menu offerings. This comment
expressed concern that menu items,
such as seafood dishes, will be dropped
from menus to make room for this
additional information to appear on
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each page of the menu. The comment
noted that the 2010 Dietary Guidelines
have outlined the importance of
including seafood in a healthy diet, and
that roughly 67 percent of the seafood
consumed in the United States is
consumed away from the home.
(Response 94) We disagree that the
succinct statement needs to appear only
once on menus. In particular, we are
concerned that for large multi-paged
menus, consumers may not read the
entire menu and instead may turn to a
specific section of the menu (e.g., the
section for burgers and sandwiches).
Unless the succinct statement is on the
page for that particular section, it is
possible that consumers could miss the
succinct statement and therefore be
unable to use the statement ‘‘to
understand, in the context of a daily
diet, the significance of the caloric
information that is provided on the
menu,’’ as specified by section
403(q)(5)(H)(I)(bb) of the FD&C Act.
Therefore, in § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B)(2), we
are requiring the succinct statement to
appear on the bottom of each page of the
menu.
However, we agree that the succinct
statement needs to appear only once on
a menu board, including a menu board
consisting of more than one panel in
one physical location (a multi-paneled
menu board). For the purpose of this
rule, we consider such a multi-paneled
menu board to be a single menu board,
provided that the entire multi-paneled
menu board is visible to consumers
when consumers are placing order
selections for the standard menu items
listed on such menu board. A multipaneled menu board is different from a
menu with multiple pages because all
panels are visible to consumers when
they place an order, regardless of the
specific panel containing the menu item
the consumer selects. A succinct
statement on a single panel of a multipaneled board is likely to be clear and
conspicuous to the consumer and
posted prominently, provided that the
type size, color, and background of the
succinct statement meet the applicable
requirements in § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B)(1)
and the entire multi-paneled menu
board is visible to consumers when
consumers are placing order selections
for the standard menu items listed on
such menu board.
Regarding one comment’s assertion
that requiring the succinct statement to
appear on each page of a menu could
lead to the removal from a menu or
menu board of information that a
covered establishment views as
optional, we note that a decision to
remove ‘‘optional information’’ or to
drop certain menu items from menus
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belongs to the covered establishment.
The succinct statement is necessary on
the bottom of each page of a menu that
includes standard menu items and
calorie information because the succinct
statement is designed to enable
consumers ‘‘to understand, in the
context of a total daily diet, the
significance of the caloric information
that is provided on the menu,’’ as
required by section 403(q)(5)(H)(I)(bb) of
the FD&C Act. However, we have also
considered the space on menus and
therefore provided flexibility where
appropriate. For example, in addressing
comments on the statement of
availability of written nutrition
information, we concluded that this
statement of availability need appear
only once on a menu or menu board. In
reaching that conclusion, we considered
the goals of the succinct statement and
the statement of availability, which are
different (see the discussion of
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C) in section XV.C).
(Comment 95) A few comments
maintained that the proposed order of
the succinct statement (i.e., in relation
to the statement of availability of
additional written nutrition
information) limits flexibility. The
comments asserted that both statements
could be just as clear and conspicuous
if they were placed in some other way.
(Response 95) We agree with the
comments, and are providing flexibility
for the placement of the succinct
statement in relation to the statement of
availability of the written nutrition
information. Consequently, we have
revised § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B)(2) and
(b)(2)(i)(B)(3) to provide that on menu
pages that also bear the statement of
availability and on menu boards, the
succinct statement must appear
immediately above, below, or beside the
statement of availability. In addition, as
an editorial change for consistency
throughout § 101.11, we have revised
the cross-references within
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B)(2) and (b)(2)(i)(B)(3)
referring to the statement of availability
to read ‘‘the statement required by
paragraph (b)(2)(i)(C) of this section’’
(i.e., § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C)). With these
changes, § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B)(2) requires
that for menus, the succinct statement
must appear on the bottom of each page
of the menu. On menu pages that also
bear the statement required by
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C), the succinct
statement must appear immediately
above, below, or beside the statement
required by § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C). In
addition, with these changes
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B)(3) requires that for
menu boards, the succinct statement
must appear on the bottom of the menu
board, immediately above, below, or
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beside the statement required by
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C).
XV. Comments and FDA Response on
Proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C)—
Statement That Must Be on Menus and
Menu Boards About Availability of
Written Nutrition Information
A. Proposed Wording of the Statement
of Availability
Proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C) would
require the following statement
regarding the availability of the
additional written nutrition information
required in § 101.11(b)(3)(i) on all forms
of the menu or menu board: Additional
nutrition information available upon
request. In a correction document, we
corrected the regulatory designation of
the requirement for the statement of
availability to be § 101.11(b)(2)(ii) rather
than § 101.11(b)(3)(i) (76 FR 30050 at
30051).
One comment supported the wording
of the statement of availability and no
comments opposed the wording. We are
finalizing the proposed wording of the
statement of availability without
change.
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B. Requirements for the Statement of
Availability To Be Prominent and
Conspicuous
Proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C)(1) would
require that the statement of availability
be posted prominently and in a clear
and conspicuous manner in a type size
no smaller than the smallest calorie
declaration appearing on the same menu
or menu board and in the same color or
in a color at least as conspicuous as the
caloric declarations, and with the same
contrasting background as the caloric
declarations.
In the following paragraphs, we
discuss comments on this proposed
provision. After considering these
comments, we are:
• Revising the proposed provision to
provide additional flexibility for the
contrasting background used for the
statement of availability;
• Making a conforming editorial
change to the requirement for the color
used for the statement of availability for
grammatical consistency; and
• Making an editorial correction for
clarity to insert ‘‘type size of any’’
between ‘‘no smaller than the smallest’’
and ‘‘calorie declaration.’’
(Comment 96) One comment
recommended that the type size of the
statement of availability ‘‘be no smaller
than the menu description or what any
ordinary person can read without any
trouble.’’ Some comments
recommended that we permit a smaller
type size for the statement of
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availability. A few comments suggested
that we require the statement of
availability to be in a type size no
smaller than the type size most
frequently used throughout the menu.
Some comments suggested that the
statement of availability be in the same
color or a color at least as conspicuous
as the color most frequently used
throughout the menu for the names of
standard menu items and with the same
contrasting background or a contrasting
background at least as contrasting as the
background most frequently used
throughout the menu for the names of
standard menu items.
(Response 96) These comments on the
proposed requirements for type size,
color, and contrasting background of the
statement of availability are analogous
to certain comments on the proposed
requirements for the succinct statement
(see Comment 92), and our response to
these comments is analogous to our
response to Comment 92 (see Response
92). Specifically, we disagree that a
smaller type size should be used for the
statement of availability for the reasons
discussed in Response 92. We disagree
that the type size, color, and contrasting
background of the statement of
availability should be tied to the type
size, color, and contrasting background
most frequently used throughout the
menu for the names of standard menu
items for the reasons discussed in
Response 92. However, we agree that we
should provide additional flexibility for
the contrasting background of the
statement of availability by permitting
the statement to be in a background at
least as contrasting as that used for the
calorie declarations. Consequently, we
have revised § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C)(1) to do
so. In addition, we are making a
conforming editorial change to the
grammatical construction of the
requirement used for the color of the
statement of availability to match the
grammatical construction of the revised
requirement for the contrasting
background used for the statement of
availability. We also are making an
editorial correction for clarity to insert
‘‘type size of any’’ between ‘‘no smaller
than the smallest’’ and ‘‘calorie
declaration.’’ With these changes,
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C)(1) requires that the
statement of availability be posted
prominently and in a clear and
conspicuous manner in a type size no
smaller than the smallest type size of
any calorie declaration appearing on the
same menu or menu board and in the
same color or in a color at least as
conspicuous as that used for the caloric
declarations, and with the same
contrasting background or a background
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71211
at least as contrasting as that used for
the caloric declarations. (Emphasis
added.) We conclude that the type size,
color, and contrasting background
requirements for the statement of
availability in § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C)(1) will
help ensure that the statement of
availability is prominent, clear, and
conspicuous, as required by sections
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(IV) and 403(f) of the
FD&C Act.
C. Placement of the Statement of
Availability
For menus, proposed
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C)(2) would require that
the statement of availability appear on
the bottom of the first page with menu
items. For menus with more than two
pages, it would also require that the
statement of availability appear either at
the bottom of every page with menu
items (proposed
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C)(2)(i)), or at the
bottom of only the first page with menu
items, as long as a symbol (e.g., asterisk)
clearly referring to the required
statement appearing on the first page of
the menu follows the term ‘Calories’ or
‘Cal,’ where the term first appears on
each page after the page with the
statement (proposed
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C)(2)(ii)). For menu
boards, proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C)(3)
would require that the statement of
availability appear on the bottom of the
menu board immediately above or
below the succinct statement. In the
following paragraphs, we discuss
comments on these proposed
provisions. After considering these
comments, we are:
• Revising proposed
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C)(2) to require that the
statement of availability appear on the
first page of a menu with menu items
and to delete the proposed provisions
that would have required the statement
of availability, or a symbol referring to
the statement of availability, on
subsequent menu pages;
• Revising both proposed
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C)(2) and (b)(2)(i)(C)(3)
to provide that the statement of
availability must appear immediately
above, below, or beside the succinct
statement; and
• Making additional editorial changes
for consistency.
(Comment 97) Some comments
supported the proposed requirements
for placement of the statement of
availability. A few comments disagreed
with our proposal that a symbol (e.g.,
asterisk) can be used to refer to the
statement of availability on the first
page, if the statement does not appear
on every page. These comments
considered that requiring the placement
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of asterisks on each subsequent page in
reference to a disclosure on the first
page with menu items would only
confuse a reader who, upon seeing an
asterisk, has been trained since
elementary school to look for the
associated footnote at the bottom of the
page on which the asterisk appears.
A few comments expressed concern
about the space that the statement of
availability would take in light of other
statements on menus (such as consumer
advisories), and recommended that the
statement of availability appear only
once on the menu, either on the first or
last page. The comments agreed that the
statement of availability should appear
at the bottom of menus and menu
boards, but recommended that we
require that the statement appear only
once on menus and menu boards, and
not on each page or panel. One
comment recommended that covered
establishments be able to put the
statement of availability on a separate
sign near the menu boards.
(Response 97) We are not revising the
rule to allow a covered establishment to
post the statement of availability on a
separate sign near a menu board as
suggested by the comment. This
comment is analogous to a comment on
the proposed requirements for the
placement of the succinct statement (see
Comment 93), and our response to this
comment is analogous to our response
to Comment 93 (see Response 93).
Section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(IV) of the FD&C
Act requires that covered establishments
post a prominent, clear, and
conspicuous statement of availability on
menus and menu boards. The
comment’s request is inconsistent with
the express statutory direction. Later in
this document, we discuss the
requirements for placement of the
statement of availability on small signs
for self-service food and food on display
that may meet the definition of a
‘‘menu’’ or ‘‘menu board’’ in section
403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of the FD&C Act, in that
such signs are the primary writings of
the establishment from which
consumers make order selections (see
the discussion of § 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(B) in
section XVII.G).
We agree that an asterisk referring to
a statement on the first page of a menu
may confuse consumers. We also agree
that the statement of availability only
needs to appear on one page of a menu.
Unlike the succinct statement, which is
designed to enable the public to
understand the significance of the
caloric information in the context of a
total daily diet and is therefore needed
on each page of a menu that includes
standard menu items and calorie
information, the statement of
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availability informs consumers that
there is additional written nutrition
information available on the premises of
the covered establishment upon request.
We believe that posting the statement of
availability on one page of a menu will
be adequate to achieve that goal.
Consequently, we have revised
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C)(2) to require that the
statement of availability appear on the
first page of a menu with menu items
and to delete the proposed provisions
that would have required the statement
of availability, or an asterisk referring to
the statement of availability, on
subsequent menu pages.
(Comment 98) A few comments
maintained that the proposed order of
the statement of availability in relation
to the succinct statement limits
flexibility. The comments contended
that both statements would be just as
clear and conspicuous if they were to
appear in some other position such as
side by side or in some other place on
the page.
(Response 98) For menu boards, we
note that there was an inconsistency in
the proposed rule between the preamble
and the codified regarding the proposed
order of the statement of availability in
relation to the succinct statement.
According to the preamble, the
statement of availability would have
been required to appear immediately
below the succinct statement (76 FR
19192 at 19211), while in the codified
text, proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C)(3)
would require that the statement of
availability appear on the bottom of the
menu board immediately above or
below the succinct statement. For both
menus and menu boards, we agree with
the comments and are providing
additional flexibility for the placement
of the statement of availability of the
written nutrition information in relation
to the succinct statement. We have
revised proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C)(2)
and (b)(2)(i)(C)(3) to provide that for
menus and menu boards, the statement
of availability must appear immediately
above, below, or beside the succinct
statement. For clarity and consistency,
we are specifying the placement of the
statement of availability in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C)(2) in relation to the
succinct statement even though
proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C)(2) did not
do so.
XVI. Comments and FDA Response on
Proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(ii)—Nutrition
Information That Must Be Made
Available in Written Form
A. Required Nutrients
Proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(ii) would
require, in relevant part, that:
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• Certain nutrition information for a
standard menu item be available in
written form on the premises of the
restaurant or similar retail food
establishment and provided to the
customer upon request;
• The nutrition information be
presented in the order listed and using
the measurements listed, except as
provided in § 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B);
• Rounding of these nutrients be in
compliance with § 101.9(c); and
• Covered establishments include the
following nutrition information in the
written form, as specified in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(A)(1) through
(b)(2)(ii)(A)(11):
1. Total number of calories derived
from any source (cal)
2. Total number of calories derived
from the total fat (fat cal)
3. Total fat (g)
4. Saturated fat (g)
5. Trans fat (g)
6. Cholesterol (mg)
7. Sodium (mg)
8. Total carbohydrate (g)
9. Dietary fiber (g)
10. Sugars (g)
11. Protein (g)
In the following paragraphs, we
discuss comments on this proposed
provision. After considering these
comments, we have revised the
provision to:
• Replace the terms ‘‘total number of
calories derived from any source’’ and
‘‘total number of calories derived from
the total fat’’ with the terms ‘‘total
calories’’ and ‘‘calories from fat’’;
• Provide that covered establishments
may use the abbreviations allowed for
Nutrition Facts for certain packaged
foods in § 101.9(j)(13)(ii)(B); and
• Clarify that the information must be
provided on the premises of the
‘‘covered establishment’’ rather than the
‘‘restaurant or similar retail food
establishment’’ (see the discussion in
section VI.I).
(Comment 99) One comment
suggested that we come up with a
standard list of abbreviations for the
nutrients for consistency and consumer
understanding. This comment pointed
out that we proposed ‘‘Cal’’ as an
abbreviation for calories but did not
suggest abbreviations for the other
nutrients.
(Response 99) We agree with this
comment. Providing abbreviations for
the written nutrition information will
improve the consistency of the written
nutrition information provided by
different covered establishments.
Therefore, we have revised
§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii) to provide that covered
establishments may use the
abbreviations allowed for Nutrition
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Facts for certain packaged foods in
§ 101.9(j)(13)(ii)(B) for the nutrient
information required to be disclosed in
the written nutrition information under
section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C
Act. For example, a covered
establishment may use ‘‘sat fat’’ for
saturated fat and ‘‘cholest’’ for
cholesterol.
(Comment 100) One comment
suggested that ‘‘total number of calories
derived from any source’’ (required
under section 403(q)(1)(C) of the FD&C
Act) be changed to ‘‘total number of
calories,’’ which, according to the
comment, is clear and concise.
(Response 100) We agree with the
comment’s suggestion that the term
‘‘total number of calories derived from
any source’’ can be revised to be more
concise. Specifically, we are replacing
the term ‘‘total number of calories
derived from any source’’ (which had
been specified by section 403(q)(1)(C) of
the FD&C Act) with ‘‘total calories.’’
This change is consistent with how the
‘‘total number of calories derived from
any source’’ is disclosed in the Nutrition
Facts under § 101.9. For consistency, we
are making an analogous revision to
replace the term ‘‘total number of
calories derived from the total fat’’ with
‘‘calories from fat.’’ This change is
consistent with section 403(q)(1)(C) of
the FD&C Act, and the declaration of
‘‘total calories’’ and ‘‘calories from fat’’
will be consistent with the terms used
for nutrition labeling for packaged food
(see § 101.9(c)).
(Comment 101) Several comments
supported the proposed nutrients that
must be listed in the written nutrition
information. Some comments suggested
that the written nutrition information
also include the weight in grams of the
standard menu item. These comments
considered that the weight of the
standard menu item is an important
indicator of portion size and allows
consumers to compare similar products
more easily, and that including the
weight of the standard menu item
would be consistent with the Nutrition
Facts for packaged foods.
(Response 101) We disagree that we
should require that the written nutrition
information include the weight in grams
for each standard menu item. Section
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act
specifically requires covered
establishments to provide in a written
form, available on the premises of the
covered establishment and to the
consumer upon request, the nutrition
information required under clauses (C)
and (D) of section 403(q)(1) of the FD&C
Act. We are only requiring that covered
establishments provide in the written
nutrition information the nutrition
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information specified in section
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act,
along with trans fat, for standard menu
items as usually prepared and offered
for sale, or in the case of standard menu
items that are self-service food or food
on display, by displayed food item or
per serving. Although the weight of a
standard menu item may give some
indication of portion sizes, it does not
necessarily correlate with how many
calories are contained in a food or with
what nutrients are in a food. For
example, some foods may weigh less
than other similar foods but have more
calories because of the source of the
calories. At this time, we conclude that
the written nutrition information
required by § 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(A) will
allow consumers to make comparisons
between menu items and help inform
their dietary choices. A covered
establishment may voluntarily provide
the weight of the standard menu item in
the written nutrition information. We
also note that for some foods, the weight
is already provided as part of the name
or description of the standard menu
item on the menu or menu board, e.g.,
a 10-ounce steak versus a 12-ounce
steak.
(Comment 102) One comment
recommended that the written nutrition
information include calcium,
potassium, and phosphorus because
patients with kidney disease may have
diabetes, hypertension, or both. The
comment suggested that covered
establishments give information on the
need to limit these nutrients and to limit
sodium.
(Response 102) We disagree with
these comments. Section
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act
requires in relevant part that covered
establishments provide, in written form,
the nutrition information required
under clauses (C) and (D) of section
403(q)(1) of the FD&C Act. Sections
403(q)(1)(C) and (D) of the FD&C Act do
not require the disclosure of calcium,
potassium, and phosphorus in food
labeling. Section 403(q)(5)(H)(vi) of the
FD&C Act provides that ‘‘[i]f the
Secretary determines that a nutrient,
other than a nutrient required under
[section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C
Act], should be disclosed for the
purpose of providing information to
assist consumers in maintaining healthy
dietary practices, the Secretary may
require, by regulation, disclosure of
such nutrient in the written form
required under [section
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act].’’
However, the comment did not provide
any supporting information showing
that the disclosure of calcium,
potassium, and phosphorus in the
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71213
written nutrition information will assist
consumers in maintaining healthy
dietary practices. At this time, we
conclude that the nutrition information
specified in section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III)
of the FD&C Act, along with trans fat
information, is sufficient to assist
consumers in maintaining healthy
dietary practices within the context of
section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act. If
we determine that other nutrient
information should be disclosed in the
written form required under section
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act, we
will make changes to such requirements
as appropriate. We note that consumers
who have a particular disease or healthrelated condition may be able to use the
written nutrition information to follow
advice they have received from a health
care professional concerning dietary
practices relevant to their conditions.
(Comment 103) One comment asked
us to permit voluntary declaration of
micronutrients such as vitamins and
minerals.
(Response 103) We would not object
to the voluntary declaration of vitamins
and minerals that may be declared on
the Nutrition Facts Label of a packaged
food (see § 101.9(c)(8)(ii)), provided that
the declaration is truthful and not
misleading, as required by section
403(a)(1) of the FD&C Act.
(Comment 104) One comment
recommended that if future changes are
made to the Nutrition Facts of packaged
foods, then the requirements for the
written nutrition information should be
made consistent with such changes.
(Response 104) If future changes are
made to the requirements regarding the
Nutrition Facts for packaged foods, we
will consider whether changes should
also be made to the requirements
regarding the written nutrition
information required by this rule.
(Comment 105) One comment
recommended that the nutrient values
in the written nutrition information be
reviewed and updated yearly or when
changes are made.
(Response 105) We agree, in part, and
disagree, in part, with this comment.
Under § 101.11(c), a covered
establishment must have a reasonable
basis for its nutrient content
declarations. Under section 403(a)(1) of
the FD&C Act, covered establishments
must also ensure that their nutrient
content declarations are truthful and not
misleading. To do so, a covered
establishment would need to update the
written nutrition information when
certain changes are made, e.g., as a
result of a recipe change that affects the
nutrient content of a standard menu
item. However, we see no reason why
nutrition information for a standard
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menu item must be updated on a
recurring basis (such as yearly) when
there are no changes to the standard
menu item or its method of preparation.
(Comment 106) One comment
recommended that covered
establishments provide references for
their nutrient values to consumers on
request.
(Response 106) We are not requiring
a covered establishment to provide
supporting references for the nutrient
values in its written nutrition
information to consumers upon request.
Section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act
generally requires covered
establishments to provide calorie and
other nutrition information for standard
menu items. Further, as required by
section 403(q)(5)(H)(iv) of the FD&C Act,
a covered establishment must have a
reasonable basis for its nutrient content
disclosures. Covered establishments
must also ensure that their nutrient
content disclosures are truthful and not
misleading in accordance with section
403(a)(1) of the FD&C Act. Section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act does not
require that covered establishments
provide supporting references for their
nutrient content disclosures to
consumers. However, we would not
object if a covered establishment
provides this information voluntarily.
(Comment 107) Several comments
generally agreed that trans fat must be
included with the written nutrition
information. Some comments expressed
the view that providing information
about trans fat is warranted because of
concern with partially hydrogenated
vegetable oils.
Comments that opposed including
trans fat in the written nutrition
information generally focused on the
distinction between ‘‘industrial trans
fat’’ (i.e., trans fat chemically
manufactured from vegetable oils) and
trans fat naturally occurring in food
such as ruminant animals. Some
comments expressed concern that
listing such naturally occurring trans fat
in the written nutrition information,
particularly when it is present in small
amounts, could lead to problems in
States and localities that have banned
the use of trans fat in restaurants, or
could lead consumers to think that a
covered establishment is breaking State
or local law. These comments stated
that eliminating the requirement to list
trans fat in the written nutrition
information, or limiting the listing for
trans fat to industrial trans fat, would
prevent such problems. Other comments
expressed the view that the health
effects of naturally occurring trans fat
from ruminants may be different from
the health effects of trans fat chemically
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manufactured from vegetable oils. Some
comments stated that, in Europe,
scientists and regulators have not
singled out ruminant trans fat for
pejorative labeling. Some comments
stated that naturally occurring trans fats
derived from high fat ruminant animal
products (namely, beef and dairy
products) are converted to conjugated
linoleic acid, which the comments
reported have been associated with
health benefits. These comments
considered that industrial and naturally
occurring trans fat should therefore be
distinguished on food nutrition labels
and menus to give consumers a more
accurate assessment of nutritional
quality.
(Response 107) We disagree that we
should require the declaration of only
‘‘industrial trans fat’’ in the written
nutrition information. For purposes of
the current Nutrition Facts label, our
regulatory definitions of nutrients (such
as for trans fat, total fat, or saturated fat)
have traditionally been based on
chemical definitions. For example,
under § 101.9(c)(2)(ii), the declaration of
nutrition information on the label and
in labeling of a food must contain a
statement of the number of grams of
trans fat in a serving, defined as the sum
of all unsaturated fatty acids that
contain one or more isolated (i.e.,
nonconjugated) double bonds in a trans
configuration. Analytically, this
definition captures all trans fatty acid
isomers that have isolated bonds,
regardless of the origin of the trans fatty
acid. For example, vaccenic acid (one of
the most abundant trans fatty acids in
ruminant fat) is included in the
chemical definition of trans fat.
Therefore, listing the sum of all
unsaturated fatty acids that contain one
or more isolated double bonds in a trans
configuration regardless of the source of
such trans fat is consistent with the
requirements for declaring the amount
of trans fat in a packaged food on the
label for such food (see § 101.9(c)(2)(ii)).
Further, in the rulemaking to require the
declaration of trans fat, we responded to
comments regarding functional or
metabolic aspects of trans fatty acids
(e.g., their metabolic transformations to
other types of fatty acids) rather than on
their actual chemical structures,
including potential differences between
trans fat from industrial sources and
trans fat from ruminant sources. We
concluded that we should define trans
fat based on its chemical definition
rather than any functional attributes (68
FR 41434 at 41461, July 11, 2003). The
comments provided insufficient
information to overturn the conclusion
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we previously reached about declaring
trans fat on the label of packaged food.
We also decline to require the
declaration of ‘‘industrial trans fat’’ in
the written nutrition information
because declaration of ruminant trans
fat may lead inspectors or consumers to
believe that covered establishments are
violating State or local requirements in
jurisdictions that ban artificial trans fat.
We recognize that, in the United States,
some jurisdictions, such as the State of
California (Ref. 34), New York City (Ref.
35), the City of Baltimore (Ref. 36), and
Montgomery County, Maryland (Ref. 37)
have imposed restrictions on the use of
industrial trans fat ingredients in food
service establishments. However, a trans
fat declaration of 0.5 grams or more for
a standard menu item in the written
nutrition information of a covered
establishment does not necessarily
mean that the covered establishment is
violating a State or local requirement
that prohibits industrial trans fat
ingredients. So long as such standard
menu item does not contain the
restricted trans fat ingredients and is
otherwise in compliance with the
applicable State or local trans fat
requirement, a trans fat declaration of
0.5 grams or more for such standard
menu item could mean that the menu
item contains a certain amount of
naturally occurring trans fat. States and
localities would be able to continue to
enforce requirements restricting
artificial trans fat ingredients relying on
the same measures they already use to
determine if establishments under their
jurisdiction are using a prohibited
ingredient.
We also note that we recently
published a tentative determination that
partially hydrogenated oils, the source
of industrially produced trans fat, are
not generally recognized as safe for any
use in food based on current scientific
evidence establishing the health risks
associated with the consumption of
trans fat (78 FR 67169, November 8,
2013). If this determination is finalized,
we will consider whether the trans fat
requirements of this rule should be
amended.
B. Manner of Presentation of the Written
Nutrition Information
Proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(ii) would
require, in relevant part, that the written
nutrition information be presented in a
clear and conspicuous manner. We
received several comments on this
proposed provision. After considering
these comments, we have revised the
provision to specify that the written
nutrition information must be ‘‘clear
and conspicuous,’’ including in a color,
type size, and in a contrasting
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background that render the information
likely to be read and understood by the
ordinary individual under customary
conditions of purchase and use.
(Comment 108) One comment
supported the proposed requirements
that the written nutrition information be
clear and conspicuous. Some comments
asked us to give more guidance on
format and on the standard for the
written nutrition information to be
presented in a clear and conspicuous
manner—e.g., that it be easy to read,
have a large enough font, have a
contrasting background, and not use all
capital letters for the names of standard
menu items. One comment
recommended that we include
specifications for font size.
(Response 108) We disagree that we
should specify the particular type size
and contrasting background that must
be used in the written nutrition
information, and prohibit the use of all
capital letters for the names of standard
menu items in the written nutrition
information. Section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii) of
the FD&C Act requires covered
establishments to provide the written
nutrition information required by
section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C
Act in a clear and conspicuous manner.
As discussed later in this document (see
the discussion of § 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(D) in
section XVI.E), we are providing
covered establishments with the
flexibility to use different types of
media (e.g., flyers, posters, booklets,
kiosks) to provide the written nutrition
information. Whether the written
nutrition information is clear and
conspicuous depends on the media
through which a covered establishment
chooses to provide the written nutrition
information. For example, a specific
type size and contrasting background
may result in written nutrition
information that is clear and
conspicuous on a tray liner or brochure,
but not on a poster that a consumer may
view from several feet away. Thus, we
are not establishing specific
requirements for type size, contrasting
background, or use of capital letters for
the written nutrition information so that
covered establishments have the
flexibility to provide the written
nutrition information in a clear and
conspicuous manner based on the
particular media through which the
information is presented.
However, we agree that some
guidance is needed on the requirement
that the written nutrition information be
provided in a clear and conspicuous
manner. Section 403(f) of the FD&C Act
provides that a food will be deemed to
be misbranded ‘‘[i]f any word,
statement, or other information required
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by or under authority of this Act to
appear on the label or labeling is not
prominently placed thereon with such
conspicuousness (as compared with
other words, statements, designs, or
devices, in the labeling) and in such
terms as to render it likely to be read
and understood by the ordinary
individual under customary conditions
of purchase and use.’’ Accordingly, we
conclude that in order for the written
nutrition information to be clear and
conspicuous, the information must be
presented in a manner that renders it
likely to be read and understood by the
ordinary individual under customary
conditions of purchase and use.
Specifically, we have revised
§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii) to require that the
written nutrition information be
presented in a clear and conspicuous
manner, including using a color, type
size, and contrasting background that
render the information likely to be read
and understood by the ordinary
individual under customary conditions
of purchase and use. We are also
revising § 101.11(f) to state that a
standard menu item offered for sale in
a covered establishment shall be
deemed misbranded under sections
201(n), 403(a), 403(f), and/or 403(q) of
the FD&C Act if its label or labeling is
not in conformity with paragraph (b) or
(c) of the section.
(Comment 109) One comment asked
us to require that standard menu items
in the written nutrition information be
listed in the same order as they are on
menus and menu boards.
(Response 109) We disagree that we
should require covered establishments
to list standard menu items in the
written nutrition information in the
same order as on menus and menu
boards. The comment provided no basis
for why this particular order of listing
standard menu items is the only order
that would be useful to consumers. We
are providing flexibility for a covered
establishment to list its standard menu
items in the written nutrition
information in a manner that is best
suited to its menu offerings, and
conclude that the written nutrition
information can enable consumers to
make informed dietary choices
regardless of the order in which the
standard menu items are listed.
(Comment 110) One comment
responded to our request for comment
on whether to require that nutrients that
are particularly important for consumers
with obesity and diabetes to monitor in
order to maintain healthy dietary
practices (e.g., total calories, total fat,
sodium, sugar) be bolded or placed in a
separate table of nutritional content (76
FR 19192 at 19214–19215). This
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comment opposed such measures
because doing so would highlight the
negative aspects of food even though the
food also has positive nutrients.
Another comment supported the
bolding of nutrients of concern to
consumers with obesity and diabetes,
such as saturated fat and sodium.
(Response 110) We disagree that we
should decide whether to require
measures for highlighting nutrient
declarations important to maintain
healthy dietary practices for consumers
with obesity and diabetes based on a
concern that doing so would highlight
the ‘‘negative’’ aspects of a menu item
even though the menu item also has
‘‘positive’’ aspects. However, we did not
receive sufficient information in the
comments to warrant adding a
requirement to emphasize certain
nutrients, and we are not requiring such
a requirement in this rule. The
requirements for the written nutrition
information in § 101.11(b)(2)(ii) make
nutrition information available to
consumers in a direct and accessible
manner to enable consumers to make
informed and healthful dietary choices.
C. Nutrients in Insignificant Amounts
Proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B) would
provide that if a standard menu item
contains insignificant amounts of all the
nutrients required to be disclosed in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(A), the establishment
is not required to include nutrition
information regarding the standard
menu item in the written form.
Proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B) would
explain, however, that if the covered
establishment makes a nutrient content
claim or health claim, the establishment
is required to provide nutrition
information on the nutrient that is the
subject of the claim in accordance with
§ 101.10. Proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)
would provide that covered
establishments may present the written
nutrition information in a simplified
format for standard menu items that
contain insignificant amounts of six or
more of the required nutrients and
proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)(1) would
define what is an insignificant amount.
We note that there is an inconsistency
regarding the nutrients that must be
included in the simplified format
between the preamble discussion and
the regulatory text in proposed
§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)(2). In the preamble
discussion, we stated: ‘‘In addition, we
are proposing that the simplified format
must include information on the
nutrients required in § 101.9(f)(2)(i) and
(ii) (i.e., total calories, total fat, total
carbohydrate, protein, and sodium).’’
(76 FR 19192 at 19213). However,
proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)(2)
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specified that the simplified format
must include information on total
carbohydrates, total fat, protein, and
sodium, calories from fat, and any other
nutrients identified in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(A) that are present in
more than insignificant amounts.
Proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)(2) did not
specify that the simplified format must
include information on total calories, as
we intended. In addition, proposed
§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)(2) did not make it
clear that the simplified format must
include calories from fat only if calories
from fat are present in more than
insignificant amounts, as would be
consistent with § 101.9(f)(2)(ii). We have
revised and redesignating
§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)(2) so that it contains
three separate subparagraphs that more
clearly communicate the requirements.
As revised, § 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)(2)
requires that the simplified format must
include information, in a column, list,
or table, on the nutrients specified in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)(2)(i) and (ii). Section
101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)(2)(i) specifies that the
simplified format must include
information on total calories, total fat,
total carbohydrates, protein, and
sodium. Section 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)(2)(ii)
specifies that the simplified format must
include calories from fat and any other
nutrients identified in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(A) that are present in
more than insignificant amounts.
Section 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)(3) specifies
that if the simplified format is used, the
statement ‘‘Not a significant source
of _____’’ (with the blank filled in with
the names of the nutrients required to be
declared in the written nutrient
information and calories from fat that
are present in insignificant amounts)
must be included at the bottom of the
list of nutrients.
In the following paragraphs, we
discuss comments on proposed
§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)(2). We are finalizing
it without change other than to revise
§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)(2) to correct the
discrepancy between the description of
the proposed requirement in the
preamble and the regulatory text and to
clarify the requirements.
(Comment 111) One comment
recommended that the simplified format
we proposed in § 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)(2),
when a standard menu item contains
insignificant amounts of more than onehalf of the nutrients required to be
declared in the written nutrition
information, include information on
fiber. The comment contended that fiber
is an important element in considering
the overall nutritional value of a certain
food, both in addressing obesity and
diabetes. The comment stated that only
knowing information on the total
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carbohydrates without information on
the fiber will not allow consumers to
make sufficiently healthy choices or
will undermine their intent to do so.
(Response 111) If a standard menu
item has an insignificant amount of six
or more of the required nutrients, the
simplified format must include
information on total calories, total fat,
total carbohydrates, protein, and sodium
(§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)(2)(i)) as well as
information on calories from fat and any
other nutrient that is present in the food
in more than insignificant amounts
(§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)(2)(ii)). Thus, if fiber
is present in a standard menu item at a
level that is more than insignificant (i.e.,
one gram or more), the amount of fiber
must appear in the simplified format.
On the other hand, if an insignificant
amount of fiber is present in a standard
menu item, the simplified format must
disclose this information through the
statement, ‘‘Not a significant source
of _____’’ (with the blank filled in with
‘‘fiber’’ since fiber is required to be
declared in the written nutrition
information) (§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)(3)).
Therefore, the simplified format for the
written nutrition information already
must include information on fiber, and
there is no need to revise proposed
§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B) to include fiber as
recommended by the comment.
D. Variable Menu Items
Proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(C) would
require that, for variable menu items,
the nutrition information listed in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(A) must be declared as
follows for each size offered for sale:
(1) The nutrition information required
in § 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(A) must be declared
for the basic preparation of the item
and, separately, for each topping, flavor,
or variable component.
(2) If the calories and other nutrients
are the same for different flavors,
varieties, and substitutable components
of the combination meal, each variety,
flavor, and substitutable component of
the combination meal is not required to
be listed separately. All items that have
the same nutrient levels could be listed
together with the nutrient levels listed
only once.
In the proposed rule, we considered
the following options for providing the
nutrition information in the written
form for a variable menu item:
• Option 1. List the nutrition
information for each nutrient in the
variable menu item as a range.
• Option 2. List the nutrition
information for each component in the
variable menu item (the proposed
requirement).
• Option 3. If a standard menu item
only has two variations (e.g. a sandwich
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with fruit or with fries), provide both
numbers for each nutrient in each
option with a forward slash between
(e.g., 450/700). If three or more options
are available, provide the range in
calories.
In the proposed rule, we stated that
option 2 provides the consumer with all
the required nutrient information for
each flavor or variety of a variable item,
or each component of a combination
meal in a format that facilitates quick
comparisons between different menu
items (76 FR 19192 at 19213). In the
following paragraphs, we discuss
comments on this proposed provision.
We are making no changes in response
to these comments.
However, similar to the specific
format requirements we established for
declaring calories on a menu or menu
board for toppings listed on a menu or
menu board, where the amount of the
topping on the menu item decreases
based on the total number of toppings
ordered, we are establishing in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(C)(2) specific format
requirements for providing the written
nutrition information for toppings if the
amount of the topping included on the
basic preparation of the menu item
decreases based on the total number of
toppings ordered for the menu item
(such as is sometimes the case with
pizza toppings). Section
101.11(b)(2)(ii)(C)(2) of the final rule
specifies that if the amount of the
topping included on the basic
preparation of the menu item decreases
based on the total number of toppings
ordered for the menu item, the nutrients
for each topping must be declared as
single values representing the nutrients
for each topping when added to a onetopping menu item, specifying that the
nutrient declaration is for the topping
when added to a one-topping menu
item. The nutrients for each topping
must also be declared for each size of
the menu item offered for sale, as
required by § 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(C). We are
establishing requirements for providing
the written nutrition information for
variable menu items offered for sale
with the option of adding toppings, and
specifying the format and manner of
such nutrient content disclosures, as
required by sections 403(q)(5)(H)(v) and
(x)(II)(bb) of the FD&C Act. Section
101.11(b)(2)(ii)(C)(2) helps ensure that
consumers are given accurate and
consistent information about the
nutrient of each topping on a menu
item. We would not object if a covered
establishment voluntarily includes a
statement on the written nutrition
information explaining how the
nutrients per topping might fluctuate if
ordering multiple toppings; for example,
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such a statement regarding a pizza pie
might say, ‘‘Nutrient values per topping
may decrease as the number of toppings
per pizza increases.’’ Section
101.11(b)(2)(ii)(C)(2) is therefore
consistent with the requirements for
declaring calories for toppings listed on
the menu or menu board, where the
amount of the topping on the menu item
decreases based on the total number of
toppings ordered.
Because we added this requirement in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(C)(2) to address the
potential variation in nutrient content
for each topping based on the total
number of toppings ordered, proposed
§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(C)(2), which allows
items that have the same nutrient values
to be listed together with the nutrient
values listed only once, is renumbered
for the final rule as
§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(C)(3). We are replacing
the phrase ‘‘substitutable component’’
in two places in the first sentence of
§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(C)(3) with ‘‘variable
component.’’ We are making this change
for consistency with the term used in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(C)(1). We also are
replacing the phrase ‘‘nutrient levels’’ in
two places in the final sentence of
§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(C)(3) with ‘‘nutrient
values.’’ We are making this change for
consistency with § 101.11(c), which we
have revised to consistently use the
term ‘‘values’’ in the requirements for
determination of nutrient content.
(Comment 112) A few comments
supported option 2. Some comments
opposed the use of slashes for different
flavors and considered that slashes
would be confusing and unclear because
consumers are not used to nutrition
information in restaurants.
(Response 112) We are retaining
Option 2 in the rule for providing the
written nutrition information for
variable menu items generally. Option 2
does not specify the use of the slashes
opposed by some comments.
E. Form of the Written Nutrition
Information
Proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(D) would
permit the written nutrition information
required in § 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(A) to be
provided on a counter card, sign, poster,
handout, booklet, loose leaf binder, or
electronic device such as a computer, or
in a menu, or in any other form that
similarly permits the written declaration
of the required nutrient content
information for all standard menu items.
Proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(D) would
explain that if the written information is
not in a form that can be given to the
customer upon request, it must be
readily available in a manner and
location on the premises that allows the
customer/consumer to review the
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written nutrition information upon
request.
In the proposed rule, we discussed
the flexibility provided by proposed
§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(D) for the written
nutrition information and requested
comment on whether we should be
more prescriptive in the format and
manner of providing the written
nutrition information in order to ensure
they are useful to consumers (76 FR
19192 at 19214). We also stated that we
would not object to the use of tray liners
or wrappers as a means to provide
nutrition information, as long as the tray
liners or wrappers are available upon
request to the consumers, and the tray
liner or wrapper contains nutrition
information for all standard menu items
offered for sale at the covered
establishment (76 FR 19192 at 19214).
In the following paragraphs, we
discuss comments on this proposed
provision. We are finalizing it without
change, except for an editorial change
from ‘‘written information’’ to ‘‘written
nutrition information’’ in the final
sentence. With this editorial change,
§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(D) will consistently
use the same phrase (‘‘written nutrition
information’’).
(Comment 113) One comment
supported our proposal to permit
flexibility in how the written nutrition
information would be provided but
questioned the use of wrappers, arguing
that it is unlikely that there would be
enough room on a wrapper to list the
nutrition information for all standard
menu items in a covered establishment
and to make the information easily
readable. Another comment
recommended that § 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(D)
specify the media allowed for the
written nutrition information, with a
petition and approval process for
alternate media, rather than include a
‘‘catch-all phrase’’ such as ‘‘any other
form that similarly permits the written
declaration of the required nutrient
content information for all standard
menu items,’’ which was included in
proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(D). Another
comment recommended that we
expressly recognize that Nutrition Facts
labels can be used to convey the written
nutrition information.
(Response 113) Section
101.11(b)(2)(ii) specifies that the written
nutrition information must be provided
in a clear and conspicuous manner,
including using a color, type size, and
contrasting background that render the
information likely to be read and
understood by the ordinary individual
under customary conditions of purchase
and use. A covered establishment could
use a wrapper if the written nutrition
information for all standard menu items
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offered for sale at the covered
establishment can be presented in a
clear and conspicuous manner on the
wrapper, is available upon request to
the consumers, in accordance with
§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii), and otherwise
complies with the applicable sections of
the FD&C Act and § 101.11(b)(2)(ii). For
example, there may be enough room on
a wrapper to include the written
nutrition information for all standard
menu items in a clear and conspicuous
manner when a covered establishment
offers for sale a small number of
standard menu items.
In addition, § 101.11(b)(2)(ii) ensures
that the written nutrition information is
presented in a clear and conspicuous
manner without prescribing a list of
allowed media or the exact format of the
written nutrition information. If we
amended § 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(D) to specify
the particular types of media that can be
used by covered establishments to
provide the required written nutrition
information, as recommended by one
comment, § 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(D) would
limit the types of media that can be used
by covered establishments, including
those developed based on technological
advancements. Further, § 101.11(b)(2)(ii)
would need to amended every time a
covered establishment sought to use a
type of media not specified. Rather than
specify the media allowed for the
written nutrition information, we
conclude that the public health goal of
this rule would be better served by
providing flexibility to covered
establishments to use any media to
provide the written nutrition
information in the way that is best
suited to their establishments, as long as
the written nutrition information is
available on the premises of the covered
establishment and to the consumer
upon request, is clear and conspicuous,
and otherwise complies with the
requirements of the applicable sections
of the FD&C Act and § 101.11(b)(2)(ii).
Providing such flexibility satisfies the
requirements of section
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act
while taking into consideration the
varying practices at different covered
establishments. With this flexibility, the
petition and approval process suggested
by the comment is unnecessary.
We agree that Nutrition Facts labels
can be used to provide the written
nutrition information required under
§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii) for packaged foods,
and this rule provides flexibility to do
so (see the discussions of
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(C) in Response 133,
and of § 101.11(c)(1) in section XVIII).
(Comment 114) Some comments
stated that the written nutrition
information should not have to be
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provided with carry out menus. The
comments recommended that carry out
menus could contain a link to the
covered establishment’s Internet menu
where the written nutrition information
may be found. Another comment stated
that the written nutrition information
should be permitted on Internet menus
but not required.
(Response 114) We agree with the
comments stating that the written
nutrition information should not be
required with carry out menus. We are
not requiring a specific manner for
providing the written nutrition
information, as long as the written
nutrition information is available on the
premises of the covered establishment
and provided to the consumer upon
request, is disclosed in a clear and
conspicuous manner, and otherwise
complies with the applicable sections of
the FD&C Act and § 101.11(b)(2)(ii). If a
consumer who orders from a menu such
as a carry out menu or an Internet menu
requests the written nutrition
information, the covered establishment
must provide the information to the
consumer. For example, if a covered
establishment delivers a menu item to a
consumer, the covered establishment
could deliver the written nutrition
information with the menu item if the
consumer requests the information. As
another example, if a consumer orders
from an Internet menu, a covered
establishment could provide the written
nutrition information on its Web site or
include a link directing the consumer to
a Web site providing the written
nutrition information. Similarly, as
suggested by the comments, a covered
establishment could provide a link on
carry out menus that directs consumers
to a Web site providing the written
nutrition information. We note that all
menus, including carry out menus, and
menu boards must include a prominent,
clear, and conspicuous statement
regarding the availability of the written
nutrition information, as required by
section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(IV) of the FD&C
Act.
(Comment 115) Some comments
recommended that we require that the
written nutrition information be readily
available upon request to consumers
before ordering. The comments also
recommended that the information be
provided in a manner that allows
consumers to compare the information
between different menu items before
ordering and without losing their place
in line or having to leave the table. The
comments stated that if the written
nutrition information is not in a form
that can be given to the consumer upon
request, it must be readily available in
a manner and location on the premises
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that allows the consumer to review the
written nutrition information when
ordering (i.e., the consumer should be
able to see and review both the menu or
menu board and the written nutrition
information at the same time). One
comment recommended that the
information be provided at the place
where consumers place their orders and
not upon request. One comment
recommended that we ensure that all
consumers have access to the
information. The comment maintained
that information on a poster or on a
computer in a fixed location may not be
accessible to the mobility impaired.
(Response 115) We decline to require
that covered establishments make the
written nutrition information readily
available to consumers where
consumers place their orders rather than
providing such information to
consumers upon request. Section
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act
specifically requires covered
establishments to provide the written
nutrition information ‘‘to the consumer
upon request.’’ In addition, nothing in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii) would preclude
consumers from requesting the written
nutrition information before ordering.
We disagree that the rule must require
a format and manner of providing the
written nutrition information that
ensures that a consumer who requests
written nutrition information will avoid
losing a place in an ordering line or
leaving a table. A covered establishment
has flexibility to use a format (e.g., a
poster) that may be readily seen by
consumers even if they do not
specifically ask to see it.
We agree that covered establishments
must make the written nutrition
information available to all consumers,
including consumers with mobility
impairment, upon request, and must
ensure that the information is presented
in a clear and conspicuous manner to all
consumers. Section 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(D)
specifically identifies formats such as
on a counter card, sign, poster, handout,
booklet, loose leaf binder, or electronic
device such as a computer, or in a menu
through which a covered establishment
may provide the written nutrition
information.
XVII. Comments and FDA Response on
Proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(iii)—
Requirements for Food That Is SelfService or on Display
A. Applicability of § 101.11(b)(2)(i) to
Food That Is Self-Service or on Display
Under sections 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I)(aa)
and (II)(aa) of the FD&C Act, we
proposed to establish requirements for
the declaration of calories for standard
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menu items on menus and menu boards
in proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(i). Under
section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii), we proposed to
establish requirements for the
declaration of calories for self-service
food and food on display in proposed
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii). In the proposed rule,
we tentatively concluded that when
self-service foods and food on display
appear on menus or menu boards, the
menus or menu boards must bear the
calorie declarations required by sections
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I)(aa) and (II)(aa) of the
FD&C Act (76 FR 19192 at 19216). In
other words, we tentatively concluded
that self-service food and food on
display that appear on a menu or menu
board are subject to both requirements
for the declaration of calories—i.e., the
requirements in § 101.11(b)(2)(i)
applicable to declaration on a menu or
menu board and the requirements in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii) applicable to selfservice food and food on display.
(Comment 116) One comment
disagreed with our tentative conclusion
that the proposed requirements for
calorie declaration of standard menu
items on menus and menu boards
(§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)) apply to food on
display and self-service food that is also
listed on menus and menu boards. The
comment asserted that this tentative
conclusion is against the plain language
of section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act
and that to require covered
establishments to label menu boards
and display cases is unnecessary. The
comment asserted that only requiring
calorie labeling on signs adjacent to
food on display and self-service food
would provide information at the point
of ordering and therefore would be more
consistent with the requirement of
section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act
that calorie information be provided on
menus and menu boards, as defined in
section 403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of the FD&C Act
(‘‘the primary writing of the . . .
establishment from which a consumer
makes an order selection’’).
(Response 116) We disagree with this
comment. The plain language of section
403(q)(5)(H)(i) of the FD&C Act provides
that ‘‘in the case of food that is a
standard menu item . . . [the covered]
establishment shall disclose the
information described in subclauses (ii)
and (iii)’’ (emphasis added). As
discussed in the proposed rule, the
word ‘‘and’’ between the references to
subclause (ii) and subclause (iii)
indicates that for each standard menu
item, including self-service food and
food on display, covered establishments
must follow the requirements in section
403(q)(5)(H)(ii) of the FD&C Act as
applicable and section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii)
of the FD&C Act as applicable. Further,
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if Congress had meant for section
403(q)(5)(H)(ii) of the FD&C Act not to
apply to self-service food and food on
display, it could have included an
exception for such foods within that
section, as it did for foods described in
section 403(q)(5)(H)(vii) of the FD&C
Act, but it did not include such an
exception. See e.g., Russello v. U.S., 464
U.S. 16, 23 (1983) (‘‘[W]here Congress
includes particular language in one
section of a statute but omits it in
another section of the same [statute], it
is generally presumed that Congress acts
intentionally and purposely in the
disparate inclusion or exclusion.’’)
(internal citations omitted). In addition,
a consumer may make his or her order
selection by using information provided
on a traditional menu or menu board or
on a sign adjacent to a self-service food
or food on display. Disclosing calorie
information for self-service food and
food on display on traditional menus
and menu boards, where such menus
and menu boards list self-service food
and food on display, and on signs
adjacent to self-service food and food on
display would help ensure that
consumers are able to see the calorie
declarations before making order
selections and is consistent with the
plain language of sections
403(q)(5)(H)(ii) and (iii) of the FD&C
Act.
Therefore, when a self-service food or
food on display is listed on a menu or
menu board, the food is subject to both
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i) for declaration of
calories on menus and menu boards and
to § 101.11(b)(2)(iii) for foods on
display.
B. Placement of Calories for Self-Service
Foods and Foods on Display
Proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A) would
require that when a self-service food or
food on display is already accompanied
by an individual sign, adjacent to the
food, that provides the food’s name,
price, or both, the calories per item or
per serving must be provided on the
sign. When a self-service food or food
on display is not already accompanied
by an individual sign, adjacent to the
food, that provides the food’s name,
price, or both, the covered
establishment must place a sign
adjacent to each food with the number
of calories per serving or per item in a
clear and conspicuous manner.
In the following paragraphs, we
discuss comments on this proposed
provision. After considering these
comments, we have revised the
provision to provide more options for
the declaration of calories for selfservice food and food on display and to
require that if the individual sign does
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not already include the serving, the
amount of the serving on which the
calories are based must also be provided
on the sign, e.g., ‘‘150 calories per
scoop.’’
We also are correcting the
introductory text in § 101.11(b)(2)(iii) by
inserting a hyphen between ‘‘self’’ and
‘‘service.’’
(Comment 117) Several comments
supported the requirements in proposed
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii). Some comments
recommended that foods on display be
labeled with calorie information
regardless of whether the food is served
by the customer or employee. Some
comments asked us to clarify that a
calorie declaration is also required for
displayed foods such as pastries and
doughnuts at bakeries and ice cream
behind a glass case in an ice cream
shop.
(Response 117) The definition of
‘‘self-service food’’ includes restauranttype food that is served by the
customers themselves, and the
definition of ‘‘foods on display’’
includes restaurant-type food that is
visible to the customer before the
customer makes a selection. In general,
pastries, donuts, and ice cream on
display, such as behind a glass case,
meet the definition of food on display.
Under these definitions, the
requirements in proposed
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii) apply to standard
menu items that are foods served by the
customers themselves as well as to
standard menu items that are foods such
as pastries, donuts, and ice cream that
are behind a glass case or in an ice
cream shop and are served by an
employee.
(Comment 118) Some comments
requested flexibility to determine the
placement of calorie information that
works best for them. Some comments
recommended that the calorie
declaration be permitted to be placed on
a single sign, or electronically via kiosks
or touch screen computers, and not on
all individual signs. One comment
asserted that, for buffets, the layout and
number of items make it difficult to
display signs for hundreds of items
without cluttering the space or
obstructing the view. The comment also
asserted that customers may
inadvertently move the signs, and
therefore, the calorie declaration should
instead appear on counters or in display
cases.
Some comments stated that buffets are
unique because foods vary and change
often. For example, according to one
comment, a restaurant may have as
many as 175 different menu items in a
meal period. One comment stated that
the foods are changed multiple times a
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day, the items may change from day to
day, and the rotation of foods would
create confusion if the food signs are not
accurately changed with each new
menu item.
One comment stated that the location
and size of the food signs are affected by
health and safety regulations because
the food signs could lead to
contamination of the food and because
food signs adjacent to heated areas or
grills for food items cooked to order
could create a hazard. Moreover, the
comment noted that multiple menu
items may be simultaneously prepared
to order on open grills. This comment
recommended that these types of
restaurants be permitted to place the
calorie information on individual signs
adjacent to or in close proximity to the
food by using a variety of options (e.g.,
sneeze guards; partition or placard;
menu board or placard adjacent to the
buffet with all the items listed with
nutrition content; pamphlet adjacent to
the buffet; written or electronically
displayed information using kiosks;
tablet computers; or touch screen
computers).
(Response 118) We agree that placing
individual signs adjacent to a selfservice food or food on display may
pose a hazard in certain circumstances,
such as when there is an open heat
source (such as a grill) in close
proximity to the sign that could create
a fire hazard. We also agree that more
flexibility is needed for foods that are
constantly being replenished or
changed. Therefore, to provide more
flexibility and reduce the potential for a
sign used to declare calories for selfservice food or food on display to create
a hazard, we have revised
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A) to allow covered
establishments to declare calories for
standard menu items that are selfservice or on display, and the serving or
unit used to determine the calorie
content (e.g., ‘‘per scoop’’ or ‘‘per
muffin’’), using one of the following
options:
• On a sign, adjacent to and clearly
associated with the corresponding food
item;
• On a sign attached to a sneeze guard
with the calorie declaration and the
serving or unit used to determine the
calorie content above each specific
menu item so that the consumer can
clearly associate the calorie declaration
with the standard menu item. For
example, if a buffet has several menu
items in the serving display case
including, in particular, a broccoli and
cheese casserole, the sign attached to
the sneeze guard right above the
broccoli and cheese casserole may
declare the calories, e.g., ‘‘200 calories
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per scoop.’’ If it is not clear to which
food the calorie declaration and serving
or unit refers, then the sign must also
include the name of the food, e.g.,
‘‘Broccoli and cheese casserole—200
calories per scoop;’’ or
• On a single sign or placard listing
the calorie declaration for several menu
items along with the names of the menu
items, so long as the sign or placard is
located where a consumer can view the
name, calorie declaration, and serving
or unit of a particular menu item while
the consumer is selecting that item. The
sign must list the names of the menu
items along with their corresponding
calorie declarations. For example, for a
soup station, the sign or placard must
list all the soups that are available at
that station along with each calorie
declaration, e.g., ‘‘chicken noodle soup,
125 calories per cup,’’ ‘‘minestrone
soup, 100 calories per cup.’’ This sign
may be placed on the wall behind the
station, on a sign at the beginning or end
of the station, or at another location so
long as the consumer can read the name,
calorie declaration, and serving or unit
of a particular menu item while
selecting the menu item.
Each option, when implemented
appropriately, associates the calorie
declaration with the appropriate food on
display or self-service food to help
ensure that consumers can see such
declarations when making their
selections.
(Comment 119) In the proposed rule,
we stated that placing a separate sign
with calorie information adjacent to a
food that is already accompanied by a
sign bearing its name, price, or both,
could make it more difficult for
consumers to clearly associate the
calorie information with its
corresponding self-service food or food
on display (76 FR 19192 at 19215). We
requested comment on whether
establishments that already provide an
individual sign identifying each food on
display or self-service food with its
name, price, or both should have the
option of providing a separate
individual sign for each food on display
or self-service food for the calorie
declaration, so long as the sign with the
calorie declaration is adjacent to and
clearly associated with its
corresponding food.
One comment recommended that
calories appear on the same sign as the
name or price of the food rather than on
a separate sign, because more than one
sign could cause confusion.
(Response 119) We acknowledge the
comment’s concern, which mirrored a
concern we raised in the proposed rule.
However, in light of the
recommendations in the comments
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describing the need for more flexibility
in declaring calories for self-service
foods and foods on display, we have
concluded that there are a number of
ways in which a covered establishment
can comply with section
403(q)(5)(H)(iii) of the FD&C Act to
provide calorie declarations for selfservice foods and foods on display
based on the establishment’s particular
operations, including the use of a
separate sign placed adjacent to a selfservice food or food on display that is
clearly associated with the food (see
Comment 118 and Response 118).
Therefore, we have revised
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A) by removing the
sentence requiring that when a selfservice food or food on display is
already accompanied by an individual
sign, adjacent to the food, that provides
the food’s name, price, or both, the
calories per item or per serving must be
provided on the sign. In addition, we
have revised § 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A) by
providing options for a covered
establishment to provide calorie
declarations on signs for self-service
food and food on display, including the
options described in Response 118. We
are making these changes based on the
reasons discussed in Response 118 and
because we recognize that existing
individual signs for these foods may be
quite small and either not have enough
space for the calorie declaration, or
cause the sign to be so crowded that the
calorie declaration may not be easily
read or clear and conspicuous enough
for the consumer to read the
information. (See, e.g., the discussions
in Comment 126 and Response 126, and
in Comment 127 and Response 127,
about the requirements for type size of
the calorie declaration when a selfservice food or food on display is
already accompanied by a sign with the
food’s name, price, or both.)
C. Declaring Calories ‘‘Per Item’’ or ‘‘Per
Serving’’
Proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(1)
would specify that for purposes of
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A), ‘‘per item’’ means
per each discrete unit offered for sale,
for example, a bagel, a slice of pizza, a
muffin, or a multi-serving food such as
a whole cake. Proposed
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(2) would specify
that for purposes of
§ 101.10(b)(2)(iii)(A), ‘‘per serving’’
means: (1) Per each common household
measure, e.g., cup, scoop, tablespoon,
offered for sale as dispensed using a
serving instrument such as a scoop,
ladle, cup, or measuring spoon; or (2)
per unit of weight offered for sale, e.g.,
per half pound or pound.
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In the following paragraphs, we
discuss comments on these proposed
provisions. After considering these
comments, we are:
• Deleting ‘‘a multi-serving food such
as a whole cake’’ from the list of
examples of what the rule means by
‘‘per item.’’ As discussed in section
VI.C, the definition of ‘‘restaurant-type
food’’ established in the rule includes
food that is usually eaten on the
premises, while walking away, or soon
after arriving at another location, and
whole cakes that are self-service food or
food on display are not likely to meet
this definition.
• Providing the options to declare
calories ‘‘per serving instrument’’ or
‘‘per common household measure’’ in
separate subparagraphs, rather than in
the same subparagraph, to emphasize
that these are distinct alternatives for
declaration of calories ‘‘per serving.’’
• Revising the examples of what we
mean by ‘‘per unit of weight offered for
sale’’ to be ‘‘per quarter pound’’ or ‘‘per
4 ounces.’’ We are making this change
because examples of a quarter pound or
4 ounces are more likely to reflect a
serving of self-service food or food on
display.
• Changing § 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(1)
and (b)(2)(iii)(A)(2) to read ‘‘paragraph
(b)(2)(iii)(A) of this section’’ rather than
‘‘§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)’’ to be more
consistent with FDA’s general practice.
We note that the proposed rule had
identified the cross-reference as
‘‘§ 101.10(b)(2)(ii)(A).’’ We revised this
to ‘‘§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)’’ in the
correction document, but did not
identify the format change at that time.
(Comment 120) One comment
suggested that the portion of the
standard menu item used to calculate
the calorie content also be clearly
displayed in the same font, color, and
size as the item name and be posted on
or next to the available food on display
or self-service food.
(Response 120) We agree that the
serving or unit of a standard menu item
that is a self-service food or food on
display used to determine the calorie
content for such food must be included
in the calorie declaration. Without
information about the serving or unit of
a self-service food or food on display,
the consumer would not be able to
ascertain the calorie content of the
amount of food that would be
consumed. This would defeat the
purpose of the calorie declaration.
Therefore, we have revised
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A) to require that the
calorie declaration for foods on display
and self-service food include the serving
or unit on which the calorie content is
based. The requirements in
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§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(3)(ii) for font size
and color will apply to the entire calorie
declaration, including the serving or
unit used to determine calorie content.
(See the discussion of
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(3)(ii) in section
XVII.E.2.)
(Comment 121) One comment asked
us to allow a covered establishment to
list nutrition information for standard
menu items that are self-service or on
display per serving size and requested
clarification on how the RACC would be
used in this case. The comment asked
us to keep in mind that many retailers
would like to align their calorie
declarations for menu items with
serving sizes for packaged food so as not
to have two different serving sizes.
(Response 121) In Response 65 in
section XI, we explained why a calorie
declaration for a multiple-serving
standard menu item that is not selfservice or on display must declare ‘‘the
number of calories contained in the
standard menu item, as usually
prepared and offered for sale’’ instead of
per RACC (to the extent that there is a
RACC for such standard menu item).
Similarly, we disagree that a calorie
declaration for a standard menu item
that is a self-service food or food on
display should be declared per RACC or
per serving size used on packaged food,
unless such RACC or serving size is the
portion or serving used by the covered
establishment to display or otherwise
offer such standard menu item for sale.
Self-service food and food on display
may be portioned differently than a
RACC or serving size used on packaged
food. Section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C
Act does not require a covered
establishment to prepare and offer
standard menu items in particular sizes
or amounts, such as RACCs or serving
sizes used on packaged foods. Instead,
section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii) of the FD&C Act
expressly requires covered
establishments to disclose the number
of calories for self-service foods and
foods on display ‘‘per displayed food
item or per serving.’’ Accordingly, a
covered establishment may choose the
portion or serving of the food that it
offers for sale, and must base the calorie
declaration for a self-service food or
food on display per displayed item (e.g.,
‘‘per muffin’’) or per serving (e.g., ‘‘per
scoop’’) as offered for sale.
(Comment 122) A few comments
expressed concern with portion sizes
and with declaring nutrient values for
items that vary in size and content (e.g.,
baked potato, chicken breast). Some
comments asked for guidance on serving
sizes for calorie declarations pertaining
to foods on display. One comment asked
us to clarify that the calories should be
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declared per item or serving as offered
for sale and not for a portion of a food
item that is smaller than the food
offered for sale. For example, a covered
establishment that offers a large muffin
for sale should be required to declare
calories per item (i.e., the large muffin)
and should not be permitted to declare
calories per serving and describe the
large muffin as containing two servings.
One comment maintained that
calories of foods at salad bars should be
declared per cup and not per serving.
Several comments asked us to require
that calories be based on serving utensil
sizes where possible. One comment
recommended that we require the same
serving size as for packaged food if no
utensil is used. The comment suggested
that calories be declared per cup if tongs
are used for lettuce at a salad bar. The
comment suggested that the rule be
revised to include:
(iii) The following must be provided
for food that is self-service or on
display.
‘‘(1) Calories must be provided for
each standard serving size offered, e.g.,
each beverage cup size offered for a
fountain beverage dispenser or each
container size available for a deli salad.
(2) For purposes of
§ 101.10(b)(2)(iii)(A), ‘‘per item’’’ means
per each discrete unit offered for sale—
for example, a bagel, a muffin, a
sandwich, or a multi-serving food, such
as a whole cake.
(3) If the item is not sold as a discrete
unit, it can be labeled per serving. For
purposes of § 101.10(b)(2)(iii)(A), ‘‘per
serving’’’ means:
(i) Per each scoop or container as
dished up using the serving instrument
provided, such as a ladle, cup, or
measuring spoon, or per weight or
container-size offered, such as a quarter
pound of potato salad or a container of
soup.
(ii) If the item is not served using a
ladle or other measuring instrument or
per container size, the item must be
labeled in the common household
measure closest to the Reference
Amount Customarily Consumed (RACC)
for that item, e.g., per cup or
tablespoon.’’
(Response 122) We agree that a calorie
declaration for a self-service food or
food on display per displayed food item
should be declared for the entire item as
offered for sale and not based on a
portion of the food item that is smaller
than the food item offered for sale. For
example, if a covered establishment
offered a muffin for sale as a self-service
food or food on display, the
establishment should declare calories
for the entire muffin rather than just a
portion of the muffin (e.g., one-half or
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one-third of the muffin) because the
entire muffin is the standard menu item
offered for sale by the establishment.
We also agree with the comment
asserting that the rule should be revised
to require that when a self-service food
or food on display is offered for sale per
displayed food item, meaning per a
discrete unit offered for sale, such as a
bagel, a slice of pizza, or a muffin, the
calorie declaration for such food should
be based on the discrete unit offered for
sale rather than another amount. In the
proposed rule, we tentatively concluded
that for self-service food or food on
display that is displayed per item,
where the item represents one serving,
the calorie declaration should be per
item (76 FR 19215). We affirm this
conclusion.
We also agree with the comment
asserting that the rule should be revised
to require that when a self-service food
or food on display is not offered for sale
per displayed food item, the calorie
declaration for such food should be
based on the serving offered for sale. In
the proposed rule, we tentatively
concluded that for self-service food or
food on display that is not displayed per
item (e.g., potato salad at a buffet or ice
cream at an ice cream parlor), the
calorie declaration should be per
serving (76 FR 19215). We affirm this
conclusion.
For these reasons, we have revised
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A) to further specify
that a covered establishment must
declare calories for a self-service food or
food on display per displayed food item,
or if the food is not sold in a discrete
unit, per serving as offered for sale.
Under § 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(1), ‘‘per
displayed food item’’ means per each
discrete unit offered for sale, for
example, a bagel, a slice of pizza, or a
muffin. Accordingly, if a covered
establishment offers a food that is selfservice or on display for sale in a
discrete unit, such as a muffin, the
establishment would have to declare
calories for the food per such discrete
unit offered for sale, and not based on
a different amount.
As discussed in Response 65 and
Response 121, we disagree that the rule
should require that calories for selfservice food and food on display be
declared per RACC and, therefore, we
are not revising § 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(2)
to require that an item that is not served
using a measuring instrument be labeled
in the common household measure
closest to the RACC for that item.
However, we agree that specifying that
calories for a self-service food or food on
display be disclosed per displayed food
item, if applicable, and providing other
options to declare calories ‘‘per serving
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instrument’’ and ‘‘per common
household measure’’ in separate
subparagraphs, as suggested by this
same commenter, would provide a
clearer framework regarding how calorie
declarations must be provided for selfservice foods and foods on display.
Therefore, in addition to the revisions
we made to § 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(1) as
described previously, we have revised
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(2)(i) to specify that,
for the purposes of § 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A),
‘‘per serving’’ means (1) per serving
instrument used to dispense the food
offered for sale, provided that the
serving instrument dispenses a uniform
amount of the food (e.g., a scoop or
ladle); or (2) if a serving instrument that
dispenses a uniform amount of food is
not used to dispense the food, per each
common household measure (e.g., cup
or tablespoon) offered for sale or per
unit of weight offered for sale (e.g., per
quarter pound or per 4 ounces). As
revised, §§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(1), and
(b)(2)(iii)(A)(2)(i) to (b)(2)(iii)(A)(2)(ii)
establish a logical hierarchy for
determining how to declare calories for
a self-service food or food on display.
For example, if a covered establishment
offered a self-service food for sale in a
discrete unit, such as a muffin, the
establishment would have to declare
calories for the muffin as a whole. If the
covered establishment offered another
self-service food for sale, but the food
was not offered for sale in a discrete
unit, such as pasta salad, the
establishment would have to declare
calories for the food ‘‘per serving’’ as
defined in § 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(2).
Under § 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(2)(i), the
covered establishment would have to
declare calories for the pasta salad per
serving instrument used to dispense the
pasta salad if the serving instrument
dispensed a uniform amount of the food
(e.g., per scoop or ladle). If the covered
establishment used a serving instrument
that does not dispense a uniform
amount of the food, such as tongs,
declaring calories per that serving
instrument used to dispense the food
would not be appropriate because the
calorie declarations would not always
be consistent with the amount of food
dispensed, and therefore the covered
establishment would look to the
remaining options to declare calories,
which include declaring calories per
common household measure or per unit
of weight offered for sale (in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(2)(ii)). If a covered
establishment offers food for sale per
unit of weight, and the unit of weight
offered for sale is in ounces, then it
would be required to declare calories
per ounce (or per some number of
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ounces)—i.e., using the same unit of
weight (ounces) as the unit of weight
offered for sale.
We disagree that we should establish
specific examples of portion sizes in the
rule or add details such as specifying
that a ‘‘container of soup’’ is an
appropriate portion size for soup. A
covered establishment has flexibility to
establish the portion sizes for standard
menu items offered for sale in such
establishment.
As discussed in section VI.C, the
definition of ‘‘restaurant-type food’’
generally covers food that usually is
eaten on the premises, while walking
away, or soon after arriving at another
location. Foods (such as whole cakes
and deli salads that are sold from a
display case rather than from a salad
bar) that are grocery-type items that
consumers usually store for use at a
later time or customarily further prepare
would not be included within the
meaning of ‘‘restaurant-type food.’’
Thus, we have deleted ‘‘a multi-serving
food such as a whole cake’’ from
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(1). We decline to
add ‘‘deli salad’’ as an example in what
we mean by ‘‘per serving’’ because
doing so could incorrectly imply that a
deli salad sold at a deli counter as a
grocery-type item is likely to be covered
by the rule. We are adding
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(2)(iii) to specify
what we mean by ‘‘per serving’’ for selfservice beverages—i.e., per total number
of fluid ounces in the cup in which a
self-service beverage is served and, if
applicable, the description of the cup
size (e.g., ‘‘140 calories per 12 fluid
ounces (small)’’). See Response 125 in
the next section of this document for an
explanation of this new provision.
(Comment 123) One comment noted
that some foods on display are offered
in different flavors or varieties such as
ice cream or doughnuts. The comment
asked us to clarify that a covered
establishment may disclose the
nutrition information for such items by
using a range per serving (or one of the
other options being considered for other
variable menu items).
(Response 123) A standard menu item
on display may meet the definition for
a variable menu item in § 101.11(a)
when it is offered for sale in different
flavors, varieties, or combinations, and
is listed on a menu or menu board as a
single menu item. When this is the case,
the format requirements for variable
menu items in § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4)
through (b)(2)(i)(A)(8) would apply to
calories declared on the menu or menu
board. Accordingly, to the extent that
standard menu items on display offered
for sale in different flavors or varieties
are listed as single menu items on
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menus or menu boards, a covered
establishment would be required to
declare calories on such menus and
menu boards for such foods using the
same methods applicable to other
variable menu items, including ranges,
as specified in § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4)
through (b)(2)(i)(A)(8). However, when
these foods are on display, they would
also be subject to the requirements of
section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii) of the FD&C Act
and § 101.11(b)(2)(iii). For a standard
menu item that is a self-service food or
food on display, section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii)
of the FD&C Act requires the covered
establishment to ‘‘place adjacent to each
food offered a sign that lists the calories
per displayed food item or per serving’’
(emphasis added). Typically, a standard
menu item that is on display is
presented to the consumer as a unique
menu item, in that the food is made
visible to the consumer, and the
consumer can see what other standard
menu items are available, including
other standard menu items that come in
different flavors, varieties, or
combinations, such as various muffins
or pastries in a display case. Because
these standard menu items typically are
on display in a manner that allows
consumers to see each menu item
individually, as well as the other menu
items available, including menu items
offered in different flavors or varieties,
the way in which these items are offered
for sale is not analogous to standard
menu items that come in different
flavors or varieties but are listed as a
single menu item on a menu or menu
board. For example, a covered
establishment may offer for sale
different flavors of ice cream (e.g.,
vanilla, chocolate, strawberry) in
individual containers in a display case
visible to consumers. In this situation,
because the consumer can see each
flavor of ice cream offered for sale, the
consumer should also be able to see the
number of calories contained for each
flavor of ice cream offered for sale. As
a result, the covered establishment
would be required to place a sign
adjacent to each flavor of ice cream in
the display case that lists the calories
per each individual displayed food item
or per serving in accordance with
§ 101.11(b)(iii).
D. Declaring Calories ‘‘Per Serving’’ for
Self-Service Beverages
In the proposed rule, we discussed
the serving size of beverages following
our discussion of the declaration of
calories for self-service food and food on
display ‘‘per item’’ and ‘‘per serving’’
(76 FR 19192 at 19216). We recognized
that covered establishments may have
different sizes for beverages that are
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listed on the menu as small, medium,
and large and stated that we were
considering whether the amount of
calories declared should be based on the
number of ounces. In the proposed rule,
we anticipated that if we adopt this
view in the final rule, we would not
object to the covered establishment
listing the number of ounces as part of
the size declaration, e.g., ‘‘140 calories
per 12 ounces (small).’’ We requested
and received comment on this issue.
After considering these comments, we
are establishing a new provision to
specify that, for beverages that are selfservice or on display, ‘‘per serving’’
means per total number of fluid ounces
in the cup in which a self-service
beverage is served and, if applicable, the
description of the cup size (e.g., ‘‘140
calories per 12 fluid ounces (small)’’)
(§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(2)(iv)). As an
operational companion to new
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(2)(iii), we also are
establishing a new provision
(§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(3)(iii)) to require
that calorie declarations for self-service
beverages be accompanied by the term
‘‘fluid ounces’’ and, if applicable, the
description of the cup size (e.g.,
‘‘small,’’ ‘‘medium’’). (See also Response
129 in section XVII.E.3 of this
document.)
(Comment 124) One comment noted
that the proposed rule did not address
the issue of ice fill for the declaration of
calories for beverages. The comment
asked us to permit covered
establishments to calculate calories
based on their standard ice fill as long
as the level of ice fill is disclosed to
consumers. The comment recommended
that we expressly permit, regardless of
whether there is a standard ice fill, the
following statement regarding ice fill:
‘‘Calorie content may vary based on the
amount of ice used.’’
(Response 124) We previously
addressed this comment with respect to
beverages that are not self-service (see
the discussion of § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(9)
in section XIII). Under section
403(q)(5)(H)(iii) of the FD&C Act,
calories for standard menu items that
are self-service foods and foods on
display, including ‘‘soft drinks,’’ must
be declared ‘‘per displayed food item or
per serving’’ (emphasis added). For
beverages that are self-service, the actual
amount of a beverage dispensed by
consumers will vary depending on the
size of the cup and the amount of ice or
beverage that a consumer may add to
the cup. For these reasons, the
provisions we are establishing in this
rule for self-service beverages require
declaration of calories based on the full
volume of the cup (i.e., without ice), and
do not provide for the declaration of
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calories based on a standard beverage
fill or standard ice fill. (See discussion
of § 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(2)(iii) of the final
rule immediately following.)
We would not object to a covered
establishment posting a statement (at
the self-service beverage dispenser, on
the menu or menu board, or both)
indicating that the calories for the selfservice beverages may vary depending
on the amount of ice dispensed (e.g.,
‘‘calorie content may vary based on the
amount of ice used’’).
(Comment 125) One comment
asserted that calories for self-service
beverages should not be listed for an
‘‘appropriate serving size’’ such as 12
ounces because this may not correspond
to the sizes that are actually sold in the
covered establishment.
(Response 125) We agree that the
number of ounces in a beverage cup
may vary between covered
establishments and we agree that the
rule should not establish ‘‘an
appropriate serving size’’ for self-service
beverages. We also agree that consumers
should be given calorie information
based on the number of ounces in the
cup which the consumer uses to
dispense a self-service beverage. Section
403(q)(5)(H)(iii) of the FD&C Act
provides that calories for self-service
foods and foods on display be declared
‘‘per displayed food item or per serving’’
(emphasis added). For self-service
beverages, the serving units depend, in
part, on the cups provided by the
covered establishment to consumers for
use at the self-service beverage
dispenser. The actual amount of
beverage dispensed by consumers will
vary based on the size of the cup and
the amount of beverage that a consumer
dispenses into the cup. As already
discussed in Response 124, the actual
amount of beverage dispensed by
consumers also will vary based on the
amount of ice that a consumer may add
to the cup, and in contrast to some nonself-service beverages offered for sale by
a covered establishment, self-service
beverage dispensers typically do not
have a standard beverage fill or standard
ice fill. In addition, for any given
establishment, the cups provided for
self-service beverages may be in a single
size or may be in different sizes, e.g., in
cups labeled ‘‘small,’’ ‘‘medium,’’ or
‘‘large.’’ Further, as already noted,
covered establishments may have
different sizes for beverages that are
listed on menus as small, medium, and
large. For these reasons, we are
specifying that, for self-service
beverages, calories ‘‘per serving’’ within
the meaning of section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii)
of the FD&C Act must be based on the
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number of ounces in the cup in which
the beverage is served.
Therefore, § 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(2)(iii)
of the final rule specifies that, for
purposes of § 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A), ‘‘per
serving’’ means, for beverages that are
self-service, per total number of fluid
ounces in the cup in which a selfservice beverage is served and, if
applicable, the description of the cup
size (e.g., ‘‘140 calories per 12 fluid
ounces (small)’’). As an operational
companion to
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(2)(iii), we also are
establishing specific format
requirements applicable to the
declaration of calories for self-service
beverages.
Section 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(3)(iii) of
the final rule requires that, for selfservice beverages, calorie declarations
must be accompanied by the term ‘‘fluid
ounces’’ and, if applicable, the
description of the cup size (e.g.,
‘‘small,’’ ‘‘medium’’). By providing the
number of fluid ounces in the cup in
which the self-service beverage is served
and a description of the size of the cup,
if applicable, along with the calories for
the self-service beverage, the calorie
declaration will provide necessary
context regarding the amount of the
beverage (i.e., the number of fluid
ounces dispensed) upon which to base
the number of calories for the selfservice beverage. This information will
enable consumers to determine how
many calories are contained in a serving
of the self-service beverage in a direct
and consistent manner.
E. Manner of Declaring Calories for SelfService Foods and Foods on Display
1. Increments of Calories
Proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(3)(i)
would require that calories for selfservice food and food on display be
declared to the nearest 5-calorie
increment up to and including 50
calories and to the nearest 10-calorie
increments above 50 calories except that
amounts less than 5 calories may be
expressed as zero.
We received no comments on this
proposed provision and are finalizing it
without change, except for an editorial
change to express ‘‘nearest 10-calorie
increments’’ in the singular (i.e.,
‘‘nearest 10-calorie increment’’).
2. Requirements for Declaration of
Calories To Be Clear and Conspicuous
Proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(3)(ii)
would require that if the food is not
already accompanied by a sign with the
food’s name, price, or both, the calorie
declaration, accompanied by the term
‘‘Calories’’ or ‘‘Cal’’, must appear on a
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sign adjacent to the standard menu item
in a clear and conspicuous manner if
the food is not already accompanied by
a sign with the food’s name, price or
both. If the food is already accompanied
by a sign with the food’s name, price,
or both, the calorie declaration and the
term ‘‘Calories’’ or ‘‘Cal’’ must appear
on that sign in a type size no smaller
than the name or price of the menu item
whichever is smaller, in the same color
or a color that is at least as conspicuous
as that name or price using the same
contrasting background. Proposed
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(3)(ii) inadvertently
included the clause ‘‘if the food is not
already accompanied by a sign with the
food’s name, price, or both’’ in two
locations within the provision.
In the proposed rule, we requested
comment on whether additional or more
specific formatting requirements are
necessary (76 FR 19192 at 19215). In the
following paragraphs, we discuss
comments on the proposed provision.
We also discuss comments in response
to our specific request on whether
additional or more specific formatting
requirements are necessary. After
considering these comments, we are
finalizing it with the following changes:
• For consistency with the provisions
we are establishing in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A), we are specifying
that the calorie declarations must
include the amount of the serving on
which the calories are based.
• For consistency with the provisions
we are establishing in § 101.11(b)(2)(iii),
we are making a series of changes to
address options that a covered
establishment can use to declare
calories for self-service food or food on
display, including the use of an
additional sign even if a food is already
accompanied by a sign with the food’s
name, price, or both.
• To provide for a consistent
approach to the requirements for a
contrasting background throughout the
rule, we are providing additional
flexibility for the contrasting
background used for the calorie
declaration and making a conforming
editorial change to the grammatical
construction of the requirement for the
color used for the calorie declaration.
• As an editorial correction for
clarity, we are inserting ‘‘the type size
of’’ between ‘‘no smaller than’’ and ‘‘the
name or price.’’
(Comment 126) One comment
recommended that we require the
calorie declaration to be clear and
conspicuous but not in a type size as
large as the food’s name or price. The
comment maintained that if these foods
already have signs, there is likely no
room for calorie declarations.
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One comment pointed out that
fountain machines have small signs or
‘‘valve decals’’ on which the name is
placed. According to the comment these
valve decals can be as small as 0.7 x 1
inches to 5.25 x 5.25 inches and these
signs do not have enough space to list
the calorie declarations. The comment
recommended that a covered
establishment not have to list the
calories adjacent to the dispenser if
calories for fountain drinks are listed on
menus and menu boards and the written
nutrition information is available,
because to do so would be burdensome.
One comment asked us to allow a
covered establishment to use a sign or
placard placed adjacent to the fountain
beverage machine that lists the calories.
Another comment recommended that
calorie declarations for self-serve
beverages be posted on menus, menu
boards, or brochures, and not at the
dispensers. One comment
recommended that calorie declarations
be listed both on the menu boards and
the dispenser for each type of beverage
dispensed.
One comment noted that brand names
are stylized and therefore the names of
beverages may be in different type sizes.
The comment maintained that tying the
type size of the calories to the name of
the beverage would result in differing
sizes for calories, which could be
confusing.
(Response 126) Section
403(q)(5)(H)(iii) of the FD&C Act
requires covered establishments to place
adjacent to each standard menu item
that is a self-service food or food on
display, including self-service
beverages, a sign that lists calories per
displayed food item or per serving. As
discussed previously in this document
(see Response 116), a covered
establishment must also declare calories
on a menu or menu board, and follow
all applicable requirements of
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i) for declaration of
calories on the menu or menu board,
when self-service food or food on
display is listed on the menu or menu
board.
We acknowledge that there may be
space limitations on signs used for selfservice food (including valves used for
self-service beverages) and foods on
display. As already discussed in section
XVII.B, we have revised
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A) to provide more
options for the declaration of calories
for self-service food and food on
display, including the use of additional
signs, signs attached to a sneeze guard,
or a single sign or placard listing the
calorie information for several standard
menu items that are self-service or on
display provided that certain conditions
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are met. These options provide
additional flexibility for a covered
establishment that offers self-service
foods, including self-service beverages,
to declare the calories in a manner that
works best for it. For example, a covered
establishment has an option to declare
the calories on a sign separate from the
sign containing the food’s name and
price, provided the calories are clearly
associated with the particular food item.
Doing so would no longer link the type
size requirements for a self-service
beverage to those for the name of the
beverage. As a result, we have revised
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(3)(ii) to provide
that if a calorie declaration for a selfservice food or food on display is
provided on a sign that includes the
food’s name, price, or both, the calorie
declaration, accompanied by the term
‘‘Calories’’ or ‘‘Cal’’ and the amount of
the serving or displayed food item on
which the calorie declaration is based,
must be in a type size no smaller than
the type size of the name or price of the
food, whichever is smaller, in the same
color, or a color that is at least as
conspicuous as that used for the name
or price, using the same contrasting
background, or a background at least as
contrasting.
(Comment 127) One comment
addressed the different proposed
requirement for self-service food and
food on display depending on whether
the food is already accompanied by a
sign with the food’s name, price, or
both. If the food is already accompanied
by such a sign, the comment said that
the proposed provision would be
prescriptive with respect to type size,
color, and contrast requirements for the
calorie declarations, whereas if the food
is not already accompanied by such a
sign, the proposed provision would be
less prescriptive by merely requiring
that calorie declarations be ‘‘clear and
conspicuous.’’ The comment asked us to
revise the rule to establish the less
prescriptive requirement that the calorie
information be clear and conspicuous
regardless of whether the food is
accompanied by a sign with the name or
price of the food. The comment
considered that a prescriptive
requirement linked to type size, color,
and contrast requirements of the food’s
name, price, or both would be
misleading because it would imply that
the number of calories in a food, which
is just one attribute of the food, is as
important as the name of a food.
One comment stated that the type size
of calorie declarations should be no
smaller than the name or price,
whichever is larger. Another comment
stated that the calories for food on
display should be permitted to be
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displayed in a font that is smaller than
the font size of the name of the menu
item. (By ‘‘menu item,’’ we assume that
the comment means the food’s name,
price, or both.) One comment suggested
that the provision be revised to include
‘‘The calorie information on the sign
must be readable from the point where
consumers are choosing their food, and
it must be readily apparent which sign
labels which item, both by proximity
and by including the name of the
product on the sign.’’
(Response 127) We disagree that we
should require the type size of the
calorie declaration for food on display
to be no smaller than the type size of the
name or price, whichever is larger. All
other requirements of this rule that
anchor a type size to information
already presented to consumers allow a
covered establishment to use a type size
no smaller than (rather than no larger
than) the type size of the information
already presented, and the comment
provided no basis for why the rule
should have a different standard for
calorie declarations on signs for food on
display and self-service food.
We also disagree that calories for food
on display and self-service food should
be permitted to be displayed in a font
that is smaller than the font size of the
name or price of the menu item.
Because consumers need to see the
name and price to place an order,
anchoring the type size of the calorie
declaration to the type size of
information already on the sign acts, in
essence, as an objective and measurable
performance standard for whether a
disclosure is clear, conspicuous, and
prominent. Thus, we do not agree that
a smaller type size should be used for
the calorie declaration, because doing so
would no longer provide for such an
objective and measurable performance
standard. Therefore, we are retaining the
type size requirements for the calorie
declaration for food on display and selfservice food that are already
accompanied by individual signs.
However, to be consistent with changes
we are making to other provisions of the
rule, we have revised
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(3)(ii) to provide
additional flexibility for the contrasting
background of the calorie declaration by
permitting the calorie declaration to be
in a background at least as contrasting
as that used for the name or price of the
menu item. We also are making a
conforming editorial change to the
grammatical construction of the
requirement for the color used for the
calorie declaration to match the
grammatical construction of the revised
requirement for the contrasting
background used for the calorie
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declaration. We also are making an
editorial correction to insert ‘‘the type
size of’’ between ‘‘no smaller than’’ and
‘‘the name or price.’’
No comments suggested specific
formatting requirements for calorie
declarations when there are no preexisting signs with the name or price of
the food to which the calorie declaration
can be anchored. Covered
establishments have the flexibility to
post the calorie information in a manner
that ensures that it is clear,
conspicuous, and prominent.
3. Manner of Declaring Calories for SelfService Beverages
In the proposed rule, we stated that
the self-service beverage dispenser itself
must have calorie declarations for each
flavor or variety offered, such that the
calorie declaration is clearly associated
with its corresponding flavor or variety
(76 FR 19192 at 19216). We received
comment on calorie declarations for
self-service beverages. After considering
these comments, we are adding a new
provision to require, for self-service
beverages, that calorie declarations be
accompanied by the term ‘‘fluid
ounces’’ and, if applicable, the
description of the cup size (e.g.,
‘‘small,’’ ‘‘medium’’).
(Comment 128) A few comments
recommended that calories be posted at
self-service fountain dispensers for each
beverage size offered in the covered
establishment. One comment asked us
to permit a sign or placard placed
adjacent to a fountain beverage machine
to separate calorie ranges for specific
subcategories, e.g., regular soda, diet
soda, milk, coffees, teas, juice by cup
size. A few comments recommended
that calorie declarations should provide
the amount of calories as a range per
size.
(Response 128) We agree that calories
must be posted at self-service fountain
dispensers for each beverage size offered
in the covered establishment. As noted
previously, section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii) of
the FD&C Act requires covered
establishments to place adjacent to each
standard menu item that is a self-service
food or food on display, including selfservice beverages, a sign that lists
calories per displayed food item or per
serving. As already discussed (see
section XVII.B), § 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)
provides several options for where and
how a covered establishment could
place a sign or placard.
Earlier in this document, we
discussed another comment directed to
the declaration of calories for selfservice beverages (see Comment 126 and
Response 126). A self-service standard
menu item, including a self-service
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beverage, is subject to § 101.11(b)(2)(i)
(in addition to § 101.11(b)(2)(iii)) when
such food is listed on a menu or menu
board (see Comment 116 and Response
116). The format requirements for
variable menu items in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4) through
(b)(2)(i)(A)(7) would apply to calorie
declarations on a menu or menu board.
Accordingly, to the extent that selfservice beverages offered for sale in
different flavors or varieties are listed as
single menu items on menus or menu
boards (e.g., ‘‘soft drinks’’), a covered
establishment would be required to
declare calories on such menus and
menu boards for such foods using the
same methods applicable to other
variable menu items, including ranges,
as specified in § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4)
through (b)(2)(i)(A)(8). However, at the
point of self-service, a self-service
beverage would be subject to the
requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii)
of the FD&C Act and § 101.11(b)(2)(iii).
For a standard menu item that is a selfservice food, such as a self-service
beverage, section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii) of the
FD&C Act requires the covered
establishment to ‘‘place adjacent to each
food offered a sign that lists the calories
per displayed food item or per serving.’’
Typically, a self-service fountain
beverage machine separately dispenses
each flavor or variety of beverage from
individual valves or dispensers that list
the flavor or variety of the beverage
(such as orange soda, cola, diet cola),
and the consumer can see what beverage
flavors and varieties are available.
Otherwise, consumers would not be
able to determine which flavor or
variety of beverage is dispensed from a
particular valve or dispenser at the selfservice fountain beverage machine.
Because these self-service beverages
typically are presented in a manner that
allows consumers to see each beverage
individually, as well as the other
beverages available, including other
beverages offered in different flavors or
varieties, the way in which these
standard menu items are offered for sale
is not analogous to standard menu items
that come in different flavors or
varieties but are listed as a single menu
item on a menu or menu board. Further,
because consumers can see flavor or
variety of self-service beverage offered
for sale, the consumer should also be
able to see the number of calories
contained in each flavor or variety
offered for sale at the self-service
machine. For these reasons, calories
must be declared for each specific flavor
or type of beverage available at a selfservice machine rather than declared as
a range.
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(Comment 129) A few comments
recommended that covered
establishment should declare the
amount of calories for self-service
beverages based on the number of
ounces served. A few other comments
opposed declaring the number of
calories per ounces served. These
comments contended that it is more
practical to estimate the size of a
beverage with a household measure
than to guess the ounces without
measuring the beverage. The comments
maintained that calories per ounce
would be confusing. One comment
stated that there is not enough space on
menus for declaring the number of
calories per ounce served.
(Response 129) We disagree that
declaring calories based on the volume
in fluid ounces for self-service
beverages, as required by
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(2)(iii) of the final
rule, would be overly confusing. Fluid
ounces are commonly used to describe
the volume of beverages in packaged
food sold in the United States and, thus,
consumers who purchase beverages
likely would be familiar with ‘‘fluid
ounces’’ in the context of beverages.
Further, as discussed previously (see
Response 125),
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(2)(iii) of the final
rule specifies that, for self-service
beverages, ‘‘per serving’’ means per total
number of fluid ounces in the cup in
which a self-service beverage is served
and, if applicable, the description of the
cup size (e.g., ‘‘140 calories per 12 fluid
ounces (small)’’). As an operational
companion to
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(2)(iii), we also are
establishing in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(3)(iii) of the final
rule specific format requirements
applicable to the declaration of calories
for self-service beverages. Section
101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(3)(iii) of the final
rule requires that, for self-service
beverages, calorie declarations must be
accompanied by the term ‘‘fluid
ounces’’ and, if applicable, the
description of the cup size (e.g.,
‘‘small,’’ ‘‘medium’’). For example,
calories could be declared as ‘‘small
Orange Fizz (12 fluid ounces)—150
calories.’’ Accordingly, the calorie
declaration will provide information
regarding the number of fluid ounces
served, and in some cases, the size of
the cup, along with the number of
calories. Typically, self-service
beverages are offered for sale, including
listed or otherwise separated by price,
based on size (e.g., ‘‘small—$1.59,’’ ‘‘12
ounces—$1.59’’), and the sizes are
described using general descriptors (e.g.,
‘‘small,’’ ‘‘medium,’’ or ‘‘large,’’) or by
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fluid ounces. Therefore, in such
situations, consumers will have further
context regarding the number of fluid
ounces served in a self-service beverage,
and, in some cases, the size of the cup.
F. Applicability of Requirements for
Written Nutrition Information, Succinct
Statement, and Statement of
Availability to Self-Service Foods and
Foods on Display
In the proposed rule, we tentatively
concluded that covered establishments
must provide written nutrition
information for self-service foods and
foods on display that are standard menu
items as required by section
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act (76
FR 19192 at 19216).
(Comment 130) One comment argued
that applying certain requirements of
section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii) of the FD&C Act
to self-service food and food on display
is not a reasonable construction of the
statute, given that calorie disclosure
requirements for self-service food and
food on display appear ‘‘in a wholly
different subclause.’’ The comment
asserted that because the ‘‘subclause’’
(section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii)) of the FD&C
Act) does not require additional written
nutrition information or a succinct
statement concerning suggested daily
caloric intake and section
403(q)(5)(H)(ii) of the FD&C Act does,
Congress deliberately omitted those
requirements from section
403(q)(5)(H)(iii) of the FD&C Act. The
comment argued that, given that every
word excluded from a statute must be
presumed to have been excluded
intentionally, it is not permissible to
interpret the statute to require covered
establishments to provide additional
written nutrition information and a
succinct statement concerning suggested
daily caloric intake for self-service food
and food on display.
(Response 130) We agree in part, and
disagree in part, with the comment. As
we discussed in the proposed rule and
Response 116, section 403(q)(5)(H)(i) of
the FD&C Act states, ‘‘in the case of food
that is a standard menu item . . . [the
covered] establishment shall disclose
the information described in subclauses
(ii) and (iii)’’ (emphasis added). The
word ‘‘and’’ between the references to
subclauses (ii) and (iii), as opposed to a
disjunctive ‘‘or,’’ indicates that covered
establishments must follow the
requirements in subclause (ii) for all
standard menu items, as applicable, and
subclause (iii) for all standard menu
items, as applicable.
We acknowledge that a principle of
statutory interpretation is that ‘‘where
Congress includes particular language in
one section of a statute but omits it in
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another section of the same [statute], it
is generally presumed that Congress acts
intentionally and purposely in the
disparate inclusion or exclusion.’’
Russello v. U.S., 464 U.S. 16, 23 (1983)
(internal citations omitted). We
considered this principle when
interpreting section 403(q)(5)(H) of the
FD&C Act. Section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of
the FD&C Act—the section requiring
additional written nutrition
information—omits certain important
words. Sections 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I), (II),
and (IV) of the FD&C Act specify that
certain disclosures must appear ‘‘on the
menu,’’ ‘‘on the menu board,’’ and ‘‘on
the menu or menu board,’’ respectively.
Section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C
Act does not mention menus or menu
boards at all. Because section
403(q)(5)(H)(i) of the FD&C Act states
that covered establishments must
disclose the information in section
403(q)(5)(H)(ii) and (iii) of the FD&C Act
for standard menu items, it is reasonable
to apply section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of
the FD&C Act to standard menu items,
regardless of whether they appear on
menus or menu boards. Therefore, the
rule requires that covered
establishments provide the additional
written nutrition information described
in section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the
FD&C Act for all standard menu items,
including self-service food and food on
display regardless of whether such
standard menu items appear on menus
or menu boards.
We agree that the succinct statement
concerning suggested daily caloric
intake is required only on menus or
menu boards, based on the plain
language of sections
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I)(bb) and
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(II)(bb) of the FD&C Act.
Similarly, the statement of availability
of the written nutrition information is
only required on menus or menu
boards, based on the plain language of
section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(IV) of the FD&C
Act.
We discuss the specific requirements
related to the succinct statement and
statement of availability for self-service
food and food on display in the next
section. We discuss the specific
requirements related to the written
nutrition information for self-service
food and food on display in section
XVII.H.
G. Succinct Statement and Statement of
Availability for Self-Service Foods and
Foods on Display
Proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(B) would
require that for food on display
identified by a menu (meaning an
identifying sign) adjacent to the food
itself, the statement that puts the calorie
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information in the context of a
recommended total daily caloric intake
as required by § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B) and
the statement regarding the availability
of the additional written nutrition
information required by
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C) must be provided in
one of two ways. Proposed
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(B) would permit these
two statements to appear either on the
sign adjacent to the standard menu item
or on a separate, larger sign, in close
proximity to the food on display, that
can be easily read as the consumer is
making order selections. Proposed
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(B) would explain that
this requirement is satisfied if the two
statements appear on a large menu
board that can be easily read as the
consumer is viewing the food on
display.
In the following paragraphs, we
discuss comments on this proposed
provision. After considering these
comments, we have revised the
provision to clarify that the
requirements to provide the statement
that puts the calorie information in the
context of a recommended total daily
caloric intake (also referred to as the
‘‘succinct statement’’) and the statement
of availability for foods on display apply
to all types of food on display, including
those that are self-service. Further, we
are also providing further flexibility for
how to satisfy those requirements.
(Comment 131) In the proposed rule,
we noted that signs identifying food on
display placed adjacent to such foods
meet the definition of a ‘‘menu’’ or
‘‘menu board’’ within the meaning of
section 403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of the FD&C Act,
in that such signs are the primary
writings of the establishment from
which consumers make order selections
(76 FR 19192 at 19217). Further, we
noted that, as a result, the requirements
to disclose the succinct statement and
statement of availability on menus and
menu boards under sections
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I)(bb), (II)(bb), and (IV)
of the FD&C Act would apply to such
small signs (76 FR 19192 at 19217).
However, we noted that the
requirements to post the statements on
small signs seem to pose difficulties
given the size of such signs, and from
a consumer’s perspective, it is probably
unnecessary for the two statements to
appear on every single individual
identifying sign.
Taking these issues into
consideration, along with the space on
small signs that constitute menus and
menu boards, as provided in section
403(q)(5)(H)(x) of the FD&C Act, we
tentatively concluded that each
individual sign could be considered its
own menu, but that a set of signs that
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are in close proximity to each other,
such as those that might identify items
in a bakery display counter, could be
viewed together as the primary writing
from which consumers choose among
those items to order (76 FR 19192 at
19217). As a result, we proposed in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(B) that covered
establishments may place the succinct
statement and statement of availability
on individual specific signs or on a
separate, larger sign, in close proximity
to food on display, that can be easily
read as the consumer is making his or
her order selection (76 FR 19192 at
19217). In addition, we tentatively
concluded that signs identifying food on
display that are the primary writing
from which consumers select the
corresponding items to order and are in
close proximity to the menu board, such
that the menu board can be easily read
as the consumer is viewing the food on
display, could be considered part of that
menu board.
One comment asserted that menu
boards, tags, and other signs within an
establishment are used by consumers to
identify standard menu items and make
order selections. The comment argued,
however, that tags or other signs should
not be considered menus or menu
boards because a menu board lists
multiple items from which a consumer
can make an order selection.
One comment argued that if the
succinct statement and statement of
availability already appeared on a menu
board, they should not have to appear
again on signs adjacent or in close
proximity to self-service foods or foods
on display. The comment stated that the
final rule should provide that posting
the statement of availability and the
succinct statement on the menu board of
the covered establishment is sufficient
to inform consumers who are selecting
food on display and self-service food.
(Response 131) We agree that an
individual small sign adjacent to a selfservice food or food on display that
contains the name (or image) and price
of a standard menu item, and that can
be used by a consumer to make an order
selection from the establishment at the
time the consumer is viewing the sign
would meet the definition of a menu or
menu board within the meaning of
section 403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of the FD&C Act.
As a result, the requirements of sections
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I)(bb), (II)(bb), and (IV)
of the FD&C Act for a succinct statement
and statement of availability apply to
such signs. However, as we noted in the
proposed rule, the obligation to provide
the succinct statement and statement of
availability on every individual small
sign likely would pose difficulties given
the small size of these individual signs,
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71227
and it likely would not be necessary,
from a consumer’s perspective, for the
two statements to appear on every
individual sign (76 FR 19192 at 19217).
Considering these factors and the
limited space on these individual small
signs that constitute menus or menu
boards, as described by section
403(q)(5)(H)(x)(II) of the FD&C Act, we
conclude that, while each individual
sign could be considered its own menu,
a set of signs that are in close proximity
to each other could also be viewed
together as the primary writing from
which consumers choose among items
in making order selections. Further, we
conclude that a covered establishment
can satisfy the requirements for posting
a succinct statement and statement of
availability for self-service foods and
foods on display by posting such
statements on the individual sign
adjacent to the food itself, on a separate,
larger sign, in close proximity to the
food that can be easily read as the
consumer is making an order selection,
or on a large menu board that can be
easily read as the consumer is ordering
the food. Accordingly, we are retaining
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(B) and making
revisions for clarity. We have revised
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(B) to clarify that the
provision applies to food that is selfservice or on display and is identified
by an individual sign adjacent to the
food itself where such sign meets the
definition of a menu or menu board
under paragraph (a) of this section. As
an inadvertent error, proposed
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(B) opened with the
clause ‘‘For food on display’’ and did
not specifically identify food that is selfservice as being covered by the
proposed requirements for providing the
succinct statement and statement of
availability on signs that are menus. As
a practical matter, food that is ‘‘selfservice’’ is ‘‘on display’’ and, thus, the
requirements apply to ‘‘self-service
food’’ regardless of whether ‘‘selfservice food’’ is specified or not.
Comments that addressed proposed
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(B) from the
perspective of both food on display and
self-service food implicitly
acknowledged that self-service foods
would be subject to proposed
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(B). Moreover,
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(B) is a subparagraph
of § 101.11(b)(2)(iii), which establishes
requirements for ‘‘food that is selfservice or on display.’’ For clarity, and
to ensure that covered establishments
are aware that § 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(B) and
the flexibility it provides applies to selfservice foods identified by a menu
adjacent to the food itself, we have
revised the opening clause of
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§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(B) to read ‘‘For food
that is self-service or on display . . .’’
We also are making associated edits
throughout the provision to remove any
narrow reference only to food that is on
display.
H. The Written Nutrition Information
That Must Be Provided for Food That Is
Self-Service or on Display
Proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(C) would
require that the nutrition information in
written form required by
§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii) be provided for food
that is self-service or on display, except
for packaged food that bears nutrition
labeling information required by § 101.9
if the packaged food, including its label,
can be examined by a consumer before
purchasing the food. In the following
paragraphs, we discuss comments on
this proposed provision. After
considering these comments, we have
revised § 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(C) to clarify
the regulatory requirements that apply
to the nutrition labeling information on
the packaged food.
(Comment 132) One comment asked
us to provide more detail on what
format establishments may use to
provide the written nutrition
information for foods on display and
self-service food to ensure that the
information is readily available and
easily readable.
(Response 132) Section
101.11(b)(2)(ii) both requires that
written nutrition information be
available for standard menu items and
establishes format requirements for that
written nutrition information. With one
exception, the format requirements of
§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii) apply to standard
menu items that are self-service food or
food on display. See § 101.11(b)(2)(ii)
and the discussion of § 101.11(b)(2)(ii)
in section XVI. The exception is for
packaged foods, insofar as they bear
nutrition labeling required by section
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act and
§ 101.11(b)(ii)(2)(D). We discuss this
exception further in Response 133.
(Comment 133) Two comments asked
us to broaden the exception in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(C) for packaged food
in compliance with § 101.9, regardless
of whether the nutrition information can
be examined prior to purchase. One
comment pointed out that some
packaged confectioneries may be placed
near the cash register in a covered
establishment. The comment stated that
these confectioneries may be exempt
from the nutrition labeling requirements
of § 101.9 because they have fewer than
12 square inches of available label space
or may be in gift packages. This
comment stated that if a food is subject
to and in compliance with § 101.9, it
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should not also be subject to § 101.11.
The comment maintained that a food
should be required to comply with one
nutrition labeling regulation or the
other, but not both. Another comment
stated that some foods, such as food in
small packages, foods with insignificant
amounts of all the nutrients required on
the labels of packaged food (e.g., bottled
water) and foods sold in gift packages,
which may provide the nutrition
information inside the box or package,
should be exempt from the menu
labeling requirements even though their
nutrient content cannot be examined by
consumers prior to purchase. The
comment also stated that if these foods
included front of package labeling, they
would lose the exemption from
nutrition labeling.
(Response 133) Section 403(q)(5)(H) of
the FD&C Act does not establish any
new requirements regarding the labels
of packaged food. Furthermore, to
clarify that the requirements of § 101.11
do not affect the exemptions from
nutrition labeling under § 101.9(j)(2)
and (j)(3), we proposed conforming
amendments to § 101.9(j)(2) and (j)(3).
As discussed in the proposed rule, the
NLEA amendments to the FD&C Act
included an exemption, at sections
403(q)(5)(A)(i) and (ii) of the FD&C Act,
for nutrition labeling for food that is
‘‘served in restaurants or other
establishments in which food is served
for immediate human consumption’’ or
‘‘sold for sale or use in such
establishments’’ (76 FR 19192 at 19193
(citing 21 U.S.C. 343(q)(5)(A)(i)). The
NLEA amendments also included an
exemption for food of the type described
in section 403(q)(5)(A)(i) of the FD&C
Act that is primarily processed and
prepared in a retail establishment, ready
for human consumption, ‘‘offered for
sale to consumers but not for immediate
human consumption in such
establishment and which is not offered
for sale outside such establishment.’’ (21
U.S.C. 343(q)(5)(A)(ii)). We issued
regulations for these exemptions at
§ 101.9(j)(2) and (j)(3); however, these
exemptions were contingent on there
being no nutrient content claims or
other nutrition information in any
context on the labeling or in the labeling
or advertising. As discussed in section
IV.B, we are finalizing the conforming
amendments to § 101.9(j)(2) and (j)(3).
Likewise, as discussed in section IV.B,
we also have made a conforming
amendment to § 101.9(j)(4), which
applies to foods that contain
insignificant amounts of nutrients and
food components required to be
included in the declaration on nutrition
information under § 101.9(c). As a
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result, a food that is exempt from the
requirements of § 101.9 under
§ 101.9(j)(2), (j)(3), and (j)(4) would not
fall out of such exemption by complying
with the requirements of § 101.11. We
also note that, for a standard menu item
that contains insignificant amounts of
all of the nutrients required in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(A), including, if
applicable, a packaged food, a covered
establishment generally would not be
required to provide written nutrition
information for that standard menu item
(see § 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)).
Section 101.11 does not change the
food label requirements under
§ 101.9(h)(3) for food products with
separately packaged ingredients or foods
where a package contains a variety of
foods, or an assortment of foods, and is
in a form intended to be used as a gift.
Similarly, § 101.11 does not change the
exception at § 101.9(j)(13)(i) for foods in
small packages that have a total surface
area of less than 12 square inches of
available label space. To the extent that
such foods are offered for sale in
covered establishments, they generally
would fall within the exceptions at
§ 101.9(j)(2) and (j)(3); when this is the
case, the conforming amendments to
§ 101.9(j)(2) and (j)(3) would preserve
the pre-existing exemptions under
§ 101.9 for such foods.
While section 403(q)(5)(H) of the
FD&C Act does not establish any new
requirements regarding the labels of
packaged food, there may be some
situations in which a covered
establishment (rather than the
manufacturer of a packaged food) must
disclose nutrition information for a food
on display or a self-service food that is
a packaged food, such as a packaged
food that is offered for sale at a cash
register in a covered establishment. For
example, if a standard menu item, such
as a package of chips, is on display (e.g.,
a package of chips that is part of a
combination meal or listed individually
on a menu or menu board and is
available at a cash register), the covered
establishment would be required to post
a calorie declaration on a sign adjacent
to the package of chips and provide
written nutrition information for the
package of chips unless the label for the
chips bears calorie and certain other
nutrition information and can be
examined by the consumer prior to
purchase. Further, the covered
establishment would be required to post
a calorie declaration for the package of
chips on a menu and menu board to the
extent the package of chips is listed on
such menu and menu board.
In the proposed rule, we tentatively
concluded that a packaged food that is
self-service or food on display that bears
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nutrition information required by
section 403(q)(1) of the FD&C Act and
§ 101.9 satisfies the calorie disclosure
requirement for self-service food or food
on display in section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii) of
the FD&C Act and the written nutrition
information requirement of section
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act (see
76 FR 19192 at 19217 and 19235). In
addition, we tentatively concluded that,
in such a situation, a covered
establishment would still be required to
post calorie declarations on menus and
menu boards for packaged foods that are
standard menu items and are listed on
such menus and menu boards (e.g.,
where ‘‘chips’’ is listed on a menu board
and refers to packaged bags of chips that
are available as self-service foods or
foods on display) (76 FR 19192 at
19217). We affirm these conclusions;
however, we have revised the exception
at § 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(C).
Under proposed § 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(C),
self-service food and food on display
would be subject to the written nutrition
information requirement of
§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii), except for packaged
food that bears nutrition labeling
information required by § 101.9 if the
packaged food can be examined by a
consumer before purchasing. In
response to comments regarding a food
that is in compliance with § 101.9 but
does not otherwise bear nutrition
labeling, we have revised the exception
at § 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(C) to clarify in
relevant part that a covered
establishment is not required to provide
the written nutrition information in
§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii) for a packaged food,
insofar as that packaged food bears the
nutrition information specified in
section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C
Act and the written nutrition
information requirements of
§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii). For example, if the
package of chips described previously
includes Nutrition Facts information,
including the nutrition information
specified in section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III)
of the FD&C Act and § 101.11(b)(2)(ii), a
covered establishment would not be
required to provide written nutrition
information for the chips as required by
§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii), provided that the
packaged food, including its label, can
be examined by a consumer before
purchasing the food. However, if the
package of chips does not bear the
nutrition information specified in
section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C
Act and § 101.11(b)(2)(ii) (e.g., because
it is exempt from the nutrition label
requirements of § 101.9, such as a food
in a small package that has fewer than
12 square inches of available label space
as provided by § 101.9(j)(13)), the
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covered establishment would be
required to provide written nutrition
information for the chips as required by
§ 101.11(b)(2)(ii). Moreover, if the
package of chips does not bear the
nutrition information specified in
section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C
Act and § 101.11(b)(2)(ii), the food
would not satisfy the calorie disclosure
requirement for self-service food or food
on display in section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii) of
the FD&C Act, and the covered
establishment would be required to
disclose the number of calories
contained in the package of chips on a
sign adjacent to the food, in accordance
with § 101.11(b)(2)(iii). In either
situation, the establishment would be
required to post a calorie declaration for
the package of chips on the menu and
menu board to the extent the package of
chips is listed on such menu and menu
board, as required by § 101.11(b)(2)(i).
XVIII. Comments and FDA Response on
Proposed § 101.11(c)(1) to (c)(5)—
Determination of Nutrient Content
(Final § 101.11(c)(1) to (c)(2))
Under section 403(q)(5)(H)(iv) of the
FD&C Act, a covered establishment
must have a reasonable basis for its
nutrient content disclosures, including
nutrient databases, cookbooks,
laboratory analyses, and other
reasonable means, as described in
§ 101.10. Proposed § 101.11(c)(1) would
establish this reasonable basis
requirement in this rule.
In addition, proposed § 101.11(c)(2),
(c)(3), (c)(4), and (c)(5) would establish
requirements for determining
compliance with proposed
§ 101.11(c)(1). As discussed in the
proposed rule, because the nutrition
information that is required to be
disclosed by covered establishments is a
subset of the nutrition information
required in § 101.9, we modeled
proposed § 101.11(c)(2), (c)(3), (c)(4),
and (c)(5) after our regulation for
compliance with the nutrition labeling
requirements for packaged foods in
§ 101.9(g) (76 FR 19192 at 19218). In
brief, for purposes of compliance,
proposed § 101.11(c)(2), (c)(3), (c)(4),
and (c)(5) would establish the following:
• Proposed § 101.11(c)(2) would
define two classes of nutrients. ‘‘Class I’’
nutrients would be ‘‘added’’ nutrients
and ‘‘Class II’’ nutrients would be
‘‘naturally occurring’’ (indigenous)
nutrients in standard menu items;
• Proposed § 101.11(c)(3) would
establish conditions under which a
standard menu item with a nutrient
declaration of protein, total
carbohydrate, or dietary fiber would be
deemed to be misbranded under section
403(a) of the FD&C Act, including a
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71229
requirement that, for Class II protein,
total carbohydrate, or dietary fiber, the
nutrient content of an appropriate
composite of a standard menu item not
be less than 80 percent of the declared
value;
• Proposed § 101.11(c)(4) would
establish conditions under which a
standard menu item with a nutrient
declaration of calories, sugars, total fat,
saturated fat, trans fat, cholesterol, or
sodium would be deemed to be
misbranded under section 403(a) of the
FD&C Act, including a requirement that
the nutrient content of an appropriate
composite of a standard menu item not
be more than 20 percent in excess of the
declared value; and
• Proposed § 101.11(c)(5) would
allow for reasonable excesses of protein,
total carbohydrate, dietary fiber and
reasonable deficiencies of calories,
sugars, total fat, saturated fat, trans fat,
cholesterol, or sodium.
Comments commonly referred to the
combined provisions of proposed
§ 101.11(c)(3) and (c)(4) as ‘‘the 80/120
rule.’’
In the following paragraphs, we
discuss comments on proposed
§ 101.11(c)(1), (c)(2), (c)(3), (c)(4), and
(c)(5). After considering these
comments, we are:
• Finalizing § 101.11(c)(1) with
several changes and making a
companion change to the substantiation
requirements of proposed § 101.11(c)(6)
(which is being established in
§ 101.11(c)(3));
• Replacing proposed § 101.11(c)(2),
(c)(3), (c)(4), and(c)(5) with a new
§ 101.11(c)(2); and
• Establishing revised certification
requirements (in § 101.11(c)(3)(i)(G),
(c)(3)(ii)(D), (c)(3)(iii)(E), and
(c)(4)(iv)(E)) directed to reasonable steps
that a covered establishment takes to
ensure that the method of preparation
(e.g., types and amounts of ingredients
in the recipe, cooking temperatures) and
amount of a standard menu item offered
for sale adhere to the factors on which
the nutrient values were determined.
(Comment 134) One comment
asserted that the menu labeling
requirements would have an impact on
the manufacturers of foods sold to
covered establishments, because
covered establishments would look to
the food manufacturers to supply them
with the nutrition information that the
covered establishments must provide to
consumers. For the most part, food
manufacturers do not currently provide
restaurants and similar retail food
establishments with this information.
The comment maintained that some
manufacturers may elect to provide the
nutrition information in inserts and
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other forms of labeling, which will
require development of guidelines on
how the nutrition information should be
provided to restaurant customers.
One comment asked us to consider
nutritional information provided by a
producer to a covered establishment to
be a reasonable basis for the covered
establishment’s nutrition declarations.
Another comment maintained that
because food suppliers are not required
to provide nutrition information to
retailers, compliance with the rule will
be challenging for covered
establishments. The comment asked us
to consider requiring suppliers to
provide nutrition information to
covered establishments.
(Response 134) The nutrition labeling
provisions of this rule only apply to
covered establishments as specified in
§ 101.11(a). Section 4205 of the ACA
does not require distributors of food
sold to covered establishments to
provide nutrition information to those
establishments. In addition, section
4205 of the ACA did not remove or
amend section 403(q)(5)(G) of the FD&C
Act, which provides that the nutrition
labeling requirements of section
403(q)(1) through (4) of the FD&C Act do
not apply to ‘‘food which is sold by a
food distributor if the distributor
principally sells food to restaurants and
other establishments in which food is
served for immediate human
consumption and does not manufacture,
process, or repackage the food it sells.’’
Accordingly, this rule does not require
distributors of food sold to covered
establishments to provide nutrition
information to covered establishments.
Nevertheless, we have revised
§ 101.11(c)(1), in relevant part, to
expressly specify that the use of
Nutrition Facts on labels on packaged
foods that comply with the nutrition
labeling requirements of section
403(q)(1) of the FD&C Act and § 101.9 is
an additional means that may be used
as a reasonable basis to determine
nutrient values.
We encourage cooperation between
food distributors and covered
establishments so that covered
establishments are able to efficiently
comply with the requirements of this
rule. We would consider nutrition
information otherwise provided by food
distributors to covered establishments
for food sold by such distributors to be
captured within the provision that
nutrient values may be determined by
using ‘‘other reasonable means’’
provided that such nutrition
information is truthful and not
misleading and otherwise in compliance
with the requirements of sections
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403(a)(1) and (q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act
and § 101.11.
We also have revised § 101.11(c)(1) to
include another example of ‘‘other
reasonable means’’—i.e., FDA nutrient
values for raw fruits and vegetables in
Appendix C of part 101 and FDA
nutrient values for cooked fish in
Appendix D of part 101. We developed
this nutrition information to encourage
retail stores that sell raw fruits,
vegetables, and cooked fish to
participate in the voluntary point-ofpurchase nutrition program (§§ 101.42
through 101.45).
(Comment 135) Many comments
agreed that a covered establishment
must have a reasonable basis for its
nutrient content disclosures and the
means for determining them, which
include nutrient databases, cookbooks,
laboratory analyses, and other
reasonable means, as described in
§ 101.10. Some comments suggested that
we replace the language in proposed
§ 101.11(c) with the language in
§ 101.13(q)(5)(ii). Section 101.13(q)(5)
sets forth requirements for nutrient
content claims for food served in
restaurants or other establishments in
which food is served for immediate
consumption or which is sold for sale or
use in such establishments. Section
101.13(q)(5)(ii) provides that for
nutrient content claims made for such
food, in lieu of analytical testing,
compliance may be determined using a
reasonable basis for concluding that the
food that bears the claim meets the
definition for the claim. It continues by
stating that this reasonable basis may
derive from recognized databases for
raw and processed foods, recipes, and
other means to compute nutrient levels
in the foods or meals and may be used
provided reasonable steps are taken to
ensure that the method of preparation
adheres to the factors on which the
reasonable basis was determined (e.g.,
types and amounts of ingredients,
cooking temperatures). Furthermore,
according to § 101.13(q)(5)(ii), firms
making claims on foods based on this
reasonable basis criterion are required to
provide to appropriate regulatory
officials on request the specific
information on which their
determination is based and reasonable
assurance of operational adherence to
the preparation methods or other basis
for the claim.
(Response 135) We agree that some
aspects of § 101.13(c)(5)(ii) that we did
not include in § 101.11(c) should be
added to the rule. In particular,
§ 101.13(c)(5)(ii) requires that
reasonable steps be taken to ensure that
the method of preparation adheres to
the factors on which the reasonable
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basis was determined (e.g., types and
amounts of ingredients, cooking
temperatures) when the reasonable basis
for a nutrient disclosure is derived using
databases for raw and processed foods,
recipes, or other means (e.g., means
other than analytical testing). As
discussed later in this document (see
Comment 136), several comments
opposed our proposal for using a
compliance approach for determining
compliance modeled after § 101.9(g) and
some comments discussed the problems
that can occur when the preparation of
a menu item does not adhere to a recipe
or deviates from the parameters used as
the reasonable basis. In Response 136,
we discuss the provisions of
§ 101.11(c)(2) that we are establishing in
this rule in lieu of the provisions of
proposed § 101.11(c)(2), (c)(3), (c)(4),
and (c)(5) that were modeled after
§ 101.9(g). Those new provisions
specify, in relevant part, that a covered
establishment must take reasonable
steps to ensure that the method of
preparation (e.g., types and amounts of
ingredients, cooking temperatures) and
amount of a standard menu item offered
for sale adhere to the factors on which
its nutrient values were determined.
We also agree that § 101.11(c) should
require, among other things, that a
covered establishment provide to FDA
on request specific information about
the basis for its nutrient declarations
and reasonable assurance of operational
adherence to the preparation methods
used as the basis for its nutrient
declarations. As discussed in Response
136, we have revised the rule to
establish these requirements.
We disagree that § 101.11(c) need
specify that a reasonable basis may
derive from recognized databases for
raw and processed foods, recipes, and
other means to compute nutrient levels
in the foods or meals ‘‘in lieu of
analytical testing.’’ Proposed
§ 101.11(c)(1) already provides for the
use of databases, cookbooks, and ‘‘other
reasonable means’’ in addition to
analytical testing. However, we
acknowledge that this may not have
been clear in part because we used the
conjunction ‘‘and’’ in proposed
§ 101.11(c)(1). To make clear that any of
the listed means for determining
nutrient content may be used, we have
revised § 101.11(c)(1) to replace the
conjunction ‘‘and’’ with the conjunction
‘‘or’’ in the second sentence.
As a companion change, we have
revised proposed § 101.11(c)(6)(iv)(A)
(which is renumbered as
§ 101.11(c)(3)(iv)(A) in the final rule),
which addresses the information that
must be provided to FDA, within a
reasonable period of time upon request,
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when ‘‘other reasonable means are used
to provide the nutrition information.’’
To emphasize that ‘‘other reasonable
means’’ does not require analytical
testing, § 101.11(c)(3)(iv)(A)) now
requires a detailed description of the
‘‘means’’ (rather than the ‘‘method’’)
used to determine the nutrition
information.
We are finalizing § 101.11(c)(1) with
the following additional changes:
• We are substituting the term
‘‘nutrient declarations’’ for the term
‘‘nutrient disclosures’’ for consistency
in terms used throughout § 101.11. For
example, § 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A) establishes
requirements to ‘‘declare’’ calories, and
§ 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(3) refers to calorie
‘‘declarations.’’
• We are clarifying that nutrient
databases may be used to determine
nutrient values regardless of whether
they use computer software programs.
For example, a covered establishment
may use a nutrient database that both
lists nutrient values for certain food
items and provides software that a
covered establishment could use to
calculate nutrient values for a standard
menu item prepared with several of the
listed foods in varying amounts.
Alternatively, a covered establishment
may use a nutrient database that lists
nutrient values for certain food items,
but does not provide such software. In
such a circumstance, a covered
establishment would perform and
document its own calculations.
• We are substituting the term
‘‘nutrient values’’ for the proposed term
‘‘nutrient levels.’’ We are making this
change throughout § 101.11(c), as well
as throughout the rule, to consistently
use the single term ‘‘nutrient values.’’
• We are deleting ‘‘as described in
§ 101.10.’’ Section 403(q)(5)(H)(iv) of the
FD&C Act provides that a restaurant or
similar retail food establishment shall
have a reasonable basis for its nutrient
content disclosures, including nutrient
databases, cookbooks, laboratory
analyses, and other reasonable means,
as described in 21 CFR 101.10 (or any
successor regulation) or in a related
FDA guidance. Section 101.10 requires
nutrition labeling for a restaurant food
that bears a nutrient content or health
claim, except that information on the
nutrient amounts that are the basis for
the claim may serve as the functional
equivalent of complete nutrition
information. Under § 101.10, nutrient
levels may be determined by nutrient
databases, cookbooks, or analyses or by
other reasonable bases that provide
assurance that the food or meal meets
the nutrient requirements for the claim.
In this rule, § 101.11(c)(1) is patterned
after § 101.10, as required by section
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403(q)(5)(H)(iv) of the FD&C Act, in that
it provides for nutrient values to be
determined by nutrient databases,
cookbooks, or analyses or by other
reasonable bases. However, given that
we incorporated the applicable
regulatory text from § 101.10 into
§ 101.11(c)(1), there is no need to refer
to § 101.10 within § 101.11(c)(1).
Indeed, including ‘‘as described in
§ 101.10’’ within § 101.11(c)(1) could
mistakenly signal, to both covered
establishments and investigators who
would evaluate compliance with this
rule, that a covered establishment must
look to § 101.10 to determine how to
fully comply with § 101.11(c)(1).
As finalized, § 101.11(c)(1) states that
a covered establishment must have a
reasonable basis for its nutrient
declarations. Nutrient values may be
determined by using nutrient databases
(with or without computer software
programs), cookbooks, laboratory
analyses, or other reasonable means,
including the use of Nutrition Facts on
labels on packaged foods that comply
with the nutrition labeling requirements
of section 403(q)(1) of the FD&C Act and
§ 101.9, FDA nutrient values for raw
fruits and vegetables in Appendix C of
part 101 of the chapter, or FDA nutrient
values for cooked fish in Appendix D of
part 101 of the chapter.
(Comment 136) One comment agreed
with our proposal for using an approach
for determining compliance modeled
after § 101.9(g). The comment
recognized that the proposed approach
is consistent with the accuracy
standards for Nutrition Facts
information and stated that even
relatively small variances can be
significant in influencing cardiovascular
health.
The majority of comments opposed
our proposal for using an approach for
determining compliance modeled after
§ 101.9(g), particularly with respect to
using the ‘‘80/120 rule’’ for compliance
purposes. Some comments maintained
that the proposed criteria for
compliance modeled after § 101.9(g) are
not consistent with § 101.10. Some
comments stated that use of the ‘‘80/120
rule’’ for determining compliance with
the menu labeling requirements of
section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act
contradicts 20 years of FDA precedence
regarding determining compliance for
nutrient content claims made for
restaurant foods. The comments referred
to our statements in the final rule
establishing § 101.10 regarding claims
for restaurant food (58 FR 2302 at 2387,
January 6, 1993) and in our 2008
guidance for restaurant food (Ref. 10).
Based on these statements, the
comments asserted that we understood
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71231
the difficulty in determining
compliance for restaurant foods making
nutrient content claims or health claims
and acknowledged the variations unique
to restaurant foods (e.g., by recognizing
that restaurant foods are generally hand
assembled and, therefore, subject to
individual product variation), and
therefore did not require that restaurants
conduct nutrient analyses for such
claims. The comments asserted that
reasons such as these led us to require
in § 101.10 that restaurants have a
reasonable basis for making a nutrient
content or health claim, and that the
proposed rule did not provide any
factual basis or evidence that the
circumstances that justified the original
‘‘reasonable basis standard’’ have
changed.
Some comments asserted that using
the ‘‘80/120 rule’’ for determining
compliance with the menu labeling
requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H) of
the FD&C Act was not the intent of
Congress. Some comments considered
that use of the ‘‘80/120 rule’’ would
make the reasonable basis statutory
provision at section 403(q)(5)(H)(iv) of
the FD&C Act irrelevant. Some
comments asserted that use of the ‘‘80/
120 rule’’ in the proposed rule
contradicts the plain language of section
403(q)(5)(H)(iv) of the FD&C Act, and
therefore, violates the Administrative
Procedure Act (APA). One comment
asserted that section 4205 of the ACA
proposes a specific standard at section
403(q)(5)(H)(iv) of the FD&C Act for
determining nutrient content
disclosures under section 4205, and
such a specific standard ‘‘does not
permit an agency to impose a more
rigorous standard than one required by
Congress.’’ The comment stated that
under the framework articulated in
Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural
Resource Defense Counsel, 467 U.S. 837
(1984), ‘‘courts ask as the threshold
question of ‘whether Congress has
directly spoken to the precise question
at issue,’’ and ‘‘[i]f the intent of
Congress is clear, that is the end of the
matter.’’ The comment stated that
section 4205 of the ACA is
unambiguous ‘‘in adopting the preexisting reasonable basis standard’’ in
§ 101.10 to determine compliance with
the nutrition labeling requirements of
section 4205, and ‘‘this reflects a clear
directive to FDA which does not
contemplate, nor permit, any deviation
of the kind contemplated in the
proposed rule.’’
Some comments asserted that
Congress expressly directed us to
consider ‘‘standardization of recipes and
methods of preparation, reasonable
variation in serving size and
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formulation of menu items . . .
inadvertent human error, training of
food service workers, variations in
ingredients, and other factors’’ in
issuing regulations to implement section
4205 of the ACA, including those
regarding reasonable basis. The
comments maintained that by including
this language in section 403(q)(5)(H)(x)
of the FD&C Act and directing us to
consider such factors, Congress
demonstrated its familiarity with the
challenges involved in requiring
nutrition labeling for restaurant food,
identifying many of the same factors
that led us to implement the reasonable
basis standard in § 101.10.
Some comments maintained that it is
not practical to require a compliance
standard for covered establishments that
is the same as had been developed for
packaged food manufacturers that use
modern manufacturing calibrated
equipment and methods for which the
‘‘80/120 rule’’ is appropriate. Some
comments asserted that restaurant food
is not standardized like packaged food.
For example, some comments explained
that the mere addition of five to seven
extra French fries in an order of small
fries would increase calories more than
20 percent and make the food product
misbranded under the ‘‘80/120 rule.’’
The comment stated, as an example,
that cheese sticking together and an
extra squirt of mayonnaise in a food are
not negligent practices, but would make
the nutrient content declaration for the
food out of compliance. Another
comment stated that if a lobster tail is
6 ounces rather than 5 ounces, the
calories would be 20 percent higher.
Some comments asserted that using the
‘‘80/120 rule’’ for compliance is
impractical and will require frequent
analysis that will add costs. Some
comments contrasted manufacturers
that test for nutrient variations at a
single point or a handful of points of
manufacture with restaurants that have
thousands of points of manufacture,
each of which would require separate
analysis. One comment asserted that the
‘‘80/120 standard’’ was not practicable
and is inflexible for covered
establishments and would create
increased and unnecessary compliance
and litigation costs for covered
establishments.
One comment asked us to provide
flexibility for variations in portion size
and recipes and allow for disparities
between the amount of a food used to
calculate the calories and the actual size
that might be served to or taken by
customers. This comment recommended
that the final rule create specific
guidelines for displaying caloric
information for non-uniform menu
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items (e.g. fresh fruit or pieces of
chicken).
Some comments pointed to the
variability in the nutrient content of
restaurant foods based on changes in
ingredients and recipes, and seasonal
changes in the ingredients as reasons for
why complying with the ‘‘80/120 rule’’
would be difficult. One comment noted
that moisture leaves hot foods at hotfood bars after a certain period of time
and as a result nutrient values for such
foods change from those values listed in
recipe books. The comment asked us to
expand the tolerance by 10 percent at
both ends if we kept compliance
requirements similar to the ‘‘80/120
rule’’ rather than a more flexible
‘‘reasonable basis’’ standard. Some
comments pointed out that there is
variability in menu items due to using
locally grown ingredients and that the
nutrient content of these ingredients can
vary by region. One comment asserted
that if we do not account for this
variation in the final rule, it will be a
disincentive to covered establishments
to use local farmers and suppliers.
One comment asserted that use of the
‘‘80/120 rule’’ will discourage voluntary
opting in by restaurants and similar
retail food establishments not covered
by section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act,
which would lead to less national
uniformity. The comment stated that
many State and local restaurant menu
labeling laws measure compliance using
a standard akin to ‘‘the Federal
reasonable basis standard’’ and even
where no State nutrition labeling laws
apply, a restaurant making nutrient
content claims would be subject to the
‘‘reasonable basis standard’’ under 21
U.S.C. 343(r) (i.e., § 101.10). Therefore,
according to the comment, under the
proposed rule, small-chain restaurants
voluntarily registering with us to be
subject to the Federal requirements
would subject themselves to more
potential liability under the ‘‘Federal
80/120 standard’’ and would thus be
less likely to voluntarily participate in
the Federal menu labeling scheme. The
comment maintained that in turn, there
would be less national uniformity in
menu labeling, consumers would see
less consistent nutrition information on
menus, and State and local inspectors
would have to apply a more complex
patchwork of regulatory schemes.
One comment asserted that the ‘‘80/
120 rule’’ imposes a stricter compliance
standard for foods with smaller amounts
of a particular nutrient that should be
consumed in limited quantities (e.g., fat
and cholesterol) because the ‘‘80/120
rule’’ measures compliance as a
percentage of the declared nutrient
levels. For example, a deviation of 1
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gram of fat in a salad declared to have
3 grams of fat would make the covered
establishment out of compliance. The
comment asserted that this is a
disincentive for low fat, low sodium
foods and is contrary to the purpose of
the rule.
One comment recommended that the
amount of protein, total carbohydrates,
and dietary fiber contained in an
appropriate composite of a standard
menu item be equal to the declared
value, not at least 80 percent of the
declared value.
(Response 136) Proposed
§ 101.11(c)(2), (c)(3), (c)(4), and (c)(5)
were modeled after § 101.9(g), including
use of the ‘‘80/120 rule.’’ Based on what
the comments said, we believe that
some comments misinterpreted the
proposed rule as requiring covered
establishments to determine nutrition
information through laboratory analyses
only. We did not intend to suggest such
a limited requirement. Laboratory
analysis was merely one of several
options we proposed to establish in
§ 101.11(c)(1) to satisfy the requirement
for a reasonable basis for nutrient levels.
Instead, proposed § 101.11(c)(2), (c)(3),
(c)(4), and (c)(5), were provisions
modeled after § 101.9(g), including use
of the ‘‘80/120 rule,’’ explaining how we
would determine whether a covered
establishment is in compliance with the
requirement (in proposed § 101.11(c)(1))
for a covered establishment to have a
reasonable basis for its nutrient
disclosures. We did not intend for
proposed § 101.11(c)(2), (c)(3), (c)(4),
and (c)(5) to require a covered
establishment to use laboratory analyses
in all circumstances to determine
nutrition information for standard menu
items. A covered establishment would
have been free to choose any reasonable
basis so long as it produced accurate
results.
While we do not agree with some of
the comments, particularly those
asserting that our proposal to use the
‘‘80/120 rule’’ to determine compliance
would violate the APA, we agree that
using the ‘‘80/120 rule’’ for determining
compliance with the nutrition labeling
requirements likely would raise
practical problems such as some of
those described in the comments. Given
these practical problems, we have
replaced proposed § 101.11(c)(2), (c)(3),
(c)(4), and (c)(5) with other
requirements in a new § 101.11(c)(2).
First, § 101.11(c)(2) specifies that
nutrient declarations for standard menu
items must be accurate and consistent
with the specific basis used to
determine nutrient values. For example,
for a nutrient declaration to be accurate,
a covered establishment that relies on a
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nutrient database for a list of nutrient
values, and then uses those nutrient
values to perform its own calculation of
the nutrient values in a standard menu
item, must correctly add the nutrient
values for all ingredients in the standard
menu item taking into consideration the
recipe and ingredient amounts used to
prepare the standard menu item among
other factors. Second, § 101.11(c)(2) also
specifies that a covered establishment
must take reasonable steps to ensure
that the method of preparation (e.g.,
types and amounts of ingredients in the
recipe, cooking temperatures) and
amount of a standard menu item offered
for sale adhere to the factors on which
its nutrient values were determined.
Accordingly, under § 101.11(c)(2), a
covered establishment that selects a
recipe from a cookbook and relies on the
cookbook’s nutrition information for
such recipe as a basis for the
establishment’s nutrient declarations
must take reasonable steps to ensure
that employees who prepare the
standard menu item do not depart from
that recipe, including the recipe’s
instructions and ingredient amounts.
For example, if a covered establishment
determines nutrition information for a
turkey sandwich based on a recipe along
with nutrition information provided in
a cookbook for the turkey sandwich, and
the recipe specifies using one
tablespoon of mayonnaise, the
establishment must take reasonable
steps to ensure that its employees use
one tablespoon of mayonnaise when
preparing the turkey sandwich—e.g.,
through appropriate instruction about
the importance of the consistent
application of one tablespoon of
mayonnaise to satisfy the requirements
of this rule.
Although we recognize inadvertent
human error and variations in
ingredients, covered establishments
must ensure that the nutrient
declarations are truthful and not
misleading in part by having standard
methods of preparation for standard
menu items and taking reasonable steps
to ensure that the methods of
preparation used for a standard menu
item adhere to the factors on which the
nutrient levels were determined. To
make clear that a covered establishment
has this responsibility, we are also
replacing each of the proposed
requirements (in proposed
§ 101.11(c)(6)(i)(H), (c)(6)(ii)(D),
(c)(6)(iii)(D), and (c)(6)(iv)(E)) for a
certification statement regarding the
recipe used to prepare the standard
menu item with a requirement for a
statement signed and dated by a
responsible individual employed at the
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covered establishment certifying that
the covered establishment has taken
reasonable steps to ensure that the
method of preparation (e.g., types and
amounts of ingredients in the recipe,
cooking temperatures) and amount of a
standard menu item offered for sale
adhere to the factors on which its
nutrient values were determined. These
provisions are in § 101.11(c)(3)(i)(G),
(c)(3)(ii)(D), (c)(3)(iii)(E), and
(c)(3)(iv)(E) of the final rule. (See the
discussion of these provisions in section
XIX.)
We acknowledge that the calorie
content of non-uniform menu items
such as whole fresh fruit and pieces of
chicken vary depending on the size and,
in some cases composition (e.g., chicken
breast, thigh, or drumstick) of the items.
A covered establishment may take such
variation into consideration when
determining the calorie content and
calorie declaration for the menu item.
For example, a covered establishment
could base its nutrient declarations on
the average size of a piece of fruit, or on
a weighted average of nutrient values for
a box of chicken that contains a fixed
number of chicken breasts, thighs, or
drumsticks.
In assessing compliance with
§ 101.11(c), we will consider the factors
and criteria specified in both
§ 101.11(c)(1) and (c)(2), including
whether the establishment took
reasonable steps to ensure that the
method of preparation for a standard
menu item adheres to the factors on
which the reasonable basis was
determined. We will assess compliance
on a case by case basis, taking into
consideration a number of factors,
including the covered establishment’s
nutrition labeling, the method (e.g.,
laboratory analysis, nutrient database,
cookbook, or nutrient information
provided on the labels of packaged food)
used by the covered establishment to
determine nutrition information, and
the steps taken by the establishment to
ensure that the method of preparation
and amount of a standard menu item
adhered to the factors on which its
nutrient values were determined.
Further, we may conduct our own
analysis, including laboratory analysis,
as needed, including if we find that
nutrient declarations appear to be false
or misleading or the basis upon which
the covered establishment based its
nutrient declaration appears to be
unreasonable or is otherwise
questionable.
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XIX. Comments and FDA Response on
Proposed § 101.11(c)(6)—Substantiation
Documentation (Final § 101.11(c)(3))
Proposed § 101.11(c)(6) would require
that a restaurant or similar retail food
establishment provide to FDA, within a
reasonable period of time upon request,
information substantiating nutrient
values including the method and data
used to derive these nutrient levels.
Proposed § 101.11(c)(6) would require
that covered establishments provide the
following information:
• For nutrient databases:
Æ The identity of the database used.
Æ The recipe or formula used as a
basis for the nutrient declarations. The
recipe posted on the database must be
identical to that used by the restaurant
or similar retail food establishment to
prepare the menu item.
Æ For the specified amounts of each
ingredient identified in the recipe, a
detailed listing (e.g., printout) of the
amount of each nutrient that that
ingredient contributes to the menu item.
Æ If this information is not available
because the nutrition information was
derived from a computer program,
which is designed to provide only a
final list of nutrient values for the
recipe, a certificate of validation
attesting to the accuracy of the computer
program.
Æ A detailed listing (e.g., printout) of
the nutrient values determined for each
menu item.
Æ If this information is not derived
through the aid of a computer program
which provides a final nutrient analysis
for the menu item, worksheets used to
determine the nutrient values for each
of these menu items.
Æ Any other information pertinent to
the final nutrient levels of the menu
item (e.g., information about what might
cause slight variations in the nutrient
profile such as moisture variations).
Æ A statement signed by a responsible
individual employed by the covered
establishment that can certify that the
information contained in the nutrient
analysis is complete and accurate and
that the recipe used to prepare the menu
item is identical to that used for the
nutrient analysis.
• For published cookbooks that
contain nutritional information for
recipes in the cookbook:
Æ The name, author, and publisher of
the cookbook used.
Æ If available, information provided
by the cookbook about how the
nutrition information for the recipes
was obtained.
Æ A copy of the recipe used to prepare
the menu item and a copy of the
nutrition information for that menu item
as provided by the cookbook.
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Æ A statement signed by a responsible
individual employed by the covered
establishment certifying that the recipe
used to prepare the menu item by the
restaurant or similar retail food
establishment is the same recipe
provided in the cookbook. (Recipes may
be divided as necessary to accommodate
differences in the portion size derived
from the recipe and that are served as
the menu item but no changes may be
made to the proportion of ingredients
used.).
• For analyses:
Æ A copy of the recipe for the menu
item used for the nutrient analysis.
Æ The identity of the laboratory
performing the analysis.
Æ Copies of analytical worksheets
used to determine and verify nutrition
information.
Æ A statement signed by a responsible
individual employed by the covered
establishment that can certify that the
information contained in the nutrient
analysis is complete and accurate and
an additional signed statement
certifying that the recipe used to prepare
the menu item is identical to that used
for the nutrient analysis.
• For nutrition information provided
by other reasonable means:
Æ A detailed description of the
method used to determine the nutrition
information.
Æ Documentation of the validity of
that method.
Æ A recipe or formula used as a basis
for the nutrient determination. The
recipe used in determining these
nutrient values must be the same recipe
used by the restaurant and similar retail
food establishment to prepare the item.
Æ Any data derived in determining the
nutrient values for the menu item; and
Æ A statement signed by a responsible
individual employed by the covered
establishment that can certify that the
information contained in the nutrient
analysis is complete and accurate and
that the recipe used to prepare the menu
item is identical to that used for the
nutrient analysis.
In the following paragraphs, we
discuss comments on the proposed
substantiation requirements. After
considering comments, including
comments (discussed in the previous
section of this document) that caused us
to remove proposed § 101.11(c)(2),
(c)(3), (c)(4), and (c)(5), we are:
• Redesignating proposed
§ 101.11(c)(6) as § 101.11(c)(3);
• Clarifying the applicability of the
requirements by replacing the term
‘‘restaurant or similar retail food
establishment’’ with ‘‘covered
establishment’’ in the introductory
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paragraph in § 101.11(c)(3) and in the
subparagraph in § 101.11(c)(3)(ii)(D).
• Providing that the statement
certifying that the information
contained in the nutrient analysis is
complete and accurate may be signed by
a responsible individual employed by
‘‘the covered establishment or its parent
entity’’ (proposed § 101.11(c)(6)(i)(H),
(c)(6)(iii)(D), and (c)(6)(iv)(E),
redesignated as § 101.11(c)(3)(i)(F),
(c)(3)(iii)(D), and (c)(6)(iv)(D),
respectively);
• Requiring a certification that the
covered establishment has taken
reasonable steps to ensure that the
method of preparation (e.g., types and
amounts of ingredients, cooking
temperatures in the recipe) and amount
of a standard menu item offered for sale
adhere to the factors on which its
nutrient values were determined;
• Requiring that all certification
statements be dated as well as signed;
• Specifying what we mean by ‘‘the
identity of the database used’’ in
proposed § 101.11(c)(6)(i)(A)
(redesignated as § 101.11(c)(3)(i)(A));
• Combining and replacing certain
proposed details of the substantiation
documentation when nutrient databases
are used (i.e., proposed
§ 101.11(c)(6)(i)(C), (c)(6)(i)(D), and
(c)(6)(i)(F)) with requirements (in
§ 101.11(c)(3)(i)(C)) to present the
requirements in a simplified and
streamlined format;
• Specifying what we mean by ‘‘the
identity of the laboratory performing the
analysis’’ in proposed
§ 101.11(c)(6)(iii)(B) (redesignated as
§ 101.11(c)(3)(iii)(B));
• Specifying that copies of analytical
worksheets used to determine and verify
nutrition information must include the
analytical method in proposed
§ 101.11(c)(6)(iii)(C) (redesignated as
§ 101.11(c)(3)(iii)(C));
• Revising proposed
§ 101.11(c)(6)(iv)(A) (redesignated as
§ 101.11(c)(3)(iv)(A)) to require a
detailed description of the ‘‘means’’
(rather than the ‘‘method’’) used to
determine the nutrition information ‘‘by
other reasonable means’’;
• Deleting proposed
§ 101.11(c)(6)(iv)(B) and redesignating
proposed § 101.11(c)(6)(iv)(C),
(c)(6)(iv)(D) and (c)(6)(iv)(E) as
§ 101.11(c)(3)(iv)(B), (c)(3)(iv)(C), and
(c)(3)(iv)(D), respectively; and
• Revising proposed
§ 101.11(c)(6)(iv)(D) (redesignated as
§ 101.11(c)(3)(iv)(C)) to provide an
example of any ‘‘data derived in
determining the nutrient values.’’
In addition, as nonsubstantive
editorial changes we are:
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• Replacing all instances of the term
‘‘nutrient levels’’ with the term
‘‘nutrient values’’ to consistently use the
same term throughout § 101.11(c);
• Replacing all instances of the term
‘‘menu item’’ with ‘‘standard menu
item’’ to emphasize that the
requirements for determination of
nutrient content apply only to standard
menu items; and
• Adding the conjunction ‘‘and’’
between § 101.11(c)(3)(i)(F) and
§ 101.11(c)(3)(i)(G), between
§ 101.11(c)(3)(ii)(C) and
§ 101.11(c)(3)(ii)(D), between
§ 101.11(c)(3)(iii)(D) and
§ 101.11(c)(3)(iii)(E), and between
§ 101.11(c)(3)(iv)(D) and
§ 101.11(c)(3)(iv)(E), to clarify that all of
the items listed under § 101.11(c)(3)(i),
§ 101.11(c)(3)(ii), § 101.11(c)(3)(iii), and
§ 101.11(c)(3)(iv) are required.
(Comment 137) As discussed in more
detail in section XVIII (see Comment
136), several comments opposed the
nutrient determination requirements in
proposed § 101.11(c)(2), (c)(3), (c)(4),
and (c)(5).
(Response 137) As discussed in more
detail in section XVIII (see Response
136), we are deleting those requirements
from the rule. Some comments
misinterpreted these provisions, e.g., by
concluding that we intended to require
the use of laboratory analysis as a
reasonable basis in all circumstances.
To reduce the potential for future
misunderstanding about the
substantiation provisions in the final
rule, we have made the following
revisions to the requirements for
substantiation documentation.
First, we have revised proposed
§ 101.11(c)(6)(iii) (redesignated as
§ 101.11(c)(3)(iii) in the final rule) to
clarify that the analyses governed by the
provision are ‘‘laboratory analyses.’’
Some of the specific requirements of
§ 101.11(c)(3)(iii)) (such as for analytical
worksheets) may not apply to other
means used by a covered establishment
as a reasonable basis for its nutrient
determinations.
Second, we are providing more
specific information about the
requirements for substantiation
information. Specifically:
• We have revised proposed
§ 101.11(c)(6)(i)(A) (redesignated as
§ 101.11(c)(3)(i)(A) in the final rule) to
specify that substantiation
documentation for nutrient databases
must include the name and version
(including the date of the version) of the
database, and, as applicable, the name
of the applicable software company and
any Web site address for the database.
The name and version of a database
would include the name and version of
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the computer software, if applicable.
Any database suitable for use as a
reasonable basis for the purposes of
§ 101.11 would have a name and version
number; in some cases, the version
number is a date. The version number
is necessary to fully identify a database
because databases may be updated to
reflect more recent data and
information, and nutrient values
generated with one version of a database
may be different from nutrient values
generated by a different database. If, for
example, a covered establishment used
‘‘version x’’ of a database for its nutrient
determinations, and we used ‘‘version
y’’ of that database to evaluate
compliance with the nutrient
determination requirements of rule, we
inadvertently could conclude that the
covered establishment is out of
compliance with the rule if the nutrient
values we obtained using ‘‘version y’’ do
not match those obtained using ‘‘version
x.’’ Some databases may be provided by
a public source (such as USDA),
whereas others may be provided by a
private vendor. If we have any questions
about the database, we may need to
contact the public source or private
vendor. Some databases are available on
the Internet; the Web site address would
enable us to obtain any necessary
followup information on an Internetbased database.
• We have revised proposed
§ 101.11(c)(6)(iii)(B) (redesignated as
§ 101.11(c)(3)(iii)(B) in the final rule) to
specify that substantiation
documentation for laboratory analyses
must include the name and address of
the laboratory. Some laboratories that
conduct nutrient analyses have more
than one facility, and the name of the
laboratory alone would not be sufficient
to identify the laboratory that conducted
the analysis.
• We have revised proposed
§ 101.11(c)(6)(iv)(D) (redesignated as
§ 101.11(c)(3)(iv)(C) in the final rule) to
provide ‘‘nutrition information about
the ingredients used, including the
source of the nutrient information’’ as
an example of what we mean by any
‘‘data derived in determining nutrient
values.’’
Third, we are reorganizing and
combining the provisions of proposed
§ 101.11(c)(6)(i)(C), (c)(6)(i)(D), and
(c)(6)(i)(F) (in § 101.11(c)(3)(i)(C)) to
simplify the requirements and make
them more clear. In particular, we
reorganized the requirements to clarify
that the substantiation documentation
that would be provided to FDA can vary
depending on characteristics of the
database. For example, in some cases,
the information and calculations
provided by a database are transparent
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to a person using the database, whereas,
in other cases, such information and
calculations are not transparent to the
user. Section § 101.11(c)(3)(i)(C)
addresses these different situations in
separate subparagraphs (i.e., in
§ 101.11(c)(3)(i)(C)(1) and (c)(3)(i)(C)(2)).
Under § 101.11(c)(3)(i)(C)(1), the
substantiation information for nutrient
databases must include information on:
(1) The amount of each nutrient that the
specified amount of each ingredient
identified in the recipe contributes to
the menu item; and (2) How the
database was used including
calculations or operations (e.g.,
worksheets or computer printouts) to
determine the nutrient values for the
standard menu items. Under
§ 101.11(c)(3)(i)(C)(2), if the information
in § 101.11(c)(3)(i)(C)(1) is not available,
the substantiation documentation for
nutrient databases must include
certification attesting that the database
will provide accurate results when used
appropriately and that the database was
used in accordance with its instructions.
Fourth, we have revised proposed
§ 101.11(c)(6)(iii)(C) (redesignated as
§ 101.11(c)(3)(iii)(C) in the final rule) to
specify that copies of analytical
worksheets used to determine and verify
nutrition information must include the
analytical method used to determine
and verify nutrition information. An
analytical worksheet cannot be
evaluated for compliance purposes
unless the method is identified. A key
aspect of evaluating analytical results is
determining whether the procedure was
carried out correctly, by comparing the
data in the work sheets to the procedure
in the applicable analytical method.
(Comment 138) One comment
recommended that covered
establishments provide references for
their nutrient values to consumers on
request. Another comment
recommended that establishments be
required to maintain the reasonable
basis verification only at headquarters,
‘‘and not in-store and available upon
customer request or online.’’ This
comment considered that providing
hard copies on site at many locations
would be costly, administratively
burdensome, and environmentally
unsustainable.
(Response 138) We did not propose to
require that the substantiation
documentation be available to
consumers in a covered establishment
or online. The provisions for making
substantiation documentation available
to us were directed to our enforcement
of the rule rather than to informing
consumers. Hard copies of the
substantiation documentation would
only need to be provided to FDA
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‘‘within a reasonable period of time
upon request.’’ Thus, a covered
establishment need not generate any
hard copies of the substantiation
information until we request the
information. We would request
substantiation documentation from
individual covered establishments
during inspections. However, a covered
establishment could wait to physically
obtain substantiation documentation
generated by its corporate headquarters
or parent entity until we ask for it,
provided that the covered establishment
can obtain the information within a
reasonable period of time.
(Comment 139) One comment stated
that it was unclear whether each
independently operated unit, including
a franchisee, will have to substantiate
the accuracy of the nutrient information.
Some comments disagreed that the
responsible person of the covered
establishment needs to sign a statement
certifying that the nutrient analysis is
complete and accurate and that recipes
used to prepare menu items are
identical to those used for the nutrient
analysis. The comments asserted that
this information is mostly gathered at
corporate headquarters and there is no
comparable requirement for packaged
food.
(Response 139) We agree, in part, and
disagree, in part, with these comments.
We agree that the responsible individual
certifying that the nutrient analysis is
complete and accurate need not be
employed at the covered establishment;
instead, the individual could be
employed at the establishment’s
corporate headquarters or parent entity.
Whether such individual is employed at
the covered establishment or the
establishment’s corporate headquarters
or parent entity, it is critical that the
individual who signs the certification
has a factual basis for certifying that the
nutrient analysis is complete and
correct.
We disagree that a responsible
individual employed at the covered
establishment’s corporate headquarters
or parent entity, rather than a
responsible individual employed at the
covered establishment, could sign a
certification regarding the use of a
recipe within a covered establishment.
A responsible individual employed at
the establishment’s corporate
headquarters or parent entity likely
would not have a factual basis for
certifying the actions of a specific
covered establishment because the
individual would not be present in the
establishment where the standard items
are prepared, and, thus, likely could not
certify the actions the establishment
takes to comply with the rule.
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After considering these comments, we
have revised the requirements for
certification statements (i.e., proposed
§ 101.11(c)(6)(i)(H), (c)(6)(ii)(D),
(c)(6)(iii)(D), and (c)(6)(iv)(E), which we
have renumbered in the final rule as
described in the following sentences) to
distinguish certifications that must be
signed and dated by a responsible
individual employed at the covered
establishment from certifications that
may be signed and dated by a
responsible individual employed at
either the covered establishment or at its
corporate headquarters or parent entity.
First, § 101.11(c)(3)(i)(F), (c)(3)(iii)(D),
and (c)(6)(iv)(D) of the final rule require
a statement signed and dated by a
responsible individual, employed at the
covered establishment or its corporate
headquarters or parent entity, who can
certify that the information contained in
the nutrient analysis is complete and
accurate. We are using the term ‘‘parent
entity’’ in addition to ‘‘corporate
headquarters’’ because some business
entities may not be ‘‘corporations.’’
Second, § 101.11(c)(3)(i)(G),
(c)(3)(ii)(D), (c)(3)(iii)(E), and
(c)(6)(iv)(E) of the final rule require a
statement signed and dated by a
responsible individual employed at the
covered establishment certifying that
the covered establishment has taken
reasonable steps to ensure that the
method of preparation (e.g., types and
amounts of ingredients in the recipe,
cooking temperatures) and amount of a
standard menu item offered for sale
adhere to the factors on which its
nutrient values were determined.
We are requiring that all certification
statements be dated as well as signed. A
date is standard practice on such
documents and would be necessary, for
example, to establish whether a
certification signed in advance by a
responsible individual at the parent
entity can address nutrient analyses
conducted over time.
(Comment 140) One comment
opposed the proposed requirement that
a covered establishment turn over its
recipes to a governmental agency,
because a covered establishment cannot
be assured that its proprietary
information will be protected and will
not make it into the hands of
competitors or unscrupulous
governmental employees looking to sell
or pass on trade secrets.
(Response 140) While we understand
that some establishments may have
concerns about the confidentiality of
information inspected by FDA under
§ 101.11, we emphasize that we protect
confidential information from
disclosure, consistent with applicable
statutes and regulations. Our disclosure
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of information is subject to the Freedom
of Information Act (FOIA) (5 U.S.C.
552), the Trade Secrets Act (18 U.S.C.
1905), the FD&C Act, and our
implementing disclosure regulations
under part 20 (21 CFR part 20), which
include protection for confidential
commercial or financial information and
trade secrets. To the extent that the
comment is asserting that we have no
procedures in place to protect the
confidentiality of proprietary
information, we disagree. We receive
trade secret or confidential information
on a regular and recurring basis. As
noted previously, trade secrets and
commercial or financial information
that are privileged or confidential are
protected from disclosure under the
FOIA, the Trade Secrets Act, the FD&C
Act, and our implementing disclosure
regulations (see, e.g., 21 U.S.C. 331(j), 18
U.S.C. 1905; 21 CFR 20.61(c)). Our
disclosure regulations set forth specific
procedures for assuring such protection
(see part 20). A covered establishment
that provides substantiation
documentation to us may identify any
information in such documentation that
the establishment considers to be trade
secret or confidential commercial or
financial information (21 CFR 20.61(d)).
Information so marked will not be
disclosed to the extent such information
is protected under the FOIA and our
disclosure regulations (part 20).
(Comment 141) A few comments
asserted that the proposed requirement
that a responsible individual of the
covered establishment certify that the
recipe used for the standard menu item
is identical to that used for the nutrient
analysis is unreasonable and beyond the
scope of the law. The comments
considered that Congress directed us (in
section 403(q)(5)(H)(x)(II)(aa) of the
FD&C Act) to consider standardization
of recipes, reasonable variation in
serving size and formulation of menu
items, inadvertent human error, training
of food service workers, variations in
ingredients, and other factors. One
comment noted that this certification is
not required by statute, and considered
that it is not clear what regulatory
purpose it would serve. The comments
asserted that it is unreasonable to expect
a covered establishment to prepare a
standard menu item in a manner that is
identical to the recipe on each given
day. A few comments opposed asking
employees to attest that they have
followed recipes exactly and considered
such a requirement to be unfair to
employees because there are several
factors that affect the recipe such as
seasonal variations, market availability
of certain ingredients, and modifying
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recipes to accommodate regional taste
preferences. One comment suggested
deleting the following proposed
requirements in § 101.11(c)(6):
• For nutrient databases
Æ The recipe posted on the database
must be identical to that used by the
restaurant or similar retail food
establishment to prepare the menu item.
Æ For the specified amounts of each
ingredient identified in the recipe, a
detailed listing (e.g., printout) of the
amount of each nutrient that that
ingredient contributes to the menu item.
Æ If this information is not available
because the nutrition information was
derived from a computer program,
which is designed to provide only a
final list of nutrient values for the
recipe, a certificate of validation
attesting to the accuracy of the computer
program.
Æ A statement signed by a responsible
individual employed by the covered
establishment that can certify that the
information contained in the nutrient
analysis is complete and accurate and
that the recipe used to prepare the menu
item is identical to that used for the
nutrient analysis.
• For published cookbooks that
contain nutritional information for
recipes in the cookbook:
Æ A copy of the recipe used to
prepare the menu item and a copy of the
nutrition information for that menu item
as provided by the cookbook.
Æ A statement signed by a responsible
individual employed by the covered
establishment certifying that the recipe
used to prepare the menu item by the
restaurant or similar retail food
establishment is the same recipe
provided in the cookbook. (Recipes may
be divided as necessary to accommodate
differences in the portion size derived
from the recipe and that are served as
the menu item but no changes may be
made to the proportion of ingredients
used.)
• For analyses:
Æ A statement signed by a responsible
individual employed by the covered
establishment that can certify that the
information contained in the nutrient
analysis is complete and accurate and
an additional signed statement
certifying that the recipe used to prepare
the menu item is identical to that used
for the nutrient analysis.
• For nutrition information provided
by other reasonable means:
Æ The word ‘‘detailed’’ from the
provision in § 101.11(c)(6)(iv)(A).
Æ Documentation of the validity of
that method.
Æ A statement signed by a responsible
individual employed by the covered
establishment that can certify that the
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information contained in the nutrient
analysis is complete and accurate and
that the recipe used to prepare the menu
item is identical to that used for the
nutrient analysis.
(Response 141) As discussed in
Response 136, we are replacing each
requirement (in proposed
§§ 101.11(c)(6)(i)(H), (c)(6)(ii)(D),
(c)(6)(iii)(D), and (c)(6)(iv)(E)) that a
responsible individual of the covered
establishment certify that the recipe
used for the standard menu item is
identical to that used for the nutrient
analysis used to prepare the standard
menu item with a requirement for a
statement signed and dated by a
responsible individual employed at the
covered establishment certifying that
the establishment has taken reasonable
steps to ensure that the method of
preparation (e.g., types and amounts of
ingredients in the recipe, cooking
temperatures) and amount of a standard
menu item offered for sale adhere to the
factors on which its nutrient values
were determined. Therefore, § 101.11(c)
will not require a responsible individual
of the covered establishment to certify
that the recipe used for the standard
menu item is identical to that used for
the nutrient analysis used to prepare the
standard menu item; nor will it require
that a covered establishment prepare a
standard menu item using a recipe that
is identical to that used in a database (as
proposed in § 101.11(c)(6)(i)(B)).
Nevertheless, a covered establishment
must ensure that its nutrition labeling is
truthful and not misleading and that it
has a reasonable basis for its nutrient
content disclosures, as further discussed
in Response 136.
As requested in Comment 136 and
discussed in Response 136, we have
revised the rule to require (in
§ 101.11(c)(2)) that the covered
establishment take reasonable steps to
ensure that the method of preparation
(e.g., types and amounts of ingredients
in the recipe, cooking temperatures) and
amount of a standard menu item offered
for sale adhere to the factors on which
its nutrient values were determined. As
discussed in Response 135, we have
revised proposed § 101.11(c)(6)(iv)(A)
(which is renumbered as
§ 101.11(c)(3)(iv)(A) in the final rule),
which addresses the information that
must be provided to FDA, within a
reasonable period of time upon request,
when ‘‘other reasonable means are used
to provide the nutrition information.’’
To emphasize that ‘‘other reasonable
means’’ does not require analytical
testing, § 101.11(c)(3)(iv)(A)) requires a
detailed description of the ‘‘means’’
(rather than the ‘‘method’’) used to
determine the nutrition information.
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We also have removed proposed
§ 101.11(c)(6)(iv)(B), which would have
required documentation of the validity
of the method for ‘‘nutrition information
provided by other reasonable means.’’
As evidenced by the examples we now
provide of ‘‘other reasonable means’’ in
§ 101.11(c)(1), ‘‘documentation of
validity of that method’’ generally
would not apply to ‘‘other reasonable
means’’ that are reasonably foreseeable.
Other than by removing proposed
§ 101.11(c)(6)(iv)(B) and the proposed
provisions requiring that the recipe used
to prepare a standard menu item be
identical to the recipe used to determine
the nutrition information for the
standard menu item described
previously, we are not deleting the
remaining specific proposed provisions
that one comment recommended
deleting. The comment provided no
explanation or basis for deleting those
specific provisions. Further, these
provisions establish requirements for
substantiating determination of nutrient
content for standard menu items
provided by covered establishments. As
we discussed in the proposed rule (76
FR 19192 at 19219), to determine
whether a covered establishment has a
reasonable basis for its nutrient content
disclosures, as required by section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act, and
whether a standard menu item is
otherwise misbranded under section
403(a)(1) of the FD&C Act, we must have
access to the information substantiating
the covered establishment’s
determination of nutrient content.
Without these requirements, which
provide access to substantiation
documentation, we would not be able to
efficiently determine whether a covered
establishment’s nutrition labeling is
truthful and not misleading. Further,
without access to substantiation
documentation of the basis of a covered
establishment’s nutrient content
disclosures, including recipe and
ingredient information, we would not be
able to determine whether an
establishment has a reasonable basis for
its nutrition content disclosures, as
required by section 403(q)(5)(H)(iv) of
the FD&C Act. Accordingly, such
requirements are necessary for the
efficient enforcement of the FD&C Act.
XX. Comments and FDA Response on
Proposed Section 101.11(d)—Voluntary
Registration To Elect To Be Subject to
the Rule
Proposed § 101.11(d)(1) would
provide that a restaurant or similar retail
food establishment that is not part of a
chain with 20 or more locations doing
business under the same name and
offering for sale substantially the same
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menu items could voluntarily register to
provide the nutrition information
required by § 101.11(b), and that in
doing so they would no longer be
subject to non-identical State or local
nutrition labeling requirements.
Proposed § 101.11(d)(2) would provide
that the authorized official of a
restaurant or similar retail food
establishment as defined, may register
with FDA. Proposed § 101.11(d)(3)
would list the types of information (in
brief, the contact information of each
restaurant or similar retail food
establishment, as well as contact
information of an official onsite, trade
names the restaurant or similar retail
food establishment uses, preferred
mailing address, and certification) that a
restaurant or similar retail food
establishment would need to provide to
us in order to register voluntarily.
Proposed § 101.11(d)(3) and (d)(4)
would also describe the mechanism for
submission by email, fax, mail, or
online form. Finally, proposed
§ 101.11(d)(5) would require reregistration every other year within 60
days prior to the expiration of the
current registration with FDA, and
would provide that registration will
automatically expire if not renewed.
In the following paragraphs, we
discuss comments on these proposed
provisions. We are finalizing them with
the following changes for clarity.
• We are amending the titles of
§ 101.11(d)(4) and (d)(5) by replacing
the question mark in each title with a
period because these titles are not
questions.
• We are deleting the revision date of
Form FDA 3757 (i.e., 7/10) from
§ 101.11(d)(3). The FDA form number is
sufficient to identify the form.
Moreover, the revision date may change
as a result of the renewal of the form
every 3 years under the Paperwork
Reduction Act.
• We are moving proposed
§ 101.11(d)(3)(vi) and (d)(3)(vii) to be
subparagraphs of § 101.11(d)(4) rather
than § 101.11(d)(3) and redesignating
them as § 101.11(d)(4)(i) and (d)(4)(ii),
respectively. These provisions are
directed to ‘‘How to register’’ rather than
to ‘‘What information is required?’’
• For clarity, we are adding the form
number (i.e., Form FDA 3757) to the
second sentence of § 101.11(d)(4).
• For completeness, we have added
‘‘.gov’’ to the end of the email address
provided for voluntary registration
under § 101.11(d)(4)(i). The complete
email address now reads
‘‘menulawregistration@fda.hhs.gov.’’
• We have revised the format of the
cross-reference, within § 101.11(d)(4) to
§ 101.11(d)(3) to read ‘‘paragraph (d)(3)
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of this section’’ rather than
‘‘§ 101.11(d)(3).’’ We note that the
proposed rule had identified the crossreference as ‘‘§ 101.11(c)(3).’’ We revised
this to ‘‘§ 101.11(d)(3)’’ in the correction
document, but did not revise the format
at that time.
(Comment 142) One comment
supported the proposed registration
requirements. One comment
recommended that retail food
establishments not covered by section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act, regardless
of whether they have fewer than 20
locations or if the sale of food is not the
primary business activity, be allowed to
elect to become subject to the
requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H) of
the FD&C Act by registering biannually
with us. One comment referred to our
discussions in the proposed rule that
establishments such as cafeterias in
schools and hospitals would not be
covered by the rule under the proposed
definition of ‘‘restaurant or similar retail
food establishment’’ (see Footnote 1 at
76 FR 19192 at 19197 and discussion at
19230). This comment asked us to
clarify whether there are some
establishments (e.g., hospitals or school
cafeterias) that are not restaurants or
similar retail food establishments and
therefore cannot voluntarily register to
be subject to the Federal menu labeling
requirements. The comment also asked
us to clarify whether certain food
service contractor facilities can
voluntarily register even if other
facilities in the overall set of operations
do not. The comment recommended
that we allow a restaurant or similar
retail food establishment to voluntarily
register on an establishment-byestablishment basis and not require the
chain or company to make a single
corporate-wide determination. The
comment asked us to allow a food
service contract business to register
some of their establishments in order to
make well-informed decisions on
whether to register the other
establishments and modify their
establishments and contracts
accordingly (‘‘rolling adoption’’). The
comment also asked if there were
requirements for opting out of the
Federal requirements after voluntarily
registering. The comment asked whether
a restaurant or similar retail food
establishment is required to be covered
by the menu labeling requirements for a
specific length of time, once it has
voluntarily registered.
(Response 142) The final rule defines
‘‘restaurant or similar retail food
establishment’’ to mean a retail
establishment that offers for sale
restaurant-type food, except if it is a
school as defined in 7 CFR 210.2 or
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220.2. Under § 101.11(d), a restaurant or
similar retail food establishment, as
defined in § 101.11(a), that is not part of
a chain with 20 or more locations doing
business under the same name and
offering for sale substantially the same
menu items (and, thus, is not subject to
the requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H)
of the FD&C Act) may voluntarily
register to be subject to the requirements
established in this rule. It does not
matter whether the sale of food is the
establishment’s primary business
activity, because the definition of
restaurant or similar retail food
establishment in this rule does not
include a primary business test. Many
establishments that would not have
been a ‘‘restaurant or similar retail food
establishment’’ under the definition we
proposed (including establishments in
hospitals) would be a restaurant or
similar retail food establishment under
the definition established in this rule
(see the discussion of the definition of
restaurant or similar retail food
establishment in section VI.B). Whether
any such establishment is automatically
covered by the rule generally would
depend on whether the establishment
satisfies all other criteria in the
definition of ‘‘covered establishment’’
(i.e., part of a chain with 20 or more
locations doing business under the same
name (regardless of the type of
ownership, e.g., individual franchises)
and offering for sale substantially the
same menu items).
Section 403(q)(5)(H)(ix) of the FD&C
Act provides that an authorized official
of any restaurant or similar retail food
establishment not subject to the
requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H)
may elect to become subject to the
requirements by registering with FDA.
Accordingly, any establishment that
meets the definition for a restaurant or
similar retail food establishment, as
provided in § 101.11(a), that is not
already subject to the requirements of
section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act
can voluntarily register to become
subject to the requirements under
§ 101.11(d). Establishments that do not
meet the definition of ‘‘restaurant or
similar retail food establishment’’ (e.g.,
drug stores that do not offer for sale any
restaurant-type food) cannot voluntarily
register.
Under § 101.11(d), an authorized
official is permitted to register an
individual restaurant or similar retail
food establishment on an establishmentby-establishment basis, in that the
authorized official may register a single
restaurant or similar retail food
establishment or multiple restaurants or
similar retail food establishments within
a chain on a single registration form,
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provided that the individual is
authorized to do so for all of the
restaurants or similar retail food
establishments included on the form
(Form FDA 3757) submitted. Whether a
decision to register is made on an
establishment-by-establishment basis or
is a corporate-wide decision applying to
many or all establishments within a
chain is a matter for the restaurant or
similar retail establishments and any
corporate management to determine.
This is as true for restaurants or similar
retail food establishments operated by
contractors as it is for other restaurants
or similar retail food establishments.
The rule does not establish a date by
which a restaurant or similar retail food
establishment must register in order to
‘‘opt in’’ as a covered establishment and,
thus, establishments within a chain
could approach the voluntary
registration using the ‘‘rolling adoption’’
requested by one comment.
A restaurant or similar retail food
establishment that has voluntarily
registered under § 101.11 must comply
with the requirements of sections
403(a)(1), 403(f), and 403(q)(5)(H) of the
FD&C Act and § 101.11 for 2 years after
the date of registration and may not ‘‘opt
out’’ until the 2 years has passed. If the
restaurant or similar retail food
establishment wants to ‘‘opt out,’’ the
mechanism to do so would be to let the
registration lapse (i.e., not re-register)
after the 2 years have passed.
XXI. Comments and FDA Response on
Proposed § 101.11(e)—Signatures
Proposed § 101.11(e) would provide
that signatures obtained under the
voluntary registration provisions that
meet the definition of electronic
signatures in § 11.3(b)(7) would be
exempt from the requirements of part 11
of the CFR (requirements for electronic
records and signatures).
We received no comments on this
proposed provision and are finalizing it
without change.
XXII. Comments and FDA Response on
Proposed § 101.11(f)—Misbranding
Proposed § 101.11(f) would provide
that ‘‘a standard menu item offered for
sale in a covered establishment’’ would
be ‘‘deemed misbranded under sections
201(n), 403(a), and/or 403(q) of the
Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act if
its label or labeling is not in
conformity’’ with the requirements for
nutrition labeling and determination of
nutrient content at § 101.11(b) and (c).
While we received no comments on
this proposed provision, we are
finalizing this provision with one
change. We are including a reference to
section 403(f) of the FD&C Act to clarify
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that failure to comply with the
requirements of § 101.11(b) could cause
a food to be misbranded under section
403(f) of the FD&C Act. Section 403(f) of
the FD&C Act provides that a food shall
be deemed misbranded ‘‘if any word,
statement, or other information required
by or under authority of this Act to
appear on the label or labeling is not
prominently placed thereon with such
conspicuousness (as compared with
other words, statements, designs, or
devices, in the labeling) and in such
terms as to render it likely to be read
and understood by the ordinary
individual under customary conditions
of purchase and use.’’ For example, as
discussed in Response 127, if a calorie
declaration for a standard menu item
that is a self-service food or food on
display is not declared in a manner that
complies with
§ 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(3)(ii), in that the
declaration is not clear and
conspicuous, the standard menu item
would be misbranded under section
403(f) of the FD&C Act in addition to
section 403(q) of the FD&C Act.
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XXIII. Comments and FDA Response on
Effective Date
A. Proposed Effective Date and Request
for Comment
The proposed rule specified that the
final rule would become effective 6
months from the date of its publication
in the Federal Register (76 FR 19192 at
19219). We noted that compliance is
expected to yield significant public
health benefits because consumers will
have calorie and other nutrition
information when they make menu
choices. Because of this benefit, we
stated that it is reasonable to make the
requirements effective as soon as
practicable. We recognized, however,
the potential difficulties of
implementing the rule in this
timeframe, and requested comment on
whether the effective date should be
extended for a greater period of time
after the publication of the final rule. In
particular, we requested comment on
whether a 9-month or 1-year
implementation timeframe would be
more appropriate.
We also requested comment,
supported by data, concerning how
much time is needed for covered
establishments to come into compliance
with the rule, including, if possible,
data on whether specific provisions of
the rule can be more quickly
implemented than others. We also
requested comment on whether we
should provide for staggered
implementation based on the size of a
chain or of a specific franchisee and
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again requested that suggestions be
supported by data.
B. Comments on Proposed Effective
Date
(Comment 143) Many comments
supported our proposed 6-month
effective date. Some comments noted
that State and local jurisdictions with
menu labeling requirements
implemented and enforced the
requirements in 6 or 7 months. One
comment stated that many large chains
have already conducted nutrient
analyses for their menu items. In
contrast, another comment reported the
implementation time frames for 12 State
and local requirements. This comment
noted that restaurants subject to State or
local menu labeling requirements have
had no less than 6 months to comply
with such requirements. This comment
reported that one city (Philadelphia)
provided more than 1 year for
compliance and one State (Oregon)
provided 6 months for implementation
of Phase 1 of its requirements, and an
additional year for compliance with
Phase 2 of its requirements. This
comment urged us to allow
establishments at least 1 year to come
into compliance with the Federal
requirements.
Several comments opposed the 6month effective date and requested an
effective date of at least 1 year. Some
comment noted that an effective date of
at least 1 year would be necessary for
covered establishments to develop and
install redesigned menus. In particular,
one comment from national associations
representing a number of restaurants
estimated that there are 250,000 to
275,000 covered restaurants in the
United States, not including similar
retail food establishments that would be
covered under the rule. This comment
recommended that we adopt an
implementation period of not less than
1 year after the publication of the final
rule and noted that extending the time
period to 1 year would allow most
restaurants to incorporate adding calorie
declarations to menus and associated
menu redesigns with regular menu
replacement cycles, thereby reducing
costs. This comment identified several
specific steps necessary for covered
establishments to comply with the rule,
including:
• ‘‘Digest the final rule,’’ including
determining what are menus and menu
boards, what are standard menu items,
what are custom orders, and what are
temporary menu items or otherwise
excluded foods;
• Determine nutrient content levels
and ensure that their bases for
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determining such nutrient information
are sound;
• Prepare and print written nutrition
information;
• Redesign menus and menu boards
to include calories;
• Roll out new menus and menu
boards simultaneously to chain
restaurants nationwide;
• Update food preparation procedures
to ensure consistency and ensure that
reasonable steps are in place to ensure
standard menu items are prepared
consistently;
• Create processes where information
related to standard menu items, e.g.,
ingredients supplier data, is periodically
updated; and
• Develop and conduct training.
This comment also presented the
following estimated time frames to
conduct some of these steps:
• Four weeks to digest the
requirements of the rule;
• Twenty-four weeks to design new
layouts, obtain reviews and approvals,
and for production and kitting; and
• Eight weeks for shipping.
Other comments that supported a 1year effective date presented similar
reasons, noting that a 1 year effective
date would allow restaurants to
properly review the final rule, analyze
covered food items, and incorporate
nutrition labeling into their truck stop
and travel plaza restaurants. Some
comments expressed concern that
demand for menu item nutrient analysis
and redesigning menu boards will
skyrocket upon publication of the final
rule, thereby overwhelming testing
laboratories and companies that design
menus and menu boards.
(Response 143) We agree that covered
establishments will need more than 6
months to come into compliance with
the rule, including making changes to
menus and menus boards. While some
establishments already are subject to
State or local nutrition labeling
requirements for foods sold in such
establishments, others are not.
Moreover, even those establishments
that already are subject to State or local
requirements nutrition labeling
requirements may not be required to
disclose such nutrition information in
the format and manner specified in
section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act
and this rule. We carefully considered
the activities and associated time frames
identified by the comments, including
the comment from national
organizations representing restaurants,
and we agree that the rule should
provide for an effective date of 1 year to
comply with the Federal requirements.
Most comments, even the comment
noting that one State and one local
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government provided more than 1 year
for full implementation, requested an
effective date of ‘‘at least 1 year.’’
We also agree that a time frame that
enables establishments to make changes
to menus and menu boards during a
time period that coincides with their
regular menu replacement cycles would
save time and resources. In addition, we
acknowledge that companies that design
and produce menu boards will receive
many orders to update menu boards to
comply with the rule. We note that a
covered establishment that experiences
difficulty obtaining new menus or menu
boards as a result of increased demand
as the effective date draws near will
have other ways to comply with the rule
without replacing the menus or menu
boards. For example, we would not
object if a covered establishment
declares calorie information by applying
stickers or pieces of paper to menus or
menu boards. For packaged foods, we
have taken the position for some time
that the Nutrition Facts label may be
printed on a sticker and affixed to a
package, as long as the sticker adheres
to the product under the intended
storage conditions (Ref. 38; see L16). We
also have long taken the position that
stickers may be used to make changes in
labeling such as correcting label
mistakes provided that the final label is
correct and complies with all
regulations at the time of retail sale, the
stickers do not cover other mandatory
labeling, and the stickers adhere tightly
(Ref. 38, see L55).
Likewise, we acknowledge that there
could be some increased demand for
nutrient analysis by testing laboratories
as the effective date draws near.
Importantly, the rule does not require
analytical testing of standard menu
items; analytical testing is merely one
option available to a covered
establishment to determine nutrient
values. Other options include use of
nutrient databases, cookbooks, or other
reasonable means, including the use of
Nutrition Facts on labels on packaged
foods that comply with the nutrition
labeling requirements of section
403(q)(1) of the FD&C Act and § 101.9,
FDA nutrient values for raw fruits and
vegetables in Appendix C of part 101, or
FDA nutrient values for cooked fish in
Appendix D (see § 101.11(c)(1)). In
addition, as noted by the comments,
many establishments that are part of
large chains have already determined
nutrient values for their menu items. As
discussed in Response 138 and
Response 139, this rule provides that
corporate headquarters or a parent
entity, rather than each individual
covered establishment, may determine
and certify nutrient values, as requested
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by comments. Thus, to the extent
establishments’ corporate headquarters
or parent entity have determined
nutrient values for standard menu items
offered for sale in such establishments,
individual covered establishments can
come into compliance with this rule
without significantly overwhelming
testing laboratories, even if such
establishments choose analytical testing
as the means to determine nutrient
values.
For all of these reasons, and as
discussed in more detail in section
XXIII.C, we have established an
effective date for this rule that is 1 year
from the date of publication of this
document. Thus, the final rule is
effective on December 1, 2015.
(Comment 144) One comment that
recommended a minimum of 12 to 18
months for establishments to comply
with the rule provided information
about its experience from a 2010 rollout
of new menu boards for all its domestic
stores. This comment identified the
following steps and corresponding time
frames for this 2010 rollout:
• 2 months to develop new menu
board templates for the seven types of
menu boards for its various types of
store locations (mall stores, mall kiosks,
mall carts, stadium stores, stadium
carts, etc.);
• 8 months to develop, program, and
test an ordering site to accommodate
more than 850 individual store menus;
• 2 months to receive the orders and
lay out all custom menu boards; and
• 2 months to produce and ship new
menu boards to its stores.
(Response 144) We appreciate that
this comment provided its specific
experience from a company-wide
rollout of new menu boards. The steps
identified by this comment are similar
to the steps identified by the comment
from national associations representing
restaurants, although with longer
timeframes. However, as discussed in
Comment 143 these national
associations also noted that extending
the time period to 1 year would allow
most restaurants to incorporate adding
calorie declarations to menus and
associated menu redesigns with regular
menu replacement cycles. We therefore
disagree that the time frames
experienced by one entity during a
company-initiated rollout of new menu
boards should determine the time frame
for compliance by all covered
establishments.
(Comment 145) Some comments
requested an effective date of more than
12 months. One comment requested an
18-month effective date because it
considered that many requirements are
still unclear. Another comment
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requested an 18-month to 2-year
effective date for similar retail food
establishments, even if there is a shorter
time for restaurants. According to this
comment, establishments need time to
comply properly with the requirements
and rushing through compliance could
result in mistakes that may be confusing
to consumers and would require
additional industry resources to correct.
A few comments requested a 2-year
effective date. One comment asserted
that there will be a steep learning curve
and time is needed to train employees
and develop and print display materials.
A few comments maintained that a 2year compliance period is appropriate
because, according to one comment, we
used a 2-year uniform compliance
period when implementing the NLEA.
According to another comment, a 2-year
timeframe is reasonable as long as
nutrition information is available in
brochures and online.
(Response 145) We disagree that an
effective date over 1 year (such as 18
months or 2 years, as suggested by the
comments) is necessary. Many
comments seeking a longer effective
date focused on the need to train
employees. Such training does not need
to wait until all implementation
activities are complete—e.g., such
training can begin while an
establishment is waiting for delivery of
its revised menus and menu boards.
We also disagree with the comment
asserting that similar retail food
establishments need more time than
restaurants to comply with the rule. The
comment provided no basis for why
similar retail food establishments
should be treated differently from
restaurants or why such establishments
would need more time for compliance
than restaurants.
We discuss the applicability of the
uniform compliance date in section
XXIII.C.
(Comment 146) One comment
asserted that there will be an unfair
competitive advantage for larger
companies because of the ability of
larger companies to leverage their
market position with the menu board
producers. One comment requested a
grace period to come into compliance if
a covered establishment has adopted
and followed a reasonable program to
monitor changing nutrient values and
update menus and menu boards at
reasonable intervals coinciding with
typical cycles.
(Response 146) In the proposed rule,
we specifically requested that comments
about whether we should provide for
staggered implementation based on the
size of a chain or of a specific franchisee
be supported by data. The comment
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asserting that there will be an unfair
competitive advantage for larger
companies (because of their ability to
leverage their market position with the
menu board producers) provided no
data for its assertion; therefore we have
no information that could assist us in
considering whether or how much
additional time might be appropriate.
Further, as discussed in Response 143,
covered establishments can use a
number of ways to comply with this
rule without replacing menus or menu
boards; for example, they can apply
stickers or pieces of paper to menus or
menu boards. For these reasons, we do
not believe there is a sufficient basis to
establish a staggered implementation
period based on the size of the chain or
of a specific franchise.
Nevertheless, we can work with
establishments that are not in
compliance by the effective date of this
rule on a case-by-case basis, taking into
consideration a number of factors,
including specific steps an
establishment has taken towards
compliance.
(Comment 147) One comment
requested that we allow 1 year for
implementation, rather than 6 months,
to provide covered establishments with
adequate time to come into compliance
given contractual requirements. For
example, the comment said that it
maintains a database with over 35,000
recipes which, in turn, may be modified
or adapted by the specific restaurant or
similar retail food establishment for
local needs and tastes, limitations of the
establishment, contractual
specifications, and other restrictions
(e.g., an establishment’s determinations
as to types of offerings). In addition, the
comment stated that contractors rely on
suppliers to provide nutritional
information and, therefore, we should
allow adequate time to retrieve data
from these sources.
(Response 147) As discussed in
section XXIII.C, we are establishing an
effective date of 1 year from the date of
publication of this rule. We note that the
comment refers to recipes that may be
modified or adapted by a specific
restaurant or similar retail food
establishment. In section VI.F, we
discuss how such modifications can
affect whether an establishment is
offering for sale substantially the same
menu items (and, thus, satisfies this
criterion in the definition of covered
establishment).
C. Effective Date and Compliance Date
for This Rule
We are establishing the effective date
to be 1 year from the date of publication
of this document, i.e., the final rule is
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effective on December 1, 2015, (see
DATES). We believe that extending the
effective date from 6 months to 1 year
provides sufficient time for covered
establishments to come into compliance
with the requirements without a
significant negative impact on public
health.
We expect covered establishments to
come into compliance with the
requirements of this rule by December 1,
2015, i.e., the same date as the effective
date of this rule. Although we are
issuing this final rule after January 1,
2013, there is sufficient justification for
establishing a compliance date of
December 1, 2015, to enforce the
provisions of this final rule, rather than
January 1, 2016, which FDA has
established as the next uniform
compliance date for other food labeling
changes required by food labeling
regulations that are issued between
January 1, 2013, and December 31, 2014
(77 FR 70885; November 28, 2012).
Typically, our uniform compliance
dates for food labeling regulations focus
on changes made to the requirements for
labels of packaged foods and seek to
minimize the economic impact of such
label changes, in relevant part, by
allowing manufacturers to come into
compliance with such regulations by
one particular compliance date rather
than several different dates (e.g., 77 FR
70885; 75 FR 78155 (December 15,
2010)). By providing one uniform
compliance date, we enable
manufacturers to avoid multiple shortterm label revisions that would
otherwise occur if not for the uniform
compliance date. However, this rule
does not establish requirements for the
labels of packaged foods, and therefore
would not cause food label revisions
comparable to other food labeling
regulations typically addressed by our
uniform compliance dates. In addition,
standard menu items offered for sale in
covered establishments were not subject
to Federal nutrition labeling
requirements before the enactment of
section 4205 of the ACA. As a result,
unlike packaged foods, standard menu
items currently are not subject to several
different Federal food labeling
regulations that may provide for
different compliance dates. Further, a
comment from national associations
representing restaurants reported that
extending the time period from the 6
months that we proposed, to 1 year,
would allow most restaurants to comply
with the rule as part of regular menu
replacement cycles, thereby lessening
costs. For these reasons, along with the
reasons discussed previously, we
believe that 1 year is sufficient time for
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covered establishments to come into
compliance with the requirements of
this rule. Waiting until FDA’s next
uniform compliance date of January 1,
2016, would create unnecessary delay in
the enforcement of this rule and could
minimize public health benefits.
XXIV. Comments and FDA Response on
Compliance
In the proposed rule, we noted that
some provisions of section 4205 of the
ACA became requirements immediately
upon enactment of the law and that we
intended to exercise enforcement
discretion until after we had completed
notice and comment rulemaking. We
encouraged our State and local partners
to proceed in a similar way. We
requested comment on how we should
implement the rule, including whether
specific provisions of the rule can be
more quickly implemented than others
(76 FR 19192 at 19220).
(Comment 148) One comment asked
us to develop a protocol for checking
the accuracy of the nutritional
information provided by covered
establishments. One comment
recommended that we undertake
random testing as resources allow.
Another comment recommended that
testing be done annually and kept on a
public file to ensure that the portions
continue to be within 5 percent
tolerance of the original nutritional
information. The comment suggested
that if deviations are found, the
company would either retest in 30 days
or pay a penalty fee that would be
passed to a childhood obesity campaign.
(Response 148) The rule provides
several options for how covered
establishments can determine nutrition
information. While analytical testing of
standard menu items may be
appropriate in some cases (e.g., when
the reasonable basis that a covered
establishment uses to determine
nutrient values is analytical testing), we
expect our routine approach to
evaluating the accuracy of the nutrition
information to be based on the
particular facts at issue, including the
reasonable basis used by the covered
establishment, which may be means
other than analytical testing. Consistent
with our approach to inspection of food
processing facilities, we do not expect to
establish a public file with the results of
any testing we conduct. Under the
Freedom of Information Act and our
regulations in part 20, a person who
wishes to see the results of our
inspections may submit a request to do
so.
Regarding the comment suggesting
that we develop a protocol for checking
the accuracy of the nutritional
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information provided by covered
establishments, we decline to include
such a protocol for checking the
accuracy of the nutritional information
in the rule at this time. Section
101.11(c) includes requirements for
determining nutrient content and
section XVII further discusses such
requirements, including the requirement
that nutrient declarations be accurate
and consistent with the specific basis
used to determine nutrient values. After
we have had experience in evaluating
compliance with the rule, we will
consider whether to develop such a
protocol.
(Comment 149) A few comments
asked us to clarify our enforcement
strategy and quickly establish an
enforcement protocol. One comment
stated that the proposed rule is virtually
silent on how the menu labeling
requirements will be enforced and
encouraged us to permit the industry to
comment on our enforcement strategy
before it is included in the rule. One
comment recommended that we issue
guidance documents to the industry to
better clarify matters of uncertainty that
will persist following issuance of the
rule.
One comment asked us to provide
details on the penalties for
noncompliance. Another comment
recommended that we issue warning
letters prior to instituting civil penalties
against a covered establishment,
particularly if the proposed rule’s
ambiguities are not clarified in the final
rule. The comment maintained that a
covered establishment may have made a
good faith effort to comply and that
warning letters will encourage
compliance and inform establishments
how they have fallen short of
compliance. The comment
recommended that we use a tiered
penalty structure, whereby minor
violations (e.g., inadequate font size of
nutrition information) are treated less
harshly than more serious violations
(e.g., a clear lack of effort to place
calorie information on printed menus).
The comment also encouraged us to
have a progressive penalty system for
violations, whereby first violations are
treated less harshly (e.g., a warning
letter) than repeated violations. The
comment maintained that this is
especially crucial in the first few years
the rules are being implemented as
covered establishments familiarize
themselves with the new requirements.
(Response 149) We are establishing
these regulations under sections 201(n),
403(a)(1), 403(f), and 403(q)(5)(H) of the
FD&C Act, as well as under section
701(a) of the FD&C Act. As discussed in
the proposed rule and in section XXII,
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failure to comply with the rule will
render the food misbranded under
section(s) 201(n), 403(a), 403(f), or
403(q) of the FD&C Act (76 FR 19192 at
19219). Penalties are already set forth in
the FD&C Act, and violations of § 101.11
may result in enforcement action
consistent with those penalties. For
example, introducing, delivering for
introduction, or receiving a misbranded
food in interstate commerce, or
misbranding a food while it is in
interstate commerce or being held for
sale after shipment in interstate
commerce, are prohibited acts under
section 301 of the FD&C Act (21 U.S.C.
331), carrying criminal penalties under
section 303 of the FD&C Act (21 U.S.C.
333). In addition, under section 302 of
the FD&C Act (21 U.S.C. 332), the
United States can bring a civil action in
Federal court to enjoin a person who
commits a prohibited action. Under
section 304(a)(1) of the FD&C Act (21
U.S.C. 334(a)(1)), a food that is
misbranded when introduced into or
while in interstate commerce or while
held for sale after shipment in interstate
commerce may be seized by order of a
Federal court. We expect to issue
guidance to help covered establishments
with compliance.
The tiered enforcement approach
described by the comment is similar to
the approach we currently take for other
misbranded food, and we generally
expect our enforcement approach to
misbranding violations of this rule to be
similar to that for other misbranded
food. Nevertheless, enforcement will be
considered on a case-by-case basis
depending on the specific facts and
circumstances.
(Comment 150) One comment asked
us to focus our enforcement actions on
helping with compliance, rather than
seeking monetary penalties, at least
until establishments have an
opportunity to fully adopt the
requirements. This comment
maintained that flexibility is needed in
the initial phases of implementation for
facilities that operate under Federal
Government contracts so that they can
continue to comply with requirements
mandated by specific Government
Agencies. As a result, the comment
recommended that we provide
flexibility for contract food providers
that provide services to Government
facilities under a specified program.
(Response 150) We recognize that
covered establishments will need time
to comply with the nutrition labeling
requirements of this rule during the
initial phase of implementation. To
provide more time to do so, this rule is
not becoming effective until 1 year after
the date of publication of this document
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(see the discussion in section XXIII.C of
this document).
A covered establishment has
responsibility to comply with all
requirements of the rule. We
acknowledge that a covered
establishment may need to update its
business and contractual relationships
with its suppliers in order to do so.
(Comment 151) One comment asked
us to permit stores to register points of
contact to which we will address
enforcement because experience shows
that involving ‘‘corporate parents’’ of
individual franchises or the owner of
multi-store chains is the most effective
way to manage enforcement issues. The
comment recommended that we notify
these contacts in the event of an
enforcement action. Similarly, the
comment recommended that we
designate specific contacts for informal
guidance and advice and develop a
menu labeling hotline telephone
number or email address to which store
operators can ask specific questions.
The comment considered that doing so
would increase compliance and ease the
administrative burden on its members.
(Response 151) Each individual
restaurant or similar retail food
establishment is responsible for
disclosing the required nutrition
information for its standard menu items
and otherwise complying with the
requirements of sections 403(q)(5)(H),
403(a)(1), and 403(f) of the FD&C Act
and § 101.11. Persons exercising
authority and supervisory responsibility
over such establishments may also be
held liable for violations of the FD&C
Act. See Response 3. Our decisions
regarding enforcement actions will be
determined on a case by case basis. In
general, we intend to notify a ‘‘corporate
parent’’ as appropriate (see e.g., Refs. 39
and 40). Although § 101.11(d) provides
for voluntary registration for restaurants
and similar retail food establishments
that are not subject to the nutrition
labeling requirements of section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act, and
requires contact information, these
requirements only apply to such
establishments that would not be
subject to the rule without registering.
We already maintain a telephone
hotline where industry may contact us
for questions about compliance with our
regulations (1–888–SAFEFOOD (1–888–
723–3366)). Staff who are assigned to
the hotline will have or obtain the
information to answer questions about
this rule. In addition, a covered
establishment may direct questions to
the contact person identified in this
document (see FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT), to the contact telephone
number provided in any subsequent
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guidance, and to a general email
mailbox for industry questions
(industry@fda.gov). A covered
establishment also may send written
inquiries to Center for Food Safety and
Applied Nutrition (HFS–009), Food and
Drug Administration, 5100 Paint Branch
Pkwy., College Park, MD 20740.
(Comment 152) A few comments
recommended that we preapprove
menus and menu boards. One of these
comments recommended that we do so
even if a fee was required. The comment
maintained that an approval process
would alleviate covered establishments
from having to pay the costs to replace
menus that they thought met the menu
labeling requirements.
(Response 152) We decline the
request of these comments. Section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act does not
require that we preapprove menus and
menu boards, nor do we have the
resources to do so at this time. Section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act and this
rule set forth and specify the
requirements for menus and menu
boards such that a covered
establishment should be able to
determine whether its menu or menu
board meets the applicable
requirements. Further, a covered
establishment may contact us with
questions about compliance, as
discussed previously in Response 151.
(Comment 153) One comment asked
us to clarify that compliance is the
responsibility of each establishment and
that if someone fails to comply, only
that standard menu item in the
particular establishment is misbranded.
The comment expressed concern that
without clarity on this point, States and
localities may cite franchisors for
violations by franchisees, and plaintiffs’
attorneys may sue franchisors for
violations by franchisees under
consumer protection laws.
(Response 153) With regard to what
food is misbranded if there is a failure
to comply with the regulations, this
would be determined based on the
particular facts of the situation (see also
Response 3).
(Comment 154) Some comments
asked us to allow flexibility for when a
covered establishment must update
menus to reflect changes in nutrient
content. One of these comments asked
us to clarify that any temporary
inconsistencies resulting from periodic
updating will not result in a violation of
the law. The comment expressed
concern that nutrient values may change
because of ingredient changes, use of
different suppliers, suppliers updating
nutritional analysis with no changes in
formulation, and reformulation of menu
items based on consumer feedback. The
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comment asked us to state that values
found not current will not raise a
compliance issue if the covered
establishment can demonstrate that it
has adopted a reasonable program to
monitor changing values and that it
updates materials at reasonable intervals
based on the manner and frequency in
which it changes menus and other
labeling. The comment also
recommended that covered
establishments be able to update their
menus and menu boards at reasonable
intervals coinciding with typical cycles
to change menus and, at a maximum,
values that require updating be updated
at least once a year. One comment asked
that the final rule clearly state that
covered establishments are responsible
for maintaining the accuracy of their
nutrient declarations, including keeping
this information up-to-date as their
menus change.
(Response 154) Nutrition labeling for
a standard menu item must be truthful
and not misleading, consistent with the
specific basis used to determine nutrient
values, and otherwise in compliance
with the requirements of sections
403(a)(1), 403(f), and 403(q)(5)(H) of the
FD&C Act and § 101.11. We recognize
that changes in nutrition information for
standard menu items could cause a
covered establishment to change a menu
or menu board even if the list of menu
items has not changed. In general,
revised nutrition must be posted before
serving the food. Compliance will be
determined on a case-by-case basis
depending on the specific facts and
circumstances. We recommend that a
covered establishment coordinate
changes in menu items that are
significant enough to affect nutrient
content with the introduction of new
items that also require updating a menu
or menu board to help minimize costs.
As discussed in Response 143, covered
establishment may also use measures
such as stickers to update nutrient
content on menus or menu boards.
(Comment 155) Several comments
requested clarification on who would
enforce the rule. One comment asked
that delegation of inspection authority
to the States be explicit, and asserted
that the provision in 21 U.S.C. 337
authorizing States to enforce Federal
law has rarely been used. This comment
stated that we could use 21 U.S.C
372(a)(1)(A) to provide technical
assistance and funding to States and
locals for enforcement. The comment
suggested that we set up a simple
process for local health inspectors to
report violations to us, e.g., a postcard
to be filled in and sent to us with a tear
off receipt to be left with the restaurant
manager. The comment also suggested
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that we develop a system to collect and
store reports of violations in a database.
A few comments recommended that the
final rule specify that enforcement
procedures of States are not affected by
section 4205 of the ACA.
One comment recommended that we
work with headquarters of chain
restaurants and similar retail food
establishments to ensure compliance
and then have our District Offices assess
compliance in the States.
One comment stated that States and
locals cannot be expected to enforce the
Federal menu labeling requirements
without significant funding. The
comment stated that the enforcement
process in its State is already
overburdened and, therefore, the
Federal Government should enforce the
requirements. Other comments
recommended that we rely on States
and localities and provide training and
funding. A few comments stated that
historically restaurant inspections are
done by the States and localities, and
one comment recommended that we use
the contractual regime of food safety
inspections used with the enforcement
of the NLEA. One comment stated that
local restaurant inspectors can add the
enforcement of menu labeling to their
current inspections. One comment
recommended that we enforce fines and
penalties for noncompliance and direct
any resulting funds to inspection
programs enforcing the menu labeling
requirements.
One comment stated that it is not
always practical for States and locals to
enforce section 4205 of the ACA as
delegates of FDA; rather we should
encourage and support enactment of
identical requirements that fit into local
and State food codes.
One comment suggested that the rule
include specific provisions that would
be binding on State and local
jurisdictions relative to enforcing the
rule. The comment stated that the right
to a notice of a violation, the
opportunity to cure a violation, and the
opportunity to have a re-inspection
before an adverse decision by the
enforcing agent, e.g. a citation, vary
enormously from jurisdiction to
jurisdiction, at the State and at the local
level. The comment suggested that we
include specifics such as:
• The enforcement agency at initial
inspection provides written notice of
violations;
• The enforcement agency gives the
establishment a period of time to cure
the violations (e.g., 15–30 days);
• The enforcement agency would reinspect after cure period; and
• If violations are not cured, the
enforcement agency would issue
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adverse decision applying fine or other
action that would apply under the
enforcement agency’s regulations or
applicable State or local laws.
The comment stated that these actions
would only apply to calorie labeling and
not to other violations related to safety.
(Response 155) Collectively, these
comments address three mechanisms by
which States (and, in some cases, local
jurisdictions) could have a role in
enforcing the provisions of section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act and this
rule:
• In general, a State or political
subdivision of a State may establish
food nutrition labeling requirements
that are identical to applicable Federal
requirements, including the
requirements of this rule. In this case,
the State or local jurisdiction would act
on its own behalf to enforce its own
requirements, albeit requirements that
are identical to the Federal
requirements.
• Under 702(a)(1)(A) of the FD&C Act
(21 U.S.C. 372(a)(1)(A)), FDA is
authorized to conduct examinations and
investigations for the purposes of the
FD&C Act through any health, food, or
drug officer or employee of any State,
Territory, or political subdivision
thereof (such as a locality), duly
commissioned to act on behalf of FDA.
In this case, the State or local
representative would act on our behalf
to enforce the Federal requirements.
• In general, under section 310(b) of
the FD&C Act (21 U.S.C. 337(b)), a State
may bring in its own name and within
its jurisdiction proceedings for the civil
enforcement, or to restrain violations, of
section 403(q) of the FD&C Act,
including the nutrition labeling
requirements for standard menu items
under section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C
Act, if the food that is the subject of the
proceedings is located in the State
provided that other requirements and
conditions are met. In this case, the
State acts on its own behalf to enforce
the Federal requirements.
We have successfully partnered with
States to conduct examinations and
inspections in other contexts, including
inspections of food processing facilities
on our behalf (Ref. 41). We expect to
continue to cooperatively leverage the
resources of Federal, State, and local
Government Agencies as we strive to
obtain industry-wide compliance with
this rule.
XXV. Final Regulatory Impact Analysis
FDA has examined the impacts of this
final rule under Executive Order 12866,
Executive Order 13563, the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601–612), and
the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
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1995 (Pub. L. 104–4). Executive Orders
12866 and 13563 direct Agencies to
assess all costs and benefits of available
regulatory alternatives and, when
regulation is necessary, to select
regulatory approaches that maximize
net benefits (including potential
economic, environmental, public health
and safety, and other advantages;
distributive impacts; and equity). We
have developed a detailed Regulatory
Impact Analysis (RIA) that presents the
benefits and costs of this final rule (Ref.
42) which is available at https://
www.regulations.gov (enter Docket No.
FDA–2011–F–0172). The full economic
impact analyses of FDA regulations are
no longer (as of April 2012) published
in the Federal Register but are
submitted to the docket and are
available at https://www.regulations.gov.
We also post the full economic impact
analyses of FDA regulations at the
following Web site: https://www.fda.gov/
AboutFDA/ReportsManualsForms/
Reports/EconomicAnalyses/default.htm.
This rule is designated an
‘‘economically’’ significant rule, under
section 3(f)(1) of Executive Order 12866.
Accordingly, the rule was reviewed by
OMB. In particular, Executive Order
12866 directs each Agency engaged in
rulemaking to ‘‘identify the problem
that it intends to address’’—that is, the
essential purpose of the rule. As a
separate step in its rulemaking,
Executive Order 12866 directs the
Agency to ‘‘assess both the costs and the
benefits of the intended
regulation . . . , recognizing that some
costs and benefits are difficult to
quantify.’’
Executive Order 13563 confirms that
‘‘each agency is directed to use the best
available techniques to quantify
anticipated present and future benefits
and costs as accurately as possible.
Where appropriate and permitted by
law, each Agency may consider (and
discuss qualitatively) values that are
difficult or impossible to quantify.’’
Here, the essential purpose of the rule
is to make nutrition information for
certain foods available to consumers in
a direct, accessible, and consistent
manner to enable consumers to make
informed and healthful dietary choices.
The full analysis—contained in the
RIA—of anticipated and quantifiable
costs and benefits from the
promulgation of the rule does not alter
this fundamental purpose. Nor does it
fully capture the unquantifiable benefits
of greater consumer understanding
regarding dietary choices and their
impact on health.
The Regulatory Flexibility Act
requires Agencies to analyze regulatory
options that would minimize any
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significant impact of a rule on small
entities. According to our analysis, we
believe that the final rule will have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities,
and we have accordingly analyzed
regulatory options that would minimize
the economic impact of the rule on
small entities consistent with statutory
objectives. We have crafted the final
rule to provide flexibility for
compliance.
Section 202(a) of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 requires
that Agencies prepare a written
statement, which includes an
assessment of anticipated costs and
benefits, before proposing ‘‘any rule that
includes any Federal mandate that may
result in the expenditure by State, local,
and tribal governments, in the aggregate,
or by the private sector, of $100,000,000
or more (adjusted annually for inflation)
in any one year.’’ The current threshold
after adjustment for inflation is $141
million, using the most current (2013)
Implicit Price Deflator for the Gross
Domestic Product. FDA has determined
that this final rule has met the threshold
under the Unfunded Mandates Reform
Act.
The analyses that we have performed
to examine the impacts of this final rule
under Executive Order 12866, Executive
Order 13563, the Regulatory Flexibility
Act, and the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995 are included in the
RIA (Ref. 42).
We had prepared a ‘‘Preliminary
Regulatory Impact Analysis’’ (Ref. 43) in
connection with the proposed rule. We
also included sections titled ‘‘Summary
of Preliminary Regulatory Impact
Analysis’’ and ‘‘Initial Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis’’ in the preamble to
the proposed rule (76 FR 19192 at 19220
through 19225). We received comments
on our analysis of the impacts presented
in those sections, and the RIA (Ref. 42)
contains our responses to those
comments.
XXVI. Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995
This final rule contains information
collection provisions that are subject to
review by OMB under the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (the PRA) (44
U.S.C. 3501–3520). A description of
these provisions is given in this section
of the document with estimates of the
annual reporting, recordkeeping, and
third-party disclosure burden. Included
in each burden estimate is the time for
reviewing instructions, searching
existing data sources, gathering and
maintaining the data needed, and
completing and reviewing each
collection of information.
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We had included a section titled
‘‘Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995’’ in
the preamble to the proposed rule (76
FR 19192 at 19225 through 19229). We
received one comment on our analysis
of the burdens presented in that section.
(Comment 156) One comment stated
that the recordkeeping burdens of the
proposed rule would impose millions of
dollars in cost per year. The comment
stated that these burdens are needless.
(Response 156) We disagree that the
burdens are needless. Providing
accurate, clear, and consistent nutrition
information, including the calorie
content of foods, in restaurants and
similar retail food establishments will
make such nutrition information
available to consumers in a direct and
accessible manner to enable consumers
to make informed and healthful dietary
choices.
We invite comments on these topics:
(1) Whether the proposed collection of
information is necessary for the proper
performance of FDA’s functions,
including whether the information will
have practical utility; (2) the accuracy of
FDA’s estimate of the burden of the
proposed collection of information,
including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used;
(3) ways to enhance the quality, utility,
and clarity of the information to be
collected; and (4) ways to minimize the
burden of the collection of information
on respondents, including through the
use of automated collection techniques,
when appropriate, and other forms of
information technology.
Title: Information Collection Provisions
of the Final Rule on Food Labeling:
Nutrition Labeling of Standard Menu
Items in Restaurants and Similar Retail
Food Establishments
A. Reporting Requirements
Description of Respondents: The
likely respondents to this information
collection are restaurants and similar
retail food establishments that
voluntarily elect to be subject to the
Federal requirements of this rule by
registering with FDA. These
establishments include chain retail food
establishments and eating and drinking
places such as full- and limited-service
restaurants, snack bars (including, for
example, ice cream, donut, and bagel
shops and similar establishments),
cafeterias and drinking places, managed
food service facilities, grocery stores,
supermarkets, convenience stores,
general merchandise stores, lodging
facilities, recreational venues, sports
venues, performing arts venues, and
movie theaters.
Description: Restaurants and similar
retail food establishments not subject to
the ACA’s requirements may voluntarily
elect to be subject to the Federal
requirements by registering with FDA.
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Authorized officials for restaurants and
similar retail food establishments must
provide FDA with the following
information on Form FDA 3757: Their
contact information including name,
address, phone number, and email
address for their authorized official; the
contact information including name,
address, phone number, and email
address for each restaurant or similar
retail food establishment being
registered, as well as the name and
contact information for an official
onsite, such as the owner or manager,
for each specific restaurant or similar
retail food establishment; all trade
names the restaurant or similar retail
food establishment uses; preferred
mailing address, if different from
location address for each establishment;
and certification that the information
submitted is true and accurate, that the
person submitting it is authorized to do
so, and that each registered restaurant or
similar retail food establishment will be
subject to the requirements of section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act and
§ 101.11 of the final rule.
To keep the establishment’s
registration active, the authorized
official of the restaurant or similar retail
food establishment must register every
other year within 60 days prior to the
expiration of the establishment’s current
registration with FDA. Registration will
automatically expire if not renewed.
TABLE 1—ESTIMATED REPORTING BURDEN 1
Number of
respondents
21 CFR part 101
Number of
responses per
respondent
per year
Average burden per
response
(in hours)
Total annual
responses
Total hours
Initial Burden (annualized over 3 years):
§ 101.11(d) Initial Registration .......................
Annual Burden:
§ 101.11(d) Registration Renewal .................
3,559
1
3,559
2 ....................................
7,118
5,340
1
5,340
0.5 (30 minutes) ...........
2,670
Total Burden Hours .......................................
........................
........................
........................
.......................................
9,788
rljohnson on DSK3VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
1 There
are no capital costs or operating and maintenance costs associated with this collection of information.
We lack data on the number of
restaurants and similar retail food
establishments that might voluntarily
register to comply with this final rule.
We do not expect the net benefit for
voluntary registration for many noncovered establishments to be positive
and in the RIA (Ref. 42) we indicate that
as of the conducting of this analysis, no
establishments have voluntarily
registered with FDA. Therefore we did
not estimate a significant burden in the
RIA. However, in the event that a few
register anyway, or find positive
incentive to do so, for the purposes of
this PRA analysis, we estimate the
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burden such establishments will face.
We believe that implementation of the
final rule, and the resulting attention to
the nutrition content of standard menu
items, may give non-covered
establishments an incentive to
voluntarily disclose calorie and other
nutrition information. We believe that
the only types of establishments that
would likely face a positive incentive to
voluntarily register are some restaurants
and some grocery, convenience, and
general merchandise stores that do not
already provide this information in
some form or another at the point of
purchase. We estimate that 5 percent of
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these establishments may register, or
10,678 [(5% volunteer × 47% no
nutrition info × 348,200 non-covered
restaurants) + (5% volunteer × 49,900
non-covered grocery, convenience, and
general merchandise stores)] (Refs. 44
and 45). We estimate it will require
approximately 2 hours per initial
registration. Given 10,678
establishments and one initial
registration per establishment at 2 hours
per registration, we estimate the initial
hourly burden for these establishments
is 21,356 hours (10,678 establishments ×
1 initial registration per establishment ×
2 hours per registration). Annualizing
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this value over 3 years yields 7,118
hours per year (10,678 establishments/3
years × 1 initial registration per
establishment × 2 hours per
registration). (10,678 establishments/3
years = 3,559 establishments per year.)
We expect that renewal registrations
will require substantially less time
because establishments are expected to
be able to affirm or update the existing
information in an online account in a
way similar to other FDA firm
registration systems. We estimate that
re-registration will take 30 minutes (0.5
hours) for each registrant. This would
indicate that biennial registration would
impose a burden of 5,340 hours (10,678
establishments × 0.5 hours) every 2
years, or 2,670 hours every year (10,678
establishments/2 years × 0.5 hours).
B. Recordkeeping Requirements
The preamble to the proposed rule
provided an estimate of the
recordkeeping burden, which consisted
of the burden associated with nutrition
analysis and the burden associated with
generating, providing, or maintaining
records. Upon further consideration, we
have omitted the burden estimate
associated with generating or
maintaining records previously
estimated in the proposed rule because
the rule does not require restaurants and
similar retail food establishments to
generate or maintain records. This
section now includes only the burden
estimate associated with providing
information substantiating nutrient
values of standard menu items to FDA
as required by the final rule. Further, as
discussed in section C of this analysis,
we have included a burden estimate for
nutrition analysis as part of the third
party disclosure burden, since the total
time, effort, or financial resources
expended by covered establishments to
declare nutrition information likely
includes time, effort, or financial
resources to determine the nutrition
content of covered menu items.
Description of Respondents
The likely respondents to this
information collection are restaurants
and similar retail food establishments
that are subject to the Federal
requirements of this rule or that
volunteer to be subject to the rule. These
establishments include chain retail food
establishments and eating and drinking
places such as full- and limited-service
restaurants, snack bars (including, for
example, ice cream, donut, and bagel
shops and similar establishments),
cafeterias and drinking places, and
managed food service facilities. Chain
retail food establishments would also
include some grocery stores,
supermarkets, convenience stores,
general merchandise stores, lodging
facilities, recreational venues, sports
venues, performing arts venues, and
movie theaters (Ref. 46).
Description
The paperwork burden for the
recordkeeping requirements of the final
rule is to provide substantiation of the
nutrient values of standard menu items
to FDA. The likely respondents for the
nutrition analysis are restaurants and
similar retail food establishments that
are subject to the Federal requirements
of this rule or that volunteer to be
subject to the rule. These establishments
must produce records with information
substantiating nutrient values for their
standard menu items.
The likely respondents are the
universe of retail food establishments
and retail chains that are covered by the
final rule. Our estimate includes eating
and drinking places such as full- and
limited-service restaurants, snack bars
including, for example, ice cream,
donut, and bagel shops and similar
establishments, cafeterias and drinking
places, and managed food service
facilities. Covered establishments also
include some grocery stores,
supermarkets, convenience stores,
general merchandise stores, lodging
facilities, recreational venues, sports
venues, performing arts venues, and
movie theaters.
TABLE 2—ESTIMATED RECORDKEEPING BURDEN 1
Number
recordkeepers
21 CFR part 101
Annual
frequency per
recordkeeper
Total annual
records
Hours per record
Total hours
Initial Burden (Annualized over 3 years)
§ 101.8(c)(2)(i)(A) Initial Nutrition Analysis Records ....
69,017
1
69,017
0.25 (15 minutes) ..
17,254
Annual Burden
§ 101.8(c)(2)(i)(A)
Records.
Analysis
30,059
1
30,059
0.25 (15 minutes) ..
7,515
Total Burden Hours ...............................................
........................
........................
........................
...............................
24,769
1 There
Recurring
Nutrition
are no capital costs or operating and maintenance costs associated with this collection of information.
rljohnson on DSK3VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Initial Nutrition Analysis
We estimate the annual number of the
largest restaurant chains that will need
to produce substantiation of their
standard menu items to be 541 (503
covered restaurant chains + 38
voluntary restaurant chains) with an
average of 117 unique menu items that
will require an initial nutrition analysis.
This leads to 63,297 (541 chains × 117
items) individual chains-specific
restaurant records. In addition to chainlevel nutrition analysis, each individual
restaurant establishment will likely
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have a small variety of standard menu
items that are unique to the individual
establishment. We estimate there are
11,684 restaurants establishments
(10,866 covered + 818 voluntary) with
establishment-specific items. Each of
these restaurant establishments has an
average of five establishment-specific
menu items. This leads to 58,420
(11,684 establishments × 5 items)
individual establishment-specific
restaurant records.
In addition to restaurants, other
similar retail food establishments have
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both chain-specific and establishmentspecific menu items. Other covered
retail food establishments include:
Grocery stores, supermarkets,
convenience stores, general
merchandise stores, lodging facilities,
recreational venues, sports venues,
performing arts venues, and movie
theaters. We estimate there are 691
grocery, convenience, and general
merchandise (GCGM) store chains (660
covered + 31 voluntary) with an average
of 40 menu items each (= 27,640
records); 5,309 GCGM establishments
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(5,060 covered + 249 voluntary) with an
average of 5 establishment-specific
menu items each (= 26,545 records); 50
managed food service (MFS) chains
with an average of 80 menu items (=
4,000 records); 450 MFS establishments
with an average of 5 establishmentspecific menu items (= 2,250 records);
100 lodging chains with an average of
40 menu items (= 4,000 records); 620
lodging establishments with an average
of 5 establishment-specific menu items
(= 3,100 records); 250 sports, recreation
and entertainment (SRE) chains with an
average of 59 menu items (= 14,750
records); and 610 SRE establishments
with an average of 5 establishmentspecific menu times (= 3,050 records).
In total, we estimate there are 207,052
records (63,297 restaurant chain-level +
58,420 restaurant establishment-level +
27,640 GCGM chain-level + 26,545
GCGM establishment-level + 4,000 MFS
chain-level + 2,250 MFS establishmentlevel + 4,000 lodging chain-level + 3,100
lodging establishment-level + 14,750
SRE chain-level + 3,050 SRE
establishment-level). Annualized over 3
years, this value yields 69,017 (=
207,052 records/3 years) per year. We
estimate that each nutrition analysis
will require a burden of 15 minutes to
produce each record. We estimate the
total recordkeeping burden for the
initial nutrition analysis to be 17,254.25
hours (= 69,017 records × 0.25 hours per
record).
Recurring Nutrition Analysis
From Mintel Menu Insights data, we
estimate that restaurant chains
introduced, on average, 24 new menu
items in 2009 (Ref. 47). Because the
final requirements do not apply to
temporary menu items, daily specials,
and foods that are part of a customary
market test, only a fraction of these
items will need nutrition analysis. We
estimate that existing restaurant chains
or individual establishments would
need new nutrition analysis for 25
percent of new standard menu items, or
six new standard menu items per year.
If in addition to these new standard
menu items, chains need nutrition
analysis on 6 reformulated standard
menu items, there would be a total of 12
nutrition analyses per chain needed on
an annual basis. Thus we estimate there
will be 26,904 annual records associated
with new or reformulated items of
covered chains [= (1,151 restaurant
chains + 691 GCGM chains + 50 MFS
chains + 100 lodging chains + 250 SRE
chains) × 12 menus items].
In addition we estimate that each year
there will be the number of covered
chains to increase in each category as
companies expand. As discussed in the
final RIA, each year there will be some
existing non-covered chains that,
through expansion of their business,
will become subject to the rule’s
requirements (for example, a chain
expanding from 19 to 20 locations). We
estimate there will be 20 new restaurant
chains, each with an average of 117
menu items; 5 new GCGM chains each
with an average of 40 menu items; 3
new MFS chains each with an average
of 80 menu items; 2 new lodging chains
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each with an average of 40 menu items;
5 new SRE chains each with an average
of 59 menu items. Thus we estimate
there will be 3,155 annual records [= (20
restaurants × 117 items) + (5 GCGM × 40
items) + (3 MFS × 80 items) + (2 lodging
× 40 items) + (5 SRE × 59 items]
associated with nutrition analysis for
new covered chains.
Based on data from FDA’s
Recordkeeping Cost Model, we estimate
that it will take approximately 15
minutes per standard menu item for
providing the information of nutrition
analysis to FDA (Ref. 48). We estimate
the total recurring recordkeeping burden
for the nutrition analysis to be 7,515
hours [(26,899 records for new/
reformulated standard menu items
under existing chains + 3,155 records
for items under new chains) × 0.25
hours per record)].
C. Third-Party Disclosure Requirements
Description of Respondents:
Restaurants and similar retail food
establishments that are subject to
statutory menu labeling requirements or
that voluntarily elect to be subject to the
Federal requirements by registering with
FDA.
Description: There will be five types
of third-party disclosure burdens under
the rule related to: Initial nutrition
analysis, initial menu replacement,
chain-level written nutrition
information, establishment-level
nutrition information, recurring
nutrition analysis, and recurring menu
replacement.
TABLE 3—ESTIMATED THIRD PARTY DISCLOSURE BURDEN
Number of
disclosures
per
respondent
Number of
respondents
21 CFR Part 101
Average
burden per
disclosure
Total annual
disclosures
Total
hours
Total operating
and maintenance
costs
Initial Burden (Annualized over 3 years)
§ 101.8(c)(2)(i)(A)
Initial
Nutrition
Analysis.
§ 101.8(c)(2)(i)(A) Initial Menu Replacement.
§ 101.8(c)(2)(i)(A) Written Nutrition Information Chain-level.
§ 101.8(c)(2)(i)(A) Written Nutrition Information Establishment-level.
69,017
1
69,017
4 ............................
276,068
..............................
106,168
1
106,168
0.5 (30 minutes) ....
53,084
$248,767,000
1,632
1
1,632
3 ............................
4,896
..............................
18,673
1
18,673
0.5 (30 minutes) ....
9,337
..............................
rljohnson on DSK3VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Annual Burden
§ 101.8(c)(2)(i)(A) Recurring Nutrition
Analysis.
§ 101.8(c)(2)(i)(A) Recurring Menu
Replacement.
30,054
1
30,054
4 ............................
120,216
..............................
700
1
700
0.5 (30 minutes) ....
350
$529,000
Total ............................................
........................
........................
........................
...............................
463,951
$249,296,000
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 230 / Monday, December 1, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
Initial Nutrition Analysis
The first burden is the time and effort
expended by restaurants and other retail
food establishments to determine the
nutrition content of their covered menu
items, which we refer to as ‘‘Nutrition
Analysis.’’ A nutrition analysis entails
the burden of determining nutrition
content for covered and voluntary
establishment menus by analyzing the
food product and summarizing the
nutritional information results. Note
that the recordkeeping portion of this
burden was estimated in the previous
subsection.
Our estimate for the annual number of
the restaurant and similar retail food
chains and individual establishments
that will be burdened with initial
nutrition analysis is identical to our
estimate for the chains and
establishments under the recordkeeping
subsection. The total number of
respondents estimated for the thirdparty disclosure burden of initial
nutrition analysis is 207,052.
Annualized over 3 years, this value
becomes 69,017. We estimate that each
nutrition analysis will require a burden
of 4 hours (this estimate of 4 hours was
used in the final RIA (Ref. 42)), thus
total burden for the initial nutrition
analysis is 276,068 hours (207,052
records/3 years × 4 hours per record).
rljohnson on DSK3VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Recurring Nutrition Analysis
The second burden is the time and
effort expended by restaurants and other
retail food establishments in recurring
nutrition analysis. As discussed in the
recordkeeping subsection of this PRA,
recurring nutrition analysis will be
required for new and reformulated
standard menu items. Our estimate for
the annual number of the restaurant and
similar retail food chains and individual
establishments that will be burdened
with recurring nutrition analysis is
identical to our estimate for the chains
and establishments under the
recordkeeping subsection. The total
number of respondents estimated for the
third-party disclosure burden of
recurring nutrition analysis is 30,054.
We estimate that each nutrition analysis
will require a burden of 4 hours (this
estimate of 4 hours was used in the final
RIA (Ref. 42)), thus total third party
disclosure burden recurring nutrition
analysis is 120,216 hours (30,054
records × 4 hours per record).
Initial Menu Replacement
The third burden is for the time
expended by restaurants and similar
retail food establishments to physically
produce and install the menus, menu
boards that include the new calorie
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declarations, which we refer to as
‘‘Calorie Declaration Signs.’’ As
described in the final RIA (Ref. 42),
chain retail food establishments will
need to redesign and replace their
existing menus and menu boards in
order to comply with the final
requirements. For full service
restaurants and drinking places with
only personal menus and no menu
boards, this burden will be relatively
low. Most menus are replaced
frequently anyway as they wear out, are
lost, or as prices and menu items
change. For many of these
establishments, the burden of updating
menus to comply with the final
requirements would be limited to design
and associated administrative hours.
The longer lifespan of menu boards in
limited-service eating places would
likely require the redesign of menu/
menu boards and the replacement of
one or more menu boards. In addition,
some chains would need to update selfserve and display signs. The number of
menus that an establishment will keep
on hand is highly variable. A fullservice restaurant, where each order is
placed using a menu, will need more
than a quick-service establishment that
uses menus just for takeout orders. The
number of menus is also tied to the
seating capacity of the restaurant, and
whether the menu is laminated or
paper. Because paper menus are more
fragile and cheaper to print in bulk, an
establishment may keep a large reserve
in stock, whereas establishments using
more durable and expensive laminated
menus may only keep a few extra on
hand. Estimates for the burden of
updating menu boards, other major
displays that serve as menus, such as
electronic displays, or major materials
needed to disclose calories for self-serve
or displayed foods to comply with the
final requirements, will vary widely
across chains and establishments
because of different menu board and
display types.
As described in the RIA, we estimate
that the average full-service restaurant
establishment must discard and reprint
one menu for each seat, plus 10 extra,
for a total of 91 menus per restaurant
each year. We estimate that GCGM
stores have an average of two menu
boards per establishment based on
public comments that we received. We
estimate that MFS and SRE
establishments will each have an
average of one menu board. Lodging
establishments generally have menus
instead of menu boards, and we
estimate the menu replacement burden
for establishments in the lodging sector
to be 87 menu replacements per
establishment. Since each covered and
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voluntarily registered establishment will
need to replace menus and/or menu
boards, we estimate this total value to be
318,505 (= 248,610 restaurants + 53,095
GCGM + 4,500 MFS + 6,200 lodging +
6,100 SRE). (In the previous calculation,
248,610 restaurants = 231,200 covered
restaurants + 17,410 voluntary; and
53,095 GCGM = 50,600 covered + 2,495
voluntary.) Annualized over 3 years,
this value becomes 106,168 (= 318,505/
3 years). We estimate the labor burden
for ordering new menus and menu
boards to be 30 minutes (0.5 hours) per
establishment. Thus the total burden for
initial menu replacement is 53,084
hours per year. At an average wage
(which includes an extra 50 percent to
account for overhead costs and
employee benefits) of $30 per hour for
managers across the covered industries,
the labor burden comes to $1,593,000 (=
53,084 hours × $30 per hour). In the
final RIA (Ref. 42), we estimated the
total average costs associated with
initial menu replacement to be $250.36
million. This value takes into
consideration costs of menu/menu
board design, printing, and installation.
Subtracting the labor costs of ordering
new menus, $1,593,000, from the total
costs for initial menu replacement,
$250,360,000, yields total initial
operating and maintenance costs of
$248,767,000.
Recurring Menu Replacement for New
Chains
The fourth burden is for the time
expended by new restaurants and
similar retail food establishments to
physically replace menus and menu
boards that include the new calorie
declarations. All restaurants and similar
retail food chains that become covered
as the number of their associated
establishments grows beyond the
coverage threshold of 20 will need to
replace their menus and menu boards.
We estimated in the final RIA (Ref. 42)
that the annual number of new covered
restaurants and similar retail food
establishments is 700. Again, we
estimate the labor burden for ordering
new menus and menu boards to be 30
minutes (0.5 hours) per establishment.
Thus the total annual burden for
recurring menu replacement is 350
hours per year. At an average wage
(which includes an extra 50 percent in
overhead costs and employee benefits)
of $30 per hour for managers across the
covered industries, the recurring labor
burden comes to $11,000 (= 350 hours
× $30 per hour). In the final RIA, we
estimated the total average annual
operating and maintenance costs
associated with recurring menu
replacement to be $540,000. This value
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takes into consideration costs of menu/
menu board design, printing, and
installation. Subtracting the recurring
labor costs of ordering new menus,
$11,000, from the total costs for
recurring menu replacement of
$540,000, yields total recurring
operating and maintenance costs of
$529,000.
rljohnson on DSK3VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
Written Nutrition Information
The fifth burden is for the time
expended by restaurants and similar
retail food establishments to make
written nutrition information available
to customers upon request. The number
of chains (and associated
establishments) that do not already
provide this information was estimated
in the recordkeeping subsection under
initial nutrition analysis, or 1,632
chains (503 covered restaurant + 38
voluntary restaurant + 660 covered
GCGM + 31 voluntary GCGM + 50
covered MFS + 100 covered lodging +
250 covered SRE) and 18,673
establishments with establishment
specific-menu items (10,866 covered
restaurant + 818 voluntary restaurant +
5,060 covered GCGM + 249 voluntary
GCGM + 450 covered MFS + 620
covered lodging + 610 covered SRE). We
estimate the time it takes to provide
written nutrition information at the
chain level to be 3 hours per
respondent. Since the average number
of establishment-specific menu items is
only five per establishment, we estimate
the time it takes to provide written
nutrition information at the
establishment level (for those menu
items that are specific only to the
establishment) to be 30 minutes per
respondent. Thus the total burden hours
for chain-level and establishment level
written nutrition information disclosure
are 4,896 and 9,336.5 hours,
respectively. Therefore the total third
party disclosure burden for the rule is
463,950.5 hours with total operating and
maintenance costs of $249,296,000.
To ensure that comments on
information collection are received,
OMB recommends that written
comments be faxed to the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs,
OMB, Attn: FDA Desk Officer, FAX:
202–395–7285, or emailed to oira_
submission@omb.eop.gov. All
comments should be identified with the
OMB Control Number 0910–NEW, and
title ‘‘Information Collection Provisions
of the Final Rule on Food Labeling:
Nutrition Labeling of Standard Menu
Items in Restaurants and Similar Retail
Food Establishments.’’ Also include the
FDA docket number found in brackets
in the heading of this document.
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In compliance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C.
3507(d)), we have resubmitted the
information collection provisions of this
final rule to OMB for review, because
the final rule provides additional
modifications to § 101.11. These
requirements will not be effective until
we obtain OMB approval. Interested
persons are requested to submit
comments regarding information
collection to OMB (see DATES and
ADDRESSES).
Prior to the effective and compliance
date of this final rule, we will publish
a notice in the Federal Register
announcing OMB’s decision to approve,
modify, or disapprove the information
collection provisions in this final rule.
An Agency may not conduct or sponsor,
and a person is not required to respond
to, a collection of information unless it
displays a currently valid OMB control
number.
XXVII. Federalism
We have analyzed this final rule in
accordance with the principles set forth
in Executive Order 13132. Section 4(a)
of the Executive order requires Agencies
to ‘‘construe . . . a Federal statute to
preempt State law only where the
statute contains an express preemption
provision or there is some other clear
evidence that the Congress intended
preemption of State law, or where the
exercise of State authority conflicts with
the exercise of Federal authority under
the Federal statute.’’ Federal law
includes an express preemption
provision that preempts ‘‘any
requirement for nutrition labeling of
food that is not identical to the
requirement of section 403(q) [of the
FD&C Act] [21 U.S.C. 343(q)]’’, except
that this provision does not apply ‘‘to
food that is offered for sale in a
restaurant or similar retail food
establishment that is not part of a chain
with 20 or more locations doing
business under the same name
(regardless of the type of ownership of
the locations) and offering for sale
substantially the same menu items
unless such restaurant or similar retail
food establishment complies with the
voluntary provision of nutrition
information requirements under section
403(q)(5)(H)(ix) [of the FD&C Act].’’ In
the proposed rule, we provided an
interpretation of the preemptive
provisions of section 4205 of the ACA,
as well as an alternative interpretation
(76 FR 19192 at 19203). (21 U.S.C. 343–
1(a)(4)). The final rule creates
requirements for nutrition labeling of
food under section 403(q) of the FD&C
Act that would preempt certain non-
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identical State and local nutrition
labeling requirements.
Section 4205 of the ACA also includes
a Rule of Construction providing that
‘‘Nothing in the amendments made by
[section 4205] shall be construed—(1) to
preempt any provision of State or local
law, unless such provision establishes
or continues into effect nutrient content
disclosures of the type required under
section 403(q)(5)(H) of the Federal Food,
Drug, and Cosmetic Act [21 U.S.C.
343(q)(5)(H)] (as added by subsection(b))
and is expressly preempted under
subsection (a)(4) of such section; (2) to
apply to any State or local requirement
respecting a statement in the labeling of
food that provides for a warning
concerning the safety of the food or
component of the food; or (3) except as
provided in section 403(q)(5)(H)(ix) of
the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic
Act [21 U.S.C. 343(q)(5)(H)(ix)] (as
added by subsection (b)), to apply to any
restaurant or similar retail food
establishment other than a restaurant or
similar retail food establishment
described in section 403(q)(5)(H)(i) of
such Act.’’ (See Pub. L. 111–148, Sec.
4205(d), 124 Stat. 119, 576 (2010).)
We interpret the provisions of section
4205 of the ACA related to preemption
to mean that States and local
governments may not impose nutrition
labeling requirements for food sold in a
covered establishment, as defined in
§ 101.11(a), unless the State or local
requirements are identical to the Federal
requirements. In other words, States and
localities cannot have additional or
different nutrition labeling requirements
for food sold either in (1) chain retail
food establishments or (2) restaurants
and similar retail food establishments
not subject to the requirements of
section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act
that voluntarily elect to be subject to the
requirements by registering biannually
under section 403(q)(5)(H)(ix).
Otherwise, for certain food that is not
subject to the nutrition labeling
requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H) of
the FD&C Act, States and localities may
establish or continue to impose
nutrition labeling requirements. First,
States and localities can have nutrition
labeling requirements for food sold in
restaurants or similar retail food
establishments that are not part of a
chain with 20 or more locations doing
business under the same name and
offering for sale substantially the same
menu items that have not voluntarily
registered under section 403(q)(5)(H)(ix)
of the FD&C Act.
Second, States and localities can have
nutrition labeling requirements for
foods offered for sale in other
establishments described in sections
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403(q)(5)(A)(i) or (ii) of the FD&C Act
that are exempt from the nutrition
labeling requirements of sections
403(q)(1) to (q)(4) of the FD&C Act
under section 403(q)(5)(A)(i) or (ii) of
the FD&C Act, provided that such food
is not required to have nutrition labeling
under section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C
Act. For example, certain foods sold in
schools and transportation carriers
would not be required to have nutrition
labeling under sections 403(q)(1) to
(q)(4) of the FD&C Act (see section
403(q)(5)(A)(i) and (ii) of the FD&C Act
and § 101.9(j)(2) and (j)(3)), or under
section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act
because these establishments are not
covered establishments within the
meaning of § 101.11(a). Under our
interpretation of the Rule of
Construction in section 4205(d)(1) of the
ACA, nutrition labeling for food sold
from such establishments would not be
‘‘nutrient content disclosures of the type
required under section 403(q)(5)(H)(viii)
[of the FD&C Act]’’ and, therefore,
would not be preempted. As a result,
States and localities would be able to
continue to require nutrition labeling for
foods sold from establishments that are
exempt from the nutrition labeling
requirements of section 403(q)(1) to
(q)(4) of the FD&C Act and not subject
to nutrition labeling requirements of
section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act.
In addition, the express preemption
provisions of section 403(A)(a)(4) of the
FD&C Act do not preempt any State or
local requirement respecting a statement
in the labeling of food that provides for
a warning concerning the safety of the
food or component of the food.
The preamble to the proposed rule (76
FR 19192 at 19229 to 19230) described
an alternative interpretation of the
preemption provisions of section 4205
of the ACA that could leave less room
for States and localities to require
nutrition labeling for food sold in
restaurants or similar retail food
establishments. Under this alternative
interpretation, State or local nutrition
labeling requirements for food sold in
establishments that are not ‘‘restaurants
or similar retail food establishments,’’
would be ineligible for the exception to
the preemption in section 403(A)(a)(4)
of the FD&C Act, because that exception
by its literal terms only covers nutrition
labeling requirements for food offered
for sale in certain restaurants or similar
retail food establishments, specifically
those not subject to the nutrition
labeling requirements of section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act. Under
this alternative interpretation, States
and localities could not have nutrition
labeling requirements for certain foods
offered for sale in non-restaurants and
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similar retail food establishments unless
they successfully petitioned us. Federal
law provides that, upon petition, FDA
may exempt State or local requirements
from the express preemption provisions
of section 403A(a)(4) of the FD&C Act
under certain conditions. (See 21 U.S.C.
343–1(b).) We have issued regulations at
§ 100.1 (21 CFR 100.1) describing the
petition process that is available to State
and local governments to request such
exemptions from preemption.
In addition, under this alternative
interpretation, there would be foods in
certain establishments for which the
Federal Government has not required
nutrition labeling and for which States
and localities would also be precluded
from establishing such labeling
requirements unless they successfully
petitioned us and a rulemaking was
completed. This approach would risk
creating a regulatory gap that would be
inconsistent with the purposes of
section 4205 of the ACA. It would also
impose a restriction and burden on the
States and localities that is inconsistent
with the Federalism principles
expressed in Executive Order 13132, as
well as a substantial administrative
burden on FDA in the event States
petition for exemption.
We requested comment on our
interpretation of section 4025 of the
ACA related to preemption, as well as
the alternative interpretation. We also
requested comment on the use of the
petition process in this context and on
other potential interpretations that
interested persons could identify as
appropriate given both the preemptionrelated language of section 4205 of the
ACA and the statutory goals.
(Comment 157) Several comments
agreed with our interpretation of the
preemption provisions of section 4205
of the ACA. A few of these comments
recommended that the final rule include
an explicit statement that the scope of
the law’s preemptive effect is
coextensive with the law’s nutrition
labeling requirements; that is, the only
State and local provisions that are
preempted are those that explicitly
require the type of menu labeling set
forth in section 4205 of the ACA at a
covered establishment. For example, the
comments stated that if we decide not
to cover movie theaters, hospitals, and
other establishments or decide to
exempt alcohol beverages from menu
labeling in the final rule, then States
and localities can enact laws to cover
them. Another comment stated that an
express statement about preemption
will encourage States and localities to
pass laws that fill in the gaps and to
pass identical laws.
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One comment disagreed with our
proposed interpretation of the
preemption provisions and its outcome.
The comment stated that narrowing the
exception for preemption is consistent
with Congress’ purpose to preempt the
growing patchwork of State and local
menu labeling laws. In addition, the
comment stated that, while the
alternative interpretation would result
in a ‘‘regulatory gap’’ with some
establishments not covered by Federal,
State, and local menu labeling laws,
Congress could amend the FD&C Act, if
it chose to do so.
(Response 157) We agree with the
comments asserting that the preemptive
effect of the Federal menu labeling
requirements of section 4205 of the ACA
is limited to State and local
requirements that impose additional or
different nutrition labeling requirements
for food that is covered by the Federal
requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H) of
the FD&C Act and § 101.11. We also
agree that the alternative interpretation
described in the proposed rule (76 FR
19192 at 19230) would restrict State and
local authorities and create a regulatory
gap that would be inconsistent with the
purposes and language of section 4205
of the ACA and the Federalism
principles expressed in Executive Order
13132.
We disagree with the comment that
suggested that the alternative
interpretation is more consistent with
congressional intent to preempt the
‘‘patchwork’’ of State and local laws on
menu labeling and that the solution for
the ‘‘regulatory gap’’ under that
interpretation would be for Congress to
amend the FD&C Act again. Congress
did create a uniform national menu
labeling scheme for certain foods in
certain facilities described in section
4205 of the ACA. However, nothing in
the legislative history suggests that
Congress intended to create a category
of foods in establishments for which
neither the Federal Government nor
State or local governments could require
menu labeling. We think it is more
consistent with the purposes of section
4205 of the ACA, which provides
valuable nutrition information to
consumers, to allow State and local
governments to require menu labeling
for food not covered by Federal law. The
language of section 4205(c) of the ACA
amending section 403A of the FD&C Act
is consistent with our final
interpretation. This amendment
includes an exception from preemption
for food sold in restaurants or similar
retail food establishments that are not
restaurants or establishments subject to
the requirements of 403(q)(5)(H) of the
FD&C Act.
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For these reasons, we interpret the
provisions of section 4205 of the ACA
related to preemption to mean that State
and local governments may not
establish or continue in effect nutrition
labeling requirements for food covered
by the Federal requirements of section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act and
§ 101.11, unless the State or local
requirements are identical to the Federal
requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H) of
the FD&C Act and § 101.11. In other
words, States and localities cannot have
additional or different nutrition labeling
requirements for food sold either from:
(1) Chain retail food establishments; or
(2) restaurants and similar retail food
establishments not otherwise subject to
the requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H)
and § 101.11 who voluntarily elect to be
subject to those requirements by
registering biannually with FDA in
accordance with section 403(q)(5)(H)(ix)
of the FD&C Act and § 101.11(d). For
food sold in restaurants and similar
retail establishments not subject to the
nutrition labeling requirements of
section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act,
States and localities may impose
nutrition labeling requirements.
(Comment 158) Several comments
agreed with our interpretation of the
Rule of Construction. One comment
agreed that warning statements are not
preempted but asked us to clarify that
this does not mean just microbiological
hazards.
A few comments recommended that
we codify the Rule of Construction. The
comments asserted that the absence of
codified provisions in the rule regarding
the Rule of Construction could lead to
confusion in properly interpreting the
statute. The comments maintained that
the lack of codified provisions in the
rule for a similar Rule of Construction
in the NLEA (see 21 U.S.C. 343–1 note)
has led to confusion and to court
decisions that have not taken that rule
into account. The comments maintained
that ensuring that the Rule of
Construction is explicitly set out in Title
21 of the Code of Federal Regulations
could help to avoid similar problems
with the menu labeling law.
(Response 158) With respect to our
interpretation of the Rule of
Construction in section 4205(d) of the
ACA, we reiterate that State or local
requirements for statements in food
labeling providing for warnings
concerning food safety are not
preempted. We agree with the comment
that food safety in this context is not
limited to microbiological hazards. We
are not persuaded by the comments
suggesting that we add a codified
statement to § 101.11 restating the Rule
of Construction at section 4205(d) of the
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ACA. We have highlighted the existence
of the Rule of Construction and have
explained our interpretation of section
4205(d) of the ACA both in the
preamble to the proposed rule and in
the preamble to this final rule. We do
not think that codifying the Rule of
Construction in section 4205(d) in our
regulations is needed either to prevent
confusion in interpreting the statute or
to assure that courts consider section
4205(d) when appropriate.
(Comment 159) Some comments
asked us to address the meaning of
‘‘identical’’ in section 403A(a)(4) of the
FD&C Act, which excludes from
preemption State and local
requirements that are identical to
Federal requirements under section
403(q) of the FD&C Act. The comments
recommended that the final rule
explicitly state that ‘‘identical’’ refers to
the effect of the law and does not mean
that a State or local requirement must be
identical in wording of the law.
(Response 159) In response to the
comments asserting that we revise the
rule to clarify the meaning of
‘‘identical’’ within the context of section
403A(a)(4) of the FD&C Act, we note
that we have already issued a regulation
at § 100.1 that explains the meaning of
‘‘not identical to’’ in the context of
section 403A of the FD&C Act in
describing the petition process available
to State and local governments to
request an exemption from the express
preemption provisions of section 403A
of the FD&C Act under section 403A(b).
Section 100.1(c)(4) provides in relevant
part that, within the context of section
403A of FD&C Act, ‘‘not identical to’’
does not refer to the specific words in
the State or local requirement but
instead means that the State or local
requirement directly or indirectly
imposes obligations or contains
provisions concerning the labeling of
food that: (1) Are not imposed by or
contained in the applicable provision
(including any implementing
regulation) of section 403 of the FD&C
Act; or (2) differ from those specifically
imposed by or contained in the
applicable provision (including any
implementing regulation) of section 403
of the FD&C Act.
Accordingly, a State or local nutrition
labeling requirement for food covered
by the requirements of section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act and
§ 101.11 that directly or indirectly
imposes obligations or contains labeling
provisions that: (1) Are not imposed by
or contained in section 403(q) of the
FD&C Act and § 101.11; or (2) differ
from those specifically imposed by or
contained in section 403(q) of the FD&C
Act and § 101.11 would be ‘‘not
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71251
identical to’’ the Federal requirements
and therefore would be preempted
under section 403A(a)(4) of the FD&C
Act. Because the meaning of the phrase
‘‘not identical to,’’ within the context of
section 403A of the FD&C Act, is
already described in § 100.1 and is
further explained here, we decline to
revise the rule to clarify the meaning of
‘‘identical’’ as suggested by the
comments.
(Comment 160) A few comments
recommended that we support
development of State and local laws that
are identical. The comments
recommended that we help the States
and localities by making staff available
to help assess the proposed language of
State or local law for potential conflicts
with Federal law and providing model
legislation, which should be made part
of the Model Food Code.
(Response 160) As discussed in
section XXIV, a State or local
jurisdiction may establish requirements,
identical to those established in this
rule, in its own food codes and then
enforce its own food codes. Whether we
can help States and localities assess the
proposed language of State or local law
for potential conflicts with Federal law
will depend on resources available at
the time of any requests for such
assistance. However, at this time, we do
not expect to have resources to provide
model legislation for use by States and
localities. We recommend that States
and localities who wish to establish
requirements, in their own food codes,
identical to those established in this
rule adapt § 101.11 for their own use.
(Comment 161) One comment asked
us to describe the basis on which
establishments that opt into the program
can be assured that preemption applies.
The comment asserted that if a facility
complies with the Federal requirements
under its food service contract as agreed
to by the Federal Government, that
establishment must be fully protected
from State and local menu labeling
action. The comment also stated that a
facility’s compliance with the terms of
a Federal Government contract must
suffice as certification that the facility is
in compliance with all FDA menu
labeling provisions and the facility
should be permitted to opt into our
program without any additional
requirements.
(Response 161) As provided in
403(q)(5)(H)(ix) of the FD&C Act,
authorized officials of restaurants and
similar retail establishments that are not
subject to the requirements of section
403(q)(5)(H) may elect to be subject to
those requirements by registering
biannually with FDA, as specified in
§ 101.11(d). Under section 403A(a)(4) of
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the FD&C Act, an establishment that
‘‘complies with the voluntary provision
of nutrition information requirements of
403(q)(5)(H)(ix)’’ brings itself within the
scope of Federal preemption of State
and local laws. The comment appears
essentially to be seeking FDA’s
assurances that a facility’s compliance
with the terms of a Federal contract to
provide food services would (1) suffice
for ‘‘opting in’’ to the voluntary program
and (2) guarantee that State and local
menu labeling action against the facility
is prohibited. We decline to provide
such assurances. The requirements for
voluntarily ‘‘opting in’’ to be subject to
the Federal menu labeling requirements
are set forth in § 101.11(d). Preemption
of certain State and local requirements
follows from voluntarily becoming
subject to the requirements of § 101.11.
The effects of following the terms of
Federal contracts to procure food
services are outside the scope of this
rulemaking.
XXVIII. Environmental Impact
We have determined under 21 CFR
25.30(k) that this action is of a type that
does not individually or cumulatively
have a significant effect on the human
environment. Therefore, neither an
environmental assessment nor an
environmental impact statement is
required.
XXIX. References
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The following references have been
placed on display in the Division of
Dockets Management (HFA–305), Food
and Drug Administration, 5630 Fishers
Lane, Rm. 1061, Rockville, MD 20852,
and may be seen by interested persons
between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m., Monday
through Friday, and are available
electronically at https://
www.regulations.gov. (FDA has verified
all the Web site addresses in this
reference section, but FDA is not
responsible for any subsequent changes
to the Web sites after this document
publishes in the Federal Register).
1. Flegal, K.M., M.D. Carroll, C.L. Ogden, et
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15. Webster’s Third New International
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25. Webster’s Third New International
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26. 2A Sutherland Statutory Construction
137, 7th ed., 2009.
27. McDonald’s and North America
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Customer Satisfaction Survey’’, 2011.
28. FDA Memorandum, Chung-Tung Jordan
Lin, to the File, ‘‘Review of Comment
Submitted by McDonald’s USA to Docket
No. FDA–2011–F–0172, on the Use of
Stanchions at Drive-Through Windows
to Disclose Calories in Standard Menu
Items in Restaurants and Similar Retail
Food Establishments,’’ January 27, 2012.
29. Harkin, DeLauro Respond to Proposed
Menu Labeling Rules. April 1, 2011.
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30. U.S. Department of the Treasury, Alcohol
and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau. TTB
Ruling Number: 2013–2, May 28, 2013.
31. Cunningham, S.K., The Bartender’s Black
Book, 10th ed., 2011.
32. Comment from Hyman, Phelps, and
McNamara on behalf of Dominoes,
Appendix 3, 2011.
33. FDA Memorandum, Chung-Tung Jordan
Lin, to the File, ‘‘Review of Comment
Submitted by Culver Franchising
Systems, Inc,. to Docket No. FDA–2011–
F–0172, on the Calorie Declaration
Option of Not Using Caloric Ranges for
Combination Meals and Variable Menu
Items,’’ February 29, 2012.
34. California Health and Safety Code,
Section 114377.
35. New York City Health Code, Section
81.08.
36. Baltimore City Health Code Section 6–
507.
37. County Council for Montgomery County
Maryland, Resolution No. 16–134, 2007.
38. FDA, ‘‘Guidance for Industry: A Food
Labeling Guide,’’ 2008.
39. FDA, ‘‘Regulatory Procedures Manual,’’
chapter 4.
40 FDA, ‘‘Regulatory Procedures Manual,’’
chapter 6, section 5.
41. FDA, ‘‘State Contracts,’’ available at
https://www.fda.gov/
ForFederalStateandLocalOfficials/
PartnershipsContracts/StateContracts/
default.htm, 2012.
42. FDA, ‘‘Food Labeling: Nutrition Labeling
of Standard Menu Items in Restaurants
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and Similar Retail Food Establishments.
Final Regulatory Impact Analysis,’’
Docket No. FDA–2011–F–0172, 2014.
43. ‘‘Food Labeling: Nutrition Labeling of
Standard Menu Items in Restaurants and
Similar Retail Food Establishments.
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking,’’ Docket
No. FDA–2011–F–0172, Preliminary
Regulatory Impact Analysis, 2011.
44. U.S. Census Bureau. County Business
Patterns, United States NAICS 2000–
2008. October 18, 2010.
45. Wootan, M.G., M. Osborn. ‘‘Availability
of Nutrition Information From Chain
Restaurants in the United States.
American Journal of Preventive
Medicine, 30(3):266–268, 2006.
46. U.S. Census Bureau. North American
Industry Classification System. 2007.
October 18, 2010.
47. Mintel Menu Insights. New Menu Items
at Restaurants. 2010.
48. Eastern Research Group I. Evaluation of
Recordkeeping Costs for Food
Manufacturers, Final Report. Sertkaya,
A, A. Berlind, S. Erdem, editors. Contract
No. 223–01–2461, Task Order Number 5.
2007.
List of Subjects
21 CFR Part 11
Administrative practice and
procedure, Computer technology,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
21 CFR Part 101
Food labeling, Nutrition, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
Therefore, under the Federal Food,
Drug, and Cosmetic Act and under
authority delegated to the Commissioner
of Food and Drugs, 21 CFR parts 11 and
101 are amended as follows:
and (3), and the first sentence of
paragraph (j)(4) to read as follows:
§ 101.9
Nutrition labeling of food.
*
*
*
*
*
(j) * * *
(1)(i) Food offered for sale by a person
who makes direct sales to consumers
(e.g., a retailer) who has annual gross
sales made or business done in sales to
consumers that is not more than
$500,000 or has annual gross sales made
or business done in sales of food to
consumers of not more than $50,000,
Provided, That the food bears no
nutrition claims or other nutrition
information in any context on the label
or in labeling or advertising. Claims or
other nutrition information subject the
food to the provisions of this section,
§ 101.10, or § 101.11, as applicable.
*
*
*
*
*
(2) Except as provided in § 101.11,
food products that are:
*
*
*
*
*
(3) Except as provided in § 101.11,
food products that are:
*
*
*
*
*
(4) Except as provided in § 101.11,
foods that contain insignificant amounts
of all of the nutrients and food
components required to be included in
the declaration of nutrition information
under paragraph (c) of this section,
Provided, That the food bears no
nutrition claims or other nutrition
information in any context on the label
or in labeling or advertising. * * *
*
*
*
*
*
■ 5. Section 101.10 is revised to read as
follows:
PART 11—ELECTRONIC RECORDS;
ELECTRONIC SIGNATURES
1. The authority citation for 21 CFR
part 11 continues to read as follows:
§ 101.10 Nutrition labeling of restaurant
foods whose labels or labeling bear nutrient
content claims or health claims.
Nutrition labeling in accordance with
§ 101.9 shall be provided upon request
for any restaurant food or meal for
which a nutrient content claim (as
defined in § 101.13 or in subpart D of
this part) or a health claim (as defined
in § 101.14 and permitted by a
regulation in subpart E of this part) is
made, except that information on the
nutrient amounts that are the basis for
the claim (e.g., ‘‘low fat, this meal
provides less than 10 grams of fat’’) may
serve as the functional equivalent of
complete nutrition information as
described in § 101.9. For the purposes of
this section, restaurant food includes
two categories of food. It includes food
which is served in restaurants or other
establishments in which food is served
for immediate human consumption or
which is sold for sale or use in such
establishments. It also includes food
which is processed and prepared
■
Authority: 21 U.S.C. 321–393; 42 U.S.C.
262.
2. Section 11.1 is amended by adding
paragraph (g) to read as follows:
■
§ 11.1
Scope.
*
*
*
*
*
(g) This part does not apply to
electronic signatures obtained under
§ 101.11(d) of this chapter.
PART 101—FOOD LABELING
3. The authority citation for 21 CFR
part 101 continues to read as follows:
rljohnson on DSK3VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
■
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 1453, 1454, 1455; 21
U.S.C. 321, 331, 342, 343, 348, 371; 42 U.S.C.
243, 264, 271.
4. Section 101.9 is amended by
revising paragraph (j)(1)(i), the
introductory text of paragraphs (j)(2)
■
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primarily in a retail establishment,
which is ready for human consumption,
which is of the type described in the
previous sentence, and which is offered
for sale to consumers but not for
immediate human consumption in such
establishment and which is not offered
for sale outside such establishment. For
standard menu items that are offered for
sale in covered establishments (as
defined in § 101.11(a)), the information
in the written nutrition information
required by § 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(A) will
serve to meet the requirements of this
section. Nutrient levels may be
determined by nutrient databases,
cookbooks, or analyses or by other
reasonable bases that provide assurance
that the food or meal meets the nutrient
requirements for the claim. Presentation
of nutrition labeling may be in various
forms, including those provided in
§ 101.45 and other reasonable means.
■ 6. Section 101.11 is added to subpart
A to read as follows:
§ 101.11 Nutrition labeling of standard
menu items in covered establishments.
(a) Definitions. The definitions of
terms in section 201 of the Federal
Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act apply to
such terms when used in this section. In
addition, for purposes of this section:
Authorized official of a restaurant or
similar retail food establishment means
the owner, operator, agent in charge, or
other person authorized by the owner,
operator, or agent in charge to register
the restaurant or similar retail food
establishment, which is not otherwise
subject to section 403(q)(5)(H) of the
Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act,
with FDA for the purposes of paragraph
(d) of this section.
Combination meal means a standard
menu item that consists of more than
one food item, for example a meal that
includes a sandwich, a side dish, and a
drink. A combination meal may be
represented on the menu or menu board
in narrative form, numerically, or
pictorially. Some combination meals
may include a variable menu item or be
a variable menu item as defined in this
paragraph where the components may
vary. For example, the side dish may
vary among several options (e.g., fries,
salad, or onion rings) or the drinks may
vary (e.g., soft drinks, milk, or juice) and
the customer selects which of these
items will be included in the meal.
Covered establishment means a
restaurant or similar retail food
establishment that is a part of a chain
with 20 or more locations doing
business under the same name
(regardless of the type of ownership,
e.g., individual franchises) and offering
for sale substantially the same menu
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items, as well as a restaurant or similar
retail food establishment that is
registered to be covered under
paragraph (d) of this section.
Custom order means a food order that
is prepared in a specific manner based
on an individual customer’s request,
which requires the covered
establishment to deviate from its usual
preparation of a standard menu item,
e.g., a club sandwich without the bacon
if the establishment usually includes
bacon in its club sandwich.
Daily special means a menu item that
is prepared and offered for sale on a
particular day, that is not routinely
listed on a menu or menu board or
offered by the covered establishment,
and that is promoted by the covered
establishment as a special menu item for
that particular day.
Doing business under the same name
means sharing the same name. The term
‘‘name’’ refers to either:
(i) The name of the establishment
presented to the public; or
(ii) If there is no name of the
establishment presented to the public
(e.g., an establishment with the generic
descriptor ‘‘concession stand’’), the
name of the parent entity of the
establishment. When the term ‘‘name’’
refers to the name of the establishment
presented to the public under paragraph
(i) of this definition, the term ‘‘same’’
includes names that are slight variations
of each other, for example, due to the
region, location, or size (e.g., ‘‘New York
Ave. Burgers’’ and ‘‘Pennsylvania Ave.
Burgers’’ or ‘‘ABC’’ and ‘‘ABC
Express’’).
Food on display means restauranttype food that is visible to the customer
before the customer makes a selection,
so long as there is not an ordinary
expectation of further preparation by the
consumer before consumption.
Food that is part of a customary
market test means food that appears on
a menu or menu board for less than 90
consecutive days in order to test
consumer acceptance of the product.
Location means a fixed position or
site.
Menu or menu board means the
primary writing of the covered
establishment from which a customer
makes an order selection, including, but
not limited to, breakfast, lunch, and
dinner menus; dessert menus; beverage
menus; children’s menus; other
specialty menus; electronic menus; and
menus on the Internet. Determining
whether a writing is or is part of the
primary writing of the covered
establishment from which a customer
makes an order selection depends on a
number of factors, including whether
the writing lists the name of a standard
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menu item (or an image depicting the
standard menu item) and the price of
the standard menu item, and whether
the writing can be used by a customer
to make an order selection at the time
the customer is viewing the writing. The
menus may be in different forms, e.g.,
booklets, pamphlets, or single sheets of
paper. Menu boards include those
inside a covered establishment as well
as drive-through menu boards at
covered establishments.
Offering for sale substantially the
same menu items means offering for sale
a significant proportion of menu items
that use the same general recipe and are
prepared in substantially the same way
with substantially the same food
components, even if the name of the
menu item varies, (e.g. ‘‘Bay View Crab
Cake’’ and ‘‘Ocean View Crab Cake’’).
‘‘Menu items’’ in this definition refers to
food items that are listed on a menu or
menu board or that are offered as selfservice food or food on display.
Restaurants and similar retail food
establishments that are part of a chain
can still be offering for sale substantially
the same menu items if the availability
of some menu items varies within the
chain. Having the same name may
indicate, but does not necessarily
guarantee, that menu items are
substantially the same.
Restaurant or similar retail food
establishment means a retail
establishment that offers for sale
restaurant-type food, except if it is a
school as defined by 7 CFR 210.2 or
220.2.
Restaurant-type food means food that
is:
(i) Usually eaten on the premises,
while walking away, or soon after
arriving at another location; and
(ii) Either:
(A) Served in restaurants or other
establishments in which food is served
for immediate human consumption or
which is sold for sale or use in such
establishments; or
(B) Processed and prepared primarily
in a retail establishment, ready for
human consumption, of the type
described in paragraph (ii)(A) of this
definition, and offered for sale to
consumers but not for immediate
human consumption in such
establishment and which is not offered
for sale outside such establishment.
Self-service food means restauranttype food that is available at a salad bar,
buffet line, cafeteria line, or similar selfservice facility and that is served by the
customers themselves. Self-service food
also includes self-service beverages.
Standard menu item means a
restaurant-type food that is routinely
included on a menu or menu board or
PO 00000
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routinely offered as a self-service food
or food on display.
Temporary menu item means a food
that appears on a menu or menu board
for less than a total of 60 days per
calendar year. The 60 days includes the
total of consecutive and nonconsecutive days the item appears on
the menu.
Variable menu item means a standard
menu item that comes in different
flavors, varieties, or combinations, and
is listed as a single menu item.
(b) Requirements for nutrition labeling
for food sold in covered
establishments—(1) Applicability. (i)
The labeling requirements in this
paragraph (b) apply to standard menu
items offered for sale in covered
establishments.
(ii)(A) The labeling requirements in
this paragraph (b) do not apply to foods
that are not standard menu items,
including:
(1) Items such as condiments that are
for general use, including those placed
on the table or on or behind the counter;
daily specials; temporary menu items;
custom orders; food that is part of a
customary market test; and
(2) Self-service food and food on
display that is offered for sale for less
than a total of 60 days per calendar year
or fewer than 90 consecutive days in
order to test consumer acceptance.
(B) The labeling requirements of
paragraph (b)(2)(iii) of this section do
not apply to alcoholic beverages that are
foods on display and are not self-service
foods.
(2) Nutrition information. (i) Except as
provided by paragraph (b)(2)(i)(A)(8) of
this section, the following must be
provided on menus and menu boards:
(A) The number of calories contained
in each standard menu item listed on
the menu or menu board, as usually
prepared and offered for sale. In the case
of multiple-serving standard menu
items, this means the calories declared
must be for the whole menu item listed
on the menu or menu board as usually
prepared and offered for sale (e.g.,
‘‘pizza pie: 1600 cal’’); or per discrete
serving unit as long as the discrete
serving unit (e.g., pizza slice) and total
number of discrete serving units
contained in the menu item are declared
on the menu or menu board, and the
menu item is usually prepared and
offered for sale divided in discrete
serving units (e.g., ‘‘pizza pie: 200 cal/
slice, 8 slices’’). The calories must be
declared in the following manner:
(1) The number of calories must be
listed adjacent to the name or the price
of the associated standard menu item, in
a type size no smaller than the type size
of the name or the price of the
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associated standard menu item,
whichever is smaller, in the same color,
or a color at least as conspicuous as that
used for the name of the associated
standard menu item, and with the same
contrasting background or a background
at least as contrasting as that used for
the name of the associated standard
menu item.
(2) To the nearest 5-calorie increment
up to and including 50 calories and to
the nearest 10-calorie increment above
50 calories, except that amounts less
than 5 calories may be expressed as
zero.
(3) The term ‘‘Calories’’ or ‘‘Cal’’ must
appear as a heading above a column
listing the number of calories for each
standard menu item or adjacent to the
number of calories for each standard
menu item. If the term ‘‘Calories’’ or
‘‘Cal’’ appears as a heading above a
column of calorie declarations, the term
must be in a type size no smaller than
the smallest type size of the name or
price of any menu item on that menu or
menu board in the same color or a color
at least as conspicuous as that used for
that name or price and in the same
contrasting background or a background
at least as contrasting as that used for
that name or price. If the term
‘‘Calories’’ or ‘‘Cal’’ appears adjacent to
the number of calories for the standard
menu item, the term ‘‘Calories’’ or ‘‘Cal’’
must appear in the same type size and
in the same color and contrasting
background as the number of calories.
(4) Additional requirements that
apply to each individual variable menu
item:
(i) When the menu or menu board
lists flavors or varieties of an entire
individual variable menu item (such as
soft drinks, ice cream, doughnuts, dips,
and chicken that can be grilled or fried),
the calories must be declared separately
for each listed flavor or variety. Where
flavors or varieties have the same calorie
amounts (after rounding in accordance
with paragraph (b)(2)(i)(A)(2) of this
section), the calorie declaration for such
flavors or varieties can be listed as a
single calorie declaration adjacent to the
flavors or varieties, provided that the
calorie declaration specifies that the
calorie amount listed represents the
calorie amounts for each individual
flavor or variety.
(ii) When the menu or menu board
does not list flavors or varieties for an
entire individual variable menu item,
and only includes a general description
of the variable menu item (e.g. ‘‘soft
drinks’’), the calories must be declared
for each option with a slash between the
two calorie declarations where only two
options are available (e.g., ‘‘150/250
calories’’) or as a range in accordance
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with the requirements of paragraph
(b)(2)(i)(A)(7) of this section where more
than two options are available (e.g.,
‘‘100–250 calories’’).
(iii) When the menu or menu board
describes flavors or varieties for only
part of an individual variable menu item
(such as different types of cheese offered
in a grilled cheese sandwich (e.g.,
‘‘Grilled Cheese (Cheddar or Swiss)’’),
the calories must be declared for each
option with a slash between the two
calorie declarations where only two
options are available (e.g., ‘‘450/500
calories’’) or as a range in accordance
with the requirements of paragraph
(b)(2)(i)(A)(7) of this section where more
than two options are available (e.g.,
‘‘450–550 calories’’).
(5) Additional requirements that
apply to a variable menu item that is
offered for sale with the option of
adding toppings listed on the menu or
menu board. When the menu or menu
board lists toppings that can be added
to a menu item (such as pizza or ice
cream):
(i) The calories must be declared for
the basic preparation of the menu item
as listed (e.g., ‘‘small pizza pie,’’ ‘‘single
scoop ice cream’’).
(ii) The calories must be separately
declared for each topping listed on the
menu or menu board (e.g., pepperoni,
sausage, green peppers, onions on pizza;
fudge, almonds, sprinkles on ice cream),
specifying that the calories are added to
the calories contained in the basic
preparation of the menu item. Where
toppings have the same calorie amounts
(after rounding in accordance with
paragraph (b)(2)(i)(A)(2) of this section),
the calorie declaration for such toppings
can be listed as a single calorie
declaration adjacent to the toppings,
provided that the calorie declaration
specifies that the calorie amount listed
represents the calorie amount for each
individual topping.
(iii) The calories for the basic
preparation of the menu item must be
declared for each size of the menu item.
The calories for each topping listed on
the menu or menu board must be
declared for each size of the menu item,
or declared using a slash between the
two calorie declarations for each
topping where only two sizes of the
menu item are available (e.g., ‘‘adds
150/250 cal’’) or as a range for each
topping in accordance with the
requirements of paragraph (b)(2)(i)(A)(7)
of this section where more than two
sizes of the menu item are available
(e.g., ‘‘adds 100–250 cal’’). If a slash
between two calorie declarations or a
range of calorie declarations is used, the
menu or menu board must indicate that
the variation in calories for each topping
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71255
arises from the size of the menu item to
which the toppings are added.
(iv) If the amount of the topping
included on the basic preparation of the
menu item decreases based on the total
number of toppings ordered for the
menu item (such as is sometimes the
case with pizza toppings), the calories
for each topping must be declared as
single values representing the calories
for each topping when added to a onetopping menu item, specifying that the
calorie declaration is for the topping
when added to a one-topping menu
item.
(6) Additional requirements that
apply to a combination meal. Except as
provided in paragraph (b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(iv)
of this section:
(i) When the menu or menu board
lists two options for menu items in a
combination meal (e.g., a sandwich with
a side salad or chips), the calories must
be declared for each option with a slash
between the two calorie declarations
(e.g., ‘‘350/450 calories’’).
(ii) When the menu or menu board
lists three or more options for menu
items in a combination meal (e.g., a
sandwich with chips, a side salad, or
fruit), the calories must be declared as
a range in accordance with the
requirements of paragraph (b)(2)(i)(A)(7)
of this section (e.g., ‘‘350–500 calories’’).
(iii) When the menu or menu board
includes a choice to increase or decrease
the size of a combination meal, the
calorie difference must be declared for
the increased or decreased size with a
slash between two calorie declarations
(e.g., ‘‘Adds 100/150 calories,’’
‘‘Subtracts 100/150 calories’’) if the
menu or menu board lists two options
for menu items in the combination
meal, or as a range in accordance with
the requirements of paragraph
(b)(2)(i)(A)(7) of this section (e.g., ‘‘Adds
100–250 calories,’’ ‘‘Subtracts 100–250
calories’’) if the menu or menu board
lists three or more options for menu
items in the combination meal.
(iv) Where the menu or menu board
describes an opportunity for a consumer
to combine standard menu items for a
special price (e.g., ‘‘Combine Any
Sandwich with Any Soup or Any Salad
for $8.99’’), and the calories for each
standard menu item, including each size
option as described in paragraph
(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(iii) of this section if
applicable, available for the consumer to
combine are declared elsewhere on the
menu or menu board, the requirements
of paragraphs (b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(i), (ii), and
(iii) of this section do not apply.
(7) Additional format requirements for
declaring calories for an individual
variable menu item, a combination
meal, and toppings as a range, if
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applicable. Calories declared as a range
must be in the format ‘‘xx–yy,’’ where
‘‘xx’’ is the caloric content of the lowest
calorie variety, flavor, or combination,
and ‘‘yy’’ is the caloric content of the
highest calorie variety, flavor, or
combination.
(8) Exception for a variable menu item
that has no clearly identifiable upper
bound to the range of calories: If the
variable menu item appears on the
menu or menu board and is a selfservice food or food on display, and
there is no clearly identifiable upper
bound to the range, e.g., all-you-can-eat
buffet, then the menu or menu board
must include a statement, adjacent to
the name or price of the item, referring
customers to the self-service facility for
calorie information, e.g., ‘‘See buffet for
calorie declarations.’’ This statement
must appear in a type size no smaller
than the type size of the name or price
of the variable menu item, whichever is
smaller, and in the same color or a color
at least as conspicuous as that used for
that name or price, with the same
contrasting background or a background
at least as contrasting as that used for
that name or price.
(9) Additional requirements that
apply to beverages that are not selfservice. For beverages that are not selfservice, calories must be declared based
on the full volume of the cup served
without ice, unless the covered
establishment ordinarily dispenses and
offers for sale a standard beverage fill
(i.e., a fixed amount that is less than the
full volume of the cup per cup size) or
dispenses a standard ice fill (i.e., a fixed
amount of ice per cup size). If the
covered establishment ordinarily
dispenses and offers for sale a standard
beverage fill or dispenses a standard ice
fill, the covered establishment must
declare calories based on such standard
beverage fill or standard ice fill.
(B) The following statement designed
to enable consumers to understand, in
the context of a total daily diet, the
significance of the calorie information
provided on menus and menu boards:
‘‘2,000 calories a day is used for general
nutrition advice, but calorie needs
vary.’’ For menus and menu boards
targeted to children, the following
options may be used as a substitute for
or in addition to the succinct statement:
‘‘1,200 to 1,400 calories a day is used for
general nutrition advice for children
ages 4 to 8 years, but calorie needs
vary.’’; or ‘‘1,200 to 1,400 calories a day
is used for general nutrition advice for
children ages 4 to 8 years and 1,400 to
2,000 calories a day for children ages 9
to 13 years, but calorie needs vary.’’
(1) This statement must be posted
prominently and in a clear and
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conspicuous manner in a type size no
smaller than the smallest type size of
any calorie declaration appearing on the
same menu or menu board and in the
same color or in a color at least as
conspicuous as that used for the calorie
declarations and with the same
contrasting background or a background
at least as contrasting as that used for
the calorie declarations.
(2) For menus, this statement must
appear on the bottom of each page of the
menu. On menu pages that also bear the
statement required by paragraph
(b)(2)(i)(C) of this section, this statement
must appear immediately above, below,
or beside the statement required by
paragraph (b)(2)(i)(C) of this section.
(3) For menu boards, this statement
must appear on the bottom of the menu
board, immediately above, below, or
beside the statement required by
paragraph (b)(2)(i)(C) of this section.
(C) The following statement regarding
the availability of the additional written
nutrition information required in
paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of this section must
be on all forms of the menu or menu
board: ‘‘Additional nutrition
information available upon request.’’
(1) This statement must be posted
prominently and in a clear and
conspicuous manner in a type size no
smaller than the smallest type size of
any calorie declaration appearing on the
same menu or menu board and in the
same color or in a color at least as
conspicuous as that used for the caloric
declarations, and with the same
contrasting background or a background
at least as contrasting as that used for
the caloric declarations.
(2) For menus, the statement must
appear on the bottom of the first page
with menu items immediately above,
below, or beside the succinct statement
required by paragraph (b)(2)(i)(B) of this
section.
(3) For menu boards, the statement
must appear on the bottom of the menu
board immediately above, below, or
beside the succinct statement required
by paragraph (b)(2)(i)(B) of this section.
(ii) The following nutrition
information for a standard menu item
must be available in written form on the
premises of the covered establishment
and provided to the customer upon
request. This nutrition information must
be presented in the order listed and
using the measurements listed, except
as provided in paragraph (b)(2)(ii)(B) of
this section. Rounding of these nutrients
must be in compliance with § 101.9(c).
The information must be presented in a
clear and conspicuous manner,
including using a color, type size, and
contrasting background that render the
information likely to be read and
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understood by the ordinary individual
under customary conditions of purchase
and use. Covered establishments may
use the abbreviations allowed for
Nutrition Facts for certain packaged
foods in § 101.9(j)(13)(ii)(B):
(A)(1) Total calories (cal);
(2) Calories from fat (fat cal);
(3) Total fat (g);
(4) Saturated fat (g);
(5) Trans fat (g);
(6) Cholesterol (mg);
(7) Sodium (mg);
(8) Total carbohydrate (g);
(9) Dietary fiber (g);
(10) Sugars (g); and
(11) Protein (g).
(B) If a standard menu item contains
insignificant amounts of all the
nutrients required to be disclosed in
paragraph (b)(2)(ii)(A) of this section,
the establishment is not required to
include nutrition information regarding
the standard menu item in the written
form. However, if the covered
establishment makes a nutrient content
claim or health claim, the establishment
is required to provide nutrition
information on the nutrient that is the
subject of the claim in accordance with
§ 101.10. For standard menu items that
contain insignificant amounts of six or
more of the required nutrients, the
declaration of nutrition information
required by paragraph (b)(2)(ii)(A) of
this section may be presented in a
simplified format.
(1) An insignificant amount is defined
as that amount that allows a declaration
of zero in nutrition labeling, except that
for total carbohydrates, dietary fiber,
and protein, it must be an amount that
allows a declaration of ‘‘less than one
gram.’’
(2) The simplified format must
include information, in a column, list,
or table, on the following nutrients:
(i) Total calories, total fat, total
carbohydrates, protein, and sodium; and
(ii) Calories from fat, and any other
nutrients identified in paragraph
(b)(2)(ii)(A) of this section that are
present in more than insignificant
amounts.
(3) If the simplified format is used, the
statement ‘‘Not a significant source
of ____’’ (with the blank filled in with
the names of the nutrients required to be
declared in the written nutrient
information and calories from fat that
are present in insignificant amounts)
must be included at the bottom of the
list of nutrients.
(C) For variable menu items, the
nutrition information listed in
paragraph (b)(2)(ii)(A) of this section
must be declared as follows for each
size offered for sale:
(1) The nutrition information required
in paragraph (b)(2)(ii)(A) of this section
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must be declared for the basic
preparation of the item and, separately,
for each topping, flavor, or variable
component.
(2) Additional format requirements for
toppings if the amount of the topping
included on the basic preparation of the
menu item decreases based on the total
number of toppings ordered for the
menu item (such as is sometimes the
case with pizza toppings). The nutrients
for such topping must be declared as
single values representing the nutrients
for each topping when added to a onetopping menu item, specifying that the
nutrient declaration is for the topping
when added to a one-topping menu
item.
(3) If the calories and other nutrients
are the same for different flavors,
varieties, and variable components of
the combination meal, each variety,
flavor, and variable component of the
combination meal is not required to be
listed separately. All items that have the
same nutrient values could be listed
together with the nutrient values listed
only once.
(D) The written nutrition information
required in paragraph (b)(2)(ii)(A) of this
section may be provided on a counter
card, sign, poster, handout, booklet,
loose leaf binder, or electronic device
such as a computer, or in a menu, or in
any other form that similarly permits
the written declaration of the required
nutrient content information for all
standard menu items. If the written
nutrition information is not in a form
that can be given to the customer upon
request, it must be readily available in
a manner and location on the premises
that allows the customer/consumer to
review the written nutrition information
upon request.
(iii) The following must be provided
for a standard menu item that is selfservice or on display.
(A) Calories per displayed food item
(e.g., a bagel, a slice of pizza, or a
muffin), or if the food is not offered for
sale in a discrete unit, calories per
serving (e.g., scoop, cup), and the
serving or discrete unit used to
determine the calorie content (e.g., ‘‘per
scoop’’ or ‘‘per muffin’’) on either: A
sign adjacent to and clearly associated
with the corresponding food; (e.g., ‘‘150
calories per scoop’’); a sign attached to
a sneeze guard with the calorie
declaration and the serving or unit used
to determine the calorie content above
each specific food so that the consumer
can clearly associate the calorie
declaration with the food, except that if
it is not clear to which food the calorie
declaration and serving or unit refers,
then the sign must also include the
name of the food, e.g., ‘‘Broccoli and
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cheese casserole—200 calories per
scoop’’; or a single sign or placard
listing the calorie declaration for several
food items along with the names of the
food items, so long as the sign or
placard is located where a consumer can
view the name, calorie declaration, and
serving or unit of a particular item while
selecting that item.
(1) For purposes of paragraph
(b)(2)(iii)(A) of this section, ‘‘per
displayed food item’’ means per each
discrete unit offered for sale, for
example, a bagel, a slice of pizza, or a
muffin.
(2) For purposes of paragraph
(b)(2)(iii)(A) of this section, ‘‘per
serving’’ means, for each food:
(i) Per serving instrument used to
dispense the food offered for sale,
provided that the serving instrument
dispenses a uniform amount of the food
(e.g., a scoop or ladle);
(ii) If a serving instrument that
dispenses a uniform amount of food is
not used to dispense the food, per each
common household measure (e.g., cup
or tablespoon) offered for sale or per
unit of weight offered for sale, e.g., per
quarter pound or per 4 ounces; or
(iii) Per total number of fluid ounces
in the cup in which a self-service
beverage is served and, if applicable, the
description of the cup size (e.g., ‘‘140
calories per 12 fluid ounces (small)’’).
(3) The calories must be declared in
the following manner:
(i) To the nearest 5-calorie increment
up to and including 50 calories and to
the nearest 10-calorie increment above
50 calories except that amounts less
than 5 calories may be expressed as
zero.
(ii) If the calorie declaration is
provided on a sign with the food’s
name, price, or both, the calorie
declaration, accompanied by the term
‘‘Calories’’ or ‘‘Cal’’ and the amount of
the serving or displayed food item on
which the calories declaration is based
must be in a type size no smaller than
the type size of the name or price of the
menu item whichever is smaller, in the
same color, or a color that is at least as
conspicuous as that used for that name
or price, using the same contrasting
background or a background at least as
contrasting as that used for that name or
price. If the calorie declaration is
provided on a sign that does not include
the food’s name, price, or both, the
calorie declaration, accompanied by the
term ‘‘Calories’’ or ‘‘Cal’’ and the
amount of the serving or displayed food
item on which the calorie declaration is
based must be clear and conspicuous.
(iii) For self-service beverages, calorie
declarations must be accompanied by
the term ‘‘fluid ounces’’ and, if
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71257
applicable, the description of the cup
size (e.g., ‘‘small,’’ ‘‘medium’’).
(B) For food that is self-service or on
display and is identified by an
individual sign adjacent to the food
itself where such sign meets the
definition of a menu or menu board
under paragraph (a) of this section, the
statement required by paragraph
(b)(2)(i)(B) of this section and the
statement required by paragraph
(b)(2)(i)(C) of this section. These two
statements may appear on the sign
adjacent to the food itself; on a separate,
larger sign, in close proximity to the
food that can be easily read as the
consumer is making order selections; or
on a large menu board that can be easily
read as the consumer is viewing the
food.
(C) The nutrition information in
written form required by paragraph
(b)(2)(ii) of this section, except for
packaged food insofar as it bears
nutrition labeling information required
by and in accordance with paragraph
(b)(2)(ii) of this section and the
packaged food, including its label, can
be examined by a consumer before
purchasing the food.
(c) Determination of nutrient content.
(1) A covered establishment must have
a reasonable basis for its nutrient
declarations. Nutrient values may be
determined by using nutrient databases
(with or without computer software
programs), cookbooks, laboratory
analyses, or other reasonable means,
including the use of Nutrition Facts on
labels on packaged foods that comply
with the nutrition labeling requirements
of section 403(q)(1) of the Federal Food,
Drug, and Cosmetic Act and § 101.9,
FDA nutrient values for raw fruits and
vegetables in Appendix C of this part, or
FDA nutrient values for cooked fish in
Appendix D of this part.
(2) Nutrient declarations for standard
menu items must be accurate and
consistent with the specific basis used
to determine nutrient values. A covered
establishment must take reasonable
steps to ensure that the method of
preparation (e.g., types and amounts of
ingredients, cooking temperatures) and
amount of a standard menu item offered
for sale adhere to the factors on which
its nutrient values were determined.
(3) A covered establishment must
provide to FDA, within a reasonable
period of time upon request,
information substantiating nutrient
values including the method and data
used to derive these nutrient values.
This information must include the
following:
(i) For nutrient databases:
(A) The name and version (including
the date of the version) of the database,
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and, as applicable, the name of the
applicable software company and any
Web site address for the database. The
name and version of a database would
include the name and version of the
computer software, if applicable;
(B) The recipe or formula used as a
basis for the nutrient declarations;
(C)(1) Information on:
(i) The amount of each nutrient that
the specified amount of each ingredient
identified in the recipe contributes to
the menu item; and
(ii) How the database was used
including calculations or operations
(e.g., worksheets or computer printouts)
to determine the nutrient values for the
standard menu items;
(2) If the information in paragraph
(c)(3)(i)(C)(1) of this section is not
available, certification attesting that the
database will provide accurate results
when used appropriately and that the
database was used in accordance with
its instructions;
(D) A detailed listing (e.g., printout) of
the nutrient values determined for each
standard menu item.
(E) Any other information pertinent to
the final nutrient values of the standard
menu item (e.g., information about what
might cause slight variations in the
nutrient profile such as moisture
variations);
(F) A statement signed and dated by
a responsible individual, employed at
the covered establishment or its
corporate headquarters or parent entity,
who can certify that the information
contained in the nutrient analysis is
complete and accurate; and
(G) A statement signed and dated by
a responsible individual employed at
the covered establishment certifying
that the covered establishment has taken
reasonable steps to ensure that the
method of preparation (e.g., types and
amounts of ingredients in the recipe,
cooking temperatures) and amount of a
standard menu item offered for sale
adhere to the factors on which its
nutrient values were determined.
(ii) For published cookbooks that
contain nutritional information for
recipes in the cookbook:
(A) The name, author, and publisher
of the cookbook used;
(B) If available, information provided
by the cookbook or from the author or
publisher about how the nutrition
information for the recipes was
obtained;
(C) A copy of the recipe used to
prepare the standard menu item and a
copy of the nutrition information for
that standard menu item as provided by
the cookbook; and
(D) A statement signed and dated by
a responsible individual employed at
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the covered establishment certifying
that that the covered establishment has
taken reasonable steps to ensure that the
method of preparation (e.g., types and
amounts of ingredients in the recipe,
cooking temperatures) and amount of a
standard menu item offered for sale
adhere to the factors on which its
nutrient values were determined.
(Recipes may be divided as necessary to
accommodate differences in the portion
size derived from the recipe and that are
served as the standard menu item but no
changes may be made to the proportion
of ingredients used.)
(iii) For laboratory analyses:
(A) A copy of the recipe for the
standard menu item used for the
nutrient analysis;
(B) The name and address of the
laboratory performing the analysis;
(C) Copies of analytical worksheets,
including the analytical method, used to
determine and verify nutrition
information;
(D) A statement signed and dated by
a responsible individual, employed at
the covered establishment or its
corporate headquarters or parent entity,
who can certify that the information
contained in the nutrient analysis is
complete and accurate; and
(E) A statement signed and dated by
a responsible individual employed at
the covered establishment certifying
that the covered establishment has taken
reasonable steps to ensure that the
method of preparation (e.g., types and
amounts of ingredients in the recipe,
cooking temperatures) and amount of a
standard menu item offered for sale
adhere to the factors on which its
nutrient values were determined.
(iv) For nutrition information
provided by other reasonable means:
(A) A detailed description of the
means used to determine the nutrition
information;
(B) A recipe or formula used as a basis
for the nutrient determination;
(C) Any data derived in determining
the nutrient values for the standard
menu item, e.g., nutrition information
about the ingredients used with the
source of the nutrient information;
(D) A statement signed and dated by
a responsible individual, employed at
the covered establishment or its
corporate headquarters or parent entity,
who can certify that the information
contained in the nutrient analysis is
complete and accurate; and
(E) A statement signed and dated by
a responsible individual employed at
the covered establishment certifying
that the covered establishment has taken
reasonable steps to ensure that the
method of preparation (e.g., types and
amounts of ingredients in the recipe,
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cooking temperatures) and amount of a
standard menu item offered for sale
adhere to the factors on which its
nutrient values were determined.
(d) Voluntary registration to be subject
to the menu labeling requirements—(1)
Applicability. A restaurant or similar
retail food establishment that is not part
of a chain with 20 or more locations
doing business under the same name
and offering for sale substantially the
same menu items may voluntarily
register to be subject to the requirements
established in this section. Restaurants
and similar retail food establishments
that voluntarily register will no longer
be subject to non-identical State or local
nutrition labeling requirements.
(2) Who may register? The authorized
official of a restaurant or similar retail
food establishment as defined in
paragraph (a) of this section, which is
not otherwise subject to paragraph (b) of
this section, may register with FDA.
(3) What information is required?
Authorized officials for restaurants and
similar retail food establishments must
provide FDA with the following
information on Form FDA 3757:
(i) The contact information (including
name, address, phone number, and
email address) for the authorized
official;
(ii) The contact information
(including name, address, phone
number, and email address) of each
restaurant or similar retail food
establishment being registered, as well
as the name and contact information for
an official onsite, such as the owner or
manager, for each specific restaurant or
similar retail food establishment;
(iii) All trade names the restaurant or
similar retail food establishment uses;
(iv) Preferred mailing address (if
different from location address for each
establishment) for purposes of receiving
correspondence; and
(v) Certification that the information
submitted is true and accurate, that the
person submitting it is authorized to do
so, and that each registered restaurant or
similar retail food establishment will be
subject to the requirements of section
403(q)(5)(H) of the Federal Food, Drug,
and Cosmetic Act and this section.
(4) How to register. Authorized
officials of restaurants and similar retail
food establishments who elect to be
subject to requirements in section
403(q)(5)(H) of the Federal Food, Drug,
and Cosmetic Act can register by
visiting https://www.fda.gov/food/
ingredientspackaginglabeling/
labelingnutrition/ucm217762.htm. FDA
has created a form (Form 3757) that
contains fields requesting the
information in paragraph (d)(3) of this
section and made the form available at
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this Web site. Registrants must use this
form to ensure that complete
information is submitted.
(i) Information should be submitted
by email by typing complete
information into the form (PDF), saving
it on the registrant’s computer, and
sending it by email to
menulawregistration@fda.hhs.gov.
(ii) If email is not available, the
registrant can either fill in the form
(PDF) and print it out (or print out the
blank PDF and fill in the information by
hand or typewriter), and either fax the
completed form to 301–436–2804 or
mail it to FDA, CFSAN Menu and
Vending Machine Registration, White
Oak Building 22, Rm. 0209, 10903 New
Hampshire Ave., Silver Spring, MD
20993.
(5) When to renew the registration. To
keep the establishment’s registration
active, the authorized official of the
restaurant or similar retail food
establishment must register every other
year within 60 days prior to the
expiration of the establishment’s current
registration with FDA. Registration will
automatically expire if not renewed.
(e) Signatures. Signatures obtained
under paragraph (d) of this section that
meet the definition of electronic
signatures in § 11.3(b)(7) of this chapter
are exempt from the requirements of
part 11 of this chapter.
(f) Misbranding. A standard menu
item offered for sale in a covered
establishment shall be deemed
misbranded under sections 201(n),
403(a), 403(f) and/or 403(q) of the
Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act if
its label or labeling is not in conformity
with paragraph (b) or (c) of this section.
Dated: November 19, 2014.
Leslie Kux,
Associate Commissioner for Policy.
[FR Doc. 2014–27833 Filed 11–25–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4164–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Food and Drug Administration
21 CFR Parts 11 and 101
[Docket No. FDA–2011–F–0171]
rljohnson on DSK3VPTVN1PROD with RULES2
RIN 0910–AG56
Food Labeling; Calorie Labeling of
Articles of Food in Vending Machines
AGENCY:
Food and Drug Administration,
HHS.
ACTION:
Final rule.
To implement the vending
machine food labeling provisions of the
SUMMARY:
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Patient Protection and Affordable Care
Act of 2010 (ACA), the Food and Drug
Administration (FDA or we) is
establishing requirements for providing
calorie declarations for food sold from
certain vending machines. This final
rule will ensure that calorie information
is available for certain food sold from a
vending machine that does not permit a
prospective purchaser to examine the
Nutrition Facts Panel before purchasing
the article, or does not otherwise
provide visible nutrition information at
the point of purchase. The declaration
of accurate and clear calorie information
for food sold from vending machines
will make calorie information available
to consumers in a direct and accessible
manner to enable consumers to make
informed and healthful dietary choices.
This final rule applies to certain food
from vending machines operated by a
person engaged in the business of
owning or operating 20 or more vending
machines. Vending machine operators
not subject to the rules may elect to be
subject to the Federal requirements by
registering with FDA.
DATES:
Effective Date: December 1, 2016.
Compliance Date: Covered vending
machine operators must comply with
the rule by December 1, 2016. See
section III.E for more information on the
effective and compliance dates.
Comment Date: Submit comments on
information collection issues under the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 by
December 31, 2014 (see section V, the
‘‘Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995’’
section of this document).
To ensure that comments on
the information collection are received,
the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) recommends that written
comments be faxed to the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs,
OMB, Attn: FDA Desk Officer, FAX:
202–395–7285, or emailed to oira_
submission@omb.eop.gov. All
comments should be identified with the
OMB control number 0910—New and
title ‘‘Information Collection Provisions
of the final rule on Food Labeling:
Calorie Labeling of Articles of Food in
Vending Machines.’’ Also include the
FDA docket number found in brackets
in the heading of this document.
ADDRESSES:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Daniel Y. Reese, Center for Food Safety
and Applied Nutrition (HFS–820), Food
and Drug Administration, 5100 Paint
Branch Pkwy., College Park, MD 20740,
240–402–2371, email: Daniel.Reese@
fda.hhs.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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71259
Table of Contents
Executive Summary
Purpose and Coverage of the Final Rule
Summary of the Major Provisions of the Final
Rule
Costs and Benefits
I. Background
II. Legal Authority
III. Comments on the Proposed Rule, FDA
Responses, and Description of the Final
Rule
A. Introduction
B. General Comments
C. Comments on Specific Provisions and
Description of the Final Rule
D. Determination of Calorie Content
E. Effective Date
F. Enforcement
IV. Analysis of Impacts—Final Regulatory
Impact Analysis
V. Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
VI. Federalism
VII. Environmental Impact
VIII. References
Executive Summary
Purpose and Coverage of the Final Rule
To help make calorie information for
vending machine foods available to
prospective purchasers in a direct,
accessible, and consistent manner to
enable them to make informed and
healthful dietary choices, section 4205
of the ACA and the rule require that
vending machine operators who own or
operate 20 or more vending machines,
or who voluntarily elect to be covered,
must provide calorie declarations for
those vending machine foods for which
the Nutrition Facts label cannot be
examined prior to purchase or for which
visible nutrition information is not
otherwise provided at the point of
purchase.
Summary of the Major Provisions of the
Final Rule
• The final rule requires vending
machine operators who own or operate
20 or more vending machines (or who
voluntarily register with FDA to be
subject to the final rule) to provide
calorie declarations for certain articles
of food sold from vending machines.
Æ The final rule defines a vending
machine operator as a person or entity
that controls or directs the function of
the vending machine, including
deciding which articles of food are sold
from the machine or the placement of
the articles of food within the vending
machine, and is compensated for the
control or direction of the function of
the vending machine.
Æ Through biannual registration,
vending machine operators who are not
covered by the final rule can voluntarily
elect to become subject to it.
• The final rule describes which
foods are subject to the calorie
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 230 (Monday, December 1, 2014)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 71155-71259]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-27833]
[[Page 71155]]
Vol. 79
Monday,
No. 230
December 1, 2014
Part II
Department of Health and Human Services
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Food and Drug Administration
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
21 CFR Parts 11 and 101
Food Labeling; Nutrition Labeling of Standard Menu Items in Restaurants
and Similar Retail Food Establishments; Calorie Labeling of Articles of
Food in Vending Machines; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 79 , No. 230 / Monday, December 1, 2014 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 71156]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Food and Drug Administration
21 CFR Parts 11 and 101
[Docket No. FDA-2011-F-0172]
RIN 0910-AG57
Food Labeling; Nutrition Labeling of Standard Menu Items in
Restaurants and Similar Retail Food Establishments
AGENCY: Food and Drug Administration, HHS.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: To implement the nutrition labeling provisions of the Patient
Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010 (Affordable Care Act or
ACA), the Food and Drug Administration (FDA or we) is requiring
disclosure of certain nutrition information for standard menu items in
certain restaurants and retail food establishments. The ACA, in part,
amended the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (the FD&C Act), among
other things, to require restaurants and similar retail food
establishments that are part of a chain with 20 or more locations doing
business under the same name and offering for sale substantially the
same menu items to provide calorie and other nutrition information for
standard menu items, including food on display and self-service food.
Under provisions of the ACA, restaurants and similar retail food
establishments not otherwise covered by the law may elect to become
subject to these Federal requirements by registering every other year
with FDA. Providing accurate, clear, and consistent nutrition
information, including the calorie content of foods, in restaurants and
similar retail food establishments will make such nutrition information
available to consumers in a direct and accessible manner to enable
consumers to make informed and healthful dietary choices.
DATES: Effective date: December 1, 2015.
Compliance date: Covered establishments must comply with the rule
by December 1, 2015. See section XXIII for more information on the
effective and compliance dates.
Comment Date: Submit comments on information collection issues
under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 by December 31, 2014 (see
section XXVI, the ``Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995'' section of this
document).
ADDRESSES: To ensure that comments on the information collection are
received, the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) recommends that
written comments be faxed to the Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs, OMB, Attn: FDA Desk Officer, FAX: 202-395-7285, or emailed to
oira_submission@omb.eop.gov. All comments should be identified with the
OMB control number 0910-New and title ``Food Labeling: Nutrition
Labeling of Standard Menu Items in Restaurants and Similar Retail Food
Establishments.'' Also include the FDA docket number found in brackets
in the heading of this document.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Daniel Y. Reese, Center for Food
Safety and Applied Nutrition (HFS-820), Food and Drug Administration,
5100 Paint Branch Pkwy., College Park, MD 20740, 240-402-2371, email:
Daniel.Reese@fda.hhs.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
Executive Summary
Purpose and Coverage of the Final Rule
Summary of the Major Provisions of the Final Rule
Costs and Benefits
I. Background
II. Legal Authority
III. General Comments on the Proposed Rule
A. Introduction
B. Description of General Comments and FDA Response
IV. Comments and FDA Response on Proposed Conforming Amendments
A. Section 11.1(g)--Electronic Signatures
B. Sections 101.9(j)(1)(i), (j)(2), and (j)(3)--Nutrition
Labeling of Food
C. Section 101.10--Nutrition Labeling of Restaurant Foods Whose
Labels or Labeling Bear Nutrient Content Claims or Health Claims
V. Key Terms That FDA Proposed to Define (Proposed Sec. 101.11(a))
VI. Comments and FDA Response on the Proposed Definitions of Terms
Related to the Scope of Establishments Covered by the Rule (Proposed
Sec. 101.11(a))
A. Introduction
B. Restaurant or Similar Retail Food Establishment
C. Restaurant Food and Restaurant-Type Food
D. Part of a Chain With 20 or More Locations
E. Doing Business Under the Same Name
F. Offering for Sale Substantially the Same Menu Items
G. Authorized Official of a Restaurant or Similar Retail Food
Establishment
H. Covered Establishment
I. Revisions to Several Provisions to Clarify the Applicability
of the Rule to Those Restaurants and Similar Retail Food
Establishments That Are Covered Establishments
VII. Comments and FDA Response on the Proposed Definition of Menu or
Menu Board (Proposed Sec. 101.11(a))
VIII. Comments and FDA Response on the Proposed Definition of Terms
Related to Foods Covered by the Rule (Proposed Sec. 101.11(a))
A. Restaurant Food and Restaurant-Type Food
B. Standard Menu Item
C. Combination Meal
D. Variable Menu Item
E. Food on Display
F. Self-Service Food
G. Custom Order
H. Daily Special
I. Food That Is Part of a Customary Market Test
J. Temporary Menu Item
IX. Comments and FDA Response on Proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(1)(i)--
Food Subject to the Labeling Requirements
X. Comments and FDA Response on Proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(1)(ii)--
Food Not Subject to the Labeling Requirements
A. The Proposed Requirements
B. Alcohol
C. Condiments
D. Daily Specials, Temporary Menu Items, Custom Orders, and Food
That Is Part of a Customary Market Test
E. Additional Comments on Food That Is Part of a Customary
Market Test
XI. Comments and FDA Response on Proposed Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1) to (b)(2)(i)(A)(3)--General Requirements for
Calorie Declaration on Menus and Menu Boards
XII. Additional Format Requirements That Apply When Declaring
Calories on Menus and Menu Boards for Variable Menu Items,
Combination Meals, and Toppings (Final Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4)
Through (b)(2)(i)(A)(8))
A. Proposed Format for Declaring Calories for Variable Menu
Items
B. Decision To Require Option 4
C. Requirements That Apply to Individual Variable Menu Items
(Final Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4))
D. Requirements That Apply to a Variable Menu Item That Is
Offered for Sale With the Option of Adding Toppings Listed on the
Menu or Menu Board (Final Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(5))
E. Requirements That Apply to a Combination Meal (Final Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6))
F. Format Requirements for Declaring Calories for an Individual
Variable Menu Item, a Combination Meal, and Toppings as a Range, if
Applicable (Final Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(7))
G. Exception for a Variable Menu Item When There Is No Clearly
Identifiable Upper Bound to the Range of Calories (Final Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(8))
H. Declaring Calories Using Interactive Menus or New Technology
XIII. Additional Requirements That Apply to Beverages That Are Not
Self-Service or on Display (Final Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(9))
XIV. Comments and FDA Response on Proposed Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(B)--Succinct Statement That Must Be on Menus and
Menu Boards To Provide Context About Calories in a Daily Diet
A. The Proposed Requirements
B. Principles for Establishing the Succinct Statement
[[Page 71157]]
C. Wording of the Succinct Statement
D. Succinct Statement on Menus Targeted to Children
E. Requirements for the Succinct Statement To Be Prominent,
Clear, and Conspicuous
F. Placement of the Succinct Statement on Menus and Menu Boards
XV. Comments and FDA Response on Proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C)--
Statement That Must Be on Menus and Menu Boards About Availability
of Written Nutrition Information
A. Proposed Wording of the Statement of Availability
B. Requirements for the Statement of Availability To Be
Prominent and Conspicuous
C. Placement of the Statement of Availability
XVI. Comments and FDA Response on Proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)--
Nutrition Information That Must Be Made Available in Written Form
A. Required Nutrients
B. Manner of Presentation of the Written Nutrition Information
C. Nutrients in Insignificant Amounts
D. Variable Menu Items
E. Form of the Written Nutrition Information
XVII. Comments and FDA Response on Proposed Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(iii)--Requirements for Food That Is Self-Service or on
Display
A. Applicability of Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i) to Food That Is Self-
Service or on Display
B. Placement of Calories for Self-Service Foods and Foods on
Display
C. Declaring Calories ``Per Item'' or ``Per Serving''
D. Declaring Calories ``Per Serving'' for Self-Service Beverages
E. Manner of Declaring Calories for Self-Service Foods and Foods
on Display
F. Applicability of Requirements for Written Nutrition
Information, Succinct Statement, and Statement of Availability to
Self-Service Foods and Foods on Display
G. Succinct Statement and Statement of Availability for Self-
Service Foods and Foods on Display
H. The Written Nutrition Information That Must Be Provided for
Food That Is Self-Service or on Display
XVIII. Comments and FDA Response on Proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(1) to
(c)(5)--Determination of Nutrient Content (Final Sec. 101.11(c)(1)
to (c)(2))
XIX. Comments and FDA Response on Proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(6)--
Substantiation Documentation (Final 101.11(c)(3))
XX. Comments and FDA Response on Proposed Sec. 101.11(d)--Voluntary
Registration to Elect To Be Subject to the Rule
XXI. Comments and FDA Response on Proposed Sec. 101.11(e)--
Signatures
XXII. Comments and FDA Response on Proposed Sec. 101.11(f)--
Misbranding
XXIII. Comments and FDA Response on Effective Date
A. Proposed Effective Date and Request for Comment
B. Comments on Proposed Effective Date
C. Effective Date and Compliance Date for This Rule
XXIV. Comments and FDA Response on Compliance
XXV. Final Regulatory Impact Analysis
XXVI. Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
XXVII. Federalism
XXVIII. Environmental Impact
XXIX. References
Executive Summary
Purpose and Coverage of the Final Rule
More than two thirds of adults and about a third of children in the
United States are overweight or obese. Overconsumption of calories is
one of the primary risk factors for overweight and obesity. About half
of consumers' annual food dollars are spent on, and a third of total
calories come from, foods prepared outside the home, including foods
from restaurants and similar retail food establishments. Many people do
not know, or underestimate, the calorie and nutrient content of these
foods. To help make nutrition information for these foods available to
consumers in a direct, accessible, and consistent manner to enable
consumers to make informed and healthful dietary choices, section 4205
of the ACA requires that calorie and other nutrition information be
provided to consumers in restaurants and similar retail food
establishments that are part of a chain with 20 or more locations doing
business under the same name and offering for sale substantially the
same menu items (chain retail food establishment). Section 4205 of the
ACA also provides that a restaurant or similar retail food
establishment that is not a chain retail food establishment may elect
to be subject to section 4205's nutrition labeling requirements by
registering every other year with FDA.
To be covered by this rule, an establishment must satisfy several
criteria. First, the establishment must be a restaurant or similar
retail food establishment. Under this rule, that means a retail
establishment that offers for sale restaurant-type food, except if it
is a school as defined in 7 CFR 210.2 or 220.2. Restaurants and similar
retail food establishments include bakeries, cafeterias, coffee shops,
convenience stores, delicatessens, food service facilities located
within entertainment venues (such as amusement parks, bowling alleys,
and movie theatres), food service vendors (e.g., ice cream shops and
mall cookie counters), food take-out and/or delivery establishments
(such as pizza take-out and delivery establishments), grocery stores,
retail confectionary stores, superstores, quick service restaurants,
and table service restaurants.
The rule defines ``restaurant-type food'' in a way that both
focuses on the food most like the food offered for sale in restaurants
and reflects the statutory context of section 4205 of the ACA. The
table that follows provides examples of foods that generally would be
considered restaurant-type food (e.g., foods that are usually eaten on
the premises, while walking away, or soon after arriving at another
location), as well as examples of foods that generally would be not be
considered restaurant-type food (e.g., foods that are grocery-type
items that consumers often store for use at a later time or customarily
further prepare), for the purposes of this rule.
[[Page 71158]]
Examples of Foods That Generally Would or Would Not Be Considered
Restaurant-Type Food
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Examples of foods that
Examples of foods that generally would generally would not be
be considered restaurant-type food considered restaurant-type food
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Food for immediate consumption Certain foods bought
at a sit-down or quick service from bulk bins or cases (e.g.,
restaurant. dried fruit, nuts) in grocery
Food purchased at a drive- stores
through establishment. Foods to be eaten over
Food purchased at a drive- several eating occasions or
through establishment. stored for later use (e.g.,
Take-out and delivery pizza; loaves of bread, bags or boxes
hot pizza at grocery and convenience of dinner rolls, whole cakes,
stores that is ready to eat; pizza and bags or boxes of candy or
slice from a movie theater. cookies)
Hot buffet food, hot soup at a Foods that are usually
soup bar, and food from a salad bar. further prepared before
Foods ordered from a menu/menu consuming (e.g., deli meats
board at a grocery store intended for and cheeses)
individual consumption (e.g., soups, Foods sold by weight
sandwiches, and salads). that are not self-serve and
Self-service foods and foods are not intended solely for
on display that are intended for individual consumption (e.g.,
individual consumption (e.g., deli salads sold by unit of
sandwiches, wraps, and paninis at a weight such as potato salad,
deli counter; salads plated by the chicken salad), either
consumer at a salad bar; cookies from prepacked or packed upon
a mall cookie counter; bagels, donuts, consumer request
rolls offered for individual sale).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Consistent with the statute, to be covered by the rule, a
restaurant or similar retail establishment must be ``part of a chain
with 20 or more locations doing business under the same name
(regardless of the type of ownership of the locations) and offering for
sale substantially the same menu items.'' A restaurant or similar
retail food establishment that does not satisfy these criteria may
choose to be covered by the rule by registering with FDA using a
process established in the rule.
Under the rule, ``location'' means a fixed position or site.
Transportation venues such as trains and airplanes are not covered by
the rule because they do not have a fixed position or site. ``Doing
business under the same name'' means a restaurant or similar retail
food establishment must share the same name as other establishments in
the chain (regardless of the type of ownership of the locations, e.g.,
individual franchises). The term ``name'' refers to either the name of
the establishment presented to the public or, if there is no name of
the establishment presented to the public (e.g., an establishment with
the generic descriptor ``concession stand''), the name of the parent
entity of the establishment. ``Offering for sale substantially the same
menu items'' means offering for sale a significant proportion of menu
items that use the same general recipe and are prepared in
substantially the same way with substantially the same food components,
even if the name of the menu item varies.
The nutrition labeling requirements of the rule apply to standard
menu items offered for sale in covered establishments. ``Standard menu
item'' means a restaurant-type food that is routinely included on a
menu or menu board or routinely offered as a self-service food or food
on display. The nutrition labeling requirements are not applicable to
certain foods, including foods that are not standard menu items, such
as condiments, daily specials, temporary menu items, custom orders, and
food that is part of a customary market test; and self-service food and
food on display that is offered for sale for less than a total of 60
days per calendar year or fewer than 90 consecutive days in order to
test consumer acceptance. In addition, the rule exempts alcohol
beverages that are food on display and are not self-service food (e.g.,
bottles of liquor behind the bar used to prepare mixed drinks) from the
labeling requirements that apply to food on display.
Summary of the Major Provisions of the Final Rule
The rule includes provisions that:
Define terms, including terms that describe criteria for
determining whether an establishment is subject to the rule;
Establish which foods are subject to the nutrition
labeling requirements and which foods are not subject to these
requirements;
Require that calories for standard menu items be declared
on menus and menu boards that list such foods for sale;
Require that calories for standard menu items that are
self-service or on display be declared on signs adjacent to such foods;
Require that written nutrition information for standard
menu items be available to consumers who ask to see it;
Require, on menus and menu boards, a succinct statement
concerning suggested daily caloric intake (succinct statement),
designed to help the public understand the significance of the calorie
declarations;
Require, on menus and menu boards, a statement regarding
the availability of the written nutrition information (statement of
availability);
Establish requirements for determination of nutrient
content of standard menu items;
Establish requirements for substantiation of nutrient
content determined for standard menu items, including requirements for
records that a covered establishment must make available to FDA within
a reasonable period of time upon request; and
Establish terms and conditions under which restaurants and
similar retail food establishments not otherwise subject to the rule
could elect to be subject to the requirements by registering with FDA.
Costs and Benefits
The statute requires nutrition labeling for standard menu items on
menus and menu boards for certain restaurants and similar retail food
establishments and calorie labeling for food sold from certain vending
machines. FDA is issuing two separate final rules (one for menu
labeling and one for vending machine labeling) to implement those
labeling requirements. Taken together the labeling requirements (of the
menu labeling and vending machine labeling rules combined) are
estimated to have benefits exceeding costs by $477.9 million on an
annualized basis (over 20 years discounted at 7 percent).
[[Page 71159]]
Summary of Costs and Benefits of Menu Labeling and Vending Machine Rules
[In millions]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Potential Estimated
Rate benefits costs Net benefits
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total for Labeling (menu and vending rules) over 20 3 $9,221.3 $1,697.9 $7,523.4
years*...............................................
7 6,752.8 1,333.9 5,418.9
Annualized for Labeling (menu and vending rules) over 3 601.9 110.8 491.1
20 years*............................................
7 595.5 117.6 477.9
Total for Menu Labeling over 20 years................. 3 9,221.3 1,166.8 8,054.5
7 6,752.8 932.8 5,820.0
Annualized for Menu Labeling over 20 years............ 3 601.9 76.9 525.01
7 595.5 84.5 510.99
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Benefits for the vending machine labeling rule are not quantified and are not counted in these values.
I. Background
More than two thirds of adults and about a third of children in the
United States are overweight or obese (Refs. 1 and 2). Overconsumption
of calories is one of the primary risk factors for overweight and
obesity (Ref. 3). About half of consumers' annual food dollars are
spent on, and a third of total calories come from, foods prepared
outside the home, including foods from restaurants and similar retail
food establishments (Refs. 4 to 6). Research indicates that many people
do not know, or underestimate, the calorie and nutrient content of
these foods (Ref. 7).
Since the early 1990s, the Nutrition Labeling and Education Act of
1990 (NLEA) and our regulations in Sec. 101.9 (21 CFR 101.9)
implementing the NLEA have required that the labeling for many foods
bear nutrition information, including calorie information. However, as
we noted in the proposed rule (76 FR 19192 at 19193; April 6, 2011),
the NLEA left a gap in the Federal requirements for nutrition labeling
through certain exemptions. The NLEA included an exemption for
nutrition labeling for food that is ``served in restaurants or other
establishments in which food is served for immediate human
consumption'' or ``sold for sale or use in such establishments''
(section 403(q)(5)(A)(i) of the FD&C Act) (21 U.S.C. 343(q)(5)(A)(i)).
The NLEA also included an exemption for food of the type described in
section 403(q)(5)(A)(i) that is primarily processed and prepared in a
retail establishment, ready for human consumption, ``offered for sale
to consumers but not for immediate human consumption in such
establishment and which is not offered for sale outside such
establishment'' (section 403(q)(5)(A)(ii) of the FD&C Act). However,
these exemptions were contingent on there being no nutrient content
claims or health claims made on the label or labeling, or in the
advertising, for the food. Current provisions in Sec. 101.10 (21 CFR
101.10) require restaurants and other establishments in which food is
offered for human consumption that make either a nutrient content claim
(defined in Sec. 101.13 (21 CFR 101.13)) or health claim (defined in
21 CFR 101.14) to provide certain nutrition information upon request.
For example, if a menu lists an entree as being low in fat, information
about the amount of fat in the entree must be available upon request
(Sec. 101.10).
Section 101.9(j)(2) of our regulations implementing the NLEA
includes examples of restaurants or other establishments in which food
sold for immediate human consumption generally was exempted from
nutrition labeling requirements under the NLEA. Section 101.9(j)(3) of
these regulations includes examples of food sold in establishments in
which food is processed and prepared, ready for human consumption,
offered for sale to consumers but not for immediate consumption, and
not offered for sale outside of the establishments.
Several State and local governments enacted their own laws
requiring nutrition labeling on menus and menu boards to fill the gap
in the Federal requirements. However, these State and local
requirements vary significantly in their substantive requirements and
the set of establishments to which they apply.
On March 23, 2010, the ACA (Pub. L. 111-148) was signed into law.
Section 4205 of the ACA amends section 403(q) of the FD&C Act, which
governs nutrition labeling requirements, and section 403A of the FD&C
Act (21 U.S.C. 343-1), which governs Federal preemption of State and
local food labeling requirements. As amended, section 403(q)(5)(H) of
the FD&C Act requires chain retail food establishments with 20 or more
locations to provide calorie information for standard menu items,
including food on display and self-service food, and to provide, upon
consumer request, additional written nutrition information for standard
menu items (21 U.S.C. 343(q)(5)(H)(i) to (iii)). Section 403(q)(5)(H)
of the FD&C Act also provides that a restaurant or similar retail food
establishment not otherwise subject to the requirements of section
403(q)(5)(H) (e.g., a restaurant that is not part of a chain with 20 or
more locations) may elect to be subject to the requirements of section
403(q)(5)(H) by registering every other year with FDA (21 U.S.C.
343(q)(5)(H)(ix)). Thus, ``covered establishments'' include both chain
retail food establishments and other restaurants or similar retail food
establishments that voluntarily register to be subject to the rule. A
standard menu item offered for sale in a covered establishment is
deemed to be misbranded if the requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H) are
not met.
Section 4205 of the ACA became effective on the date the law was
signed, March 23, 2010; however, FDA must issue rules before some
provisions can be required. On July 7, 2010, we published a notice in
the Federal Register to solicit comments and suggestions on the new law
(2010 docket notice) (75 FR 39026). On August 25, 2010, we published
for public comment a draft guidance entitled ``Draft Guidance for
Industry: Questions and Answers Regarding Implementation of the Menu
Labeling Provisions of Section 4205 of the Patient Protection and
Affordable Care Act of 2010'' (draft implementation guidance) (Ref. 8)
(75 FR 52426), describing which provisions became requirements upon
enactment of the law, which provisions we would implement through
rulemaking, and draft interpretations of certain provisions, including
a broad interpretation of the scope of establishments covered. On
January 25, 2011, we published in the Federal Register a notice
withdrawing the draft implementation guidance (76 FR 4360) and
announcing our intent to exercise our enforcement discretion until we
[[Page 71160]]
complete the notice and comment rulemaking process.
In the Federal Register of April 6, 2011 (76 FR 19192), we issued a
proposed rule (proposed rule) to implement the requirements of section
4205 of the ACA for the nutrition labeling of standard menu items in
certain restaurants and similar retail food establishments. We
requested public comments on the proposed requirements and some
alternatives by June 6, 2011. In the Federal Register of May 24, 2011
(76 FR 30050), we issued a document (correction document) correcting
errors in the proposed rule, including errors in cross-references, an
incomplete address, and a typographical error in the codified section
of the document. In the Federal Register of May 24, 2011 (76 FR 30051),
we extended the comment period until July 5, 2011.
In the proposed rule, we described both the provisions that became
requirements upon enactment (i.e., they are self-executing) and the
provisions that depend on FDA to issue rules before they can become
effective (76 FR 19192 at 19194). We also noted that we had published
the draft implementation guidance and described the issues addressed by
the draft implementation guidance. In the proposed rule, we reiterated
that we intended to exercise enforcement discretion for the self-
executing provisions of section 4205 of the ACA and described our
reasons for doing so (76 FR 19192 at 19194).
After considering comments to the proposed rule, we are issuing
this final rule to implement the requirements of section 4205 of the
ACA for the nutrition labeling of standard menu items in certain chain
restaurants and similar retail food establishments.
In addition to the nutrition labeling requirements for standard
menu items, other amendments made by section 4205 of the ACA to the
FD&C Act (specifically, section 403(q)(5)(H)(viii)(I)) establish
calorie disclosure requirements for certain articles of food sold from
vending machines. We published a proposed rule to implement the vending
machine provisions of section 403(q) of the FD&C Act on April 6, 2011
(76 FR 19238; the proposed vending machine rule). Elsewhere in this
issue of the Federal Register, we are issuing a final rule to implement
the vending machine provisions of section 403(q)(5)(H)(viii)(I) of the
FD&C Act.
II. Legal Authority
On March 23, 2010, the ACA was signed into law. Section 4205 of the
ACA amended section 403(q)(5) of the FD&C Act by amending section
403(q)(5)(A) and by creating new clause (H), which requires, in
relevant part, covered establishments to provide certain nutrient
declarations for standard menu items in the labeling for such foods.
Under section 403(f) of the FD&C Act, any word, statement, or other
information required by or under authority of the FD&C Act to appear on
the label or labeling of a food is required to be prominently placed
thereon with such conspicuousness (as compared with other words,
statements, designs, or devices, in the labeling) and in such terms as
to render it likely to be read and understood by the ordinary
individual under customary conditions of purchase and use. Under
section 403(a)(1) of the FD&C Act, food labeling must be truthful and
non-misleading. Because food that is not in compliance with section 403
is deemed misbranded, food to which these requirements apply is deemed
misbranded if these requirements are not met. In addition, under
section 201(n) of the FD&C Act (21 U.S.C. 321(n)), the labeling of a
food is misleading if it fails to reveal facts that are material in
light of representations made in the labeling or with respect to
consequences that may result from use. Section 403(q)(5)(H)(x) of the
FD&C Act requires that the Secretary of Health and Human Services
(Secretary) issue regulations to carry out requirements in section
403(q)(5)(H). Section 701(a) of the FD&C Act (21 U.S.C. 371(a)) vests
the Secretary with the authority to issue regulations for the efficient
enforcement of the FD&C Act. Thus, we have the authority to issue this
final rule under sections 201(n), 403(a)(1), 403(f), 403(q)(5)(H), and
701(a) of the FD&C Act.
We have revised our labeling regulations by adding new Sec. 101.11
to require that covered establishments provide calorie and other
nutrition information for standard menu items, including food on
display and self-service food. Also, we are establishing the terms and
conditions for voluntary registration by establishments that are not
otherwise subject to the requirements of section 4205 of the ACA but
elect to become subject to such requirements.
III. General Comments on the Proposed Rule
A. Introduction
We received approximately 900 submissions on the proposed rule by
the close of the comment period, each containing one or more comments.
We received submissions from consumers; consumer groups; trade
organizations; industry (including restaurants, entertainment venues,
food service operations, and grocery stores); public health
organizations; public advocacy groups; contractors; Congress; Federal,
State, and local Government Agencies; and other organizations.
We describe and respond to the comments in sections III, IV, VI
through XXIV, and XXVII of this document. To make it easier to identify
comments and our responses, the word ``Comment,'' in parentheses,
appears before the comment's description, and the word ``Response,'' in
parentheses, appears before our response. We have also numbered each
comment and response to help distinguish between different comments and
responses. The number assigned to each comment is purely for
organizational purposes and does not signify the comment's value or
importance or the order in which it was received.
B. Description of General Comments and FDA Response
Many comments made general remarks supporting or opposing the rule
and did not focus on a particular section of the rule. The majority of
these comments expressed general support for nutrition labeling of
standard menu items in covered establishments, and we do not discuss
them in detail. In the following paragraphs, we discuss general
comments that did not support the rule as proposed.
(Comment 1) Some comments stated that people do not need to be told
what to eat. Some comments asserted that calorie disclosure on menus
will either cause eating disorders or affect those with eating
disorders. Other comments asserted that the menu labeling requirements
will not affect consumer behavior, there will be information overload,
and people will ignore the information. Some comments considered that
the menu labeling requirements will promote healthier choices, whereas
other comments considered that the menu labeling requirements will not
promote healthier choices. Some comments supported the menu labeling
requirements but considered that education is needed to fight obesity.
(Response 1) The rule does not tell consumers what they should or
should not eat. The nutrition labeling required by section 4205 of the
ACA will provide nutrition information to consumers in covered
establishments in a direct, accessible, and consistent manner to enable
consumers to make informed choices about the foods they purchase in
such establishments.
[[Page 71161]]
About half of consumers' annual food dollars are spent on, and a
third of total calories come from, foods prepared outside of the home,
including foods from restaurants or similar retail food establishments
(Refs. 4 to 6). Further, research indicates that many people do not
know, or underestimate, the calorie and nutrient content of these foods
(Ref. 7). Accordingly, providing direct access to nutrition information
for these foods will enable consumers to make informed decisions within
the context of nutrition regarding the foods they purchase in
restaurants or similar retail food establishments. Providing nutrition
information to consumers for standard menu items offered for sale in
covered establishments will give consumers much needed access to
essential nutrition information for a large and growing number of the
foods they purchase and consume. In addition, it will allow consumers
to make informed nutritional comparisons between different foods and
informed purchase decisions. Further, section 4205 of the ACA and this
rule require covered establishments to post, on menus and menu boards,
a succinct statement concerning suggested daily caloric intake designed
to enable consumers to understand, in the context of a total daily
diet, the significance of the calorie information provided on menus and
menu boards. This statement, along with the required calorie
information, will enable consumers to better understand the
significance of the calorie information provided on menus and menu
boards and the potential impacts of overconsumption of calories. As a
result, the information will enable consumers to assess their calorie
intake during short- or long-term settings and better understand how
the foods that they purchase at covered establishments fit within their
daily caloric and other nutritional needs.
The comments provided no evidence that the provision of nutrition
labeling at the point of purchase causes or adversely affects those
with eating disorders. For nearly two decades, consumers have had
access to this type of information on the labels of packaged foods that
bear the Nutrition Facts label in accordance with Sec. 101.9. We are
not aware of data or other information demonstrating that the
availability of nutrition information through the Nutrition Facts Panel
has either caused eating disorders or negatively impacted persons with
eating disorders. In addition, Congress, through section 4205 of the
ACA, requires covered establishments to provide calorie and other
nutrition information for standard menu items. This rulemaking
implements that Congressional mandate.
(Comment 2) Some comments considered that the requirements are
unnecessary because most ``fast food'' restaurants have the information
already. One comment considered that the proposed requirements
constitute a tax increase designed to relieve the individual of
personal responsibility.
(Response 2) Section 4205 of the ACA requires covered
establishments to provide calorie and other information for standard
menu items on menus, menu boards, signs adjacent to self-service foods
and foods on display and additional nutrition information for standard
menu items in written form, available on the premises, to consumers on
request. Therefore, section 4205 of the ACA requires covered
establishments to provide nutrition information to consumers in a
direct, accessible, and consistent manner, typically at points of
purchase, where consumers make order selections. While some ``fast
food'' establishments may already have some nutrition information
available to consumers in some fashion, these establishments are a
subset of the establishments required to comply with the requirements
of this rule, and these establishments may not be providing nutrition
information to consumers in the manner required by section 4205 of the
ACA.
Regarding the comment asserting that the proposed requirements
somehow negate personal responsibility, we reiterate that the
requirements do not tell consumers what they should or should not eat
or otherwise interfere with a consumer's ability to purchase foods. In
fact, as we noted previously, this rule requires covered establishments
to provide accurate nutrition information to consumers in a direct and
accessible manner to enable consumers to make informed and healthful
dietary choices.
(Comment 3) Some comments addressed concerns related to
enforcement. One comment expressed concern that the proposed rule did
not set forth a clear ``chain of liability'' for food that is
misbranded under the rule and related provisions of the FD&C Act,
specifically sections 201(n), 403(a), or 403(q) of the FD&C Act. The
comment stated that it is unclear whether FDA might impose vicarious
liability on the franchisor or licensor of a restaurant for such
misbranded food, particularly where the franchisor or licensor retains
power over the menus and menu boards used by the restaurants. The
comment also expressed concern that restaurants that ``unwittingly
'misbrand' their menu offerings'' will be held liable for their food
that is misbranded under this rule and related provisions of the FD&C
Act.
(Response 3) Persons exercising authority and supervisory
responsibility over a restaurant or similar retail food establishment
can be held responsible for violations under the FD&C Act. See United
States v. Park, 421 U.S. 658, 659 (1978). (``The Act imposes upon
persons exercising authority and supervisory responsibility reposed in
them by a business organization not only a positive duty to seek out
and remedy violations but also, and primarily, a duty to implement
measures that will insure that violations will not occur . . . .'')
(citing United States v. Dotterweich, 320 U.S. 277 (1943)). Agency
decisions regarding enforcement actions will be determined on a case by
case basis.
(Comment 4) Some comments addressed issues unrelated to the
specific nutrition labeling requirements of section 4205 of the ACA,
such as labeling of genetically engineered foods, allergens, gluten,
food additives (including preservatives), artificial sweeteners,
ingredients, pesticides, and organic foods; labeling to indicate
whether a food has been irradiated; labeling of alcohol as a toxin;
labeling the country of origin; and labeling the ``gender of meat
products.''
(Response 4) Section 4205 of the ACA requires covered
establishments to provide certain nutrition information for standard
menu items. It does not address the labeling issues raised in these
comments. Therefore, we do not address these issues in this document.
(Comment 5) Some comments directed to what establishments would be
covered by the rule pointed to a report submitted by a U.S. House of
Representatives Appropriations Committee explaining an appropriations
bill for Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration,
and Related Agencies for fiscal year 2012 (Ref. 9). The comments quoted
an excerpt from the report (``. . . and the Committee believes that the
FDA should define the term restaurant to mean only restaurants doing
business marketed under the same name or retail establishments where
the primary business is the selling of food for immediate consumption .
. .'') to signify Congressional intent on the scope of establishments
subject to section 4205 of the ACA or as evidence supporting their own
recommendations regarding the establishments that should be covered by
the rule. (We note that some comments reported the date of the report
as June 3, 2011, and one comment reported the date of the report
[[Page 71162]]
as May 27, 2011. We identified a report dated June 3, 2011 (Ref. 9),
but did not identify a report dated May 27, 2011. For the purpose of
this document, we assume that the comments are referring to the report
dated June 3, 2011.)
(Response 5) We disagree that an Appropriations Committee report
from a Congress subsequent to the Congress that passed section 4205 of
the ACA can be used as evidence of the intent of the previous Congress
that passed section 4205. The Appropriations Committee report cited by
the comments is dated after the ACA was passed, so it is not part of
the relevant legislative history and carries no interpretive weight on
this issue (see, e.g., Bruesewitz v. Wyeth, 131 U.S. 1068, 1081
(2011)).
IV. Comments and FDA Response on Proposed Conforming Amendments
A. Section 11.1(g)--Electronic Signatures
Proposed Sec. 11.1(g) (21 CFR 11.1(g)) would provide that 21 CFR
part 11 regarding electronic signatures does not apply to electronic
signatures obtained under the voluntary registration provision for
covered restaurants and similar retail food establishments at proposed
Sec. 101.11(d).
We received no comments on this proposed provision and are
finalizing it without change.
B. Sections 101.9(j)(1)(i), (j)(2) and (j)(3)--Nutrition Labeling of
Food
Our proposed amendment to Sec. 101.9(j)(1)(i) would specify that
claims or other nutrition information subject the food to the nutrition
labeling provisions of Sec. 101.11 as well as Sec. 101.9 or Sec.
101.10 (nutrition labeling of restaurant foods), as applicable.
Our proposed amendments to Sec. 101.9(j)(2) and (j)(3) would
change the introductory text of paragraphs (j)(2) and (j)(3) to add the
phrase ``Except as provided in Sec. 101.11, food products that are:''.
We received no comments on these proposed provisions and are
finalizing them without change. However, we also are adding a
conforming amendment to add the phrase ``Except as provided in Sec.
101.11'' to the beginning of the first sentence in Sec. 101.9(j)(4).
As with Sec. 101.9(j)(2) and (j)(3), Sec. 101.9(j)(4) needs to be
revised to exclude standard menu items sold in covered establishments
and reference the special labeling requirements for those foods in
Sec. 101.11 (see Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)).
C. Section 101.10--Nutrition Labeling of Restaurant Foods Whose Labels
or Labeling Bear Nutrient Content Claims or Health Claims
Our proposed amendment to Sec. 101.10 would provide that the
information in the written nutrition information required by Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(ii)(A) for standard menu items that are offered for sale
in covered establishments (as defined in Sec. 101.11(a)) will serve to
meet the requirements of Sec. 101.10.
We received no comments on this proposed provision. Given our
removal of the term ``restaurant food'' and our revision of the term
``restaurant-type food'' in Sec. 101.11, we are adding a conforming
amendment to ensure that the use of the term ``restaurant foods'' in
Sec. 101.10, which predates the ACA, is not confusing. We are
inserting three sentences between the current first and second
sentences of Sec. 101.10, to clarify that the scope of Sec. 101.10
includes those foods described in section 403(q)(5)(A)(i) and (ii) of
the FD&C Act. These sentences describe that, for the purposes of Sec.
101.10, restaurant food includes two categories of food. The first
category of food is that which is served in restaurants or other
establishments in which food is served for immediate human consumption
or which is sold for sale or use in such establishments. The second
category of food is that which is processed and prepared primarily in a
retail establishment, which is ready for human consumption, which is of
the type described in the first category, and which is offered for sale
to consumers but not for immediate consumption in such establishment
and which is not offered for sale outside such establishment. This
scope is reflected in numerous prior Agency statements, including in
the preamble to our final rule entitled ``Food Labeling: Nutrient
Content Claims, General Principles, Petitions, Definition of Terms;
Definitions of Nutrient Content Claims for the Fat, Fatty Acid, and
Cholesterol Content of Food'' (58 FR 2302, 2386, January 6, 1993), and
in our 2008 ``Guidance for Industry: A Labeling Guide for Restaurants
and Other Retail Establishments Selling Away-From-Home Foods'' (Ref.
10). This change does not alter the meaning or applicability of Sec.
101.10.
V. Key Terms That FDA Proposed To Define (Proposed Sec. 101.11(a))
To establish the scope of establishments, labeling, and food
covered by section 4205 of the ACA, we proposed to define key terms
(proposed Sec. 101.11(a)). We also proposed to establish that the
definitions in section 201 of the FD&C Act apply when used in Sec.
101.11 (proposed Sec. 101.11(a)). We received no comments regarding
the use of statutory definitions in section 201 of the FD&C Act, and we
are finalizing that provision without change.
In the next section of this document, we discuss the final
definitions and related comments, organized into three categories: (1)
Terms related to the scope of establishments covered by the rule, (2)
the terms menu and menu board, and (3) terms related to foods covered.
This organization is consistent with our discussion of our proposed
terms in the preamble to the proposed rule.
VI. Comments and FDA Response on the Proposed Definitions of Terms
Related to the Scope of Establishments Covered by the Rule (Proposed
Sec. 101.11(a))
A. Introduction
To specify establishments that would be subject to the nutrition
labeling requirements of section 4205 of the ACA, we proposed to define
``covered establishment'' to mean a restaurant or similar retail food
establishment that is a part of a chain with 20 or more locations doing
business under the same name (regardless of the type of ownership,
e.g., individual franchises) and offering for sale substantially the
same menu items, as well as a restaurant or similar retail food
establishment that is registered to be covered under section
403(q)(5)(H)(ix) of the FD&C Act. (Emphasis added).
Importantly, the definition of ``covered establishment'' includes
several terms, identified in italics, that are defined in the rule. In
addition, the proposed definition of one of these terms--i.e.,
``restaurant or similar retail food establishment''--includes other
terms we proposed to define--i.e., ``restaurant food'' and
``restaurant-type food.'' Thus, any revisions we make to the proposed
definitions of any of these terms may affect whether a particular
establishment is a ``covered establishment'' for the purposes of this
rule. As discussed more fully in sections VI.B, VI.C, VI.D, VI.E, and
VI.F:
We have revised the definition of ``restaurant or similar
retail food establishment'' to mean a retail establishment that offers
for sale restaurant-type food, except if it is a school as defined in 7
CFR 210.1 or 220.2;
We have revised the definition of the term ``restaurant-
type food'' to focus on the food most like the food offered for sale in
restaurants;
[[Page 71163]]
We are adding a definition of ``locations'' to clarify our
interpretation of ``part of a chain with 20 or more locations'';
We have revised the definition of ``doing business under
the same name'' so that the term ``name'' refers to either (1) the name
of the establishment presented to the public or (2), if there is no
name of the establishment presented to the public (e.g., an
establishment with the generic descriptor ``concession stand''), the
name of the parent entity of the establishment; and
We have revised the definition of ``offering for sale
substantially the same menu items'' to add a qualitative description of
the number of menu items that must be shared in order for the criterion
of ``offering for sale substantially the same menu items'' to be met.
We proposed to define the term ``gross floor area'' because we
proposed that it be used in the definition of restaurant or similar
retail food establishment. While we received comments on this proposed
definition, as discussed in section VI.B.2 the definition of restaurant
or similar retail food establishment in this rule no longer considers
gross floor area. Therefore, we are deleting the proposed definition of
``gross floor area'' because it is no longer relevant to the scope of
establishments covered by this rule.
B. Restaurant or Similar Retail Food Establishment
1. The Proposed Definition
Proposed Sec. 101.11(a) would define ``restaurant or similar
retail food establishment'' as a retail establishment that offers for
sale restaurant or restaurant-type food, where the sale of food is the
primary business activity of that establishment. Proposed Sec.
101.11(a) would provide that the sale of food is the retail
establishment's primary business activity if the establishment presents
itself, or has presented itself publicly as a restaurant (primary
purpose 1), or a total of more than 50 percent of that retail
establishment's gross floor area is used for the preparation, purchase,
service, consumption, or storage of food (primary purpose 2). (See
Figure 1 in the proposed rule (76 FR 19192 at 19201), in which we
coined the terms ``primary purpose 1'' and ``primary purpose 2.'' We
did not include these coined terms in the regulatory text of the
definition. In this document, we are using these coined terms to
simplify the discussion. We also are coining the term ``primary
business test'' to simplify the discussion of the criterion for the
primary business activity of the establishment.) Under an alternative
approach we discussed in the proposed rule (76 FR 19192 at 19197) (the
alternative revenue approach), ``primary purpose 2'' would be that more
than 50 percent of the retail establishment's gross revenues are
generated by the sale of food rather than that more than 50 percent of
the retail establishment's gross floor area is used for the
preparation, purchase, service, consumption, or storage of food.
In the proposed rule (76 FR 19192 at 19198), we also discussed an
alternative (the restaurant-type food alternative) in which the sale of
restaurant or restaurant-type food (rather than the sale of food in
general) would be the primary business activity of the establishment.
Under the restaurant-type food alternative, ``primary purpose 2'' would
be that a total of more than 50 percent of a retail establishment's
gross floor area is used for the preparation, purchase, service,
consumption, or storage of restaurant or restaurant-type food or its
ingredients.
In the proposed rule (76 FR 19192 at 19198), we acknowledged that
many facilities that sell restaurant or restaurant-type food are
located within larger retail establishments, such as coffee shops in
bookstores or concession stands in movie theaters. We considered that
some of these facilities would be separate retail establishments, while
others would be part of their larger retail establishments. We
explained that if a facility that is inside a larger establishment is
part of a chain with locations outside of the chain of the larger
establishment, the facility would be considered a separate
establishment. For example, if a coffee shop in a bookstore is part of
a chain of coffee shops with locations outside of the chain of
bookstores, the coffee shop would be considered a separate retail
establishment. By contrast, if a facility is not part of a chain with
locations outside of the chain of the larger establishment, the
facility would be considered part of the larger establishment. Thus, a
movie theater concession stand that appears only in other movie
theaters in that particular chain of movie theaters would not be
considered a separate establishment for the purposes of this proposed
rule.
As an example of how all of the elements of the proposed definition
of restaurant or similar retail food establishment fit together, movie
theaters would not have met the proposed definition of restaurant or
similar retail food establishment. Movie theaters usually do not
present themselves as restaurants. In addition, movie theaters usually
neither dedicate more than 50 percent of their gross floor area to the
sale of food, nor generate more than 50 percent of their gross revenues
from the sale of food. Thus, under the proposed definition of
``restaurant or similar retail food establishment,'' movie theater
concession stands generally would not have been covered regardless of
whether ``primary purpose 2'' is based on the percent of gross floor
area dedicated to the sale of food or on the alternative revenue
approach based on the percent of gross revenues from the sale of food.
In the proposed rule (76 FR 19192 at 19197 to 19199), we
acknowledged that the statutory language is ambiguous with respect to
the scope of establishments covered by section 4205 of the ACA, and
asked for comments on:
Whether we should use ``primary business activity,'' or a
different test, as a basis for determining whether an establishment is
a restaurant or similar retail food establishment;
Whether we should use the sale of food in general, or the
sale of restaurant-type food, as the criterion for ``primary business
activity'';
Whether we should use the alternative revenue approach,
rather than a floor space approach, in ``primary purpose 2'';
Whether we should choose a different number for the cutoff
for the percent of gross floor area for determining the primary
business activity of the retail establishment;
Whether we should choose a different criteria for
determining primary business activity, such as whether the consumer
pays for admission to the establishment; and
Whether a facility selling restaurant or restaurant-type
food that is not part of a chain with locations outside of the chain of
a larger retail establishment should be included within the definition
of restaurant or similar retail food establishment. We particularly
requested comment on this approach with respect to larger retail
establishments such as movie theaters, other entertainment-type venues,
and superstores that offer restaurant or restaurant-type food.
In the following paragraphs, we discuss comments on the proposed
definition of ``restaurant or similar retail food establishment.''
After considering these comments, we have revised the proposed
definition to eliminate the primary business test.
Importantly, the proposed definition of ``restaurant or similar
retail food establishment'' included the terms ``restaurant and
restaurant-type food'' and, thus, revisions to those terms also may
affect whether a particular establishment is a ``restaurant or similar
[[Page 71164]]
retail food establishment'' for the purposes of this rule. As discussed
more fully in section VI.C, we are deleting the term ``restaurant
food'' throughout the rule and establishing a revised definition of
``restaurant-type food'' that better reflects the food most like the
food offered for sale in restaurants.
With these changes, in this rule ``restaurant or similar retail
food establishment'' means a retail establishment that offers for sale
restaurant-type food, except if it is a school as defined in 7 CFR
210.2 or 220.2. Establishments such as bakeries, cafeterias, coffee
shops, convenience stores, delicatessens, food service facilities
located within entertainment venues (such as amusement parks, bowling
alleys, and movie theatres), food service vendors (e.g., ice cream
shops and mall cookie counters), food take-out and/or delivery
establishments (such as pizza take-out and delivery establishments),
grocery stores, retail confectionary stores, superstores, quick service
restaurants, and table service restaurants would be restaurants or
similar retail food establishments if they sell restaurant-type food.
2. Primary Business Test
(Comment 6) A few comments generally opposed having any primary
business test within the definition of ``restaurant or similar retail
food establishment.'' One of these comments recommended that the
primary purpose of the definition be related to ``whether the
establishment optimizes the nation's health through their food
distribution channels, rather than a profit/commerce approach.'' This
comment acknowledged that a ``profit/commerce approach'' may be more
tangibly measured but believed that the definition of restaurant or
similar retail food establishment should reflect what the comment
considered to be the purpose of the ACA: To inform consumers on healthy
food choices. Another comment considered that the floor space test we
proposed as ``primary purpose 2'' is not a rational basis for defining
a restaurant or similar retail food establishment. Another comment
asserted that both the proposed definition of ``restaurant or similar
retail food establishment'' and the ``alternative revenue approach''
would have covered grocery stores but not superstores, putting grocery
stores at a competitive disadvantage.
One comment recommended that we define a restaurant or similar
retail food establishment as any chain establishment selling restaurant
or restaurant-type food. The comment asserted that this broader
interpretation is consistent with the language in the statute. The
comment pointed out that the statute does not include text to suggest
that in order to qualify as a retail food establishment, an entity must
have the sale of food as its primary business activity.
One comment recommended that the definition cover all of the
establishments exempted from nutrition labeling by the NLEA. Some
comments referred to examples of covered establishments that we had
included in our draft implementation guidance (which we withdrew on
January 25, 2011) and agreed that these types of establishments should
be covered by the rule. The examples in the draft implementation
guidance included table service restaurants, quick service restaurants,
coffee shops, delicatessens, food take-out and/or delivery
establishments (e.g., pizza take-out and delivery establishments),
grocery stores, convenience stores, movie theaters, cafeterias,
bakeries/retail confectionary stores, food service vendors (e.g., lunch
wagons, ice cream shops, mall cookie counters, and sidewalk carts), and
transportation carriers (e.g., airlines and trains). These examples
reflected the establishments that sell certain food previously exempted
from nutrition labeling by the NLEA under sections 403(q)(5)(A)(i) and
(ii) of the FD&C Act, including those mentioned in Sec. 101.9(j)(2)
and (j)(3) as well as some additional examples (i.e., similar food
served in coffee shops, grocery stores, and movie theaters). Some of
the establishments that would have been covered under the draft
implementation guidance (such as transportation carriers and facilities
located within movie theaters) would be excluded under a definition
that includes any primary business test presented in the proposed rule
(i.e., regardless of whether the criterion is the proposed criterion
based on the sale of food in general or the restaurant-type food
alternative based on the sale of restaurant-type food, and regardless
of whether ``primary purpose 2'' relates to gross floor area or gross
revenue). Other examples (such as grocery stores and convenience
stores) would be excluded from coverage under the restaurant-type food
alternative but not under the proposed criterion based on the sale of
food in general.
Several comments recommended that we define a restaurant or similar
retail food establishment using the restaurant-type food alternative.
Some comments that opposed coverage of grocery and convenience stores
asserted that selling prepared foods does not make grocery stores
similar to restaurants or food court facilities that have on-premises
consumption. According to some of these comments, the primary purpose
of grocery stores is to sell packaged food, which is already labeled
with nutrition information. One comment that opposed covering
convenience stores considered that the proposed criterion for a primary
business activity based on the sale of food in general, including
prepackaged food, is an activity in which restaurants do not engage.
The comment recommended that we view the phrase ``similar retail food
establishment'' as a single cohesive term and define those that are in
fact similar to restaurants.
Some comments opposed ``primary purpose 1'' of the proposed primary
business test because it would be difficult to enforce. One comment
asserted that some bowling alleys list themselves as restaurants in the
phone book or have signs indicating that they serve as a restaurant,
whereas others do not. The comments maintained that FDA and State and
local inspectors would have to determine how many establishments in the
chain present themselves as restaurants, which would make enforcement
difficult.
One comment agreed with the proposed criterion for ``primary
purpose 2''--i.e., that greater than 50 percent of a retail
establishment's gross floor area is used for the preparation, purchase,
service, consumption, or storage of food. One comment asserted that the
amount of floor space used for the preparation, purchase, service,
consumption, or storage of food would be difficult to determine.
Another comment considered that ``primary purpose 1'' is sufficient for
determining whether an establishment is covered, but considered that
the floor space criterion would be a more accurate approach than the
alternative revenue approach if a second approach for ``primary
business activity'' is needed. One comment asked us to clarify that
``gross floor area'' includes outdoor space for parks as part of the
calculation of the percentage of gross floor area used for the
preparation, purchase, service, consumption, or storage of food. A few
comments recommended that seating areas, including outside seating, be
included in the floor space.
A few comments preferred the alternative revenue approach for
``primary purpose 2.'' One comment reported that the Internal Revenue
Service uses revenue to determine a business's primary activity. One
comment suggested that we add to the proposed definition ``or a total
of more than 50 percent of that retail establishment's revenues are
generated by the sale of food.''
[[Page 71165]]
A few comments opposed the alternative revenue approach for
``primary purpose 2.'' These comments considered that it would be
difficult for FDA and the States to ascertain the revenue of a
restaurant or similar retail food establishment and the revenue may
change from day to day. One comment noted that the proposed rule did
not include a defined time period for revenue. Another comment asserted
that basing ``primary purpose 2'' on revenue would be complicated when
a primary non-food related service or good is paired with an ancillary
service such as the sale of food in one price. The comment asserted
that it would be difficult to distinguish or separate the percentage of
the fee for the non-food related service or good from the percentage of
the fee for the food.
A few comments suggested a lower cutoff (20 to 25 percent) for the
alternative revenue approach but provided no rationale for the lower
cutoff. One comment, which also supported the coverage of movie
theaters, stated that movie theaters derive much of their revenue from
food in concession stands.
Some comments agreed with our discussion in the proposed rule that
a facility within a larger facility should not be considered to be a
separate establishment if it is not part of a chain outside that
establishment. Some comments specifically agreed that facilities
located within movie theaters and other entertainment venues should not
be covered by the provisions of section 4205 of the ACA. However, many
comments opposed a definition of ``restaurant or similar retail food
establishment'' that would exclude facilities located within a larger
facility, specifically facilities in movie theaters and other
entertainment venues. Some of these comments provided the following
reasons for including such facilities:
Excluding facilities located within movie theaters removes
information from consumers, which defeats the very purpose of the law.
Food in entertainment venues is high in calories and some
of these venues cater to children and have many less healthy options
(e.g., fries, ice cream, cotton candy).
Covering facilities located within movie theaters would
not be burdensome for them because they have limited menu options and
many packaged foods that have Nutrition Facts.
Movie theaters derive large revenue from the sale of food;
some much more than chain restaurants. It is irresponsible to send the
message that consumption of calories in popcorn offered for sale at
movie theaters is not as important as consumption of calories in menu
items offered for sale at drive-through restaurants.
Movies attract sedentary people.
Congress intended that the law apply to movie theaters,
bowling alleys, bookstore cafes, and other establishments; the phrase
``and similar retail establishments'' was used to reach beyond
restaurants.
Excluding facilities located within movies theatres and
other entertainment venues is unfair to competing venues.
Providing other services or entertainment does not affect
the need for nutrition information.
Menu labeling is feasible in venues not covered by the
proposed rule. Movie theaters in California, New York City, and
counties in New York are providing this information with no problem. To
capriciously exempt movie theaters defeats the purpose of the law. One
comment asserted that there is 98 percent compliance for menu labeling
by movie theaters in New York City.
Excluding such venues raises equal protection concerns
(U.S. Const. 14 Amend. section 1 for similarly situated entities).
One comment considered that we would have to broaden the scope of
covered establishments to include other places (such as bowling alleys,
airlines, trains, and hotels), regardless of whether they fit the
proposed definition of a restaurant or similar retail food
establishment, if the rule covered establishments such as facilities
located within movie theaters. This comment argued that there is no
mention in the legislative history, committee reports, or Congressional
floor debates of facilities located within movie theaters being
covered. The comment considered that no one would associate ``chain
retail food establishment'' with movie theaters because the primary
purpose of going to movies or other entertainment venues is not to eat
food and noted that many States and localities do not include these
establishments in their laws. Another comment suggested that we add the
following statement to our proposed definition: ``This definition does
not include businesses or establishments that sell food incidental to
their primary purpose of providing or hosting entertainment at venues
such as movie and live theaters, arenas, amusement parks, sports
facilities, concert venues, and other similar establishments.''
(Response 6) We have revised the definition of ``restaurant or
similar retail food establishment'' to eliminate the primary business
test. Most of the comments opposed one or more aspects associated with
our proposal to include a primary business test, and we are persuaded
by them. The comments we received were diverse and raised important
considerations, including issues related to fairness; public health
impact; accessibility of nutrition information; enabling informed
decision-making; statutory purpose and Congressional intent;
enforcement challenges; and feasibility of complying with the rule. We
are convinced that any primary purpose test presented in the proposed
rule will be problematic.
Congress did not define the term ``restaurant or similar retail
food establishment'' in section 4205 of the ACA or elsewhere in the
FD&C Act. As we stated in the proposed rule, we look to statutory
context as a starting point for the regulatory definition of
``restaurant or similar retail food establishment.'' As we noted, the
1990 NLEA amendments exempted two categories of food relevant for this
discussion: (1) Food ``which is served in restaurants or other
establishments in which food is served for immediate human consumption
or which is sold for sale or use in such establishments,'' (termed
``restaurant food'' in the proposed rule); and (2) food ``which is
processed and prepared primarily in a retail establishment, which is
ready for human consumption, which is of the type described in [(1)]
and which is offered for sale to consumers but not for immediate human
consumption in such establishment and which is not offered for sale
outside such establishment'' (termed ``restaurant-type food'' in the
proposed rule). Section 4205 of the ACA amended both of these statutory
exemptions. In determining the scope of section 4205 of the ACA, we
must determine which of these foods should remain wholly exempt from
Federal nutrition labeling requirements and which should be covered by
the new nutrition labeling requirements in this rule.
Instead of using a primary purpose test within the definition of
restaurant or similar retail food establishment to set the scope of the
new law, we are finalizing a broader definition of restaurant or
similar retail food establishment, consistent with many of the
comments. In response to concerns about overreaching in establishments
that sell a significant amount of food that is not typical of food sold
in restaurants, such as grocery and convenience stores (see also
discussion in section VI.B.3), we are narrowing the set of food covered
by removing the term ``restaurant food'' from this rule and redefining
``restaurant-type food'' to
[[Page 71166]]
include only the set of food described in sections 403(q)(5)(A)(i) and
(ii) of the FD&C Act that is most like the food served in restaurants
(see discussion in section VI.C). Retail food establishments that offer
for sale this type of food are either restaurants or are relevantly
similar to restaurants in that they offer for sale the kind of food
that restaurants do. Therefore, the final definition focuses on those
establishments that offer for sale food that is most like food served
in restaurants; overall, it is generally broader than the definition
provided in the proposed rule, but narrower than what we put forward in
the draft implementation guidance.
Most of the comments that addressed the floor space approach or the
alternative revenue approach to ``primary purpose 2'' expressed a
preference for one or the other without providing strong and convincing
arguments as to why their preferred alternative is superior to the
alternative that they opposed. Several comments identified challenges
to enforcing the rule if the definition of ``restaurant or similar
retail food establishment'' included either the floor space approach or
the alternative revenue approach.
We agree with several points made by the comments about facilities
within entertainment venues such as movie theaters and amusement
parks--e.g., that providing nutrition information to consumers at such
venues will make such nutrition information available to consumers in a
direct and accessible manner to enable consumers to make informed and
healthful dietary choices; food in entertainment venues is similar to
food offered for sale in other restaurants or similar retail food
establishments; and covering entertainment venues would create a level
playing field. Under the revised definition of ``restaurant or similar
retail food establishment,'' such facilities in entertainment venues
will be covered by the rule if they offer for sale restaurant-type food
and satisfy the other criteria in the definition of ``covered
establishment''--i.e., part of a chain with 20 or more locations, doing
business under the same name, and offering for sale substantially the
same menu items. Similarly, some superstores that may not have been
covered under the proposed definition likewise may be considered a
``restaurant or similar retail food establishment'' under the final
definition established in the rule. Under the definition of
``restaurant or similar retail food establishment'' in this rule, a
superstore, like a grocery store, would be covered if it sells
restaurant-type food and is part of a chain with 20 or more locations,
doing business under the same name, and offering for sale substantially
the same menu items. Hotel restaurants are another type of
establishment that we stated generally would not have been covered
under the proposed rule (76 FR 19192 at 19198), but would be covered
under the final rule if they sell restaurant-type food and are part of
a chain of hotel restaurants with 20 or more fixed locations, doing
business under the same name, and offering for sale substantially the
same menu items.
We disagree that the legislative history of section 4205 of the ACA
demonstrates any express intent of Congress to exclude facilities
located within entertainment venues such as movie theaters and bowling
alleys from the rule. The legislative history of section 4205 of the
ACA is very sparse; the section was discussed on few occasions, and
when it was discussed, few specifics were mentioned, including
specifics about the scope of the law.
We discuss transportation venues later in this document (see
Response 27).
(Comment 7) One comment considered the proposed requirement that
the sale of food be the retail establishment's primary business to be
at odds with the approach taken in the proposed vending machine rule.
The comment pointed out that we concluded that only 5,000 of 10,000
vending machine operators operate vending machines as their primary
business, yet the proposed vending machine rule would apply to those
with 20 or more machines, which includes all 10,000 of the vending
machine operators.
(Response 7) The provisions of the proposed vending machine rule,
including criteria for determining coverage of that rule, are not
relevant to the criteria for determining coverage of this rule.
Regardless, this comment is moot because the definition of ``restaurant
or similar retail food establishment'' established in this rule no
longer includes a primary business test.
(Comment 8) A few comments recommended that we separately define
``restaurant'' and ``similar retail food establishment.'' One of these
comments recommended that we define ``restaurant'' separately from
``similar retail food establishment'' because Congress uses the word
``or'' in the phrase ``restaurant or similar retail food
establishment,'' and thus ``restaurants'' and ``similar retail food
establishments'' are clearly two separate things. Another comment
recommended that we define a restaurant as one that uses greater than
50 percent gross floor space for preparation, purchase, service,
consumption of restaurant food and a similar retail food establishment
as an establishment that meets the same standard but does not present
itself as a restaurant.
(Response 8) We disagree that we should separately define
``restaurant'' and ``similar retail food establishment.'' As an initial
matter, while Congress does use the word ``or'' between ``restaurant''
and ``similar retail food establishment'' in some places, it also uses
the word ``and'' between them in others. For example, section
403(q)(5)(H)(i) of the FD&C Act contains both constructions (``General
requirements for restaurants and similar retail food establishments''
and ``the restaurant or similar retail food establishment shall
disclose''). We interpret the choice of the words ``and'' and ``or'' in
section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act to be a function of appropriate
grammar, not to indicate Congressional intent to conceptualize
``restaurants'' separately from ``similar retail food establishments.''
Moreover, given that the requirements in section 403(q)(5)(H) of the
FD&C Act are the same for restaurants and similar retail food
establishments, we see no practical reason to create separate
regulatory definitions.
(Comment 9) One comment recommended that we include as part of the
regulation table 1 from the proposed rule to help the public interpret
the regulation.
(Response 9) In the proposed rule (77 FR 19192 at 19198 and 19199),
tables 1 and 2 identify establishments that generally would, or would
not, be a ``restaurant or similar retail food establishment'' for the
purposes of this rule. We included these tables to demonstrate the
likely impact for many establishments of the proposed and alternative
criteria for a ``primary business test'' within the definition of
``restaurant or similar retail food establishment.'' The definition of
``restaurant or similar retail food establishment'' established in this
rule no longer has a primary business test. Any establishment that
sells restaurant-type food is a ``restaurant or similar retail food
establishment'' for the purposes of this rule. Therefore, we see no
value added in including such tables in this final rule.
3. Coverage of Grocery Stores and Convenience Stores
(Comment 10) Several comments recommended that grocery stores be
covered. Some of these comments considered that grocery stores should
be covered because they sell a great deal of food for immediate
consumption. One
[[Page 71167]]
of these comments referred to the ``Food Marketing Institute's 2010
U.S. Grocery Shopper Trends'' (Ref. 11) as evidence that the number of
consumers who express interest in supermarket ready-to-eat food is at
its highest point in 4 years. One comment asserted that the law does
not exempt grocery stores or take-out food.
(Response 10) We agree with these comments. Grocery stores that
sell restaurant-type food and are part of a chain with 20 or more
locations doing business under the same name and offering for sale
substantially the same menu items are covered by the rule.
(Comment 11) One comment argued that the plain meaning of section
4205 of the ACA precludes including grocery stores as ``restaurants and
similar retail food establishments.'' The comment stated that Congress
used other words elsewhere in the FD&C Act to refer to the set of
establishments that include grocery stores, such as ``food retailer''
and ``retail establishment'' in section 403(q) of the FD&C Act. In
addition, our regulation at 21 CFR 1.227 defines ``retail food
establishment'' to include grocery stores for the purposes of food
facility registration. Given that Congress chose a different term here,
the comment argued that we must assume ``similar retail food
establishments'' has a different meaning.
(Response 11) We disagree with this comment. We do interpret the
phrase ``similar retail food establishment'' to have a different
meaning than the terms ``food retailer'' and ``retail establishment''
that appear elsewhere in section 403(q) of the FD&C Act or ``retail
food establishment'' in 21 CFR 1.227. Both our proposed and final
definitions are different from the definitions of these other terms. If
a retail food establishment does not offer for sale restaurant-type
food, it would not be a ``restaurant or similar retail food
establishment'' for the purposes of section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C
Act, even though it could be a ``food retailer'' or a ``retail
establishment'' or ``retail food establishment.''
(Comment 12) One comment argues that the heading of section 4205 of
the ACA, ``Nutrition Labeling of Standard Menu Items at Chain
Restaurants,'' indicates that ``restaurants or similar retail food
establishments'' is an ambiguous term, and should be interpreted
narrowly to exclude grocery stores.
(Response 12) We disagree with this comment. First, while we
recognize that the heading of a statute may be considered part of a
section's legislative history, the heading is not part of the law
itself (Ref. 12). Second, it is clear that the heading is not meant to
describe the scope of the requirements in section 4205 of the ACA,
given that section 4205 includes requirements for ``restaurants and
similar retail food establishments'' and requirements for vending
machine operators.
(Comment 13) One comment argued that the legislative history of
section 4205 of the ACA demonstrates that grocery stores should not be
included in the menu labeling requirements. The comment cited a floor
speech by Senator Harkin where he favorably compares the nutrition
information available in grocery stores to the lack of nutrition
information available at restaurants. For example, ``It makes no sense
that American consumers can go to a grocery store and find nutrition
information on just about anything, but then they are totally in the
dark when they go to a restaurant for dinner.'' (Ref. 13) The comment
also argued that the legislative history does not include any hearing
or debate indicating that we were being given authority to regulate
chain grocery stores through section 4205 of the ACA.
Some comments stated that some State and local jurisdictions did
not cover grocery stores. One comment remarked that State and local
laws related to menu labeling referred to in the legislative history of
section 4205 of the ACA did not cover grocery stores. Specifically, the
comment mentions that the New York City Health Code provisions on menu
labeling, which the comment characterizes as the first and most
extensively discussed law cited by Senator Harkin, does not regulate
supermarkets.
(Response 13) We disagree that the legislative history demonstrates
that grocery stores should not be included in the nutrition labeling
requirements of this rule. First, the most straightforward
interpretation of Senator Harkin's statements is that the food in
grocery stores he had in mind was packaged food already required to
bear nutrition information under Federal law.
Second, the fact that none of the State or local jurisdictions with
menu labeling requirements explicitly covered grocery stores does not
mean that Congress did not intend to cover grocery stores under the
Federal law. Many State and local jurisdictions with menu labeling
requirements predating the ACA did not cover self-service food or food
on display, which is most likely to be the type of food in grocery
stores covered by this rule. However, it is clear that Congress
intended for self-service food and food on display to be covered,
because section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii) explicitly establishes statutory
requirements specific to self-service food and food on display. In
addition, for at least some local governments, including New York City,
the regulation of grocery stores fell outside of their jurisdiction
(Ref. 14). So, the fact that grocery stores were not covered by New
York City cannot be assumed to be a choice by local authorities.
Finally, we recognize that the legislative history of section 4205
of the ACA does not include any hearing or debate indicating
specifically mentioning chain grocery stores. However, this does not
imply that Congress intended for grocery stores to be excluded. As
already noted, the legislative history of section 4205 of the ACA is
very sparse; the section was discussed on few occasions, and when it
was discussed, few specifics were raised, including specifics about the
scope of the law. The comment does not provide evidence to the
contrary. Our final rule represents a reasonable interpretation of the
statute, given the language of section 4205 of the ACA and the scant
legislative history.
(Comment 14) Some comments asserted that if Congress had intended
broad application, it would have overhauled 21 U.S.C. 343(q)(5)(A)(i)
and (ii) of the FD&C Act rather than letting those stand and adding 21
U.S.C. 343(q)(5)(H). Further, these comments stated that if Congress
had wanted to include all establishments exempted by the NLEA, it would
have cross-referenced to the NLEA exemption or just removed the
exemption.
(Response 14) We agree with some of these comments and disagree
with others. We agree that Congress did not intend for all
establishments exempted by the NLEA to be covered by section 4205 of
the ACA. Under the rule, there are many establishments, including
establishments that meet the regulatory definition of restaurant or
similar retail food establishment, that will not be covered. For
example, food described in section 403(q)(5)(A)(i) of the FD&C Act
served in certain sit-down restaurants that are not part of a chain of
20 or more locations will continue to be exempt from the Federal
nutrition labeling requirements in sections 403(q)(1) to (4). In
addition, section 403(q)(5)(A)(i) and (ii) of the FD&C Act continue to
exempt all food that is described in sections 403(q)(5)(A)(i) and (ii),
including food offered for sale in restaurants and similar retail food
establishments, from the nutrition labeling requirements in sections
403(q)(3) and (4). Therefore, irrespective of the breadth of section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act, Congress's amendment to sections
403(q)(5)(A)(i) and (ii) leaves a large portion of the exemption
intact. Congress could not
[[Page 71168]]
have removed the exemption in sections 403(q)(5)(A)(i) and (ii) of the
FD&C Act and achieved the same result.
Instead, Congress amended sections 403(q)(5)(A)(i) and (ii) of the
FD&C Act to cross-reference section 403(q)(5)(H). The cross-references
to section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act in sections 403(q)(5)(A)(i) and
(ii) indicate that the requirements in 403(q)(5)(H) must apply to at
least a subset of those foods described in both sections
403(q)(5)(A)(i) and (ii). Congress did not provide a statutory
definition of ``restaurant or similar retail food establishment'' in
section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act, leaving ambiguity in the statute
as to the breadth of the set of establishments covered. Our definition
of restaurant or similar retail food establishment is a reasonable
interpretation of this ambiguous term, and is consistent with section
4205's amendments to section 403(q)(5)(A)(i) and (ii) of the FD&C Act.
(Comment 15) One comment argued that the restaurant industry
supported section 4205 of the ACA, because the law would provide them
with a nationally uniform regulatory scheme. The comment asserted that
grocery stores ``did not ask for this law,'' and should therefore not
be covered.
(Response 15) In general, whether an industry asks to be regulated
is not determinative of whether that industry should be regulated. In
addition, grocery stores are increasingly offering for sale restaurant-
type food, including food for immediate consumption that is prepared
and processed on the premises.
(Comment 16) A few comments maintained that there is too much
variability in grocery store food because food is seasonal and grocery
stores make prepared food from food in the store. Some comments also
noted that some grocery stores offer unique menu items, such as a
unique chicken salad based on the personal recipe of a chef at a
particular grocery store's location, that are not available at all
grocery stores in the chain. These comments asserted that it would be
difficult to calculate the nutrient information if grocery stores were
covered under the final rule.
(Response 16) A grocery store is required to make calorie
declarations for its standard menu items if it meets the definition of
``covered establishment'' in this rule; including, in relevant part,
that the grocery store is ``offering for sale substantially the same
menu items'' as other grocery stores in the chain (see section VI.F for
discussion on ``offering for sale substantially the same menu items'').
However, if a food is not routinely included on a menu or menu board or
routinely offered as a self-service food or food on display at a
covered establishment, it is not a standard menu item at that
establishment and therefore not covered by this rule (see section
VIII.B for discussion on the definition of standard menu item). For
example, if a food's ingredients and recipe changes daily based on food
available in the store, it is likely that such food would not be a
standard menu item. However, for food offerings that are standard menu
items, even if unique to only one location in the chain, a covered
establishment has many options for determining nutrient content,
including, for example, calculating the required nutrient information
from the recipe for the food offering using nutrient databases (see
Sec. 101.11(c)). Per the statute, in those cases where seasonal
availability is limited to less than 60 days, the food offering may be
exempt from the nutrition labeling requirements of this rule as a
temporary menu item or a self-service food and food on display that is
offered for sale for less than a total of 60 days per calendar year.
(Comment 17) One comment maintained that menu labeling is needed in
small grocery stores and convenience stores because of the disparity in
low-income neighborhoods that do not have many large grocery stores or
superstores but do have small grocery stores and convenience stores.
According to the comment, grocery stores, convenience stores, and drug
store chains have expanded their businesses to include ready-to-eat
food offerings. The comment maintained that these establishments are in
direct competition with restaurants and have grown so rapidly over the
past decade that some are being called ``grocerants.''
(Response 17) Small grocery stores and convenience stores are
covered by the rule if they sell restaurant-type food and are part of a
chain with 20 or more locations, doing business under the same name,
and offering for sale substantially the same menu items.
(Comment 18) One comment considered that grocery stores should not
be covered by the menu labeling requirements because they do not have
menus and menu boards.
(Response 18) We disagree with this comment. First, the comment
suggests that no grocery stores have menus or menu boards. However,
some grocery stores do have menus and menu boards, including for
example, menus and menu boards for sandwiches that are prepared upon
the consumer's request. Second, the comment implies that a restaurant
or similar retail food establishment must have a menu or menu board in
order to be covered by this rule. This is not the case. Consistent with
section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act, this rule requires that covered
establishments provide certain nutrition information for standard menu
items, even the standard menu items that do not appear on menus or menu
boards. For example, section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii) of the FD&C Act requires
nutrition labeling for standard menu items that are self-service foods
and foods on display, irrespective of whether they are listed on a menu
or menu board.
4. Confectionery Stores
(Comment 19) A few comments recommended that confectionery stores
not be covered because they do not sell restaurant food. According to
one of these comments, most candy sold in retail confectionery stores
is not generally consumed immediately where purchased or while walking
away. Instead, the comment stated, most candy sold in retail
confectionery stores is either prepackaged (e.g., boxed chocolates) or
selected by the consumer and placed in a box or other packaging for
consumption at a later time. Thus, according to this comment, food
served in retail confectionery stores without facilities for
consumption on the premises would continue to be covered by the
nutrition labeling requirements in Sec. 101.9. Another comment
acknowledged that some confectionary stores do sell some restaurant-
type foods, such as chocolate from display cases, shakes, and specialty
items dipped in chocolate, but that the primary focus of the business
was the sale of packaged food such as ``gift box'' packaged chocolates.
(Response 19) We disagree that confectionery stores, as a class of
retail food establishments, should not be covered. Based on these
comments, some foods sold in some confectionery stores are restaurant-
type foods. As discussed in section VI.C, we are establishing a revised
definition of ``restaurant-type food'' that would cover food that is
usually eaten on the premises, while walking away, or soon after
arriving at another location (see Response 24). A prepackaged box of
candy sold in a confectionery store is not likely to be a restaurant-
type food, because a box of candy is not usually eaten on the premises,
while walking away, or soon after arriving at another location.
However, individual pieces of candy sold to a consumer from a display
case, shakes, and specialty items dipped in chocolate likely would be
restaurant-type foods, because they are generally consumed on the
premises, while walking away, or soon after arriving at
[[Page 71169]]
another location. Under this rule, a confectionery store that sells
restaurant-type food would be covered if it is part of a chain with 20
or more locations doing business under the same name and offering for
sale substantially the same menu items. We note that the only foods
covered by this rule in a covered establishment are restaurant-type
foods that are standard menu items.
5. Facilities Within Facilities
(Comment 20) One comment asked us to clarify that the independent
franchise restaurant that operates within an amusement park is liable
for adherence to the final regulation, not the park. The comment
maintained that the park would have no way of knowing if the franchisee
is compliant.
(Response 20) The covered establishment bears the responsibility to
comply with the rule. In addition, see Response 3.
6. Schools
(Comment 21) One comment asked us to clarify whether a school food
service contractor that uses a central kitchen or cooks the same food
for 20 schools would be covered. One comment stated that these
establishments should provide calories on menu boards, online menus,
and menus sent home to parents.
(Response 21) We have decided not to include schools in the
definition of ``restaurant or similar retail food establishment'' for
the purposes of this rule. As previously discussed (see Response 6)
Congress did not define the term ``restaurant or similar retail food
establishment'' in section 4205 of the ACA or elsewhere in the FD&C
Act. The term is ambiguous, and we look to statutory context as a
starting point for our regulatory definition. As discussed in section I
of this document, while the NLEA required that the labeling of many
foods bear nutrition information, it exempted certain food from such
nutrition labeling requirements, including food that is ``served in
restaurants or other establishments in which food is served for
immediate human consumption'' (section 403(q)(5)(A)(i) of the FD&C
Act). In FDA's regulations implementing the NLEA, we included schools
among the list of examples of ``other establishments in which food is
served for immediate human consumption'' (Sec. 101.9(j)(2)) Section
4205 of the ACA amended this statutory exemption, among others, to
account for new nutrition labeling requirements for standard menu items
in restaurants and similar retail food establishments. Therefore, we
must determine whether standard menu items in schools should remain
wholly exempt from FDA nutrition labeling requirements or whether they
should be eligible to be covered by the new nutrition labeling
requirements in this rule.
Traditionally, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) has
exercised a primary role in setting the standards for foods served in
schools through school lunch and breakfast programs. USDA regulates
such foods, under various Federal statutes, including the Child
Nutrition Act of 1996 and the Richard B. Russell National School Lunch
Act. Given the traditional and long-standing role of USDA in setting
standards, including nutrition requirements, for foods served in
schools through school lunch and breakfast programs, as established by
Federal legislation and implemented by Federal Agencies, we conclude
that it is reasonable to interpret the term ``restaurant or similar
retail food establishment'' to not include schools. Therefore, we have
revised the definition ``restaurant or similar retail food
establishment'' to mean a retail establishment that offers for sale
restaurant-type food, except if it is a school as defined in 7 CFR
210.2 or 220.2.
C. Restaurant Food and Restaurant-Type Food
A key term in the final definition of ``restaurant or similar
retail food establishment'' is the term ``restaurant-type food.'' The
terms ``restaurant food'' and ``restaurant-type food'' also were
important to the proposed definition of ``restaurant or similar retail
food establishment.'' Proposed Sec. 101.11(a) would define
``restaurant food'' as food that is served in restaurants or other
establishments in which food is served for immediate human consumption,
i.e., to be consumed either on the premises where that food is
purchased or while walking away; or which is sold for sale or use in
such establishments. (As a typographical error, the proposed rule
incorrectly stated ``where that the food is purchased'' rather than
``where that food is purchased.'') Proposed Sec. 101.11(a) would
define ``restaurant-type food'' as food of the type described in the
definition of ``restaurant food'' that is ready for human consumption,
offered for sale to consumers but not for immediate consumption,
processed and prepared primarily in a retail establishment, and not
offered for sale outside of that establishment.
In the following paragraphs, we discuss comments on these proposed
definitions. After considering comments, we are deleting the proposed
definition of ``restaurant food'' and establishing a revised definition
of ``restaurant-type food'' that better reflects the food most like the
food offered for sale in restaurants. As conforming amendments, we are
deleting the term ``restaurant food'' from other proposed definitions
that had included this term--i.e., the proposed definitions for ``food
on display,'' ``restaurant or similar retail food establishment,''
``self-service food,'' and ``standard menu item.''
(Comment 22) One comment recommended that food be covered if
prepared for immediate human consumption regardless of whether
consumers choose to consume on or off the premises. The comment
recommended that we remove the term ``walking away'' from the
definition of restaurant food because it would be clearer to state
simply that foods that are served in restaurants or similar retail food
establishments and are prepared for immediate human consumption are
covered, whether customers choose to consume them on or off the
premises. The comment considered that whether foods are actually
consumed on or off the premises should not be a determining factor as
to whether a food or facility is covered by the rule. The comment asked
us to clarify that food from facilities serving take-away food that
meet the other criteria are covered.
(Response 22) We decline the specific suggestion that we replace
our proposed criterion that food may be ``consumed either on the
premises where the food is purchased or while walking away'' with a
criterion mentioning that consumers may consume the food ``on or off
the premises.'' The comment did not disagree that restaurant food
should include food that is consumed while walking away but rather
suggested communicating this differently.
While restaurants do offer for sale food that is consumed off the
premises, in general that food is consumed while walking away or upon
arriving at another location. Other foods, like groceries, are also
consumed ``off the premises'' of the store that sells them (e.g., a
grocery or convenience store), but they are often consumed at a later
time or over a period of days. Our aim is to cover the food most like
the food offered for sale in restaurants, and not food that is more
similar to food traditionally thought of as groceries. Therefore, the
phrase ``on or off the premises'' is too broad for our final definition
of restaurant-type food.
In general, take-away food is consumed while walking away or upon
arriving at another location. Therefore, take-away food is likely to be
``restaurant-type food,'' and retail
[[Page 71170]]
establishments that offer for sale take-away food are likely to meet
the definition of restaurant or similar retail food establishment.
Take-away food that satisfies the definition of ``restaurant-type
food'' established in this rule would be subject to the nutrition
labeling requirements of this rule if it is a standard menu item that
is offered for sale in a covered establishment.
(Comment 23) One comment recommended that the phrase ``not offered
for sale outside that establishment'' be deleted from the definition of
restaurant food because some restaurants market frozen meals from their
restaurants.
(Response 23) We are retaining the phrase ``not offered for sale
outside such establishment'' in the definition of restaurant-type food.
This phrase comes from section 403(q)(5)(A)(ii) of the FD&C Act. FDA
previously has interpreted this phrase (see 58 FR 2079 at 2146 (January
6, 1993)). The frozen meals described by the comment appear to be
packaged foods. Most packaged foods are subject to the labeling
requirements of Sec. 101.9. The sale of such packaged, frozen food
outside of a restaurant, e.g., in a grocery store, will not affect
whether the food in a restaurant is covered by this rule.
(Comment 24) One comment urged us to remove the term ``restaurant-
type food'' from the rule and recognize that the sale of food to
consumers for immediate consumption is a primary distinguishing factor
of a restaurant. The comment contended that our definition of
restaurant or similar retail food establishment is overly broad because
it includes an establishment that sells not only restaurant food but
also restaurant-type food. The comment maintained that we did not
explain our rationale for including restaurant-type food in the
proposed rule, especially when our existing regulation on restaurants
refers only to restaurant food.
A few comments were concerned that because of the definition of
restaurant-type food grocery stores would have to label prepared foods
for immediate consumption as well as every loaf of bread, roll, cookie
and deli item except cold cuts; these comments estimated that
approximately 6,400 service deli, prepared foods, and bakery items
would be included, which would be very costly. One comment contended
that the increase in cost may limit the items that grocery stores would
carry, which would limit sales growth. According to a few comments 95
percent of items in grocery stores have Nutrition Facts and the costs
to cover the remaining 5 percent vastly outweighs benefits.
(Response 24) We agree that sale of food to consumers for immediate
consumption is a common characteristic of restaurants but disagree that
it follows that only ``restaurant food'' is relevant to this
rulemaking. In the proposed rule, we explained that section 4205 of the
ACA amended both sections 403(q)(5)(A)(i) and (ii) of the FDA&C Act.
Under section 403(q)(5)(A)(ii) of the FD&C Act, except as provided in
section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act (i.e., the requirement
for written nutrition information for food covered by this rule) the
nutrition labeling requirements of section 403(q)(1), (2), (3), and (4)
of the FD&C Act shall not apply to food which is processed and prepared
primarily in a retail establishment, which is ready for human
consumption, which is of the type described in section 403(q)(5)(A)(i),
and which is offered for sale to consumers but not for immediate human
consumption in such establishment and which is not offered for sale
outside such establishment (emphasis added). To implement the phrase
``except as provided in section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III)'' of the FD&C
Act, some set of food described in section 403(q)(5)(A)(ii)--that is
not for immediate consumption--is covered by this rule.
We acknowledge that the proposed definition of restaurant-type food
includes some foods that are sold in grocery or convenience stores that
are not generally offered for sale in restaurants, foods that are more
like groceries, and we have amended that definition in the final rule.
After considering all of the comments directed to the proposed
definitions of ``restaurant food'' or ``restaurant-type food,'' in
addition to the comments related to the scope of the rule more
generally, given the relationship between these terms and the
definition of restaurant or similar retail food establishment, we are
convinced that this rule should cover only those foods described in
sections 403(q)(5)(A)(i) and (ii) of the FD&C Act that are most like
the food sold in restaurants and should not cover foods that are more
commonly considered to be groceries. Therefore, we are deleting the
proposed definition of ``restaurant food'' and establishing a revised
definition of ``restaurant-type food'' that reflects the food most like
the food offered for sale in restaurants. Under that new definition,
restaurant-type food means food that is (1) usually eaten on the
premises, while walking away, or soon after arriving at another
location; and (2) either (i) served in restaurants or other
establishments in which food is served for immediate human consumption
or which is sold for sale or use in such establishments; or (ii)
processed and prepared primarily in a retail establishment, ready for
human consumption, of the type described in (i), and offered for sale
to consumers but not for immediate human consumption in such
establishment and which is not offered for sale outside such
establishment. The first part of this definition focuses on the food
most like the food offered for sale in restaurants, while the second
part of this definition reflects the statutory context of sections
403(q)(5)(A)(i) and (ii) of the FD&C Act. The new definition includes
food for immediate consumption at a sit-down or quick service
restaurant; food purchased at a drive-through establishment; take-out
and delivery pizza; hot pizza at grocery and convenience stores that is
ready to eat; pizza slice from a movie theater; hot buffet food, hot
soup at a soup bar, and food from a salad bar; foods ordered from a
menu/menu board at a grocery store intended for individual consumption
(e.g., soups, sandwiches, and salads); and self-service foods and foods
on display that are intended for individual consumption (e.g.,
sandwiches, wraps, and paninis at a deli counter; salads plated by the
consumer at a salad bar; cookies from a mall cookie counter; bagels,
donuts, rolls offered for individual sale). Foods that are similar to
grocery items that may be ready for immediate consumption but that
consumers usually store for use at a later time or customarily further
prepare would not be included within the meaning of ``restaurant-type
food.'' Foods that we therefore would not consider to be within the
meaning of ``restaurant-type food'' include foods to be eaten over
several eating occasions or stored for later use (e.g., loaves of
bread, bags or boxes of dinner rolls, whole cakes, and bags or boxes of
candy or cookies); foods sold by weight that are not self-serve and are
not intended solely for individual consumption (e.g., deli salads sold
by unit of weight such as potato salad, chicken salad), either
prepacked or packed upon consumer request; and foods that are usually
further prepared before consuming (e.g., deli meats and cheeses).
(Comment 25) One comment asked us to clarify that only food offered
``for sale'' in a restaurant or similar retail food establishment
should be considered in determining whether an establishment is a
covered establishment. The comment noted that the statute expressly
limits the
[[Page 71171]]
application of food labeling to items that are ``offered for sale,''
and considered that the menu labeling regulations should adopt a
similar limitation.
(Response 25) The rule only applies to food offered for sale.
D. Part of a Chain With 20 or More Locations
In the proposed rule (76 FR 19192 at 19195), we noted that we did
not propose a definition of the statutory criterion ``part of a chain
with 20 or more locations'' and that we were assuming the common
meaning of the words in the phrase. However, we requested comment on
whether the phrase should be defined in the final rule, and
particularly on whether the terms ``chain'' and ``location'' should be
defined in context of the various types of corporate or other business
arrangements that may be relevant, including contracting arrangements.
In the following paragraphs, we discuss comments on the terms
``chain'' and ``location.'' After considering these comments, we are
adding a definition of ``locations'' to clarify our interpretation of
``part of a chain with 20 or more locations.''
(Comment 26) A few comments responded to our request for comment on
the term ``chain.'' One comment recommended that we define ``chain'' as
a covered establishment doing business under the same name as those
that share the same name under the ownership, control, and operation of
a single corporate entity. This comment considered that this is
consistent with the commonly accepted dictionary definition of a chain
as ``a group of enterprises or institutions of the same kind or
function under a single ownership, management, or control.'' Another
comment cited the following dictionary definition for ``chain'': ``A
range of retail outlets which share a brand and central management,
usually with standardized business methods''. This comment also cited
the following dictionary definition for ``restaurant chain'': ``A set
of restaurants, usually with the same name in many different locations
either under shared corporate ownership or franchising agreements.
Typically, the restaurants within a chain are built to a standard
format and offer a standard menu.''
(Response 26) Section 4205 of the ACA covers restaurants or similar
retail food establishments that are part of a chain with 20 or more
locations doing business under the same name ``regardless of the type
of ownership of the locations.'' Both definitions suggested by comments
refer to management structure, corporate control, and/or ownership.
Because the statute directs us to disregard the type of ownership of
the locations when determining whether an establishment is ``part of a
chain with 20 or more locations doing business under the same name,''
neither of these definitions for the word ``chain'' is appropriate.
According to the dictionary definitions, the word ``chain'' means,
among other things, ``a group of enterprises, establishments,
institution, or constructions of the same kind or function linked
together into a single system'' (Ref. 15), a ``series or group of
things or people that are connected to each other in some way'' (Ref.
15), and ``a series of closely linked or connected things'' (Ref. 16).
In section 403(q)(5)(H)(i) of the FD&C Act, Congress provides the ways
in which restaurants or similar retail food establishments must be
connected to or linked to each other in order to be covered by the new
law: They must be doing business under the same name and offering for
sale substantially the same menu items, and there must be 20 or more
locations of them. Therefore, we continue to use the common meaning of
the word ``chain'' and do not consider an additional regulatory
definition necessary for this broad term. The statute specifies the
particular criteria for the set of chains that are relevant for this
rulemaking, and we provide regulatory definitions for those criteria
specifically.
(Comment 27) One comment recommended that we not rely solely on the
terms ``chain'' and ``location'' because some restaurants and food
establishments have locations at the same address, such as a mall. The
comment asked us to either use the term ``selling post'' or to clarify
that the location includes chains with restaurants in the same physical
building. Another comment asked us to clarify that mobile facilities
(such as food trucks) are covered. Some comments noted that
transportation venues have menus that look like those in sandwich
shops. Other comments noted that it is feasible for transportation
venues to comply with the rule.
(Response 27) We disagree that we should add the term ``selling
post'' to the definition to specify restaurants and similar retail food
establishments that are part of the same chain and are located in the
same shopping mall or otherwise in the same physical building. However,
this comment demonstrates that there is a need to define the term
``locations,'' even assuming its common meaning. Unlike ``chain,''
where a definition is unnecessary given that we are establishing
definitions for more specific, relevant criteria, we are convinced that
establishing a regulatory definition of ``locations'' would provide
clarity and facilitate a better understanding of regulatory
expectations.
The dictionaries define ``location'' to mean, among other things,
``a position or site occupied . . . a tract of land designated for a
purpose'' (Ref. 17); ``an area or tract of land'' (Ref. 18); ``a place
where something is or could be located; a site . . . a tract of land
that has been surveyed and marked off'' (Ref. 19). This evidences that
the common meaning of the word ``location'' involves a specific or
fixed position on land or portion of land. For clarity, we are defining
``location'' to mean ``a fixed position or site.'' Therefore, for the
purposes of determining whether an establishment is part of a chain
with ``20 or more locations,'' we would consider each of the
establishments occupying separate fixed positions or sites within the
same shopping mall or physical building as separate establishments. One
result of this definition of ``location'' is to exclude food facilities
that do not have a fixed position or site, such as trains and
airplanes. Additionally, mobile food operations such as food trucks
without a fixed position or site are not covered by the rule.
E. Doing Business Under the Same Name
Proposed Sec. 101.11(a) would define ``doing business under the
same name'' as sharing the same name, where ``same name'' would include
names that are either exactly the same, or are slight variations of
each other, for example, due to the region, location, or size (e.g.,
``New York Ave. Burgers'' and ``Pennsylvania Ave. Burgers'' or ``ABC''
and ``ABC Express''). In the proposed rule (76 FR 19192 at 19199), we
requested comment on whether the term should be understood to refer to
the underlying name of ownership such as the name of the parent
company, or the name of the entity conducting corporate business on
behalf of the establishment, e.g., the name of a contractor operating
the establishment, regardless of the public name used by the individual
establishment.
In the following paragraphs, we discuss comments on this proposed
definition. After considering comments, we have revised the definition
to clarify that the term ``name'' refers to either (a) the name of the
establishment presented to the public or (b), if there is no name of
the establishment presented to the public (e.g., an establishment with
the generic descriptor ``concession stand''),
[[Page 71172]]
the name of the parent entity of the establishment.
(Comment 28) Several comments supported the proposed definition.
One comment recommended that the definition be broadened to include
those with the same underlying name of ownership (parent company or
contractor). A few comments recommended that the definition not be
based on the underlying name of ownership. Based on the language of the
statute, the comments considered that ``regardless of . . . ownership''
means that the ownership is not determinative and, therefore, the term
should refer to the name used when doing business with the public and
not the parent company, franchise owner, or other ownership entity. One
comment argued that the phrase ``regardless of . . . ownership'' means
that the corporate structure should not be considered when determining
coverage; instead, the determining factor should be whether the name of
the restaurant is the same. Another comment maintained that to include
the underlying name of ownership in the definition would stifle
investment in smaller locally based restaurants, i.e., it would place a
cap on the number of restaurants an investor or entity could have
before subjecting them to menu labeling.
One comment recommended that the definition not be based on the
name of the parent company because the name of the parent company has
no bearing on the similarity of menu offerings. The comment argued that
to do so would ignore the plain language of the statute, which clearly
meant the public name of the location. One comment asserted that our
proposed definition would expand the definition beyond the statutory
language and Congress' express intent by covering smaller restaurant
chains that offer creative menus and, thus, thwart the purpose and
intent behind thoughtfully designed restaurants.
(Response 28) We agree with comments that considered that the
statutory phrase ``regardless of the type of ownership of the
locations'' means that the type of ownership is not determinative. We
also agree that ``doing business under the same name'' should, in
general, refer to the name used when doing business with the public
(e.g., the branded name that appears on the establishment's signage)
rather than the name of the person or legal entity that owns the
establishment. However, we are aware that some establishments have no
specific name presented to the public. For example, concession stands
in entertainment venues or cafeterias in office buildings may simply
have a sign with a general descriptor, such as ``Hot Dogs'' or
``Concession Stand'' or ``Building 1 Caf[eacute],'' or they may have no
sign at all. In instances where there is no specific name presented to
the public, we find it reasonable to conclude that the name under which
they are doing business is the name of the parent entity of the
facility. Consequently, we have revised the definition of the term
``doing business under the same name'' in Sec. 101.11(a) to add that
the term ``name'' refers to the name of the facility presented to the
public or, if there is no name of the facility presented to the public
(e.g., a facility with the generic descriptor ``concession stand''),
the name of the parent entity of the facility.
(Comment 29) One comment addressed the examples we included in the
proposed definition of establishments doing business under the same
name. As discussed in the proposed rule (76 FR 19192 at 19199), these
examples include names that are slight variations on each other due,
for example, to the region, location, or size. The comment asserted
that it is inappropriate to imply that same name means slight
variation. Another comment recommended that the rule apply to
facilities in grocery stores with 20 or more locations even if the
facilities' names vary from store to store.
(Response 29) We disagree that the examples we included in the
proposed definition of establishments doing business under the same
name are inappropriate. Establishments that are part of large chains
have slight variations in the name, e.g., to reflect a limited menu
based on the space that the establishment occupies. For example,
``XYZ'' chain may have ``XYZ'' restaurant in a free-standing store and
``XYZ Express'' in an airline terminal, food court in a shopping mall,
or grocery store. Even though the names are slight variations of each
other, they are sufficiently similar that it is clear that the
establishments are affiliated with one another. Generally, these
establishments also have the same trade dress (e.g., trade name, logo,
graphics and other distinctive elements of a brand) as the other
establishments in the chain.
(Comment 30) One comment recommended that we require that a chain
remain covered if it initially is subject to the rule but the parent
company changes the name of some locations to get below 20.
(Response 30) Individual restaurants and similar retail food
establishments would be subject to the rule if they satisfy the
criteria for a ``covered establishment.'' If a restaurant or similar
retail food establishment satisfies all the criteria for a covered
establishment, and subsequently changes its name, it must reconsider
whether it continues to satisfy all the criteria for a covered
establishment, including whether it ``is part of a chain with 20 or
more locations doing business under the same name.'' We anticipate that
the benefits to an establishment to continue to do business under the
same name as other establishments in the chain will keep establishments
from changing their names in order to avoid being covered by this rule.
F. Offering for Sale Substantially the Same Menu Items
Proposed Sec. 101.11(a) would define ``offering for sale
substantially the same menu items'' as offering for sale menu items
that use the same general recipe and are prepared in substantially the
same way with substantially the same food components, even if the name
of the menu item varies (e.g. ``Bay View Crab Cake'' and ``Ocean View
Crab Cake''). Under the proposed definition, ``menu items'' would refer
to food items that are listed on a menu or menu board or that are
offered as self-service food or food on display. The proposed
definition would also provide that restaurants and similar retail food
establishments that are part of a chain can still be offering for sale
substantially the same menu items if the availability of some menu
items varies within the chain.
In the following paragraphs, we discuss comments on this proposed
definition. After considering comments, we have revised the definition
to:
Add a qualitative description of the number of menu items
that must be shared in order for the criterion of ``offering for sale
substantially the same menu items'' to be met; and
Add a statement that having the same name may indicate,
but does not necessarily guarantee, that menu items are substantially
the same.
(Comment 31) Several comments supported the definition. One comment
asserted that the proposed rule was not clear on what ``substantially''
the same menu items means quantitatively and suggested that it could
mean anywhere between 51 and 99 percent. Another comment asked us to
clarify what constitutes ``offering for sale menu items that use the
same general recipe and are prepared with substantially the same food
components even if the name varies.'' This comment pointed out that
some restaurants in a chain may have some unique items or may vary the
recipes and therefore, it is not clear if the restaurant is ``offering
for sale substantially the same menu items.''
[[Page 71173]]
The comment gave as an example a kosher restaurant that uses the same
name as non-kosher restaurants that are part of the same chain. The
comment noted that due to the kosher restaurant's following of the
kosher laws, the kosher restaurant may offer for sale some menu items
that vary from the menu items offered for sale in a non-kosher
restaurant in the chain. In addition, the comment noted that the kosher
restaurant may offer for sale unique menu items, such as schwarma, that
are not offered for sale in the non-kosher restaurants in the chain.
This comment requested an exemption for franchise restaurants that
offer specialty menu items or items altered to accommodate a specific
dietary practice (e.g., kosher).
One comment pointed out that menu items in chain restaurants and
similar retail food establishments vary between States and within
States to accommodate local tastes, even if the menu items have the
same name. The comment cited chili as an example, stating that in
Cincinnati it is common for chili to be made with cocoa and cinnamon
thinned out with finely ground meat over spaghetti, whereas in Texas,
chili is made with large chunks of meat, often with beans, served alone
in a bowl.
One comment stated that some food service contractors provide
clients with menus that may change daily, weekly, or monthly and with
rotating cycle menus that can use up to several hundred recipes with
cycle menus that vary from 3, 4, or 5 week cycles and from 5, 6, or 7
day service weeks. Due to the variability in menus in locations that
rely on contract food services, the comment recommended that the
definition of ``offering for sale substantially the same menu item'' be
changed to ``establishments in a chain that offer standard menus
comprised of menu items that use the same general recipes and are
prepared in substantially the same ways with substantially the same
food components, even if the name of the menu item varies.''
(Response 31) We decline to name a proportion or percentage of menu
items that must be shared between establishments. Restaurants and
similar retail food establishments regularly offer new and reformulated
menu items in their establishments. It would be burdensome and
impractical for establishments and inspectors to continually evaluate
all of the establishments in the chain to count the numbers of standard
menu items in common in order to determine whether a given
establishment is covered. In addition, some establishments that are
part of a large chain may not offer for sale all of the standard menu
items offered in other locations of that chain. For example, some
chains have a handful of locations in airports or other venues notated
by the term ``Express'' added to the name, that sell a subset of the
foods that are carried by the larger establishments in the chain.
Finally, as the comments point out, some restaurants that are part of
large chains have some unique or regional items or may vary recipes in
a unique way. These types of minor variations should not exclude
establishments from the requirements of this rule.
Based on the comments and on the considerations discussed
previously in this document, we are not finalizing a specific
proportion or percentage of menu items that covered establishments
within a chain must share. However, we understand from the comments
that our definition should speak to the number of menu items that must
be shared more clearly. Therefore, we are adding a qualitative, not
quantitative, description of the number of menu items that must be
shared in order for the criterion of ``offering for sale substantially
the same menu items'' to be met. Given the statutory language, along
with the practicalities of and variations within the industry, we are
adding ``offering for sale a significant proportion of menu items'' to
the definition of ``offering for sale substantially the same menu
items.'' For example, if establishments only share one or two menu
items, those establishments would not meet the criterion of ``offering
for sale substantially the same menu items.''
We recognize that some establishments in a chain may have some menu
items with ingredients that vary based on regional taste or source.
Some menu items may be designed or prepared to meet certain dietary
practices (e.g., Kosher or Halal) or contain a ``secret ingredient.''
This is why our definition of ``offering for sale substantially the
same menu items'' includes the criteria ``us[ing] the same general
recipe, prepared in substantially the same way, with substantially the
same food components.'' By ``the same general recipe,'' we mean that
the establishments share a recipe, even if one establishment
subsequently tweaks that recipe due to regional tastes or dietary
practices. By ``prepared in substantially the same way,'' we mean to
include slight deviations from the recipe, because of, for example,
food service worker variability. By ``with substantially the same food
components,'' we mean to include situations where ingredients may vary
based on local availability or sourcing, including those used to
conform to certain dietary practices (e.g., Kosher meat).
We also agree with comments that having the same name may indicate
that the menu items are substantially the same, but it does not always
do so. As comments pointed out, menu items that reflect regional
differences may be so different that the name of the menu item sheds
little light on whether the menu items use the same general recipe and
are prepared in substantially the same way with substantially the same
food components. For example, in some regions of the United States a
menu item named ``barbecue'' may refer to a food prepared from pulled
pork, whereas in other regions a menu item named ``barbecue'' may refer
to a food prepared from beef ribs. Therefore, we have revised the
definition to add a new sentence stating that having the same name may
indicate, but does not necessarily guarantee, that menu items are
substantially the same.
The definition for ``substantially the same menu items'' would also
apply to establishments relying on food contractors. If such an
arrangement caused menu rotations, the relevant question would still be
whether those establishments are offering for sale substantially the
same menu items, including whether they are selling a significant
proportion of menu items that use the same general recipe and are
prepared in substantially the same way with substantially the same food
components, even if not necessarily at the same time. In other words,
the focus is on whether the menu items are substantially the same, not
on whether the menus or menu boards are substantially the same. We
decline to accept the suggestion from the comment to revise the
definition to include ``establishments in a chain that offer standard
menus comprised of menu items that . . .'' because it reflects a
misunderstanding that an establishment needs to have a menu, or a
``standard menu'' more specifically, to be covered by the new law.
(Comment 32) One comment maintained that convenience stores in a
chain do not have identical business plans and the same food; the food
varies per establishment and is not prepared to corporate policy as it
is in restaurants.
(Response 32) As explained previously in this document,
establishments can be ``offering for sale substantially the same menu
items'' even if not all of their menu items are exactly the same.
Depending on the extent to which the menu items vary, a convenience
store may or may not meet the criterion of offering for sale
[[Page 71174]]
substantially the same menu items as defined in the rule.
(Comment 33) One comment described itself as a family-owned
restaurant operator with 25 restaurants located entirely within a
single State. Two of its restaurants also contain sushi operations,
each under a different name and with entirely different menus than the
larger establishment. The comment asked us to confirm that the rule
would not apply to these sushi operations.
(Response 33) Based on the information in the comment, the two
sushi operations do not appear to be covered by the rule because they
are neither doing business under the same name (see section VI.E) nor
offering for sale substantially the same menu items as 18 other
establishments.
G. Authorized Official of a Restaurant or Similar Retail Food
Establishment
Proposed Sec. 101.11(a) would define ``Authorized official of a
restaurant or similar retail food establishment'' as the owner,
operator, agent in charge, or other person authorized by the owner,
operator, or agent in charge to register the restaurant or similar
retail food establishment, which is not otherwise subject to section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act, with FDA for the purposes of Sec.
101.11(d). (Section 101.11(d) pertains to voluntary registration to
become subject to the requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C
Act.)
We received no comments on the proposed definition and are
finalizing it without change.
H. Covered Establishment
As already noted in section VI.A, proposed Sec. 101.11(a) would
define ``covered establishment'' as a restaurant or similar retail food
establishment that is a part of a chain with 20 or more locations doing
business under the same name (regardless of the type of ownership,
e.g., individual franchises) and offering for sale substantially the
same menu items, as well as a restaurant or similar retail food
establishment that is registered to be covered under section
403(q)(5)(H)(ix) of the FD&C Act. (Emphasis added).
In the following paragraphs, we discuss general comments on this
proposed definition. We are finalizing the definition of ``covered
establishment'' without change, except to refer to Sec. 101.11(d)
instead of section 403(q)(5)(H)(ix) of the FD&C Act. However, as
already discussed (see sections VI.B, VI.C, VI.D, VI.E, and VI.F),
changes we are making to other terms (i.e., adding a definition of
``location,'' revising the definition of ``restaurant or similar retail
food establishment,'' revising the definition of ``restaurant-type
food,'' revising the definition of ``doing business under the same
name,'' and revising the definition of ``offering for sale
substantially the same menu items'') affect the overall set of covered
establishments.
1. General Comments on the Definition of Covered Establishment
(Comment 34) One comment considered that our proposed definition
would make it conceivable for the requirements to apply to a single,
completely unique ``restaurant concept'' that is owned by a chain with
20 or more other restaurants. The comment described a ``restaurant
concept'' as separate and distinct operations by virtue of the
individual restaurant's menu offerings or recipes, name, decor, and
other distinguishing characteristics such as different dining
experiences with higher quality food and different menu items that may
be unrecognizable to the average diner as being operated by the larger
chain. This comment also considered that applying the menu labeling
requirements to these individual ``restaurant concepts'' would not be
consistent with the statute or intent of Congress. Another comment
expressed concern that a person who operates more than 20 chain retail
food establishments and wants to start a ``new concept'' would be
required to provide nutrition information if this ``new concept'' is
only in one location.
(Response 34) We disagree that we need to revise the definition of
a covered establishment to prevent a misinterpretation that a single,
completely unique ``restaurant concept'' that is owned by a chain with
20 or more other restaurants generally would be covered by the rule. An
establishment that is ``single'' and a ``completely unique restaurant
concept'' is unlikely to have ``20 or more locations'' and be
``offering for sale substantially the same menu items'' as 20 or more
other restaurants. Thus, such an establishment is unlikely to satisfy
the criteria in the proposed definition to be a ``covered
establishment'' as it is currently written. Likewise, if a person
operates more than 20 chain retail food establishments and starts a
``new concept,'' that ``new concept'' establishment would not be a
covered establishment unless it is part of a chain with 20 or more
locations doing business under the same name and offering for sale
substantially the same menu items. We are retaining our definition,
which, as we described in the proposed rule, is derived from sections
403(q)(5)(H)(i) and (xi)(I) of the FD&C Act (76 FR 19192 at 19195).
(Comment 35) One comment recommended that we revise the definition
of covered establishment to use the following language from its State's
regulation: ``A food establishment that: (1) Is engaged in the business
of preparing and selling food items for immediate human consumption on
the premises or off the premises, . . . and (2) offers for sale
substantially the same menu items, utilizing menus, menu boards or food
item tags, in servings that are standardized for portion size and
content, and (3) is one of a group of . . . food establishments . . .
that (a) operates under common ownership or control, or (b) operates as
franchised outlets of a parent business, or (c) does business under the
same name.'' The comment cited only those portions of its regulation
relevant to the questions raised by the definition of covered
establishment in our proposed rule, and used ellipses to indicate text
that was in the State regulation but not being offered as part of the
definition of ``covered establishment'' in this rule.
(Response 35) We disagree with this comment and are not revising
the definition of ``covered establishment'' to incorporate its
suggestions. Our definition of covered establishment is derived from
the Federal statutory language. The only basis offered by the comment
was that the suggestions are used in a State law; the comment did not
state why these changes were necessary from a policy perspective or
legally justified under the Federal law.
(Comment 36) One comment recommended that the rule apply to most
restaurants, and not just those with more than 20 locations, possibly
excluding only establishments with a very small seating capacity. The
comment contended that consumers already know that fast food is ``bad
for you'' and they need to know the nutrition information about the
food in other restaurants.
(Response 36) This rule implements section 4205 of the ACA, which,
in general, covers only restaurants and similar retail food
establishments that are part of a chain with 20 or more locations.
Section 4205 of the ACA allows other restaurants and similar retail
food establishments to register with FDA to become subject to the
Federal requirements, but it does not require them to do so.
(Comment 37) One comment asked us to clarify whether the rule would
apply to foreign establishments of a particular chain that has 20 or
more establishments in the United States, and also has an establishment
located in a foreign location, such as Italy.
[[Page 71175]]
(Response 37) The rule applies to locations in the United States,
including any State or Territory of the United States, the District of
Columbia, and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico. This geographic scope is
consistent with the definitions of ``State'' and ``Territory'' in
section 201(a) of the FD&C Act.
(Comment 38) A few comments asked us to clarify that contractors
and managed food service operations would be covered if they offer for
sale substantially the same menu items.
(Response 38) Whether any other specific contractor or managed food
service would be subject to the rule would depend on whether it
satisfied all criteria established within the definition of ``covered
establishment.'' Thus, to be a covered establishment, an establishment
operated by a contractor or managed food service must be a restaurant
or similar retail food establishment that is a part of a chain with 20
or more locations doing business under the same name and offering for
sale substantially the same menu items. We expect that some
establishments operated by contractors and managed food services will
satisfy all of these criteria.
2. Cooperatives
(Comment 39) Some comments addressed cooperatives and discussed
multiple aspects related to the definition of ``covered
establishment,'' including ``part of a chain,'' ``doing business under
the same name,'' and ``offering for sale substantially the same menu
items.'' One comment considered that cooperatives should not be exempt
because the law expressly states ``regardless of . . . ownership.'' One
comment considered that the type of ownership of grocery stores, such
as a cooperative, is irrelevant to whether a store is part of a chain.
This comment maintained that the law clearly requires chains operating
under the same name to disclose calories, regardless of the type of
ownership. This comment also maintained that grocery store cooperatives
face a similar situation as that faced by independent franchise owners
of chain restaurants.
Other comments generally expressed the view that cooperatives
should not be covered by the rule. One comment asserted that
establishments associated with the same wholesaler or cooperative
should not be considered ``part of a chain'' regardless of whether they
operate under the same ``banner'' or under a different ``banner.'' The
comment considered that cooperatives are the opposite of chains because
they are owned by individual members, operate independently, and are
not bound by franchise agreements, whereas chains are centrally
controlled with little say or choice by participants. The comment asked
us to recognize that independent grocers are not part of a chain of 20,
doing business under same name and selling the same items, even if we
believe cooperatives are similar retail food establishments.
A few comments maintained that the definition for ``doing business
under the same name'' does not apply to cooperatives because they are
independent and exercise their independence more than franchised
restaurants. According to one comment, independent retailers own,
control, and operate their stores independently as customers of
voluntary wholesalers and members of cooperatives. The comment
explained that the food distribution system allows independent
retailers to take advantage of economies of scale when procuring goods
and services, as well as marketing and advertising, thus helping
independent operators effectively compete with large national chain
stores. The comment also explained that these entities are
independently owned and operated businesses that often compete with
other stores under the same banner name, and that menu items can have
different general recipes and be prepared in substantially different
ways with substantially different food components.
One comment asked us to recognize that members of cooperatives are
not ``doing business under the same name.'' For example, the comment
considered that ``Fred's Thriftway'' is not the same as ``Bob's
Thriftway.'' The comment considered that ``Thriftway'' signals that
these establishments are part of a cooperative but maintained that they
are two different stores.
One comment contended that the term ``offering for sale
substantially the same menu items'' may not apply to some foods, such
as brownies or potato salad, made in grocery store cooperatives,
although those foods may be offered for sale under the same name in
those stores. According to the comment, ``Bob's Thriftway'' and
``Mike's Thriftway'' may both sell brownies made from the same general
recipe, (e.g., flour, sugar, eggs, chocolate and butter); however,
because independent grocers compete with each other, each is likely to
include a secret ingredient, and as a result, the brownies are not the
same.
(Response 39) We agree with some comments that the type of
ownership of an establishment is not relevant to whether it is covered.
To be subject to the rule, a cooperative must satisfy all the criteria
in the definition of ``covered establishment.'' In other words, to be
subject to the rule a cooperative must be a restaurant or similar
retail food establishment that sells restaurant-type food and is a part
of a chain with 20 or more locations doing business under the same name
(regardless of the type of ownership, e.g., individual franchises) and
offering for sale substantially the same menu items. As we explain in
section VI.D., we are not defining the term ``chain'' in this
rulemaking. In addition, for the reasons we provide in section VI.E.,
we continue to define doing business under the same name to include
names that are slight variations of each other. Independent businesses
that are cooperatives, even those that are similarly named, are not
covered establishments if, for example, they are only connected insofar
as they take advantage of economies of scale when procuring goods and
services, or for marketing and advertising purposes, but are not
``offering for sale substantially the same menu items.''
However, given the way cooperatives generally are structured, we do
not expect that two cooperatives would be offering for sale
substantially the same menu items. Unless a food such as a brownie
offered for sale in Bob's Thriftway has the same general recipe,
prepared in substantially the same way, with substantially the same
food components as a brownie offered for sale in Mike's Thriftway, the
two cooperatives' brownies would not be ``substantially the same.''
However, if Bob's Thriftway and Mike's Thriftway share a recipe such as
a brownie recipe, and the only difference between the two brownie
recipes is that Mike's Thriftway has added a ``secret ingredient,'' the
brownies could be considered substantially the same menu item,
depending on the importance of that ingredient. Note that even in this
circumstance, Bob's Thriftway and Mike's Thriftway would not be
``offering for sale substantially the same menu items'' if the brownie
is the only menu item that the two cooperatives share.
In addition, we note that a cooperative that is a restaurant or
similar retail food establishment and does not satisfy all of the
criteria to be a covered establishment, but voluntarily registers to be
covered in accordance with Sec. 101.11(d), would be subject to the
rule.
[[Page 71176]]
I. Revisions to Several Provisions To Clarify the Applicability of the
Rule to Those Restaurants and Similar Retail Food Establishments That
Are Covered Establishments
This rule applies to restaurants and similar retail food
establishments that satisfy the definition of ``covered establishment''
in this rule. Several provisions of the proposed rule that would apply
to ``covered establishments'' used the term ``restaurant or similar
retail food establishment'' rather than ``covered establishment.'' To
make clear that those provisions only apply to those restaurants and
similar retail food establishments that satisfy the definition of
``covered establishment,'' we are replacing the term ``restaurant or
similar retail food establishment'' with ``covered establishment'' in
those provisions. The affected provisions are:
The definition of ``custom order'' (Sec. 101.11(a));
The definition of ``menu or menu board'' (Sec.
101.11(a));
The introductory text of Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii) regarding
nutrition information for a standard menu item that must be available
in written form;
The introductory paragraph of proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(6)
(which we are establishing in Sec. 101.11(c)(3)) regarding information
that must be provided to FDA substantiating nutrient information; and
A subparagraph of proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(6) regarding
specific substantiation documentation (i.e., proposed paragraph
(c)(6)(ii)(D), which we are establishing as paragraph (c)(3)(ii)(D)).
We note these changes in our discussion of each of these specific
provisions.
VII. Comments and FDA Response on the Proposed Definition of Menu or
Menu Board (Proposed Sec. 101.11(a))
Proposed Sec. 101.11(a) would define ``menu or menu board'' as the
primary writing of the restaurant or similar retail food establishment
from which a customer makes an order selection, including, but not
limited to, breakfast, lunch, and dinner menus; dessert menus; beverage
menus; children's menus; other specialty menus; electronic menus; and
menus on the Internet. The proposed definition would also provide that
menus may be in different forms, e.g., booklets, pamphlets, or single
sheets of paper and that menu boards include those inside a restaurant
or similar retail food establishment as well as drive-through menu
boards at restaurants or similar retail food establishments.
In the proposed rule, we stated that given the importance for all
consumers to have access to nutrition information when making order
selections, ``primary writing'' should be interpreted from a consumer's
vantage point (76 FR 19192 at 19202). For example, while a printed menu
may be the ``primary writing'' of a restaurant used by a customer
ordering food while dining inside the restaurant itself, a menu mailed
as a flyer to another customer's home could be the ``primary writing''
of the restaurant used by that customer ordering take-out or delivery
from the same restaurant. Both the printed menu and the menu flyer
would meet the definition of ``menu'' or ``menu board'' under proposed
Sec. 101.11(a).
In the following paragraphs, we discuss comments on this proposed
definition. We have revised the definition by replacing the term
``restaurant or similar retail food establishment'' with ``covered
establishment'' in three locations in the definitions for clarity (see
explanation in section VI.I). We are also including factors used to
determine whether a writing is or is part of the primary writing from
which a consumer makes an order selection.
(Comment 40) Many comments supported the proposed definition and
agreed that ``primary writing'' should be interpreted from the
perspective of consumers, so that each writing of the establishment
that is the primary writing used by consumers in making order
selections would be considered a menu or menu board. Several comments
asserted that consumers need to see calorie information when making
order selections in order for the information to be useful to them. One
comment noted that Congress did not intend for covered establishments
to only provide calorie declarations on a single medium in each
establishment, as evidenced by the fact that section 4205 of the ACA
requires calorie declarations on drive-through menu boards and menus
and menu boards located inside establishments. Another comment
suggested that we emphasize that any list or display of a standard menu
item that is primary to the consumer placing an order would constitute
a menu or menu board.
One comment considered that a single store that has multiple menus
or menu boards should be able to select the menu on which the calories
must be disclosed. For example, a single store might have more than one
menu board--with one such board being handwritten and highlighting
specific special options. As long as every food offered for sale in the
establishment is listed on one menu board and that menu board includes
the necessary information, the comment considered that requiring
calories on that one menu board should be sufficient. Alternatively,
the comment suggested that the calorie declaration be required on the
``menu board of prominence,'' which the comment considered to be the
menu board from which the order is placed.
Another comment similarly asserted that covered establishments must
post the required information on the menu used most often rather than
on all menus. Alternatively, the comment suggested that we provide an
exemption for menus not commonly used by customers. In support of its
suggestion, the comment pointed out that the statute uses the singular
term ``writing'' and not a plural term. The comment stated that 90
percent of pizza customers order over the phone or the Internet or may
order from memory. The comment asserted that to require nutrient
information on every menu, menu board, Internet menu, or other writing
is expensive, time consuming, and burdensome. The comment stated that
it already uses in-store brochures to provide nutrition information to
the small percentage of in-store customers. Although each franchisee in
the applicable chain is required to carry certain menu items, the
comment considered that each franchisee has the latitude to add items
to the menu. Because the franchisee can add menu items to its menu, the
comment asserted that it would be costly to a franchisee to change menu
boards, because the franchisee will be required to order new menu
boards and request calorie information for the new menu items.
One comment referred to an ``industry proposal'' for posting
calories only on menus and menu boards that have the highest percentage
of sales for that particular establishment, e.g., Web sites used for
Internet ordering and paper menus for phone ordering. This comment was
opposed to any such proposal. The comment asserted that this approach
would be an unfair business advantage for certain restaurants because
it would allow some restaurants to provide calorie declarations on less
expensive menus such as paper take-out menus or Internet Web sites
while others would have to provide calorie declarations for more
expensive in-restaurant menus and menu boards. The comment also
expressed concern that any requirement for a covered establishment to
declare calories on only the menus that listed substantially all menu
items would exclude children's menus and dessert menus.
[[Page 71177]]
(Response 40) We agree with the comments in support of the proposed
definition. We disagree that the required information should only be
posted on the menu or menu board most often used by consumers in a
covered establishment, the ``menu board of prominence,'' or only on the
menus and menu boards that have the highest percentage of sales for a
particular covered establishment. The critical factor is whether
written material is or is part of the primary writing of a covered
establishment from which a customer makes an order selection. It is not
a matter of physical prominence of a menu, or the proportion of
customers who order from a menu. Some consumers may want to select from
a subset of standard menu items sold in the covered establishment. For
example, if a consumer wanted to order only a dessert, he or she may
ask for a dessert menu. As raised by one comment, if calorie
information is listed only on the dinner menu, the consumer would not
have access to the calorie information for the desserts if he or she is
ordering from the dessert menu. As we stated in the proposed rule,
given the importance for all consumers to have access to nutrition
information when making order selections, we believe that the term
``primary writing'' should be interpreted from a consumer's vantage
point (76 FR 19192 at 19202).
In addition, in the proposed rule, we tentatively concluded that a
``menu'' or ``menu board'' includes any writing of the covered
establishment that is the primary writing from which a consumer makes
an order selection (76 FR 19192 at 19201). We affirm this conclusion.
The ``primary writing'' of an establishment can include more than one
form of written material, such as a paper menu, a delivery menu, and a
menu board; the critical factor is whether the written material is or
is part of the primary writing of a covered establishment from which a
customer makes an order selection. Further, we clarify that determining
whether a writing is or is part of the primary writing from which a
consumer makes an order selection depends on a number of factors,
including whether the writing, such as a paper menu, delivery menu, or
sign, lists the name of a standard menu item (or an image depicting the
standard menu item) and the price of the standard menu item, and
whether the writing can be used by a consumer to make an order
selection at the time the consumer is viewing the writing (e.g., the
writing is posted at the cash register in a covered establishment, or
the writing lists the phone number or email address of a covered
establishment for purposes of placing an order).
Accordingly, a writing of a covered establishment that contains the
name (or image) and price of a standard menu item, and that can be used
by a consumer to make an order selection from the establishment at the
time the consumer is viewing the writing would be a menu or menu board
regardless of whether, for example, the writing is not the menu used
most often by consumers. Another writing, such as a poster on a
storefront, a banner or billboard located along a road or highway, or a
tray-liner or table-tent at a quick-service restaurant, could be
considered a ``secondary'' writing within this context and would not
meet the definition of a ``menu or menu board,'' provided that such
writing does not contain the name (or image) and price of a standard
menu item, and cannot be used by a consumer to make an order selection
at the time the consumer is viewing the writing.
We interpret the comment asserting that section 403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of
the FD&C Act uses the singular term ``writing'' in defining the term
``menu or menu board'' as raising the question of what Congress
intended ``primary writing'' to mean within the context of section
403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of the FD&C Act. In construing section
403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of the FD&C Act, FDA is confronted with two questions.
First, has Congress directly spoken to the precise question presented
(Chevron step one)? (Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. NRDC, Inc., 467 U.S. 837,
842 (1984).) If the ``intent of Congress is clear,'' an Agency ``must
give effect to the unambiguously expressed intent of Congress.'' (Id.
at 843.) However, if ``Congress has not directly addressed the precise
question at issue,'' and the statute is ``silent or ambiguous with
respect to the specific issue,'' then our interpretation of the term
``primary writing'' will be upheld as long as it is based on a
``permissible construction of the statute (Chevron step two). (Chevron,
467 U.S. at 842-43; FDA v. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corp, 529 U.S.
120, 132 (2000).) To find no ambiguity, Congress must have clearly
manifested its intention with respect to the particular issue. (See
e.g., Young v. Community Nutrition Institute, 476 U.S. 974, 980
(1986).)
We have determined that, in enacting section 403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of
the FD&C Act, Congress did not speak directly and precisely to the
meaning of ``primary writing'' within the definition of ``menu or menu
board.'' In conducting the Chevron step one analysis, we began with the
language of section 403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of the FD&C Act. (See e.g., Touche
Ross & Co. v. Redington, 442 U.S. 560, 568 (``[A]s with any case
involving the interpretation of a statute, our analysis must begin with
the language of the statute itself.'').) The term ``primary writing''
is not defined in section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act or elsewhere in
the FD&C Act. In general, a term that is undefined in a statute carries
its ordinary meaning. (See e.g., Perrin v. United States, 444 U.S. 37,
42 (1979) (``A fundamental canon of statutory construction is that,
unless otherwise defined, words will be interpreted as taking their
ordinary contemporary, common meaning.'').) One common definition of
the term ``writing'' is ``something written, especially (a) meaningful
letters or characters that constitute readable matter . . . (b) a
written work, especially a literary composition'' (Ref. 20). Similarly,
another common definition of the term ``writing'' is ``something
written: As (a) letters or characters that serve as visible signs of
ideas, words, or symbols; (b) a letter, note, or notice used to
communicate or record; (c) a written composition.'' (Ref. 21; see also
Ref. 22).
One common definition of the term ``primary'' is ``first or highest
in rank or importance; principal'' (Ref. 23; see also Refs. 24 and 25).
Another common definition of the term ``primary'' is ``functioning or
transmitting without intermediary: Direct'' (Ref. 25; see also Ref.
24).
Where, as here, the statutory language on its face does not clearly
establish Congressional intent, it is appropriate to also consider
other traditional tools of statutory construction, including other
language in the section, the language, design, and purpose of the
statute as whole, and legislative history. (See e.g., Pharmaceutical
Research & Manufacturers of America v. Thompson, 251 F.3d 219, 224
(D.C. Cir. 2001); Davis v. Michigan Department of Treasury, 489 U.S.
803, 809 (1989); Martini v. Federal National Mortgage Association, 178
F.3d 1336, 1345 (D.C. Cir. 1999).) The other language in section
403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of the FD&C Act indicates that the writing at issue is
writing of the establishment ``from which a consumer makes an order
selection.'' Further, other provisions within section 403(q)(5)(H) of
the FD&C Act indicate that requirements apply to more than one form of
writing within a covered establishment. (See sections
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I) and (II) of the FD&C Act.) In addition, a general
purpose of section 4205 of the ACA is to make calorie and other
nutrition information available to consumers in a direct and
[[Page 71178]]
accessible manner to enable consumers to make informed and healthful
dietary choices. Lastly, the legislative history does not suggest that
Congress intended to limit the term to only one writing of the
establishment.
Having determined that the meaning of ``primary writing'' in
section 403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of the FD&C Act is ambiguous, we have
determined that the final rule's interpretation of ``primary writing''
is a permissible construction of the statute (Chevron step two). In
conducting the Chevron step two analysis, the same tools of statutory
construction are available as those for the step one analysis.
First, the interpretation in the final rule is consistent with the
plain meaning of the statute (Ref. 26). (See also Perrin v. United
States, 444 U.S. 37, 42 (1979).) Under the final rule, a ``primary
writing'' is ``something written,'' such as letters or characters on a
sign or board. Further, determining whether the ``writing'' is
``primary,'' meaning of the most relevance or importance within this
context or functioning without intermediary, or direct, depends on a
number of factors, including whether the writing lists the name of a
standard menu item (or an image depicting the standard menu item) and
the price of the standard menu item, and whether the writing can be
used by a consumer to make an order selection at the time the consumer
is viewing the writing. In developing these factors, we considered
other language in section 403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of the FD&C Act,
specifically that the writing of the establishment is one ``from which
a consumer makes an order selection.'' We also considered other
language within section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act, including
sections 403(q)(5)(H)(i) and (ii)(I) and (II) of the FD&C Act, which
together require a covered establishment to post calorie and other
information on a menu and menu board. Further, in considering the
general purpose of the section 4205 of the ACA, we determined that
construing the term ``primary writing'' within the meaning of section
403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of the FD&C Act so as to include more than one form of
writing, dependent on specific factors, would better serve the purposes
of section 4205.
For all of these reasons, Sec. 101.11(a) continues to specify that
a menu or menu board is defined as the primary writing of the
restaurant or similar retail food establishment from which a consumer
makes an order selection.
In response to the comment regarding costs related to adding new
menu items to a menu or menu board, we first note that section
403(q)(5)(H)(ii) of the FD&C Act requires covered establishments to
declare calories on menus and menu boards for standard menu items
listed on such menu and menu boards. Therefore, to the extent a covered
establishment adds a new standard menu item to the establishment's menu
or menu board, the establishment would be required to declare calories
on the menu or menu board for the new standard menu item. Further, a
covered establishment that decides to add a new menu item to a menu or
menu board has already decided to incur the cost of redesigning or
replacing the menu or menu board for such change--i.e., to display the
new standard menu item. In this situation, the additional cost to the
establishment is the cost for determining the calorie information that
must be declared for the new standard menu item.
Regarding costs related to determining nutrition information for
standard menu items, we note that this rule also provides flexibility
in order to minimize such costs. As discussed in section XVIII, section
403(q)(5)(H)(iv) of the FD&C Act provides that a restaurant or similar
retail food establishment must have a reasonable basis for its nutrient
content disclosures. As also discussed in section XVIII, this rule
provides that a covered establishment can satisfy the requirements of
403(q)(5)(H)(iv) of the FD&C Act by various means, including use of
nutrient databases, cookbooks, laboratory methods, and other reasonable
means, including the use of Nutrition Facts on labels on packaged foods
that comply with the nutrition labeling requirements of section
403(q)(1) of the FD&C Act and Sec. 101.9, FDA nutrient values for raw
fruits and vegetables in Appendix C of part 101 (21 CFR part 101), or
FDA nutrient values for cooked fish in Appendix D of part 101 (see
Sec. 101.11(c)(1)). In addition, this rule provides that a covered
establishment can satisfy the requirements of 403(q)(5)(H)(iv) of the
FD&C Act by relying on nutrition information for a standard menu item
determined by the establishment's corporate headquarters or parent
entity (see Sec. 101.11(c)(3)(i)(F), (c)(3)(iii)(D), and
(c)(3)(iv)(D)). In some cases, a corporate headquarters or parent
entity could decide to maintain a nutrient database and use it to
determine nutrition information for specialty standard menu items
offered for sale by one or a few individual establishments in the
chain. Therefore, this rule provides flexibility for covered
establishments in order to minimize costs while also helping to ensure
that calorie and other nutrition information is made available to
consumers in a direct and accessible manner to enable consumers to make
informed and healthful dietary choices.
(Comment 41) A few comments appeared to believe that the proposed
rule would require covered establishments to post or otherwise have
menu boards for disclosing calorie information. These comments asked
for other options for disclosing calories. One comment suggested that
large menu boards should not be required because they will obscure the
consumers' view of the preparation of their food and thereby create a
food safety issue. One comment suggested that we consider
``technological solutions'' instead of menu boards, e.g., use of a
kiosk near the point of sale. The comment also suggested that we
provide flexibility to cover alternative sources such as a daily
feature board.
One comment asked us to provide flexibility for facilities that
operate in locations too small to display a menu board by allowing
establishments to choose among several different options for display
methods. As one alternative to the traditional menu board, the comment
asked us to permit the use of a display terminal to provide nutrition
information for menu items or allow ``menu identifiers'' (a term the
comment did not define) at the point of selection, and to permit
nutrition information to be displayed adjacent to the food item in
cafeteria and buffet type settings.
(Response 41) Some comments may have misinterpreted the proposed
rule. We did not propose to require that covered establishments post or
otherwise have menu boards. Rather, within this context, we proposed to
define the terms ``menu'' and ``menu board,'' based on the statutory
definition at section 403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of the FD&C Act, and to provide
direction regarding what information must be disclosed on menus and
menu boards for covered establishments that have menus and menu boards.
That proposed definition relies on the concept of a primary writing. If
an electronic display is the primary writing of the covered
establishment from which a customer makes an order selection, it would
satisfy our definition of a menu or menu board. As such, electronic
menus may be used by covered establishments, and we have retained
electronic menus as an example of menus in the definition of menu or
menu board in Sec. 101.11(a).
Standard menu items offered for sale in covered establishments with
cafeteria- and buffet-type settings are most likely foods on display or
self-service foods. As discussed in section XVII.B, for a food on
display or a self-
[[Page 71179]]
service food, section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii) of the FD&C Act and Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(iii) require covered establishments to place a sign
adjacent to the food listing calories per displayed food item or per
serving. This rule provides flexibility for covered establishments by
providing a number of options for meeting the requirements of section
403(q)(5)(H)(iii) of the FD&C Act and Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii). For
example, covered establishments are permitted to declare calories for a
food on display or a self-service food by posting calorie declarations
on signs adjacent to the food, on a sign attached to a sneeze guard, or
on a single sign or placard (Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)). Therefore,
this rule provides flexibility, as requested by some comments, for
covered establishments to choose among several options for declaring
calorie information for standard menu items, including self-service
foods or foods on display in cafeteria and buffet-type settings.
(Comment 42) In the proposed rule, we noted that many consumers
order restaurant-type food from restaurants or similar retail food
establishments over the phone or Internet. We tentatively concluded
that if consumers can order from a covered establishment online, over
the phone, or by fax, using a writing of the covered establishment on
the Internet as the primary writing from which he or she makes his or
her order selection, then the writing on the Internet is a menu for the
purposes of section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act (76 FR 19192 at
19202). Some comments asked us to keep in mind the need to keep up with
technology and not have a rigid standard.
(Response 42) The definition of ``menu or menu board'' clearly
specifies that menus may be in different forms and does not establish a
standard for the technology used on a menu or menu board. The
definition lists a number of examples of primary writings that may be
menus or menu boards, including electronic menus and menus on the
Internet, that are not meant to be all-inclusive, as indicated by use
of the terms ``including, but not limited to'' before the examples.
Because a menu or menu board is defined as the primary writing of the
covered establishment from which a customer makes an order selection,
the definition is adequate to capture methods and media other than
those specifically listed in that definition, so long as such methods
and media otherwise satisfy the criteria in the definition.
(Comment 43) Several comments noted that some local zoning laws do
not permit restaurants with drive-through windows to build larger menu
boards. These comments expressed concern about how to comply with the
new requirements for menu boards in light of State or local size
restrictions. One comment asked us to provide more flexibility for
compliance, including permitting the use of a pamphlet next to the
drive-through menu board. Some comments suggested that we allow
nutrition information on a large poster adjacent to the menu board.
A few comments supported the use of stanchions (i.e., free-standing
boards that are not connected to the menu board and are often placed
near drive-through menu boards) to post calorie information. One
comment maintained that restaurants and similar retail food
establishments have a vested interest in customer satisfaction in the
context of drive-through windows and have concluded that clear and
organized space, presented within the framework of a known brand, is
the most critical success factor in presenting information to consumers
on menu boards. This comment considered that stanchions adjacent or
close to menu boards are ``complete thoughts'' if the information is
relevant, well organized, and clearly marked, and that such stanchions
will help consumers with their menu choices. The comment considered
that in many cases information on stanchions is more clear and
conspicuous than on menu boards. The comment noted that calorie
information is provided on stanchions in some jurisdictions that
require nutrition labeling on menus and menu boards, including
Montgomery County (Maryland), New York City, Philadelphia, and certain
counties in New York. The comment maintained that the current use of
stanchions in some jurisdictions is evidence of its effectiveness, and
noted that some States and localities permit stanchions because
information is hard to read on already crowded drive-through menu
boards.
A comment from a quick-service restaurant chain asserted that
stanchions are less costly to update and replace than menu boards. The
chain had conducted a consumer survey of customers who purchased food
from the chain's drive-through windows in 13 of the chain's restaurants
that use stanchions, as permitted in King County, Washington, and
submitted a report of this survey to the docket for this rule (Ref.
27). For the 128 customers surveyed, the comment reported that 92
percent felt it was easy to find calories, 98 percent felt calories
were easy to understand, 95 percent thought the stanchion location was
clearly visible to consumers, 95 percent noted nothing blocked view of
stanchion, and 76 percent felt they had adequate time to review before
ordering.
One comment considered that while ``the statute'' refers to menus
and menu boards, it also gives us authority to define those terms. (We
assume this comment is referring to section 4205 of the ACA.) The
comment stated that we could include stanchions as a method to
communicate calorie information that is clear and conspicuous.
Several comments agreed with our tentative conclusion that
stanchions inadequately convey calorie information. The comments
asserted that it is challenging for consumers to read different
information in different locations at a drive-through window especially
when trying to read the information from a car, where consumers have
limited mobility and a limited field of vision. The comments also
asserted that, even with different zoning laws, drive-through menu
boards have enough room for calories, although photos and other
marketing information may need altering. One comment pointed out that
separate stanchions would not comply with section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii) of
the FD&C Act, which requires that calories be on the menu board itself.
(Response 43) We disagree that the rule should provide for
declaration of calorie information in pamphlets or on posters or
stanchions, rather than on the menu board at a drive-through in a
covered establishment. In the proposed rule, we tentatively concluded
that stanchions inadequately convey calorie information because a
situation in which customers need to look to one board (the menu board)
for important food-selection information, such as price, and another
(the stanchion) for calories, is likely to be more difficult for
customers attempting to use the declared calorie information at the
point of selection (76 FR 19192 at 19206). We also tentatively
concluded that this is particularly true in the drive-through context,
where customers have a restricted field of vision from their car
windows, and may have a relatively short time to consider the menu
board prior to ordering, because customers often cannot view the full
menu while waiting in line. As discussed further in the following
paragraphs, the comments provide insufficient basis for us to conclude
otherwise, and as a result, we affirm our conclusion from the proposed
rule.
In addition, section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(II)(aa) of the FD&C Act
requires the number of calories contained in standard menu items to be
disclosed on the menu board itself.
[[Page 71180]]
Section 403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of the FD&C Act defines ``menu'' or ``menu
board'' as ``the primary writing of the restaurant or similar retail
food establishment from which a customer makes an order selection.''
Because a stanchion is a free-standing board that is not connected to a
drive-through menu board and therefore typically is not used by
consumers to make order selections, we do not consider it to meet the
definition of ``menu'' or ``menu board'' as defined in this rule and
section 403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of the FD&C Act. Accordingly, we concluded
that a stanchion cannot be the means by which a covered establishment
discloses calorie declarations on menus and menu boards as required
under section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii) of the FD&C Act and this rule.
We considered the consumer survey results provided with one comment
and did not find the information adequate to overcome the concerns we
raised in the proposed rule regarding the use of stanchions (Ref. 28).
Although the participants expressed favorable impressions of the
stanchions, the survey data:
Did not provide a comparison with other calorie displays,
including calorie declarations on drive-through menu boards without
stanchions;
Did not show whether participants would have more or less
favorable impressions of calorie declarations on drive-through menu
boards without stanchions.
Only showed that the participants liked the display and
not whether the display was useful for them in making their order
selections; and
Did not assess the use of stanchions in situations where
the consumer needs to make quick decisions because other consumers are
in the drive-through line behind them.
For all of the reasons discussed in response to this comment, this
rule does not provide for declaration of calories in a pamphlet or on a
stanchion at a drive-through of a covered establishment as a means of
satisfying the requirement that the number of calories contained in a
standard menu item be disclosed on the menu and the menu board, as
required by section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii) of the FD&C Act and Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i).
(Comment 44) Some comments asserted that the proposed rule allows
the Secretary to amend the nutrition information that must be disclosed
and that this will further burden restaurants to replace drive-through
and interior menu boards multiple times.
(Response 44) We interpret the comments as referring to section
403(q)(5)(H)(vi) of the FD&C Act. Under section 403(q)(5)(H)(vi) of the
FD&C Act, the Secretary (and, by delegation, FDA) may, by regulation,
require the disclosure of a nutrient, other than a nutrient required
under section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act, in the written
nutrition information that is available to consumers upon request if
FDA determines that the nutrient information should be disclosed for
the purpose of providing information to assist consumers in maintaining
healthy dietary practices. If this is indeed what the comments mean,
the comments appear to have confused section 403(q)(5)(H)(vi) of the
FD&C Act with the requirements in section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I)(aa)
related to the disclosure of calories on a menu or menu board. The
statutory authority in section 403(q)(5)(H)(vi) of the FD&C Act for FDA
to require disclosure in the written nutrition information of a
nutrient other than one required under section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of
the FD&C Act does not address the calories declarations that must be on
a menu or menu board.
(Comment 45) In the proposed rule, we stated that we recognize that
some establishments may send menus as a form of advertising. We
tentatively concluded that advertisements for food fall outside the
scope of section 4205 of the ACA. However, take-out and delivery menus,
which include all or a significant portion of items offered for sale
and serve as the primary writing from which consumers make their order
selections, would be menus under the proposed rule (76 FR 19192 at
19201).
Several comments considered that the proposal did not adequately
distinguish between menus and menu boards and advertisements or
promotional material. One comment considered that it is not appropriate
to require calorie disclosure in advertising, such as a postcard
announcing a new restaurant that has pictures of a few sample dishes.
However, the comment also considered that when the advertising is the
menu itself and can be used as the ``primary writing'' a customer uses
to make an order, calorie disclosure should be required. The comment
recommended that the test be whether customers can use the menu as a
primary writing for making their selection, not the way in which the
menu is presented or delivered to the customers by the restaurant or
similar retail food establishment. One comment asked us to clarify that
calorie disclosure should be on any menu regardless of whether the menu
also serves as a marketing tool. One comment stated that any list of
covered food items that is the primary vehicle from which a customer
places his or her order constitutes a menu. The comment noted that in
some instances, an in-store sign that looks like an advertisement
(e.g., promotional poster) for a menu item is the primary vehicle from
which the customer orders the menu item when the menu item is not
included on the menu but is included only on that sign. This comment
asked us to make clear that a sign listing a menu item that is only
listed on that sign makes it a menu board.
One comment asked us to make clear that covered menus include
individualized order sheets used at certain restaurants. Another
comment asked us to make clear that take-out menus are included and
suggested that a take-out menu be added as an example to the definition
in the regulation.
Some comments asked us to make a clear statement that
advertisements and promotional material such as table top stands,
newspaper advertisements and flyers, tray liners and point of purchase
marketing materials are not menus, even if they list some names and
prices. One comment noted that, in the proposed rule, we tentatively
concluded that ``advertisements for food fall outside the scope of
section 4205'' but did not include this statement in the proposed
definition. The comment asserted that we hinted at potential grounds
for excluding some menus from coverage, when we stated that ``take-out
and delivery menus, which include all or a significant portion of items
offered for sale and serve as the primary writing from which consumers
make their order selections, would be menus under the proposed rule''
(76 FR 19192 at 19202; emphasis added by comment). The comment
expressed concern that, without specific language in the final
regulation that advertisements are not menus and thus fall outside the
scope of section 4205 of the ACA, the terms ``menu'' or ``menu board''
could be construed to encompass materials that list menu items but that
are in fact used as advertisements. The comment maintained that this
clarity is needed to ensure consistent enforcement. The comment also
recommended that we expand on our statement that such promotional
materials are menus subject to the menu labeling requirements if they
``include all or a significant portion of items offered for sale.'' The
comment asserted that limiting labeling requirements, for example, to
only menus listing more than a certain percentage of standard menu
items sold by the restaurant would have the practical effect of
limiting the number of pieces covered, excluding many promotional items
(such as door hangers and pizza box tops) and creating an
[[Page 71181]]
objective standard that could guide both restaurant behavior and
enforcement. The comment considered that requiring calorie disclosures
on promotional material is especially burdensome for some of the
franchises who pay for this promotional material.
One comment stated that circular advertisements should not be
menus. Another comment recommended that grocery store signs that
highlight the attributes of a food in the store not be considered a
menu or menu board. One comment supported including nutrition
information on any food advertisement that makes a health claim.
(Response 45) As discussed previously in this document, the term
``menu'' or ``menu board'' includes any writing of the covered
establishment that is the primary writing from which a consumer makes
an order selection. As discussed in Response 40, determining whether a
writing is or is part of the primary writing from which a consumer
makes an order selection depends on a number of factors, including
whether the writing, such as a take-out menu, sign, or poster, lists
the name of a standard menu item (or an image depicting the standard
menu item) and the price of the standard menu item, and whether the
writing can be used by a consumer to make an order selection at the
time the consumer is viewing the writing (e.g., the writing is posted
at the cash register in a covered establishment, or the writing lists
the phone number or email address of a covered establishment for
purposes of placing an order). Accordingly, a writing of a covered
establishment that contains the name (or image) and price of a standard
menu item, and that can be used by a consumer to make an order
selection from the establishment at the time the consumer is viewing
the writing would be a menu or menu board regardless of whether, for
example, the writing is mailed to a consumer's home or is posted inside
a covered establishment. In contrast, written material of an
establishment that does not satisfy this criteria, such as a poster on
a storefront, a coupon or other promotional material, banners, tray
liners, billboards, and stanchions, could be considered a ``secondary
writing'' of an establishment.
We recognize that, in the proposed rule, we tentatively concluded
that take-out and delivery menus would be considered menus within the
meaning of section 403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of the FD&C Act to the extent that
such menus include all or a significant portion of items offered for
sale (76 FR 19192 at 19201). However, we are not affirming this
conclusion for a number of reasons. First, we agree with the comment
asserting that the critical factor should be whether the take-out or
delivery menu is or is part of the primary writing from which a
consumer makes an order selection, not the way in which the menu is
presented or delivered to consumers.
Second, as discussed previously in this document, in this rule we
clarified the factors to be considered in determining whether a writing
is or is part of the primary writing from which a consumer makes an
order selection, and these factors help clarify whether a writing
constitutes a menu or menu board or an advertisement or promotional
material, as requested by several comments. Further, in light of these
factors, if we were to conclude that delivery or take-out menus would
only be considered menus if they included all or a significant portion
of items offered for sale, that conclusion would be inconsistent with
how we will be determining whether other written material constitutes a
primary writing of an establishment from which a consumer makes an
order selection, particularly since consumers can use take-out and
delivery menus to make order selections in generally the same way as
they would use dine-in menus.
In addition, menus vary in size and selection. A covered
establishment that has a single menu for daily use, including menu
offerings for breakfast, lunch, and dinner, may nonetheless have
separate take-out menus directed only to breakfast, lunch, or dinner.
We see no reason to treat a take-out menu that only includes menu
offering for breakfast any differently than we would treat a breakfast
menu used by consumers to order and consume breakfast while seated at
the establishment.
For these reasons, in this rule we are not affirming the proposed
rule's tentative conclusion that take-out and delivery menus would be
considered menus within the meaning of section 403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of the
FD&C Act to the extent that such menus include all or a significant
portion of items offered for sale. Instead, in this document we
identify factors we would use to determine whether a writing is the
primary writing from which a consumer makes an order selection--i.e.,
the name (or image) and price of the standard menu item food and a
means to make an order selection at the time the consumer is viewing
the writing. Accordingly, determining whether a writing is a menu or
menu board does not depend on how many items are listed. If a writing
constitutes a menu or menu board within the meaning of section
403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of the FD&C Act and Sec. 101.11(a), it must contain
the information required under section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act and
Sec. 101.11(b), regardless of the number of items on that menu or menu
board.
Any written material that is or is part of the primary writing from
which a consumer makes an order selection, whether it is an
individualized order sheet or a take-out menu, would be a menu for
purposes of this rule if it includes the name (or image) and price of a
standard menu item and a means by which a consumer can make an order
selection from the establishment at the time the consumer is viewing
the writing. Providing calorie and other required information on menus
and menu boards will make such information available to consumers in a
direct and accessible manner to enable consumers to make informed and
healthful dietary choices.
Using these factors, other writings of a covered establishment,
such as newspaper ads, circular advertisements, banners, or postcards
that announce a new restaurant and provide pictures of sample dishes
generally would not be menus or menu boards. Although it is possible
that such writings could include the name (or image) and price of
standard menu items, they generally would not provide a means by which
a consumer can make an order selection at the time the consumer is
viewing the writing and therefore such a writing would not constitute a
primary writing from which a consumer makes an order selection within
the meaning of section 403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of the FD&C Act. Likewise, a
sign in a grocery store that highlights attributes of a standard menu
item (e.g., by the name or image of the menu item), without including
the price, would not be a menu or menu board.
While a writing may constitute a menu or menu board, not all of the
menu items listed on such writing would require calorie declarations.
For example, if the requirements of section 4205 of the ACA do not
apply to a food (e.g., as a daily special, temporary menu item, or
customary market test item), a covered establishment would not be
required to declare calories or other nutrition information for such
food under this rule, meaning that a writing listing a daily special or
temporary menu item would not be required to bear a calorie declaration
for such item. Further, as discussed later in this document (see
Response 79), for certain ``mix and match'' situations, where the menu
or menu board describes an opportunity for a consumer to combine
standard menu items for a special price
[[Page 71182]]
(e.g., ``Combine Any Sandwich with Any Soup or Any Salad for $8.99''),
and the calories for each standard menu item, including each size
option if applicable, available for the consumer to combine are
declared elsewhere on the menu or menu board, a covered establishment
would not be required to declare the calories for such item (see Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(iv)).
The comment supporting nutrition information on any food
advertisement that makes a health claim is outside the scope of this
rule, which establishes requirements for declaring nutrition
information for standard menu items offered for sale in establishments
covered by the requirements of section 4205 of the ACA. We note,
however, that material that constitutes food labeling within the
meaning of section 201(m) of the FD&C Act would be subject to the
requirements in Sec. 101.10. Under section 201(m) of the FD&C Act, the
term ``labeling'' means all labels and other written, printed, or
graphic matter (1) upon any article or any of its containers or
wrappers, or (2) accompanying such article.
(Comment 46) One comment recommended that menu labeling
requirements apply to airline magazines that include menus.
(Response 46) In the proposed rule, we tentatively concluded that
most airplanes would not satisfy the definition of ``restaurant or
similar retail food establishment'' because, in general, they do not
present themselves to the public as restaurants, nor are they likely to
meet the floor space (or revenue) threshold. As discussed in section
VI.D, under the definition of ``covered establishment'' established in
this rule airplanes are not covered establishments that must comply
with the rule. Therefore, the nutrition labeling requirements of this
rule do not apply to airline magazines that include menus.
VIII. Comments and FDA Response on the Proposed Definition of Terms
Related to Foods Covered by the Rule (Proposed Sec. 101.11(a))
A. Restaurant Food and Restaurant-Type Food
As discussed in section VI.C, after considering comments, we are
deleting the proposed definition of ``restaurant food'' and
establishing a revised definition of ``restaurant-type food'' that
better reflects the food most like the food offered for sale in
restaurants. We discussed these changes to two terms related to foods
covered by the rule within section VI because the definition of
``restaurant-type food'' established in this rule is one of several
terms related to the scope of establishments covered by the rule.
B. Standard Menu Item
Proposed Sec. 101.11(a) would define ``standard menu item'' as a
restaurant or restaurant-type food that is routinely included on a menu
or menu board or routinely offered as a self-service food or food on
display. In the following paragraphs, we discuss comments on this
proposed definition. We are finalizing it without change, except to
revise ``restaurant or restaurant-type food'' to ``restaurant-type
food'' to conform with our deletion of the term ``restaurant food''
throughout the rule (see section VI.C).
(Comment 47) Several comments supported the proposed definition.
One comment opposed the proposed definition because it is
``incomplete'' and misunderstands the meaning of ``standard'' within
the context of a chain of 20 or more restaurants and similar retail
food establishments doing business under the same name and offering for
sale substantially the same menu items. The comment argued that it is
not the regularity with which a menu item is sold at a given restaurant
that renders the item ``standard'' within the context of a restaurant
chain; rather, it is the fact that the menu item is offered across many
establishments in the chain, in substantially the same form, and is
prepared according to the same recipe and using the same ingredients.
The comment maintained that when foods are standardized, nutrition
information can be derived. On the other hand, according to the
comment, if foods do not have a common recipe, nutrition information
would be determined case-by-case, which is impractical and cost
prohibitive. The comment suggested the following definition: ``A menu
item that appears on the menus of substantially all restaurants in a
chain that uses the same general recipe and that is prepared in
substantially the same way with substantially the same food components,
even if the name of the menu item varies.''
The comment also recommended that, for a chain that prints a single
standardized menu for all its restaurants or establishments or for
those in a given region, the term ``standard menu item'' be interpreted
to refer to menu items that appear on those centrally printed and
distributed menus. The comment maintained that adopting this definition
would harmonize the terms ``standard menu item'' and ``covered
establishment'' and ensure that the requirements apply to the foods
that are subject to the type of standardization that would allow them
to be consistently prepared. The comment also requested that a covered
establishment be allowed but not required to provide the nutrition
information in writing at the point of sale for menu items offered for
sale in only some establishments in a chain if we decide to include
such menu items within the definition of standard menu item in the
final rule. Otherwise, the comment considered that a chain retail food
establishment would have to include, in nutrition brochures,
information on many menu items that are sold in a small percentage of
stores, which could be confusing and costly.
(Response 47) We disagree that the definition of ``standard menu
item'' should be based on whether the menu item is offered across
substantially all of the establishments within the chain, in
substantially the same form, and is prepared according to the same
recipe and using the same ingredients. Section 403(q)(5)(H)(i) of the
FD&C Act provides, in relevant part, that ``in the case of food that is
a standard menu item that is offered for sale in a restaurant or
similar retail food establishment that is part of a chain with 20 or
more locations doing business under the same name . . . and offering
for sale substantially the same menu items, the restaurant or similar
retail food establishment shall disclose the [required] information. .
. .''. The statutory language does not indicate that a menu item must
be offered for sale in all of the restaurants or similar retail food
establishments within a chain in order for it to be a ``standard menu
item'' at a particular covered establishment. Indeed, it would be
burdensome and impractical for establishments and inspectors to
continually evaluate all of the menu items offered by a chain to
determine which items are offered by all establishments in the chain in
order to determine whether a given menu item is a standard menu item
subject to requirements of this rule. In addition, we have no evidence
that it would be impractical and cost prohibitive to require covered
establishment to provide the nutrition required by this rule for menu
items that they routinely offer. We continue to believe that it is
reasonable to interpret ``standard menu item'' to mean a restaurant-
type food routinely included on a menu or menu board or routinely
offered as a self-service food or food on display in a given covered
establishment.
We would not object to central printing of a single, standardized
menu for use by all covered establishments within a chain, provided
that the
[[Page 71183]]
centrally printed menu complies with the requirements of this rule and
applicable provisions of the FD&C Act. However, if an individual
covered establishment offers for sale an additional standard menu item
that is not offered by every establishment in the chain and, therefore,
is not included on the centrally printed menu, that establishment still
must comply with all applicable requirements of this rule for that
standard menu item, including where and how the nutrition information
must be disclosed.
We disagree that a covered establishment would have to include, in
nutrition brochures, information on many menu items that are sold in a
small percentage of stores. A covered establishment need only provide
the required information for the standard menu items it offers for
sale.
(Comment 48) A few comments stated that grocery stores use items
from other departments within the grocery store (e.g., meat department,
produce department) to make its prepared food items. The ingredients
for a given prepared food can vary significantly depending on the
availability of items in the store. These comments argued that labeling
and determining calorie information for these items would be difficult.
(Response 48) If a prepared food item varies significantly
depending on what ingredients a covered establishment happens to have
available, the item may not meet the definition of standard menu item.
For example, if a grocery store with a hot soup bar offers a different
vegetable soup every day based on whatever vegetables the store happens
to have in surplus (e.g., cabbage and tomatoes soup one day, carrots
and leeks the next, spinach and squash on a third day), and if none of
these vegetable soups is offered for sale routinely, then none of the
vegetable soups would meet the definition of standard menu item. Even
if the grocery store names each version of the soup as ``vegetable
soup,'' the item would not be considered a standard menu item, because
the soup's ingredients significantly differ daily.
C. Combination Meal
Proposed Sec. 101.11(a) would define ``combination meal'' as a
standard menu item that consists of more than one food item, for
example a meal that includes a sandwich, a side dish, and a drink. The
proposed definition would further provide that a combination meal may
be represented on the menu or menu board in narrative form,
numerically, or pictorially. Some combination meals may include a
variable menu item (or be a variable menu item as defined in Sec.
101.11(a)) where the components may vary. For example, the side dish
may vary among several options (e.g., fries, salad, or onion rings) or
the drinks may vary (e.g., soft drinks, milk, or juice) and the
customer selects which of these items will be included in the meal.
Comments that addressed the proposed definition agreed with it.
Therefore, we are finalizing it without change, except to correct a
typographical error by removing an open parenthesis mark between ``may
include a variable menu item'' and ``or be a variable menu item . . .''
D. Variable Menu Item
Proposed Sec. 101.11(a) would define ``variable menu item'' as a
standard menu item that comes in different flavors, varieties, or
combinations, and is listed as a single menu item. In the following
paragraphs, we discuss comments on this proposed definition. We are
finalizing it without change.
(Comment 49) Several comments considered that the term ``variable
menu item'' does not include items listed on a menu that can be
assembled in varying combinations, such as pizza. These comments
suggested that the definition of variable menu item be revised to ``a
standard menu item that comes in different flavors, varieties, or
combinations, and is listed as a single menu item. It does not include
foods, beverages, or meals that are listed as separate menu items but
could be combined in a variety of combinations or that are different
sizes of the same menu item.''
Several comments asked that we clarify that the definition for
``variable menu item'' does not mean different sizes. They maintained
that each size should be accompanied by a calorie declaration. In
contrast, one comment opposed the posting of calories for different
sizes, maintaining that providing calorie information for each size
would take too much space and might force the reduction in font size.
This comment asked us to permit covered establishments to provide a
range of calories to reflect the calorie content range from the
smallest to the largest size for beverages offered as standard menu
items. This comment considered that the statute provides us discretion
to allow covered establishments to provide calorie information for
different sized beverages using ranges, as long as the calorie
information is clear and conspicuous.
(Response 49) We disagree that variable menu items do not include
foods such as pizza. Our proposed definition is consistent with section
403(q)(5)(H)(v) of the FD&C Act, which expressly includes pizza as an
example of a standard menu item that comes in different flavors,
varieties, or combinations, but is listed as a single menu item. For
example, a menu or menu board can list a pizza with a particular price
and up to four toppings. This is an example of a food that comes in
different varieties because the consumer has the choice of various
toppings.
We agree with the comments asserting that different sizes of a
standard menu item are not variable menu items, but disagree with the
comment opposing the posting of calories for different sizes. Section
403(q)(5)(H)(v) of the FD&C Act provides, in relevant part, that FDA
shall establish by regulation standards for disclosing the nutrient
content for standard menu items that come in different flavors,
varieties, or combinations, but which are listed as single menu items.
When a standard menu item, including a beverage, is listed on a menu or
menu board by name with different sizes, or each size has its own
price, each size would constitute a standard menu item rather than a
different flavor, variety, or combination, and each standard menu item
must include a calorie declaration.
E. Food on Display
Proposed Sec. 101.11(a) would define food on display as restaurant or
restaurant-type food that is visible to the customer before the
customer makes a selection, so long as there is not an ordinary
expectation of further preparation by the consumer before consumption.
In the following paragraphs, we discuss comments on this proposed
definition. After considering comments, we are finalizing the
definition without changes, except to revise ``restaurant or
restaurant-type food'' to ``restaurant-type food'' to conform with our
deletion of the term ``restaurant food'' throughout the rule (see
section VI.C).
(Comment 50) A few comments agreed with the proposed definition.
Other comments suggested modifications to the definition. Some comments
recommended that the definition clarify that the food can be self-serve
or served by the restaurant staff and that the food could be in the
open or behind glass. The comments suggested that the following
language be added to the proposed definition: ``It includes food that
is served by restaurant staff or self-served by customers and foods
with Nutrition Facts labels that customers cannot examine without
assistance. Food on display can be behind glass or other
[[Page 71184]]
material or in an open display accessible to consumers.''
(Response 50) We decline the requests to revise the proposed
definition. The definition applies regardless of whether the food is
self-serve or served by the restaurant staff, whether it is in the open
or behind glass, or whether it has a Nutrition Facts label that can be
examined by a consumer without assistance. In addition, we do not want
to appear to limit the definition to only those foods described in the
language suggested by the comment.
(Comment 51) One comment asserted that food on display, such as
deli meats and cheeses, should be covered even if there is an
expectation that there will be further preparation before consuming. A
few comments asked that we clarify that foods on display and self-
service food do not include fresh breads, cheese wheels, bulk olives,
bulk sauces, condiments, and salads sold by the pound like ``tuna
salad, egg salad, chicken salad, etc.'' One comment recommended that
grocery stores provide calories for bakery items, prepared deli foods
such as salads and sandwiches, prepared meals and side dishes, freshly
cooked pizza, fountain drinks, salad bars, and other foods sold for
immediate consumption. One comment requested an exemption for certain
food items prepared for home consumption, such as fruit slices, fruit
cups, fruit salads, containers of fresh-cut fruit, fresh squeezed
juices, bulk or packaged nuts, seeds, or dried fruit, and similar items
that are packaged (or in the case of bulk products, are sold in
containers that are available for self-packaging).
(Response 51) As discussed in section VI.C, we are establishing a
revised definition of ``restaurant-type food'' that better reflects the
food most like the food offered for sale in restaurants (see Comment 24
and Response 24). Because restaurants typically sell food that is fully
prepared, deli meats and cheese generally will not meet the definition
of ``restaurant-type food,'' and therefore generally will not be
covered. However, certain foods offered for sale in grocery stores that
are visible to the consumer before the consumer makes a selection, such
as prepared sandwiches, freshly cooked pizza, and salad and hot food
bars would meet the definition of restaurant type food and do not have
an ordinary expectation of further preparation by the consumer before
consumption. These foods meet the definition of foods on display. Other
foods commonly offered for sale by grocery stores are not within the
definition of ``restaurant-type food'' and would not be subject to the
nutrition disclosure requirements of this rule (e.g., foods such as
dried fruit and nuts bought from bulk bins or cases; foods such as
loaves of bread, bags or boxes of dinner rolls, whole cakes, bags or
boxes of candy or cookies to be eaten over several eating occasions or
stored for later use; foods such as deli salads sold by unit of weight
that are not self-serve and are not intended solely for individual
consumption, either prepacked or packed upon consumer request).
F. Self-Service Food
Proposed Sec. 101.11(a) would define ``self-service food'' as
restaurant or restaurant-type food that is available at a salad bar,
buffet line, cafeteria line, or similar self-service facility and that
is served by the customers themselves. Self-service food also includes
self-service beverages. Comments that addressed the proposed definition
supported it. We are finalizing it without changes, except to revise
``restaurant or restaurant-type food'' to ``restaurant-type food'' to
conform with our deletion of the term ``restaurant food'' throughout
the rule (see section VI.C).
G. Custom Order
Proposed Sec. 101.11(a) would define ``custom order'' as a food
order that is prepared in a specific manner based on an individual
customer's request, which requires the restaurant or similar retail
food establishment to deviate from its usual preparation of a menu
item, e.g., a club sandwich without the bacon if the establishment
usually includes bacon in its club sandwich. In the following
paragraphs, we discuss comments on this proposed definition. We are
finalizing it without change, except for two clarifications. First, we
are clarifying that the deviation is from the usual preparation of a
standard menu item (emphasis added). Second, we are replacing the term
``restaurant or similar retail food establishment'' with ``covered
establishment'' to clarify the applicability of the definition (see the
discussion in section VI.I).
(Comment 52) Several comments agreed with the proposed definition.
Some comments considered that the custom order exemption should apply
to custom birthday cakes and sandwiches made to order, because they
have no standard preparation from which to deviate.
One comment maintained that supermarkets often preprint labels or
previously affix them to packaging (e.g., a paper bag for a sandwich or
bread) to improve efficiency or to save costs. Because consumers may
request that toppings be added or removed from a food item that is sold
in the prelabeled packaging, the comment considered that this would be
a custom order that would be exempt from the menu labeling
requirements. The comment asked us to clarify that the product would
not be misbranded if the packaging contained nutrition information
based on the standard preparation.
(Response 52) If a custom birthday cake that is made to order is
not routinely included on a menu or menu board or routinely offered as
a self-service food or food on display, it would not be covered by the
rule, because it is not a standard menu item.
We agree that a sandwich that is made to order can be a custom
order if the sandwich is prepared in a specific manner based on an
individual customer's request, which requires the covered establishment
to deviate from its usual preparation of a standard menu item. However,
some sandwiches that are made to order can be variable menu items,
depending on how the food is depicted on a menu or menu board or
otherwise offered for sale. We discuss the definition of variable menu
item in section VIII.D.
We also agree that if a customer asks that toppings be changed or
removed from a standard menu item, and the standard menu item normally
includes certain toppings, the customer's order is a custom order. In
response to the question regarding the use of a preprinted label on a
food product, which is subject to modification, we first note that a
food order that is prepared in a specific manner based on an individual
customer's request, which requires a covered establishment to deviate
from its usual preparation of a standard menu item, is a custom order
and is not subject to the requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H) of the
FD&C Act and this rule. Nevertheless, food labeling, including
nutrition labeling, for a food must be truthful and not misleading
(section 403(a)(1) of the FD&C Act). If a label on a food bears
nutrition information for such food that is false or is otherwise
misleading, the food would be misbranded under section 403(a)(1) of the
FD&C Act. Accordingly, if a custom order, such as a club sandwich
without the bacon if the establishment usually includes bacon in its
club sandwich, bears nutrition information in a preprinted label that
is false or is otherwise misleading, such food could be misbranded
under the FD&C Act. We recommend that covered establishments refrain
from affixing preprinted labels on custom orders unless the information
[[Page 71185]]
included on such labels is truthful and not misleading.
H. Daily Special
Proposed Sec. 101.11(a) would define ``daily special'' as a menu
item that is prepared and offered for sale on a particular day, that is
not routinely listed on a menu or offered by the covered establishment,
and that is promoted by the covered establishment as a special menu
item for that particular day.
Comments that addressed the proposed definition agreed with it.
Therefore, we are finalizing it without change, except to add ``or menu
board'' after ``not routinely listed on a menu.'' We inadvertently
omitted ``or menu board'' in the proposed definition.
I. Food That Is Part of a Customary Market Test
Proposed Sec. 101.11(a) would define ``food that is part of a
customary market test'' as food that is marketed in a covered
establishment for fewer than 90 consecutive days in order to test
consumer acceptance of the product. Comments that addressed the
proposed definition agreed with it. Therefore, we are finalizing it
without change, except for changes to clarify that food that is part of
a customary market test is food ``that appears on a menu or menu board
for less than 90 consecutive days'' rather than food ``that is marketed
in a covered establishment for fewer than 90 consecutive days.'' These
changes are consistent with section 403(q)(5)(H)(vii)(I)(cc) of the
FD&C Act, our description of ``food that is part of a customary market
test'' in the proposed rule (76 FR 19192 at 19205), and with the
definition for ``temporary menu item'' in Sec. 101.11(a).
J. Temporary Menu Item
Proposed Sec. 101.11(a) would define ``temporary menu item'' as a
food that appears on a menu or menu board for less than a total of 60
days per calendar year. Proposed Sec. 101.11(a) would explain that the
60 days includes the total of consecutive and non-consecutive days the
item appears on the menu. In the following paragraphs, we discuss
comments on this proposed definition. We are finalizing it without
change.
(Comment 53) Several comments agreed with the proposed definition.
One comment agreed that the 60 days need not be consecutive, but
considered that seasonal items (such as the pumpkin-flavored latte
example we included in the proposed rule (76 FR 19192 at 19205)) should
not be exempt if they are routinely offered each year.
One comment recommended that we change the definition for temporary
menu item to shorten the time period from 60 to 45 days, to discourage
restaurants from continuously changing menus to avoid calorie
disclosure.
(Response 53) The proposed definition for ``temporary menu item''
focused on the explicit statutory language in section 403(q)(5)(H)(vii)
of the FD&C Act, which provides in relevant part that the requirements
of section 403(q)(5)(H)(i) through (vi) of the FD&C Act do not apply to
``temporary menu items appearing on the menu for less than 60 days per
calendar year.'' Accordingly, we decline to shorten the 60-day time
period for temporary menu items to 45 days, as suggested by the
comment, because doing so would not be consistent with section
403(q)(5)(H)(vii) of the FD&C Act. We did not propose to go beyond the
language of section 403(q)(5)(H)(vii) of the FD&C Act by developing a
new category of foods called ``seasonal items.'' We disagree that
seasonal items should not be exempt if they are routinely offered each
year. Whether a ``seasonal item'' would be exempt would be determined
by whether the seasonal item satisfied the definition of a ``temporary
menu item'' as determined by the total number of consecutive and non-
consecutive days per calendar year that the menu item appears on the
menu or menu board.
IX. Comments and FDA Response on Proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(1)(i)--Food
Subject to the Labeling Requirements
Proposed Sec. 101.11(b) would establish requirements for nutrition
labeling of food sold in covered establishments. Proposed Sec.
101.11(b)(1)(i) would provide that the labeling requirement would apply
to standard menu items offered for sale in covered establishments. We
are finalizing it without change.
Most comments we received about how the nutrition labeling
requirements of the rule apply to standard menu items addressed
specific labeling requirements (e.g., the provisions of Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i) for what must be provided on menus and menu boards),
and we discuss these comments as they relate to such specific
requirements. Immediately following, we discuss one comment more
generally directed to the applicability of the labeling requirements of
this rule.
(Comment 54) One comment recommended that foods that are preordered
and picked up at a later date, such as birthday cakes, boxed lunches,
deli trays, and sandwich platters, not be covered by the menu labeling
requirements because they are not foods on display, standard menu
items, restaurant-type foods, or ordered from a menu or menu board. The
comment asserted that restaurant foods are ordered for consumption
within a proximate time from when they are ordered, and the person
ordering the food intends to eat a portion of the food, whereas catered
foods are ordered on behalf of a larger group of people and further
ahead of time.
(Response 54) The rule applies to standard menu items offered for
sale in covered establishments. The rule defines standard menu item as
restaurant-type food that is routinely included on a menu or menu board
or routinely offered as a self-service food or food on display (see
Sec. 101.11(a)). The definition of ``restaurant-type food'' in Sec.
101.11(a) captures the time when the food will be eaten relative to
when it is purchased or picked up (i.e., usually eaten on the premises,
while walking away, or soon after arriving at another location) but
when the food is ordered in relation to when it is picked up, and how
many people will share the food, have no bearing on the applicability
of the rule.
X. Comments and FDA Response on Proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(1)(ii)--Food
Not Subject to the Labeling Requirements
A. The Proposed Requirements
Proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(1)(ii) would provide that the labeling
requirements would not apply to alcohol beverages; items such as
condiments that are placed on the table for general use; daily
specials; temporary menu items; custom orders; and food that is part of
a customary market test. In sections X.B through X.E of this document,
we discuss comments on this proposed provision. After considering
comments, we are:
Narrowing the proposed exemption of alcohol beverages from
all of the new requirements for nutrition labeling;
Clarifying that the exemption applies to condiments that
are for general use, including those placed on the table or on or
behind the counter; and
Clarifying that the labeling requirements of paragraph (b)
do not apply to self-service food and food on display that is offered
for sale for less than a total of 60 days per calendar year or fewer
than 90 consecutive days in order to test consumer acceptance.
B. Alcohol
1. Alcoholic Beverages
(Comment 55) Some comments agreed with our proposal that alcoholic
[[Page 71186]]
beverages should not be covered. Some comments stated that alcoholic
beverages should not be considered food within the context of menu
labeling. Some comments supporting FDA's proposal to exclude alcoholic
beverages referenced Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau's (TTB's)
oversight of alcoholic beverage labels, which includes premarket
approval. One comment referred to the district court decision cited in
FDA's proposed rule (76 FR 19192 at 19203), Brown-Forman Distillers
Corp. v. Mathews, 435 F. Supp. 5 (W.D.Ky. 1976), as evidence that TTB
has jurisdiction over the labeling of alcoholic beverages under the
Federal Alcohol Administration Act (FAA Act). Another comment argued
that requiring calorie declarations for alcoholic beverages will not
affect obesity, because obesity is the result of years of poor diet and
lack of exercise. Another comment mentioned a 2011 survey of adult
consumers and stated that it showed that most consumers do not want to
see calorie counts on drink menus and want to order what they want. The
comment did not include or provide a reference for the survey.
In contrast, many comments argued that alcoholic beverages should
be covered in the final rule. Some comments asserted that it was not
the intent of Congress to exclude alcoholic beverages from the menu
labeling requirements. According to these comments, Congress excluded
some foods from menu labeling, but did not exclude alcoholic beverages.
One comment, referring to a press release of two Senators (Ref. 29),
contended that Congress rejected lobbyists who wanted to exclude
alcoholic beverages.
Several comments argued that FDA has jurisdiction to require menu
labeling for alcoholic beverages and not TTB. According to these
comments, Congress directed FDA to require menu labeling for all food,
including alcoholic beverages. Some comments maintained that FDA
currently has exclusive authority to regulate labeling of certain
alcoholic beverages (such as wines containing less than 7 percent
alcohol by volume and some beers), and another comment stated that FDA
had asserted its authority over alcoholic beverages when FDA and the
Federal Trade Commission took action on caffeinated alcohol drinks. One
comment maintained that in the absence of a specific prohibition or
direct conflict, each Agency can regulate alcoholic beverages in line
with its mandate. Another comment stated that the U.S. Supreme Court
has noted, ``The courts are not at liberty to pick and choose among
congressional enactments, and when two statutes are capable of
coexistence, it is the duty of the courts, absent a clearly expressed
congressional intention to the contrary, to regard each as effective,''
citing Morton v. Mancari, 417 U.S. 535, 551 (1974). Thus, this comment
asserted that there is no need to pick and choose between the FAA Act
and section 4205 of the ACA because these statutes are capable of
coexistence in that they apply to different groups and different
practices.
Several comments questioned the applicability of the Brown-Forman
Distillers v. Matthews case to section 4205 of the ACA and contended
that Brown-Forman addressed the FAA Act and FDA's authority to impose
ingredient labeling on alcoholic beverage labels, not nutrition
labeling on menus.
Some comments also argued that FDA's proposed position with regard
to alcoholic beverage menu labeling contrasts markedly with its
position on meat and poultry menu items, the labels for which are
regulated by the USDA. One comment remarked that alcohol used in non-
beverage foods, such as bananas foster, would be covered under the
proposed rule, so not covering alcohol in foods that are beverages
would not be consistent.
Comments supported covering alcoholic beverages on public health
grounds. Some comments argued that excluding alcoholic beverages is
problematic because it may give the false impression that alcoholic
drinks do not contribute to the overall caloric consumption of
consumers, working against the underlying goal of section 4205 of the
ACA. Other comments remarked that alcoholic beverages contribute a
substantial portion of average total calories consumed by Americans,
representing the fifth leading source of calories in American adults'
diets. One comment stated that alcoholic beverages provide more
calories per day on average than many of the food items required to be
labeled under this law including pizza, hamburgers, and fried potatoes.
Another comment argued that calories in alcoholic beverages count
toward overweight and obesity just like calories in foods and other
beverages.
According to some comments, if some drinks are labeled and some are
not, consumers might be confused, and they would not have the
information to compare beverage options and make informed choices.
Comments also stated that the calorie content of alcoholic beverages
can vary widely and cited studies indicating that consumers are likely
to have difficulty identifying lower calorie options. Comments argued
that failing to provide consumers with calorie information for
alcoholic beverages will make it more difficult for them to follow the
2010 Dietary Guidelines' advice to control total calorie intake to
manage body weight.
(Response 55) The final rule does not provide a general exemption
for alcoholic beverages. As we stated in the proposed rule, alcoholic
beverages are ``food'' under the FD&C Act. Section 201 of the FD&C Act
defines ``food'' to include ``articles used for . . . drink for man,''
``for the purposes of this Act.'' The nutrition labeling requirements
of section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act apply to ``food that is a
standard menu item.'' In addition, as some comments indicated, section
403(q)(5)(H)(vii) of the FD&C Act deems the requirements of section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act inapplicable to certain foods, and
alcoholic beverages are not one of them.
While section 4205 of the ACA amends section 403(q) of the FD&C
Act, which generally provides nutrition labeling requirements for
certain foods, the nutrition labeling requirements in section 4205 are
directed specifically toward standard menu items sold in covered
restaurants or similar retail food establishments. Within this context,
providing nutrition information for an alcoholic beverage for which
other labeling is also regulated by TTB provides the same public health
benefit as providing the information for other foods. The provisions of
section 4205 of the ACA do not apply to and have no effect on the
labels of food products sold in packaged form, including alcoholic
beverages regulated by TTB.
Thus, we conclude that the nutrient content disclosure requirements
in amended section 403(q)(5) of the FD&C Act for standard menu items
offered for sale in covered establishments apply to alcoholic
beverages, even though the labeling of alcoholic beverage containers
under the FAA Act is regulated by TTB.
FDA's decision to include alcoholic beverages in the menu labeling
regulations is not inconsistent with the Brown-Forman decision, which
addressed the labeling of containers of distilled spirits, wines, and
malt beverages subject to the requirements of the FAA Act. This
conclusion will not subject the regulated alcohol beverage industry
``to `duplication and inconsistent standards,' '' a key basis for the
Brown-Forman decision. (Brown-Forman at 14, citing United States v.
National Ass'n of Securities Dealers, 422 U.S. 694, 735 (1975)). The
requirements we are finalizing here do not directly conflict with any
TTB requirements. As comments pointed out, the nutrition labeling
requirements
[[Page 71187]]
of section 4205 of the ACA do not apply to and have no effect on the
labels of alcoholic beverage containers. In addition, this final rule
applies to covered establishments, while the FAA Act's labeling and
advertising regulations generally apply to distillers, brewers,
rectifiers, blenders, producers, importers, wholesalers, bottlers, and
warehousemen of alcoholic beverages (see 27 U.S.C. 205). In short, the
two regulatory schemes address different labeling and different actors;
they are ``capable of coexistence.'' (See Manconi, cited previously in
this document.)
We also recognize that applying this final rule to alcoholic
beverages also regulated by TTB is more consistent with the inclusion
of meat, poultry, and egg products that are also regulated by USDA.
From a public health perspective, we agree that requiring nutrition
labeling of alcoholic beverages that are standard menu items is more
likely to enable consumers to compare beverage options and make
informed order selections in covered establishments. In addition, while
obesity may be related to poor diet generally and a lack of exercise,
calories in alcoholic beverages contribute to obesity and overweight
just like calories in other foods. Alcoholic beverages contribute a
substantial portion of average total calories consumed by American
adults (Ref. 3). Table 2-2 in the 2010 Dietary Guidelines for Americans
(``2010 Dietary Guidelines''), jointly developed and issued by HHS and
the USDA, reports that alcoholic beverages rank sixth in a list of the
top 25 food sources of calories among Americans ages 2 years and older,
and fifth in a list of the top 25 food sources of calories among adult
Americans ages 19 years and older (Ref. 3). The 2010 Dietary Guidelines
also discuss alcohol in Chapter Three, entitled ``Foods and Food
Components to Reduce'' (Ref. 3).
As to the 2011 survey mentioned in one comment, FDA is unable to
draw regulatory conclusions from such a survey without being able to
evaluate the survey itself.
(Comment 56) Several comments argued that providing calorie and
other nutrition labeling for alcoholic beverages on menus is feasible,
and one comment provided an example of a menu which included nutrient
content disclosures for alcoholic beverages.
(Response 56) We agree with these comments. We see no basis for why
providing calorie and other nutrient content information for alcoholic
beverages on menus would be less feasible for covered establishments
than providing that same information for most other standard menu
items.
(Comment 57) Some comments noted that TTB and FDA currently work
together through a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) and asserted that
under this MOU, TTB ensures adequate and non-misleading labeling, and
FDA ensures safety. One comment that mentioned this MOU indicated that
FDA should not begin to regulate the labeling of alcoholic beverages,
while another comment that mentioned the MOU indicated that FDA's
coverage of alcoholic beverages would not be inconsistent with the
specific language of the MOU.
(Response 57) We agree that FDA's coverage of alcoholic beverages
in this context does not affect the delineation of responsibilities
between FDA and TTB articulated in the MOU. FDA and TTB continue to
work together under the MOU, and FDA has consulted with TTB during this
rulemaking.
(Comment 58) A few comments maintained that establishing menu
labeling requirements for alcoholic beverages could lead to
inconsistencies with TTB requirements. One comment pointed out that TTB
has rulemaking underway for ``serving facts'' on alcoholic beverage
labels and asserted that, if FDA establishes menu labeling requirements
for alcoholic beverages, there could be inconsistencies between
nutrition information on labels and menus.
At the time that the proposed rule was issued, alcoholic beverages
subject to the labeling regulations under the FAA Act were required to
include a statement of average analysis if the label or advertisement
made a claim with regard to the calorie or carbohydrate content of the
product, and were allowed to include a statement of average analysis
for any product. The statement of average analysis listed the number of
calories and the number of grams of carbohydrates, fat, and protein per
serving (see TTB Ruling 2004-1). In the Federal Register of July 31,
2007 (72 FR 41860), TTB published a proposed rule to amend its
regulations to require a Serving Facts statement, which would include a
statement of calories, carbohydrates, fat, and protein per serving, on
alcohol beverage labels. As of December 1, 2014, the TTB proposed rule
has not been finalized. On May 28, 2013, TTB issued a ruling (TTB
Ruling 2013-2) (Ref. 30) that allows alcohol beverage industry members
to provide consumers with nutritional information on alcoholic beverage
container labels by using the format of a statement of average analysis
or a Serving Facts statement.
The comment stated that TTB's rulemaking should be completed before
FDA takes further action or FDA should exclude alcoholic beverages from
the menu labeling requirements permanently. According to another
comment, the labels currently approved by TTB with a statement of
average analysis apply to a small portion of the total volume of beers
produced by small brewers. The comment stated that the format is not
consistent with FDA's proposed rule, because TTB only requires the
disclosure of calories, carbohydrates, protein, and fat, while FDA's
proposed rule would require disclosure of additional nutrients. Without
agreement on formats, the comment asserted, compliance with FDA
proposed menu labeling could contradict TTB guidance. This comment also
stated that without a final rule from TTB, beer sold in bottles and
cans on display in covered establishments will not be required to bear
nutrition information. Comments stated that if FDA decides to cover
alcoholic beverages in its menu labeling rule, FDA should coordinate
with TTB to ensure consistency.
Some comments that were against including alcoholic beverages
maintained that the cost of laboratory analysis for alcoholic
beverages, which they assumed would fall on the alcoholic beverage
manufacturers, would be significant, especially for alcoholic beverage
manufacturers that are small businesses. One comment asserted that the
number of brands and styles of beer produced by small brewers varies
dramatically in comparison to large brewers, and without in-house
laboratories, which the comment believed large breweries would have,
covering alcoholic beverages would have a disproportionate effect on
small brewers. Several comments argued that sufficiently accurate
calorie values for various types of alcohol are readily available from
easily accessible databases, such as the USDA's National Nutrient
Database for Standard Reference. One comment suggested allowing covered
establishments to list estimated or approximate calorie values by
category on wine lists rather than by each brand, recognizing that some
types of alcoholic beverages, like red or white wines, contain
substantially the same calories regardless of variety.
(Response 58) We agree with some comments and disagree with others.
As previously mentioned, the nutrition labeling requirements finalized
here do not apply to and have no effect on the labels of alcoholic
beverage containers. In addition, the new requirements apply
[[Page 71188]]
to covered establishments, not to alcoholic beverage manufacturers. In
contrast, TTB's ``Serving Facts'' rulemaking would establish new
requirements for disclosures on alcoholic beverage labels and would
apply to alcoholic beverage bottlers and importers.
Under this final rule, covered establishments have significant
flexibility in choosing a reasonable basis for their nutrient content
disclosures, which can include a database such as the USDA's National
Nutrient Database for Standard Reference (see Sec. 101.11(c) and the
discussion in sections XVIII and XIX). The USDA's National Nutrient
Database for Standard Reference includes the categories, ``alcoholic
beverage, wine, table, red,'' ``alcoholic beverage, wine, table,
white,'' among several other general categories for alcoholic
beverages. Consistent with our treatment of other standard menu items
(see section XVIII of this document), we will allow covered
establishments to use these entries as the bases for their nutrient
content disclosures for alcoholic beverages that are standard menu
items.
In addition, we recognize that statements of average analysis and
nutrient content disclosures under current TTB guidance include four
nutrients, and our final rule requires that covered establishments make
additional nutrient content disclosures for most standard menu items.
However, we do not see these differences as conflicts. Nutrient content
information on alcoholic beverage labels that is required by or
consistent with TTB regulations or guidance could be a reasonable basis
for a covered establishment's corresponding nutrient content
disclosures. In addition, many alcoholic beverages will be eligible for
the simplified format (see discussion re: Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)(2)). As provided in Sec. 101.11(c)(1), covered
establishments may also choose to use a database such as the USDA
National Nutrient Database for Standard Reference as the reasonable
basis for making their nutrient content disclosures, including
disclosures for nutrients that do not currently appear on alcoholic
beverage labels. This should address the comment's concerns about malt
beverages or other alcoholic beverages that do not currently include
nutrient information. FDA has consulted with TTB on this rulemaking and
intends to continue to consult with TTB in the future.
(Comment 59) Some comments recommended that drinks that are ordered
by customers at the bar and that are not listed on the menu should be
exempt from this rule.
(Response 59) We agree with these comments. The final rule covers
alcoholic beverages that are standard menu items that are listed on a
menu or menu board. However, we are finalizing the proposed exemption
for a subset of alcoholic beverages that are not listed on a menu or
menu board. Specifically, Sec. 101.11(b)(1)(ii)(B) of the final rule
provides that the labeling requirements of Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii) do
not apply to those alcoholic beverages that are food on display. Our
reasons follow. Because these reasons do not apply equally to alcoholic
beverages that are self-service foods, Sec. 101.11(b)(1)(ii)(B) of the
final rule clarifies that alcoholic beverages that are self-service
foods are covered.
First, it is unclear whether covered establishments could provide
nutrient content disclosures for alcoholic beverages on display behind
a bar that would assist consumers in making informed and healthful
order selections. Covered establishments often serve such beverages in
mixed drinks, and the amount of each alcoholic beverage and other
mixers they serve to consumers may vary depending on the drink ordered.
Section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii) of the FD&C Act requires that calories for
self-service food and food on display be declared per serving or per
item. Examples of other food on display include: Burrito fillings
behind a counter at a burrito restaurant where burritos are made to
order and salad ingredients behind a counter at a quick-service salad
restaurant where salads are made to order. An employee generally adds a
standard serving of each burrito filling or salad ingredient when asked
by the customer, e.g., a standard measured weight of meat or a standard
spoonful of beans. Nutrient content declarations based on those
standardized servings are directly applicable to consumers' order
selections.
Even for some foods on display that have servings that vary, e.g.,
ice cream (where a customer can order one, two, or three scoops) or
burrito fillings (where a customer can order extra cheese), the amount
the customer receives is generally a simple multiple of a base serving.
Ice cream would likely be labeled per scoop and cheese would likely be
labeled per standard portion, with extra cheese being double the
standard portion.
In contrast, covered establishments with bottles of alcoholic
beverages on display behind a bar generally serve varying amounts of
alcohol and mixers depending on the establishment's recipes for the
various beverages ordered. For example, at a given covered
establishment, a martini recipe might have 2 ounces (oz.) of gin and
0.5 oz. vermouth; a cosmopolitan recipe might have 3.5 oz. vodka, a
dash of triple sec, a dash of cranberry juice, 1 tsp of sugar, and 1
oz. of lime juice; and a grasshopper recipe might have 1 oz. white
cr[egrave]me de cacao, 1 oz. green cr[egrave]me de menthe, and milk or
cream to fill the glass (Ref. 31). As a result, the covered
establishment does not have a standard serving on which to base a
nutrient content declaration for each ingredient that will be directly
applicable to all routinely ordered mixed drinks. In addition, recipes
for even well-known drinks, like margaritas, may differ from one chain
of restaurants to another, and consumers are unlikely to know a
particular establishment's recipe while ordering (Ref. 31). It is
difficult to see how a consumer would use an establishment's nutrient
content disclosure on a bottle of alcohol behind a bar in choosing
which mixed drink to order.
Section 403(q)(5)(H)(x)(II)(aa) of the FD&C Act requires FDA to
``consider standardization of recipes and methods of preparation'' and
``variations in ingredients'' in issuing these regulations. Therefore,
in finalizing the exemption for alcoholic beverages that do not appear
on menus or menu boards, we considered that recipes and methods of
preparation for alcoholic mixed drinks are not standardized throughout
the industry. In addition, we considered the variations of the amounts
of alcoholic beverages and other mixers served in mixed drinks in a
given covered establishment.
Alcoholic beverages that are on display differ from other food on
display in additional relevant ways. Alcoholic beverages that are on
display, particularly bottles of alcohol that are behind a bar, often
appear to be on display primarily for decoration or storage, not to aid
consumers in selecting among food options. This contrasts with most
food that is on display, which is on display in order to aid consumers
in selecting among food options (e.g., food choices at a salad bar,
cookie varieties at a mall cookie counter). Once covered establishments
comply with these new regulations, consumers in covered establishments
who look at food on display to decide which displayed food they would
like to consume will be able to consider calorie information on signs
adjacent to the food and adjust their selection if they choose.
In contrast, bottles of alcoholic beverages often are displayed
very close together, layered on top of each other, staged in low
lighting or back lighting, or placed very high. In other words,
[[Page 71189]]
they are displayed in a manner that does not enable consumers to easily
identify the particular alcoholic beverages available to assist them in
making their selections. In addition, bartenders often use bottles of
alcoholic beverages under the bar--that are not on display--to mix
alcoholic drinks. Finally, at many covered establishments that serve
alcoholic beverages, mixed drinks and other alcoholic beverages that
are not on menus or menu boards are ordered by customers sitting at
tables, from which the bar could be completely out of sight.
Based on the above considerations, we are exempting alcoholic
beverages that are food on display and are not self-service food.
Because these considerations do not apply readily to self-service
alcoholic beverages (e.g., bottles of beer in a cooler near the
register at a quick service restaurant), self-service alcoholic
beverages are covered by the final rule. Therefore, Sec.
101.11(b)(1)(ii)(B) of the final rule provides that the labeling
requirements of Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii) for standard menu items that
are self-service or on display do not apply to alcoholic beverages that
are foods on display and are not self-service foods.
C. Condiments
(Comment 60) Several comments recommended that covered
establishments provide calorie information for all condiments. Other
comments maintained that calorie information should be provided for
condiments if they are part of the standard menu item. One comment
recommended that the following be added to the provision: ``Condiments
and sauces included as an ingredient or standard accompaniment to a
menu item must be included in the nutrition information calculated for
that item.''
Another comment asked us to clarify that if condiments are provided
for optional use, they should not be included in the calorie
declaration. As an example, if a container of ketchup is provided on
the side with a hamburger and the consumer can decide whether to use
it, the container of ketchup should be treated the same as a bottle on
the table and be exempted from calorie declaration. Another comment
asked that the words ``on the table'' be removed from the provision and
that the statute be interpreted to encompass condiments and other items
kept behind the counter for general use. This comment explained that
its establishment does not typically have tables as most of the
business is take-out, and the condiments are kept behind the counter
and available to the consumer upon request.
One comment suggested that the exemption for condiments include
only those self-serve items that are calorie free or that have a
Nutrition Facts label. Another comment recommended that self-serve
restaurants have the flexibility to determine which items can
reasonably be considered condiments for general use, noting that many
of its restaurants have an extensive ``spice bar'' that contains dozens
of different spices, seasonings, and other condiments that any customer
can use, regardless of that customer's order or food selections. The
comment maintained that the regulation should be clear that all spices
and seasonings fall in this exempt category.
(Response 60) We are clarifying the exemption for condiments.
Section 403(q)(5)(H)(vii)(I)(aa) of the FD&C Act provides that the
requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act do not apply to
``items that are not listed on a menu or menu board (such as condiments
and other items placed on the table or counter for general use).'' We
affirm our tentative conclusion in the proposed rule that, given the
phrase ``for general use,'' it is reasonable to interpret section
403(q)(5)(H)(vii)(I)(aa) of the FD&C Act to apply to foods, such as
many condiments, that are available for use by any customer in the
covered establishment, regardless of the customer's particular order or
food selection (76 FR 19192 at 19205). For example, it is reasonable to
apply section 403(q)(5)(H)(vii)(I)(aa) of the FD&C Act to maple syrup
that is provided in a bulk container or bottles of ketchup that are
available for any customer to add to his or her food.
However, we agree that the calorie declaration for a standard menu
item must include the number of calories in the condiment if the
condiment is used as a component in the standard menu item, as usually
prepared and offered for sale. In such situation, the nutrient
declarations for the standard menu item in the written nutrition
information required by section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act
and Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii) must also include the nutrient amounts from
the condiment because the condiment is used as a component in the
standard menu item. The exemption in section 403(q)(5)(H)(vii)(I)(aa)
of the FD&C Act does not apply to condiments that are part of a
standard menu item, as the standard menu item is usually prepared and
offered for sale. For example, if a covered establishment ordinarily
offers for sale burgers containing ketchup and mayonnaise added by the
establishment, the ketchup and mayonnaise would be part of the standard
menu item as usually prepared and offered for sale, and the calorie
declaration for the standard menu item would include the calories in
the ketchup and mayonnaise. Likewise, if a covered establishment
ordinarily provides each customer who orders pancakes with a single
serving container of maple syrup, the maple syrup would be part of the
standard menu item as usually prepared and offered for sale, and the
calorie declaration for the standard menu item would include the
calories in the single serving container of maple syrup. Similarly, as
noted previously in this document, in these situations, the nutrient
declarations for the standard menu item in the written nutrition
information required by section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act
and Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii) must also include the nutrient amounts from
the condiment because the condiment is used as a component in the
standard menu item.
We see no difference between a condiment brought to the table for
general use and a condiment kept behind the counter for general use
(and then provided to a customer who requests it), provided that such
condiments are not listed on the menu or menu board separately or as
part of a standard menu item. Therefore, we agree that condiments that
are behind the counter for general use are exempt from the nutrition
labeling requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act under
section 403(q)(5)(H)(vii)(I)(aa) of the FD&C Act. For clarity, we have
revised Sec. 101.11(b)(1)(ii) to explicitly provide that the labeling
requirements in paragraph (b) do not apply to items such as condiments
that are for general use, including those placed on the table or on or
behind the counter. (Emphasis added.) As revised, Sec.
101.11(b)(1)(ii) includes condiments placed ``on'' the counter in
accordance with section 403(q)(5)(H)(vii)(I)(aa) of the FD&C Act and in
order to take into account varying business practices.
We disagree that the exemption for condiments should include only
those self-serve items that are calorie free or that have a Nutrition
Facts label. The exemptions under Sec. 101.11(b)(1)(ii) are based on
the language of section 403(q)(5)(H)(vii) of the FD&C Act. Section
403(q)(5)(H)(vii) of the FD&C Act generally provides that the nutrition
labeling requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act do not
apply to certain foods, including certain condiments. Section
403(q)(5)(H)(vii) of the FD&C Act does not qualify such exemptions
based on the caloric content of the food or the fact that some food
would be available in packaged form that provides a Nutrition Facts
label.
[[Page 71190]]
However, we note that under Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(C), a covered
establishment would not be required to provide the written nutrition
information required by section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act
and Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii) for a self-service food or food on display
that is a packaged food insofar as it bears nutrition labeling
information required by and in accordance with Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)
and the packaged food, including its label, can be examined by a
consumer before purchasing the food.
We also note that spices and seasonings (such as crushed dried
peppers) are considered condiments that are exempt from the
requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act under section
403(q)(5)(H)(vii)(I)(aa) of the FD&C Act, provided that they are for
general use by customers regardless of their particular order
selection.
D. Daily Specials, Temporary Menu Items, Custom Orders, and Food That
Is Part of a Customary Market Test
(Comment 61) Several comments agreed with the proposed exemption
for daily specials. One comment disagreed with the proposed exemption
because the burden to calculate the calories and other nutrition
information is not so great for daily specials to justify this
exemption. The comment maintained that consumers often buy what is on
sale and that excluding daily specials from the requirements of section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act would undermine the purpose of the
statute.
One comment opposed the proposed exemption for temporary menu items
because temporary menu items represent a large portion of what is
ordered on a single day at some establishments.
Several comments agreed with the proposed exemption for food that
is part of a customary market test. One comment opposed the proposed
exemption because chain restaurants test market their menu items
carefully before they mass market menu items and the determination of
the nutrient content should be part of that process. The comment
asserted that disclosing the calorie content of the food may impact the
consumer's decision to purchase the food and may impact the
establishment's decision whether to include that food on the regular
menu.
(Response 61) We are retaining in Sec. 101.11(b)(1)(ii) the
exemptions for daily specials, temporary menu items, custom orders, and
food that is part of a customary market test. Section 403(q)(5)(H)(vii)
of the FD&C Act specifically exempts such items from the requirements
of section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act regardless of the factors
identified by the comments, such as how the burden to calculate
calories for these items compares to the burden to calculate calories
for standard menu items; the tendency of consumers to buy what is on
sale; and whether a chain restaurant could determine nutrition
information.
Section 403(q)(5)(H)(vii) of the FD&C Act generally provides that
the nutrition labeling requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C
Act do not apply to certain foods, including daily specials, temporary
menu items appearing on the menu for less than 60 days per calendar
year, custom orders, and food that is part of a customary market test
appearing on the menu for less than 90 days under terms and conditions
established by FDA. Accordingly, Sec. 101.11(b)(1)(ii) provides that
the labeling requirements of Sec. 101.11(b) do not apply to such foods
and Sec. 101.11(a) defines the terms for such foods. We note that, as
discussed in Response 62, self-service food and food on display that
are temporary menu items or part of a customary market test, but do not
appear on a menu, are also exempt from the requirements of section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act because these foods are not standard menu
items.
However, neither section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act nor this rule
would prevent a covered establishment from voluntarily declaring
calories or providing written nutrition information for condiments,
daily specials, temporary menu items, or food that is part of a
customary market test.
Regarding daily specials, we note that we would not consider an
item that is offered every week on a particular day (e.g., the Monday
special) to be a ``daily special'' because it is being routinely
offered for sale (i.e., every Monday). In addition, we would not
consider a standard menu item, as defined in this rule, to be a ``daily
special'' if it is offered at a discounted price on a particular day
(e.g., a turkey club sandwich that is a standard menu item and normally
costs 5 dollars, but is specially advertised as costing only 4 dollars
on Fridays).
(Comment 62) In the proposed rule (76 FR 19192 at 19205), we noted
that self-service food and food on display that do not appear on menus
or menu boards would not be considered temporary menu items or food
that is part of a customary market test. Therefore, even if a self-
service food or food on display that does not appear on a menu or menu
board is only offered by a covered establishment for a limited time,
such as a pumpkin spice muffin available only in November, we
tentatively concluded that the nutrition information declaration
requirements in section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act would still apply.
Several comments that addressed the exemption in proposed Sec.
101.11(b)(1)(ii) for temporary menu items and food that is part of a
customary market test considered that this exemption should apply to
self-service food and food on display even though such foods may not
``appear[ ] on a menu'' as described in section 403(q)(5)(H)(vii) of
the FD&C Act. These comments said that Congress excluded temporary menu
items and customary market test items from the nutrition labeling
requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act because it
recognized that restaurants should be able to test products (many of
which fail and are discontinued quickly) without incurring the
significant costs associated with changing their menu and compiling
nutritional information. The comments considered that this same
reasoning applies to temporary menu items and customary market test
items offered in self-service restaurants (whether the restaurant
displays items on a menu, menu board, or individual signs). The
comments asserted that for buffet-type restaurants, there would be
significant costs in attempting to improve and change their menus for
temporary menu items and food that is being market tested and that
these costs would not be incurred by other kinds of non-buffet-type
restaurants.
(Response 62) We agree with these comments that the statutory
exemptions for temporary menu items appearing on the menu for less than
60 days per calendar year and customary market test items appearing on
the menu for less than 90 days apply to self-service foods and foods on
display that fall into those categories, as defined in Sec. 101.11(a).
We also agree that a self-service food and food on display that does
not appear on a menu or menu board but otherwise meets the definition
for temporary menu items or food that is part of a customary market, in
that the food is offered for sale in a covered establishment for less
than a total of 60 days per calendar year or fewer than 90 consecutive
days in order to test consumer acceptance, should not be required to
comply with the requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act
and Sec. 101.11. The requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C
Act and Sec. 101.11 apply to foods that are standard menu items.
However, self-service foods and foods on display that do not appear on
a menu or menu board, but otherwise meet the definitions for temporary
menu items or
[[Page 71191]]
food that is part of customary market test, along with the foods
described in section 403(q)(5)(H)(vii) of the FD&C Act, do not meet the
definition for a standard menu item in Sec. 101.11(a) because such
self-service foods and foods on display are neither ``routinely
included on a menu or menu board'' nor ``routinely offered as a self-
service food or food on display.'' Like temporary menu items or food
that is part of a customary market test appearing on a menu or menu
board, as described in section 403(q)(5)(H)(vii) of the FD&C Act, self-
service foods and foods on display that do not appear on a menu or menu
board but otherwise meet the definitions for temporary menu items or
food that is part of a customary market are offered for a limited time
and are subject to variation and discontinuation depending on the
seasonality and consumer response. Thus, these foods, like the foods
described in section 403(q)(5)(H)(vii) of the FD&C Act, are not
standard menu items and the requirements of this rule do not apply to
such foods.
For these reasons, we are modifying Sec. 101.11(b)(1)(ii)(A).
First, we are specifying in Sec. 101.11(b)(1)(ii)(A) that the labeling
requirements in paragraph (b) do not apply to foods that are not
standard menu items. Second, we are specifying in Sec.
101.11(b)(1)(ii)(A)(1) that such foods that are not standard menu items
include items such as condiments that are for general use, including
those placed on the table or on or behind the counter; daily specials;
temporary menu items; custom orders; and food that is part of a
customary market test. Third, we are specifying in Sec.
101.11(b)(1)(ii)(A)(2) that such foods that are not standard menu items
also include self-service food and food on display that is offered for
sale for less than a total of 60 days per calendar year or fewer than
90 consecutive days in order to test consumer acceptance.
E. Additional Comments on Food That Is Part of a Customary Market Test
(Comment 63) Some comments asked us to clarify that if a food is
tested in more than one location, the 90-day period is applied to each
location. These comments maintained that it is common for restaurants
and similar retail food establishments to conduct iterative tests to
evaluate the performance of a menu item and change the menu in light of
test results. For example, the results of iterative tests may lead to
``changes in product makeup, including size, shape, taste profile, and
preparation,'' with accompanying changes to the underlying nutrient
content. The comment asked us to clarify that a food that changes in
such a manner during a market test is a new food, and the 90-day period
would begin again. One comment asked us to confirm that a market test
may be conducted in multiple locations and that the 90-day period
starts when the testing begins in a particular location.
(Response 63) As we discussed in the proposed rule (76 FR 19192 at
19205) and as suggested by the comments, in some cases, a chain of
restaurants and similar retail food establishments may test a new
product in different locations within the chain and in more than one
region of the country at different times. We conclude that a
``customary market test,'' for the purposes of Sec. 101.11, refers to
a test in a single covered establishment. Therefore, we agree with the
comments that the 90-day period for the food that is part of a
customary market test applies to each covered establishment that offers
for sale food that is part of a customary market test.
Further, we recognize that restaurants and similar retail food
establishments may change the foods that they are market testing in an
iterative process. Therefore, we agree that if a food changes in ways
such as those noted in the comments (e.g., changes in product makeup,
including size, shape, taste profile, and preparation), it would be a
new food and the 90-day period would begin again. We would consider the
food to be a new food if it is not made with the same general recipe or
same ingredients or otherwise has a significant change in the nutrient
profile during the market test. For example, we would consider a soup
prepared without meat, and a soup prepared with added sausage, to be
different foods and would expect differences between the nutrient
profiles of these different foods.
XI. Comments and FDA Response on Proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1)
to (b)(2)(i)(A)(3)--General Requirements for Calorie Declaration on
Menus and Menu Boards
Proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1) to (b)(2)(i)(A)(3) would
require that covered establishments declare the number of calories
contained in each standard menu item listed on the menu or menu board,
as usually prepared and offered for sale in the following manner:
The number of calories must be listed adjacent to the name
or the price of the associated standard menu item, in a type size no
smaller than the name or the price of the associated standard menu
item, whichever is smaller, in the same color, or a color at least as
conspicuous as the name of the associated standard menu item, and with
the same contrasting background as the name of the associated standard
menu item (proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1)).
The calories must be declared to the nearest 5-calorie
increment up to and including 50 calories and to the nearest 10-calorie
increment above 50 calories, except that amounts less than 5 calories
may be expressed as zero (proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(2)).
The term ``Calories'' or ``Cal'' must appear as a heading
above a column listing the number of calories for each standard menu
item or adjacent to the number of calories for each standard menu item.
If the term ``Calories'' or ``Cal'' appears as a heading above a column
of calorie declarations, the term must be in a type size no smaller
than the smallest type size of the name or price of any menu item on
that menu or menu board in the same color or a color at least as
conspicuous as that name or price and in the same contrasting
background as that name or price. If the term ``Calories'' or ``Cal''
appears adjacent to the number of calories for the standard menu item,
the term ``Calories'' or ``Cal'' must appear in the same type size and
in the same color and contrasting background as the number of calories
(proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(3)).
In the following paragraphs, we discuss comments on these proposed
provisions. After considering the comments, we are:
Revising Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A) to specify that in the
case of multiple-serving standard menu items, the calorie declaration
must be for the whole menu item as listed on the menu or menu board, as
usually prepared and offered for sale (e.g., ``pizza pie: 1600
calories''), or per discrete serving unit as long as the discrete
serving unit (e.g., pizza slice) and total number of discrete serving
units are declared on the menu or menu board, and the menu item is
usually prepared and offered for sale divided in discrete serving units
(e.g., ``pizza pie: 200 cal/slice, 8 slices'').
Revising Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1) to provide additional
flexibility for the contrasting background used for the calorie
declaration;
Making a conforming editorial change to the requirement
for the color used for the calorie declaration for grammatical
consistency; and
Making an editorial correction for clarity to insert ``the
type size of'' between ``no smaller than'' and ``the name or the
price'' in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1).
(Comment 64) Many comments regarding the proposed requirement that
the number of calories contained in each standard menu item listed on
the
[[Page 71192]]
menu or menu board be declared as usually prepared and offered for sale
addressed the discussion in the proposed rule regarding how the calorie
labeling requirements on menus and menu boards would apply to multiple-
serving foods that are standard menu items (76 FR 19192 at 19203-
19204). Many comments agreed with the view we expressed in the proposed
rule that section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act requires that calories
be declared for standard menu items regardless of how many servings are
included in the item (76 FR 19192 at 19203). The comments asserted that
servings vary by product and by portions taken by consumers. One
comment considered that if a menu item is to be shared, it would be
easier for consumers to determine how many people will share the item
and divide the calories accordingly than for the restaurant to choose
how many servings are in a menu item. The comment said that we should
not allow restaurants to choose how many servings are in a menu item.
Many other comments opposed listing the calories for the entire
standard menu item and instead supported the listing of calories per
serving. Some comments asserted that listing calories per serving would
be less confusing, would be consistent with calorie declarations on
packaged food, and would not require consumers to do a calculation. One
comment agreed with our determination that a multiple-serving food is a
standard menu item but disagreed with our tentative conclusion that the
calorie declaration should be for the entire multiple-serving food
because providing calories for the entire multiple-serving food would
not be helpful and would be detrimental for those who need the
information per serving (e.g., diabetics). A few comments asked us to
provide an option to permit either the declaration of calories for the
entire multiple-serving menu item, or the declaration of the number of
servings and the calories per serving. As an example, one comment
suggested that a restaurant selling a four-serving family-style platter
of pasta could comply either by disclosing that the whole menu item
contains 2,000 calories, or by disclosing that the menu item consists
of 4 servings, 500 calories per serving.
One comment pointed out that if we required calorie declaration for
an entire multiple-serving food, nutrition information would be
inconsistent in some instances. For example, a cheesecake from a
display case would have different nutrition information than the same
cheesecake in prepackaged form, because the first would list calories
for the entire item whereas the second would list calories per serving.
One comment suggested that, for foods that are not appetizers or
desserts that are intended to serve more than one person, calorie
disclosure should include the number of persons intended to be served
and the calorie content per serving.
A few comments recommended that calories for pizza be listed per
slice. One comment reported that it received complaints when it
provided calorie information for the entire listed pizza. The comment
provided a report of consumer research showing that 60 percent of
consumers preferred calorie information per slice. The report of this
survey was submitted with the comment (Ref. 32). Some comments referred
to our previous statements that nutrition information should be
declared per serving. For example, in our proposed rule on ``Food
Labeling: Serving Sizes,'' we stated that for ``[f]oods in large
discrete units,'' ``the household measure most meaningful for these
products is a fraction of the whole unit.'' (56 FR 60394 at 60410,
November 27, 1991). Another comment referred to statements in our 2008
``Guidance for Industry: A Labeling Guide for Restaurants and Other
Retail Establishments Selling Away-From-Home Foods (the 2008 restaurant
labeling guide) (Ref. 10) that generally the nutrition information
should be presented on a per serving basis. For example, the 2008
restaurant labeling guide states that ``[i]t is especially important
that the basis be declared when a food is available in more than one
size serving (e.g., pizza that is available whole and by slice). . . .
The restaurant may provide additional information, such as `8 slices
per medium 16-inch pizza, 1 slice contains . . .' to help consumers put
nutrition information in context.''
Other comments urged us to clarify that a covered establishment can
voluntarily provide nutrition information per serving. These comments
suggested that we revise the rule to indicate that fact. These comments
suggested adding the following to Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A): ``(5) For
items that could serve more than one person, such as a large pizza or a
bucket of chicken, calories must be listed per standard menu item as
offered for sale and listed on the menu or menu board or as placed on
display. In addition, restaurants and similar retail food
establishments may also voluntarily provide nutrition information per
serving.''
(Response 64) Listing calories for multiple-serving standard menu
items as usually prepared and offered for sale by a covered
establishment is consistent with section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act.
As discussed in the proposed rule, section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act
requires covered establishments to disclose calorie information for
standard menu items as usually prepared and offered for sale,
regardless of how many servings are included in the menu item (76 FR
19192 at 19203).
Based on the comments that supported calorie declarations for
multiple-serving standard menu items ``per serving,'' the complexity of
consumer eating habits and preferences described by the comments, and
the variety of ways that covered establishments may choose to usually
prepare and offer their foods for sale, we have revised the rule's
calorie declaration requirements for multiple-serving standard menu
items on menus and menu boards.
Where a multiple-serving standard menu item is usually prepared and
offered for sale divided in discrete serving units (e.g., slices of
pizza), we are allowing covered establishments to provide the calorie
declaration per discrete serving unit, subject to some additional
requirements. If a covered establishment declares calories for a
multiple-serving standard menu item per discrete serving unit, the
establishment must also declare the discrete serving unit and the total
number of discrete serving units in the menu item on the menu or menu
board so that the consumer can make a fully-informed decision before
selecting the item.
We are allowing calorie declarations per discrete serving unit for
multiple-serving standard menu items that are usually prepared and
offered for sale divided in discrete serving units because such
division will likely enable consumers to easily identify the discrete
serving unit (e.g., pizza slice) and therefore keep track of the number
of serving units consumed. Pizza slices that come in a pie, or
breadsticks that come in a bunch (e.g., ``pizza pie: 200 cal/slice, 8
slices;'' ``breadsticks: 150 cal/stick, 5 sticks'') are examples of
multiple-serving standard menu items that are usually prepared and
offered for sale divided in discrete serving units. If consumers share
such a menu item, the discrete serving units provide a distinct
division along which portions can be divided, thereby allowing
consumers to keep track of calories consumed by either adding or
multiplying the per discrete serving unit calorie declaration based on
the number of serving units consumed. Providing the number of calories
per discrete serving unit and the total number of discrete serving unit
contained in the menu item for
[[Page 71193]]
multiple-serving standard menu items that are usually prepared and
offered for sale divided in discrete units enables consumers to
determine the number of calories they may actually consume and
therefore enables consumer to make informed dietary choices.
However, where a multiple-serving standard menu item is not usually
prepared and offered for sale divided in discrete serving units,
covered establishments must declare calories for the entire menu item
listed on the menu or menu board, as usually prepared and offered for
sale. We disagree with the comment that said a calorie declaration for
a whole multiple-serving standard menu item would be unhelpful or
detrimental. If consumers decide to share a multiple-serving standard
menu item, they can divide the total number of calories by the number
of individuals sharing it. We clarify--as one comment suggested--that
for multiple-serving standard menu items that are not usually prepared
and offered for sale divided in discrete serving units, we would not
object if a covered establishment decided to voluntarily declare
calories per serving, in addition to the calories for the entire
standard menu item.
(Comment 65) A few comments recommended that calories be declared
per reference amount customarily consumed (RACC) or by household
measure. A RACC represents the amount of food customarily consumed at
one eating occasion (Sec. 101.12 (21 CFR 101.12)). A few comments
considered that listing calories per serving based on the RACC would be
consistent with the labeling of packaged food. One comment noted that
customers are used to seeing information per serving even though actual
consumption may not be aligned with the RACC.
(Response 65) We assume that ``household measure'' refers to
measures such as ``cups'' or ``tablespoons.'' RACCs represent the
amount of food customarily consumed at one eating occasion and are
calculated for a variety of foods purchased by consumers in
establishments such as grocery stores (see Sec. 101.12). RACCs are
based on data set forth in national food consumption surveys and other
sources of information on serving sizes of food, including serving
sizes used in dietary guidance recommendations or recommended by other
authoritative systems or organizations, serving sizes used by
manufacturers and grocers, and serving sizes used by other countries
(Sec. 101.12(a)). We developed RACCs as the basis for determining
serving sizes for specific products for the purpose of declaration of
nutrition information on product labels.
We disagree that calories for standard menu items should be
declared per RACC or by household measure. Section 403(q)(5)(H) of the
FD&C Act requires covered establishments to disclose the number of
calories contained in a standard menu item ``as usually prepared and
offered for sale.'' Although many standard menu items may have an
associated RACC, others may not. Even if some standard menu items have
an associated RACC, each covered establishment is free to choose the
amount of food offered for sale in its standard menu items, and section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act does not require covered establishments to
prepare and offer standard menu items in particular amounts, such as
RACCs.
(Comment 66) Some comments considered that calories should be
declared for each size of a menu item (such as ``upgrades'' or
``upsized options'' and ``downsized options'') offered on menus and
menu boards. Some comments linked the requirement to declare calories
for different sizes to different prices--e.g., by considering that
calories must be declared for any size option that has a distinct price
on the menu or menu board. Some comments specifically addressed fixed
combination meals and considered that calories should be declared for
fixed combination meals available in multiple sizes.
One comment asked us to allow the restaurant to list calories for a
6-inch version of a sandwich and provide a statement on the menus and
menu boards that the 12-inch sandwich is double that amount.
(Response 66) The calorie labeling requirements of Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A) apply to each standard menu item listed on the menu
or menu board, as usually prepared and offered for sale. Thus, if a
standard menu item (such as fries or onion rings) is listed on the menu
or menu board in more than one size (such as ``small'' and ``large''),
the menu or menu board must provide calories for each size, following
the format requirements of Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1),
(b)(2)(i)(A)(2), and (b)(2)(i)(A)(3). Likewise, if a fixed combination
meal (i.e., a meal consisting of components that are not subject to a
consumer's selection, such as a burger and fries) is listed on the menu
or menu board in more than one size (e.g., a hamburger with small fries
or large fries), the menu or menu board must provide calories for each
size of the fixed combination meal, also following the format
requirements of Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1), (b)(2)(i)(A)(2), and
(b)(2)(i)(A)(3).
If a 6-inch sandwich and a 12-inch sandwich are both standard menu
items listed on a menu or menu board, or are on display in a covered
establishment, the establishment must disclose the number of calories
for each sandwich size, following the format requirements of Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1), (b)(2)(i)(A)(2), and (b)(2)(i)(A)(3) or Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(iii) as applicable, unless the sandwich is exempt from the
nutrition labeling requirements under section 403(q)(5)(H)(vii) of the
FD&C Act.
(Comment 67) One comment interpreted the phrase ``as usually
prepared'' within ``as usually prepared and offered for sale'' in
proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A) to be a ``standard formula,''
``recommended formula,'' ``standard build,'' or any other term that
means a predetermined method of preparation designed to ensure that all
menu offerings are nutritionally consistent and uniform throughout all
covered establishments in a chain.
One comment agreed that the number of calories for a standard menu
item should be measured based on how the standard menu item is usually
prepared and offered for sale, but expressed concern about build-as-
you-go menu items. The comment explained that, a covered establishment
might post the number of calories for a build-as-you-go menu item as an
``undressed'' sandwich (the comment did not define this term), giving
the false impression that the sandwich has fewer calories than it may
actually contain as prepared by the covered restaurant and then
consumed by a customer. This comment contended that this type of
sandwich should be considered a variable menu item with calories posted
as a range (i.e., in accordance with proposed Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4)) that includes the undressed sandwich and the
fully built one, because there is standardization with respect to the
specific amount of each particular food item or condiment that
consumers can add to the build-as-you-go menu item. As evidence for
this view, the comment referred to the standard extra charge for items
such as an extra scoop of guacamole.
(Response 67) We agree that ``standard build'' or ``recommended
formula'' is consistent with the term ``as usually prepared and offered
for sale.'' However, it is the build that is standard to any given
covered establishment, rather than recommendations or standards by or
from the chain as a whole, that dictates the nutrition information that
would be required to be declared for standard menu items in a
particular covered establishment.
Regarding the comment expressing concern about build-as-you-go menu
[[Page 71194]]
items, we first note that a build-as-you-go menu item, such as a
sandwich with the option of adding different fixings, that is a
standard menu item, likely would be considered a variable menu item. As
discussed previously in this document (see sections VIII.B and VIII.D),
Sec. 101.11(a) defines the terms, ``standard menu item'' and
``variable menu item.'' A variable menu item is defined in Sec.
101.11(a) as a standard menu item that comes in different flavors,
varieties, or combinations, and is listed as a single menu item. A
variable menu item is one type of standard menu item. In the proposed
rule, we provided examples of ``standard menu items''--e.g., a
hamburger, a combination meal, a specific type of pizza (e.g., deluxe
pizza), potato salad that is routinely offered at a salad bar, pancakes
that are routinely offered at a buffet, and pudding that is routinely
offered at a cafeteria line (76 FR 19192 at 19203). We also provided
examples of variable menu items--i.e., foods that may have flavoring
options (e.g., a milkshake that is available in vanilla, chocolate, or
strawberry flavors) or topping options (e.g., pizza prepared with a
selection of toppings) (76 FR 19192 at 19204). In the following
paragraphs, we provide additional examples relevant to build-as-you-go
menu items and explain how the calorie labeling requirements of Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A) would apply.
A standard menu item that is listed on a menu or menu board that is
not a variable menu item, in that it does not come in different
flavors, varieties, or combinations that are listed as a single menu
item, (e.g., a turkey and Swiss cheese sandwich on whole wheat bread
with mustard), would be subject to the calorie declaration format
requirements of Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1) to (b)(2)(i)(A)(3), but
would not be subject to the additional format requirements for variable
menu items (proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4)), established in this
rule as Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4) through (b)(2)(i)(A)(8); see the
discussion of the additional format requirements for variable menu
items in section XII). However, a standard menu item that comes in
different flavors, varieties, or combinations, and is listed as a
single menu item on a menu or menu board (e.g., a ``turkey and cheese
sandwich,'' with different options for the type of bread (e.g., whole
wheat or white), cheese (e.g., Swiss, provolone, cheddar), fixings
(e.g., onions, lettuce, tomato), and condiments (mustard, ketchup,
mayonnaise)) would be a variable menu item subject to both the general
calorie declaration format requirements of Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1)
to (b)(2)(i)(A)(3) for all standard menu items and the additional
format requirements for variable menu items as applicable in Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4) through (b)(2)(i)(A)(8).
(Comment 68) Several comments agreed with proposed Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(2) and the flexibility in proposed Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(3) to permit the abbreviation ``Cal'' for calories.
Several comments addressed the placement provisions for the calorie
declarations in proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1) and
(b)(2)(i)(A)(3). A few comments agreed that the number of calories be
posted next to the name or price of the menu item (proposed Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1)) and that the term ``Calories'' or ``Cal'' be
next to the number of calories (proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(3)).
One comment found that customers in its restaurants confused calorie
declarations with price declarations and noted that declaring calories
in the same font, size, and contrast as the price would create
confusion, even if the color is different.
Another comment from a chain restaurant found that consumers in its
restaurants were confused when calories were posted next to the name of
the menu item and thought the number of calories was the order number;
to address this confusion, the restaurant put the number of calories
after the price and in a different color, font, and size. This comment
emphasized its 3 years of experience with posting calorie declarations
and provided examples of its menu boards to demonstrate how it
communicates calorie information about its menu offerings. This comment
agreed that calorie information should be listed in a manner that
allows the customer to easily identify the calories associated with a
particular menu item, but disagreed that listing calories adjacent to a
menu item is the only way (or even the best way) for customers to
understand the information associated with their menu choice. This
comment asserted that it had specifically learned from practical
application and guest feedback that this generally is not the most
useful method of providing caloric information. This comment suggested
that the rule require a logical and clear association between the menu
item and calorie declaration, but provide flexibility for how that
logical and clear association occurs.
(Response 68) We appreciate receiving the sample menu boards from
the comment as a means of sharing experience with us. However, we are
retaining in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1) the requirement that the
number of calories be listed adjacent to the name or the price of the
associated standard menu item. This requirement is consistent with
section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I)(aa) of the FD&C Act, which requires that
the calorie declaration be ``adjacent to the name of the standard menu
item, so as to be clearly associated with the standard menu item.''
Placing calorie declarations adjacent to the names of standard menu
items provides a clear and logical association between the standard
menu item and the calorie declaration and helps to ensure that
consumers are able to see the declarations. In addition, Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(3) provides that the term ``Calories'' or ``Cal''
must appear as a heading above a column listing the number of calories
for each standard menu item or adjacent to the number of calories for
each standard menu item. As such, Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(3) helps to
further ensure that the calorie declaration is clearly associated with
a particular standard menu item, and the required use of the term
``Calories'' or ``Cal'' will help inform consumers that the number
listed refers to calories. Section 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1) also provides
flexibility by requiring a covered establishment to declare calories
adjacent to either the name or the price of the standard menu item.
This flexibility is consistent with what one comment described doing in
a restaurant. As finalized, Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1) also provides
sufficient flexibility to accommodate different types of menus and menu
boards and the various ways that standard menu items may be listed on
menus and menu boards. Specifically, in this rule Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1):
Provides flexibility to use a color ``at least as
conspicuous'' as that of the name of the associated standard menu item
and, thus, allows for the use of a different color;
Provides flexibility to use a contrasting background ``at
least as conspicuous'' as that used for the name of the associated
standard menu item and, thus, allows for the use of a different
contrasting background (see Response 73);
Provides flexibility to use a type size ``no smaller than
the type size of the name or price'' of the associated standard menu
item and, thus, allows for the use of a different type size; and
Does not restrict the font style.
We also note that the sample menu boards of the chain restaurant
provided in the comment generally followed the provisions of the
proposed rule in terms of type size and placement of calorie
declarations. For example, the menu boards listed calorie declarations
[[Page 71195]]
adjacent to the names of standard menu items in a type size no smaller
than the name or the price of the associated standard menu item,
whichever is smaller, in a column with a heading ``Calories.''
Therefore, while the comment opposed the requirement that calorie
declarations be placed adjacent to the names of standard menu items on
menus and menu boards, the menu boards of the chain restaurant,
nevertheless, generally used the same method of calorie declaration on
menus and menu boards as required by this rule.
(Comment 69) In the proposed rule, we tentatively concluded that
some packaged foods offered for sale in covered establishments are
covered by the menu labeling requirements (see 76 FR 19192 at 19217,
proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(C)). For example, a covered
establishment may list ``chips'' on its menu board, referring to
packaged bags of chips that are available as self-service foods or
foods on display within the establishment. In this situation, the
establishment would be required to disclose on the menu board calorie
information for the packaged chips. In addition, if a covered
establishment lists on its menu or menu board a combination meal that
includes a packaged food, the establishment would be required to
disclose the total calorie information for the combination meal,
including the packaged food.
One comment agreed with requiring the total calorie information of
a combination meal that includes a packaged food to include the
calories for the packaged food. Another comment disagreed that calories
should be declared on a menu or menu board for packaged foods,
particularly packaged soft drinks.
(Response 69) As required by section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act,
covered establishments must provide calorie information for all
standard menu items, including foods that are packaged. In addition,
sections 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I)(aa) and (II)(aa) of the FD&C Act requires
that covered establishments disclose the number of calories contained
in a standard menu item, ``as usually prepared and offered for sale.''
As such, we agree that a covered establishment that lists on its menu
or menu board a combination meal that includes a packaged food must
disclose the total number of calories in the combination meal,
including the calories for the packaged food.
(Comment 70) One comment stated that the total calorie declaration
for a standard menu item must include all ingredients of a standard
menu item, as it is usually prepared and offered for sale, e.g., for a
teaspoon of sugar added to oatmeal and salad dressings served on or
with salad.
(Response 70) We agree that the total calorie declaration for a
standard menu item must include all ingredients of the standard menu
item, as it is usually prepared and offered for sale, e.g., for a
teaspoon of sugar added to oatmeal and salad dressings served on or
with salad. As with the scenario discussed in Response 69 for a
combination meal that includes a packaged food, doing so is required by
section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act and by sections
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I)(aa) and (II)(aa) of the FD&C Act.
(Comment 71) One comment suggested that we require that covered
establishments provide the Reference Daily Intakes (RDIs) of calories,
fat, cholesterol, and ``salt'' on menus and menu boards. The comment
acknowledged that there is no RDI for sugar, but requested that it
nonetheless be included on menus and menu boards. The comment also
recommended that menus and menu boards only list percent Daily Value
(DV) of calories, fat, cholesterol, sugar, and ``salt'' and not list
vitamins and minerals because ``too many details may lead to
information overload and defeat the purpose.''
(Response 71) We disagree with the comment's suggestions, and we
are not requiring covered establishments to include RDIs or percent DVs
for certain nutrients on menus and menu boards. On menus and menu
boards, we are requiring the number of calories contained in standard
menu items, as usually prepared and offered for sale, and a succinct
statement concerning suggested daily caloric intake, as required by
sections 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I) and (II) of the FD&C Act. The succinct
statement will adequately enable the public to understand, in the
context of a total daily diet, the significance of the caloric
information provided on menus or menu boards. We further note that
percent DVs cannot be expressed for sugar or calories because Daily
Reference Values (DRVs) have not been established for these nutrients.
(See Sec. 101.9(c)(9), which lists DRVs for fat, cholesterol, sodium,
and other food components.) The term Reference Daily Intake (RDI)
applies to a vitamin or mineral but does not apply to calories, fat,
cholesterol, sugar, or salt. (See Sec. 101.9(c)(8)(iv), which lists
the RDIs for vitamins and minerals that are essential for human
nutrition.) For the Nutrition Facts Label, the amount of a nutrient is
calculated as a percentage of the RDI or DRV, as appropriate, and
expressed using the same term--i.e., percent DV. Because ``salt'' can
be either a general term applicable to substances such as calcium
chloride or potassium chloride, or a synonym for the specific food
substance ``sodium chloride,'' and because nutrition information
generally is directed to information about the sodium content of food,
we considered the request of the comment to be directed to the
declaration of percent DV for ``sodium'' rather than to ``salt.''
(Comment 72) A few comments agreed with the proposed requirement
(in proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1)) that the type size for the
calorie disclosure be no smaller than the name or the price of the
associated standard menu item, whichever is smaller. Other comments
considered that the proposed type size requirements are too
prescriptive and recommended that we require only that the type size be
``clear and conspicuous.'' One comment stated that restaurants located
in one State have already complied with a clear and conspicuous
standard; therefore, to move to a type size no smaller than the smaller
of the name or price of the menu item would require changes. Another
comment asked us to provide guidance that if the calorie declaration is
as large as the name, price, or description of the menu item, whichever
is smaller, it is presumptively clear and conspicuous and complies with
section 4205 of the ACA, rather than require a specific font size
relative to the price or name; as an alternative, the type size of the
calorie declaration could be the same size as the description of the
menu item (rather than the name of the menu item) (emphasis added). One
comment recommended that any required minimum type size for the calorie
declaration be half the size of the name or price, whichever is
smaller. Another recommended that the calorie declaration be the same
size and font as either the name or price.
A few comments recommended that we require that the calorie
declaration be at least as large as (or no smaller than) the name or
price, whichever is larger. One comment recommended that the type size
of the calorie declaration be no less than 10 point font on menus and
no less than 22 point font on menu boards or a type size equal to the
type size of the food listed.
(Response 72) We are retaining the type size requirements for the
calorie declaration without change. We disagree that the requirements
for the type size of the calorie declaration are too prescriptive. Some
type size requirements suggested in the comments would be more
restrictive than what we proposed. This would be true for those
comments specifying a
[[Page 71196]]
type size at least as large as (or no smaller than) the name or price,
whichever is larger; a type size the same as the type size of the name
or price; a type size the same size as the description of the menu
item; or a specific type size. Such type size requirements would not
take into consideration the various types and sizes of menus and menu
boards that may be used in covered establishments. We have concerns
that a type size that is half the size of the name or price, whichever
is smaller, would result in a calorie declaration that is not clear and
conspicuous and, therefore, not compliant with sections
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I) and (II) and 403(f) of the FD&C Act. Sections
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I) and (II) of the FD&C Act require, in relevant part,
that calorie declarations required on menus and menu boards be clear
and conspicuous and clearly associated with the corresponding standard
menu item. Further, section 403(f) of the FD&C Act provides that a food
shall be deemed misbranded ``if any word, statement, or other
information required by or under authority of this Act to appear on the
label or labeling is not prominently placed thereon with such
conspicuousness (as compared with other words, statements, designs, or
devices, in the labeling) and in such terms as to render it likely to
be read and understood by the ordinary individual under customary
conditions of purchase and use.'' The calorie declaration specified in
Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1) is tied to the name and price of the
standard menu item, which typically are included on menus and menu
boards and are two primary features of a menu or menu board typically
used by consumers to make order selections. The type size requirements
for calorie declarations balance the statutory requirements of sections
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I) and (II) and 403(f) of the FD&C Act that calorie
declarations be clear and conspicuous with the mandate in section
403(q)(5)(H)(x)(II)(aa) of the FD&C Act to consider space on menus and
menu boards and, thus, provide flexibility for different covered
establishments.
(Comment 73) A few comments discussed the proposed requirements (in
proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1)) for the color and contrasting
background of the calorie declaration. Some comments suggested changes
to the proposed requirements for color and contrasting background. One
comment emphasized that some menus and menu boards may have different
contrasting background colors and provided two suggestions to
accommodate such menus and menu boards. One suggestion was that we
require that the calorie declaration have the same contrasting
background, or a background at least as contrasting as the background
used for the name of the associated standard menu item on the menu or
menu board. As an alternative, the comment suggested that we could
require that the calorie declaration have a background at least as
contrasting as that used for the price and that menus using the same
contrasting background as the price of the standard menu item will be
presumed to comply.
One comment asserted that the color and contrast requirements are
too restrictive and maintained that many menu boards have a variety of
colors to enhance customer experiences. One comment suggested that the
color of the calorie declaration should not be fainter or less obvious
than that of the other items on the menu. Another comment asked us to
permit the calorie declaration to be in the same color as the subtext
that lists ingredients. One comment that opposed the proposed
requirement for color asserted that ``the eye becomes overwhelmed''
when all copy is the same size and color, and the consumer misses the
information or gives up looking for the information. This comment
requested flexibility in color and ``weight of calorie information'' (a
term the comment did not define). This comment also asked us to clarify
whether ``type'' is limited to font type (e.g., Arial) or whether it
also includes text effects (e.g., bold, italics, color).
One comment stated that the proposal was written with menu boards
in mind and noted that some restaurants use translites (lighted boxes)
where the name and price are in ``oversized type'' for marketing
purposes. It asked us to permit the use of ``reverse type'' (which is
white or light colored type printed on a dark background) and varied
backgrounds if translites are used.
(Response 73) We have revised the contrasting background portion of
Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1) to require that the number of calories be
in the same contrasting background, or a background at least as
contrasting as that used for the name of the associated standard menu
item. We agree that this revision provides additional flexibility
related to the prominence requirements to take into account that there
may be different backgrounds on a single menu or menu board.
We disagree that the color requirements of the calorie declarations
should be revised. Section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii) of the FD&C Act requires
that the calories be disclosed in a clear and conspicuous manner and
clearly associated with the standard menu item. Further, section 403(f)
of the FD&C Act provides that a food shall be deemed misbranded ``if
any word, statement, or other information required by or under
authority of this Act to appear on the label or labeling is not
prominently placed thereon with such conspicuousness (as compared with
other words, statements, designs, or devices, in the labeling) and in
such terms as to render it likely to be read and understood by the
ordinary individual under customary conditions of purchase and use.''
Requiring the calorie declaration to be in the same color, or in a
color at least as conspicuous as the color of the name of the
associated standard menu item helps ensure that the calorie
declarations are clear and conspicuous, prominently placed on the menu
or menu board with such conspicuousness as compared to other words on
the menu or menu board and likely to be read and understood by the
ordinary individual under customary conditions of purchase and use, and
clearly associated with the standard menu item. However, to match the
grammatical construction of the revised requirement for the contrasting
background used for the calorie declaration, we are making a conforming
editorial change to require that the color used for the calorie
declaration be in the same color, or a color at least as conspicuous as
that used for the name of the associated standard menu item (emphasis
added).
In addition, we are not requiring calorie declarations to be in a
specific font or to include particular text effects because we
recognize that menus and menu boards come in a variety of sizes and
include different fonts and type sizes. We are providing flexibility by
taking into consideration the space on menus and menu boards (see
section 403(q)(5)(H)(x)(II)(aa) of the FD&C Act), along with the fonts
and type sizes already in use by the covered establishments, while also
establishing requirements that help ensure calorie declarations are
disclosed in a manner that is clear and conspicuous and that otherwise
satisfies the requirements of applicable sections of the FD&C Act.
We would not object to reverse type and varied backgrounds on
translites, provided that the calorie declarations are clear and
conspicuous and satisfy the requirements of applicable sections of the
FD&C Act and Sec. 101.11. Calorie declarations on translites would be
subject to the same general requirements as disclosures on other types
of menu boards, as specified in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A).
[[Page 71197]]
(Comment 74) Some comments asked us to require a comma for
declaring more than 1,000 calories because consumers are accustomed to
seeing a comma in numbers of one thousand or greater. The comments
suggested that we revise proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A) to include a
new subparagraph to state ``(4) Calorie numbers over 1,000 must include
a comma after the thousands place.''
(Response 74) We would not object to the voluntary use of a comma
for calorie declarations of 1,000 or more, but decline to revise the
rule to require a comma. The requirements we have established in Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A) adequately ensure that calorie declarations are
disclosed in a clear and conspicuous manner, as required by section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act, and render the calorie declarations
likely to be read and understood by the ordinary individual under
customary conditions of purchase and use, as required by section 403(f)
of the FD&C Act. A covered establishment may choose to declare numbers
over 1,000 with or without a comma.
(Comment 75) One comment suggested that we accommodate vision-
impaired consumers by providing for alternate menus and availability of
other nutrition information. This comment asserted that vision-impaired
consumers suffer more from hypertension, heart problems, and diabetes.
(Response 75) We recognize that vision-impaired consumers should
have access to nutrition information for standard menu items in covered
establishments. However, we are only implementing the nutrition
labeling requirements specified in section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C
Act, at this time. Covered establishments may voluntarily provide
visually impaired individuals with nutrition information for standard
menu items in a way that is accessible to them. For example, we would
not object to a covered establishment providing nutrition information
for standard menu items through a Braille menu or a menu that gives
information about menu items orally, in addition to providing nutrition
information in accordance with Sec. 101.11.
XII. Additional Format Requirements That Apply When Declaring Calories
on Menus and Menu Boards for Variable Menu Items, Combination Meals,
and Toppings (Final Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4) Through
(b)(2)(i)(A)(8))
A. Proposed Format for Declaring Calories for Variable Menu Items
Section 403(q)(5)(H)(v) of the FD&C Act requires FDA to establish
by regulation standards for determining and disclosing the nutrient
content for variable standard menu items that are listed as a single
menu item ``through means determined by the Secretary, including
ranges, averages, or other methods.'' (See the discussion of the
definition of the term ``variable menu item'' in section VIII.D) In the
proposed rule, we considered five options for implementing this
statutory provision, and selected Option 2 (76 FR 19192 at 19207-
19209). Consistent with Option 2, proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4)
would require, in relevant part, that for variable menu items, the
calories must be declared as a range, in the format ``xx-yy'' where
``xx'' is the caloric content of the lowest calorie variety, flavor, or
combination, and ``yy'' is the caloric content of the highest calorie
variety, flavor, or combination. The other options we considered were
as follows:
Option 1. Single value; either in the form of an average
(obtained by summing up the calorie content of all options and then
dividing by the number of options) or a median of all options (obtained
by determining the ``middle'' number of calories from the list of
options).
Option 3. Hybrid combining averages and ranges;
declaration of a single average value for variable menu items whose
calorie ranges fall within specified bounds and declaration of a range
for variable menu items whose calorie ranges fall outside those bounds.
Option 4. If only 2 options are available for an item
(e.g., a sandwich with fries or with fruit), provide both numbers with
a forward slash between (e.g., 450/350). If three or more options are
available, provide the range in calories.
Option 5. If only 2 options are available for an item
(e.g., a sandwich with fries or with fruit), provide both numbers with
a forward slash between (e.g., 450/350). If three or more options are
available, use one of the hybrid approaches outlined in Option 3.
We also proposed specific requirements that would apply when a
variable menu item appears on the menu or menu board and is a self-
service food or food on display, and there is no clearly identifiable
upper bound to the range, e.g., all-you-can-eat buffet. In the
following paragraphs, we discuss comments on these proposed provisions.
After considering these comments, we have revised the provisions to:
Require Option 4 instead of Option 2;
Specify additional format requirements that apply when
declaring calories on menus and menu boards for variable menu items,
combination meals, and toppings (Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4) through
(b)(2)(i)(A)(7)); and
Redesignate the requirements that apply to a variable menu
item when there is no clearly identifiable upper bound to the range of
calories to Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(8) and clarify that such item is
otherwise exempt from the requirements of Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A) for
what must be provided on menus and menu boards.
B. Decision To Require Option 4
(Comment 76) Several comments supported our proposal to require
Option 2 because they considered that ranges provide more detailed
information. Several comments addressed one or more of the other four
options we described. One comment stated that the use of ranges does
not require customers to make calculations as would be the case for
medians and means. This comment asserted that declaring calories in
mixed options and hybrids would be confusing because consumers would
need to understand why and when a single value (e.g., mean) is used
rather than a range. One comment asserted that if single calorie values
for each flavor and size were used rather than ranges, the menu board
would be unreadable and consumers would be confused by too much
information or would ignore the information. Another comment asserted
that without a range, a single value calorie declaration for a variable
menu item would be false.
Other comments supported the use of hybrid approaches (such as in
Options 3 and 5) that would provide calorie information in both ranges
and averages. One comment recommended that Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4)
be revised to include specific exceptions that would limit the use of
ranges--i.e., (1) very low or no calorie beverages should be listed
separately from other beverages; (2) the mean must be used for menu
items that come in different flavors, varieties, or combination meals
if all options are within 40 calories of each other and all of the
options contain fewer than 400 calories, or if all options are within
80
[[Page 71198]]
calories of each other and one or more options contain more than 400
calories; and (3) if there is a fixed or default option for a
combination meal, calories should be posted for that option. This
comment explained that it suggested the 40-calorie range because 40
calories is used as the basis for low calorie claims, and that it
suggested a cut-off of 400 calories because 400 is 20 percent of a
2,000 calorie diet and is high according to our labeling principles.
One comment recommended that a covered establishment be able to
declare one range for a variable menu item that comes in different
sizes only if the difference between the upper and lower limits is less
than 5 percent. This comment did not explain the basis for its
recommendation to use 5 percent to limit the use of ranges.
One comment stated a preference for Option 4, but also requested
that we limit the use of calorie ranges, within the constraints of
Option 4. This comment considered that ranges are not particularly
useful to customers in putting their choices into context. Several
other comments opposed Option 4 because they considered that it would
be confusing.
(Response 76) After considering all five options in light of the
totality of the comments and the advantages and disadvantages of each
option as described in the proposed rule (76 FR 19192 at 19207 through
19209), we are requiring Option 4, rather than Option 2, as the format
for declaring calories for variable menu items on menus and menu
boards.
Option 4 is similar to proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4) in that
it continues to provide for the declaration of calories using a range,
which some comments supported. However, Option 4 also provides for the
use of a different communication tool--i.e., a slash (e.g., 110/230)--
that is more tailored to a situation in which there are only two
options available for a variable menu item. Using a slash instead of a
dash (e.g., 110-230) better reflects the fact that there are only two
options for a variable menu item available (see the discussion in 76 FR
19192 at 19209), and more accurately informs consumers about the
calories for each of the two options, whereas using a range represented
by a dash is more appropriate when there are more than two options. As
we discussed in the proposed rule, we recognize that in some instances,
a calorie range may be so wide that a consumer may still need the
calorie information for the particular menu item before he or she can
make a fully informed purchase decision (76 FR 19192 at 19209). For
example, the potential calorie range for a variable menu item that is
offered for sale with the option of adding toppings (e.g., pizza) may
be very wide. We are establishing specific requirements for such
variable menu items when the toppings are listed on a menu or menu
board in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(5), in part to address the
potentially large variation in calories and to provide more specific
calorie information to consumers regarding their order selections.
In general, however, we agree with the comments that use of a range
is less confusing than hybrids and single values where consumers may
not understand how a single value is derived if a median or mean is
used. Requiring a range for variable menu items where three or more
options are available gives consumers a consistent format across such
variable menu items and may allow covered establishments to save some
space on menus and menu boards.
We disagree that we should limit the use of ranges to calorie
declarations for variable menu items where the difference between the
upper and lower limits is less than 5 percent. While this approach may
provide for smaller range variations, such limitations likely would
require additional calorie declarations on menus and menu boards and
significant redesigns of menus and menu boards. Taking into
consideration the space on menus and menu boards and the fact that
calorie declarations for individual variable menu items will be
included in the written nutrition information required under section
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act and Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii), we
are not requiring limits on the use of ranges where the difference
between the upper and lower limits is less than 5 percent, at this
time. Further, the comment provided no basis to use 5 percent to limit
the use of ranges.
For these reasons, we have revised Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4) to
require Option 4 for the declaration of calories on the menu or menu
board for variable menu items. Requiring the declaration of calories of
each option for a variable menu by using a slash where only two options
are available will reduce or limit the number of times that calories
are declared as a range, as requested by some comments, while also
providing specific calorie information about each option. If there are
three or more options available, the calories must be provided in a
range in the format ``xx-yy,'' where ``xx'' is the caloric content of
the lowest calorie variety, flavor, or combination, and ``yy'' is the
caloric content of the highest calorie variety, flavor, or combination.
The use of a slash to declare calories for each option for a variable
menu item where only two options are available and the use of a range
where three or more options are available satisfy the requirements of
section 403(q)(5)(H)(v) of the FD&C Act.
We have revised Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4) to specify, in
subparagraphs (b)(2)(i)(A)(4) through (b)(2)(i)(A)(7):
Specific requirements that apply to individual variable
menu items (Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4));
Specific requirements that apply to a variable menu item
that is offered for sale with the option of adding toppings listed on
the menu or menu board (Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(5));
Specific requirements that apply to a combination meal
(Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)); and
Specific format requirements for declaring calories for an
individual variable menu item, a combination meal, and toppings as a
range, if applicable (Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(7)).
We discuss these specific requirements in sections XII.C through
XII.F.
We note that variable menu items that are self-service food or food
on display are subject to the calorie declaration requirements, in
Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii), for food that is self-service or on display,
as discussed in section XVII.B.
C. Requirements That Apply to Individual Variable Menu Items (Final
Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4))
(Comment 77) One comment stated that the proposed rule suggests
that a calorie range is only appropriate when a general term such as
``soda'' is used for a set of beverages, but not when specific flavors
or brands are also named. The comment considered that the proposed rule
therefore would require a calorie declaration for each specific size or
each specific brand of a beverage listed on the menu. The comment
referred to a discussion in the proposed rule (76 FR 19192 at 19216)
where we compared individually listed beverages to individually listed
flavors of ice cream and indicated that calorie declarations must be
provided on menus and menu boards for the individually listed flavors.
The comment contended that there is not enough space to list the
calorie content for each size of each beverage offered for sale in the
required type size. The comment also stated that this requirement will
force covered establishments to refrain from listing the beverage
options.
(Response 77) We are establishing in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4)(i)
through (b)(2)(i)(A)(4)(iii) requirements for
[[Page 71199]]
declaring calories on the menu or menu board for individual variable
menu items. First, we are establishing in Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4)(i) the principle, discussed in the proposed rule,
that calorie declarations must be provided on menus and menu boards for
the individually listed flavors (76 FR 19192 at 19216). Section
403(q)(5)(H)(v) of the FD&C Act provides, in relevant part, that FDA
shall establish by regulation standards for disclosing the nutrient
content for standard menu items that come in different flavors,
varieties, or combinations, but which are listed as a single menu item
through means determined by FDA, including ranges, averages, or other
methods. Accordingly, Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4)(i) specifies that
when the menu or menu board lists flavors or varieties of an entire
individual variable menu item (such as soft drinks, ice cream,
doughnuts, dips, and chicken that can be grilled or fried), the
calories must be declared separately on the menu or menu board for each
listed flavor or variety.
We acknowledge the comment's concern about space on menus and menu
boards. However, a covered establishment could group together varieties
or flavors that have the same number of calories (after rounding in
accordance with Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(2)) and declare the calories
for that group as a single calorie declaration, specifying that the
calorie declaration represents the calorie amount for each individual
flavor or variety (e.g., ``Diet Lemon Lime or Diet Cola (0 cal); Cola
or Lemon Lime (150 cal)''). We have revised Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4)(i) to include this option for grouping flavors
and varieties that have the same calorie amounts. We discuss in more
detail the specific requirements for calorie declarations for self-
service beverages in section XVII.E.3.
Flavors or varieties of variable menu items such as soft drinks,
ice cream, doughnuts, dips, and chicken are not always listed on the
menu or menu board. When the menu or menu board does not list flavors
or varieties for an entire individual variable menu item, and only
includes a general description of the variable menu item (e.g. ``soft
drinks''), Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4)(ii) specifies that the calories
must be declared for each option with a slash between the two calorie
declarations where only two options are available (e.g., ``150/250
calories'') or as a range in accordance with the requirements of Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(7) where more than two options are available (e.g.,
``100-250 calories''). As discussed in section XII.F, Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(7) specifies the format requirements for declaring
calories as a range.
Some menus or menu boards describe flavors or varieties for only
part of an individual variable menu item (such as different types of
cheese offered in a sandwich). To address these types of variable menu
items, Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4)(iii) specifies that when the menu or
menu board describes flavors or varieties for only part of an
individual variable menu item (such as different types of cheese
offered in a grilled cheese sandwich (e.g., ``Grilled Cheese (Cheddar
or Swiss)'')), the calories must be declared for each option with a
slash between the two calorie declarations where only two options are
available (e.g., ``450/500 calories'') or as a range in accordance with
the requirements of Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(7) where more than two
options are available (e.g., ``450-550 calories'').
D. Requirements That Apply to a Variable Menu Item That Is Offered for
Sale With the Option of Adding Toppings Listed on the Menu or Menu
Board (Final Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(5))
(Comment 78) A few comments recommended that the calories either be
declared as a range as proposed or be declared for the basic
preparation of the item together with a separate calorie declaration
for each topping. These comments supported separate calorie
declarations for sauces and dressings served on the side.
One comment appeared to believe that covered establishments must
list a range providing calories for pizzas with no toppings and pizzas
with everything on them. The comment asserted that this calorie range
would be too wide and ``useless.'' The comment also asserted that
measuring toppings is not an ``exact science.'' The comment recommended
that calories be disclosed on menus and menu boards for the standard
build pizzas but not for toppings, because the nutrient information for
the toppings would be required in the written nutrition information.
However, the comment suggested that a single calorie listing for all
toppings as a range from lowest to highest would be appropriate if we
require calorie disclosures for pizza toppings on menus and menu
boards.
One comment recommended that ranges not be the only option for
pizza. The comment asserted that pizzas can have up to 34 million
combinations with a range as wide as 1,610 calories. The entity
submitting the comment said it had received complaints from consumers
in one jurisdiction where calorie information for pizza is provided by
a range and found that the customers questioned the usefulness of a
wide range of calories for a whole pizza. This comment stated that some
jurisdictions have attempted to address this problem by requiring that
the covered establishments list calories per each component or topping.
The comment asserted that listing calories for each component or
topping would not be useful for pizza because each topping has a
different portioning based on the size of the pizza and the total
number of toppings on the pizza. The comment explained that the amount
of an individual topping selection (e.g., pepperoni, sausage,
mushrooms, green peppers) added to a pizza is reduced based on the
total number of individual toppings selections ordered. For example, a
one-topping medium pizza where ham is the topping may have 10 grams of
ham per slice (adding 10 calories from the ham per slice) whereas a
medium pizza with ham as a topping and three other toppings may have 6
grams of ham per slice (adding 5 calories from the ham per slice).
Therefore, the comment contended that individual labeling of toppings
would lead to large calorie ranges that would not be useful information
for the consumer. This comment stated that under one State law, pizza
is a custom order and nutrition information is not required for
toppings. The comment maintained that the best way to make calorie
declarations for pizza is to declare calorie information for the
standard build and provide calorie information for other customizations
in a brochure or an online calculator.
One comment noted that, in the proposed rule, we discussed the
possibility of listing calories for both the standard preparation of
pizza and for each topping (76 FR 19192 at 19207) but did not codify
this as we did for the written nutrition information. One comment asked
us to clarify that calories should be listed for each separate pizza
topping. Another comment recommended that calories for items such as
pizzas and sundaes be posted for the standard preparation only if
calories for each topping or option are also listed.
(Response 78) In Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(5)(i) through
(b)(2)(i)(A)(5)(iv), we are specifying format requirements that apply
to a variable menu item that is offered for sale with the option of
adding toppings listed on the menu or menu board. Doing so is
consistent with section 403(q)(5)(H)(v) of the FD&C Act, responds to
the comments making specific suggestions for how to declare calories
for toppings such as those used
[[Page 71200]]
on pizza and sundaes, and acknowledges some of the unique
characteristics of such toppings (e.g., that the amount of each topping
added to a menu item such as pizza may decrease with the total number
of toppings ordered).
As noted by the comments, the proposed rule acknowledged that some
comments received in response to the 2010 docket notice recommended
that the calorie information for items such as pizza be displayed for
the standard preparation of the item, with the standard preparation of
the item clearly noted on the menu, menu board, or food tag or next to
the food on display. The calorie content for each additional food
component would then be displayed on the menu, menu board, food tag, or
next to the food on display for each food component (76 FR 19192 at
19207). In light of these comments to the 2010 docket notice and the
comments received to the proposed rule, Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(5)(i)
specifies that when the menu or menu board lists toppings that can be
added to a menu item (such as pizza or ice cream), the calories must be
declared for the basic preparation of the menu item as listed (e.g.,
``small pizza pie,'' or ``single scoop ice cream''). Section
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(5)(ii) specifies that the calories must be
separately declared for each topping listed on the menu or menu board
(e.g., pepperoni, sausage, green peppers, onions on pizza; fudge,
almonds, sprinkles on ice cream), and the menu or menu board must
specify that the calories are added to the calories contained in the
basic preparation of the menu item. For example:
Ice Cream Scoop: 300 cal
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Toppings Added cal
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Almonds................................................. 25
Fudge................................................... 50
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Furthermore, a covered establishment could group toppings that have
the same calorie amounts (after rounding in accordance with Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(2)), and declare the calories for such toppings as a
single calorie declaration adjacent to the toppings, specifying that
the calorie declaration represents the calorie amount for each
individual topping (e.g., ``Red Peppers or sweet onions (adds 10
cal);'' ``Red peppers, sweet onions (adds 10 cal per topping)''). We
have revised Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(5)(ii) to include this option for
grouping toppings that have the same calorie amounts.
We note that if the general term, ``toppings'' is used on a menu or
menu board, but the individual toppings are not listed, then the format
requirements of Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4)(ii) would apply (i.e., the
calories must be declared for each option with a slash between the two
calorie declarations where only two options are available (e.g., ``150/
250 calories'') or as a range where more than two options are available
(e.g., ``100-250 calories'').
Foods such as pizza and ice cream are often offered for sale in
different sizes (e.g., a small, medium, or large pizza pie, and ice
cream dishes that contain one, two, or three scoops of ice cream). As
mentioned by a comment, the amount of a topping added to a variable
menu item may vary based on the size of the variable menu item ordered
by a consumer. The calorie content of each topping will likely vary
accordingly, depending on the size of the variable menu item ordered.
To account for the potential variability in calorie content of each
topping based on the size of the variable menu item ordered, Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(5)(iii) specifies that the calories for the basic
preparation of the menu item must be declared for each size of the menu
item, and the calories for each topping listed on the menu or menu
board must either be declared separately for each size of the menu
item, or declared using a slash between the two calorie declarations
for each topping where only two sizes of the menu item are available
(e.g., ``adds 150/250 cal'') or as a range for each topping in
accordance with the requirements of paragraph (b)(2)(i)(A)(7) of the
rule where more than two sizes of the menu item are available (e.g.,
``adds 100-250 cal''). If a slash between two calorie declarations or a
range of calorie declarations is used, the menu or menu board must
indicate that the variation in calories for each topping arises from
the size of the menu item to which the toppings are added. For example:
Plain Pizza Pie: Small (12'') 500 cal * Medium (14'') 750 cal * Large
(16'') 1000 cal
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Added cal
Toppings -----------------------------
Small Med Large
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pepperoni................................. 200 300 400
Sausage................................... 250 350 450
Green Peppers............................. 15 20 25
------------------------------------------------------------------------
or
Plain Pizza Pie: Small (12'') 500 cal * Medium (14'') 750 cal * Large
(16'') 1000 cal
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Added cal (S/M/
Toppings L pie)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pepperoni............................................... 200-400
Sausage................................................. 250-450
Green Peppers........................................... 15-25
------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the proposed rule, we requested comment on complexities that may
be raised by certain variable menu items, such as those offered for
sale with the option of adding toppings (such as pizza or ice cream)
(76 FR 19192 at 19209). As mentioned by the comments, the amount of a
topping added to a variable menu item, and therefore the calorie
content of each topping, may vary not only based on the size of the
menu item, but also based on the total number of toppings ordered by a
consumer. Specifically, the amount of each topping added to a variable
menu item may decrease as the total number of toppings ordered by a
consumer increases.
Therefore, to address this complexity, we have established a
specific calorie declaration requirement in Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(5)(iv) for variable menu items offered for sale with
the option of adding toppings listed on the menu or menu board, where
the amount of the topping included on the basic preparation of the menu
item decreases based on the total number of toppings ordered (such as
sometimes is the case with pizza toppings). In such situation, the
calories for each topping listed on the menu or menu board must be
declared as single values representing the calories for each topping
when added to a one-topping menu item, and the menu or menu board must
specify that the calorie declaration is for the topping when added to a
one-topping menu item. The following table provides an example of
calorie declarations that would satisfy the requirements of Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(5)(i) through (iv):
Plain Pizza Pie: Small (12'') 500 cal * Medium (14'') 750 cal * Large
(16'') 1000 cal
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Added cal
(single
Toppings topping S/M/L
pie)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pepperoni............................................... 200-400
Sausage................................................. 250-450
Green peppers........................................... 15-25
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Structuring the requirement in this way helps ensure that consumers
are given accurate and consistent information about the calories of
each
[[Page 71201]]
topping that are added to the calories contained in the basic
preparation of the menu item. We would not object if a covered
establishment voluntarily includes a statement on the menu or menu
board explaining how the calories per topping might fluctuate if
ordering multiple toppings; for example, for a pizza pie, the statement
might say, ``Calories per topping may decrease as the number of
toppings per pizza increases.''
In Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(5)(i) through (b)(2)(i)(A)(5)(iv), we
are establishing requirements for declaring calorie information for
variable menu items with toppings listed on a menu or menu board, and
specifying the format and manner of such declarations, as required by
sections 403(q)(5)(H)(v) and (x)(II)(bb) of the FD&C Act. Because the
requirements in Sec. 101.11 (b)(2)(i)(A)(5)(iii) and
(b)(2)(i)(A)(5)(iv) address the potential variability in calorie
content of each topping based on the size of the menu item, and the
total number of toppings ordered, the required calorie declarations
will provide accurate calorie information to consumers regarding the
calorie content of each topping they order. In addition, the
requirement in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(5)(iii) for toppings added to
menu items that come in different sizes provides covered establishments
with flexibility to choose one of two options that best fits their
establishments and menus and menu boards. Allowing covered
establishments to use a range for each topping to represent the added
calories across various sizes of the menu item may save some space on
menus and menu boards while still providing the necessary calorie
information for consumers to make informed dietary choices.
We disagree that pizza with toppings generally would be a custom
order for the purposes of this rule and that nutrition information is
not required for such foods for a number of reasons. First, the
requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act and this rule
apply to standard menu items. This rule defines a standard menu item as
restaurant-type food that is routinely included on a menu or menu board
or routinely offered as a self-service food or food on display. To the
extent a pizza with toppings meets the definition of a standard menu
item, the requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act and
Sec. 101.11(b) would apply to such pizza.
Second, while section 403(q)(5)(H)(vii) of the FD&C Act exempts
from the nutrition labeling requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H) of the
FD&C Act items that are custom orders, a pizza with toppings that meets
the definition of a standard menu item would not be a custom order
within the meaning of Sec. 101.11. Under the definition of ``custom
order'' in Sec. 101.11(a), a custom order is a food order that is
prepared in a specific manner based on an individual consumer's
request, which requires the covered establishment to deviate from its
usual preparation of a menu item. For example, if a covered
establishment offers a ``Meat Lovers'' pizza containing ground meat and
sausage as a standard menu item, and a customer orders a ``Meat
Lover's'' pizza without sausage, that order could be considered a
custom order. In contrast, a pizza with toppings routinely listed on
the menu or menu board of a covered establishment would meet the
definition of a standard menu item, and toppings can be added to a
pizza as part of the establishment's usual preparation of the menu
item.
Third, pizza is explicitly identified in section 403(q)(5)(H)(v) of
the FD&C Act as a variable menu item for which the nutrition
information must be disclosed. If Congress had meant for pizza,
including pizza with toppings, not to be covered by the requirements of
section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act, it would not have had reason to
specifically include pizza as an example of the foods described in
section 403(q)(5)(H)(v) of the FD&C Act.
We also disagree that calorie declarations for different toppings
should not be required on menus or menu boards because these calorie
declarations will be provided in the written nutrition information or
can be provided in a brochure. When toppings are listed on a menu or
menu board, consumers can use such information to make order
selections. Accordingly, when toppings are listed on a menu or menu
board, a covered establishment must declare calories for each topping
on the menu or menu board in accordance with Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(5)(ii) through (b)(2)(i)(A)(5)(iv). Requiring
calorie declarations for toppings when they are listed on the menu or
menu board helps to inform consumers' decisions by providing the
calorie content of menu items before consumers make their order
selections. Further, providing such information will enable consumers
to make informed and healthful dietary choices.
E. Requirements That Apply to a Combination Meal (Final Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6))
(Comment 79) Some comments recommended that, when practicable,
calorie amounts for all components of a variable menu item that is a
combination meal be listed on the menu or menu board. One comment
provided an example of a variable menu item for a pancake combination
meal with a choice of bacon strips or pork sausages to accompany
pancakes, eggs, and hash browns. In the comment's example, the calories
for the two options ranged from 1,200 to 1,420 calories, and the
comment stated that the covered establishment could list the calories
as ``Two pancakes (600 calories) served with two eggs (200 calories),
hash browns (300 calories) and your choice of 2 bacon strips (100
calories) or 2 pork sausages (320 calories).''
A few comments acknowledged that ranges are a better mechanism for
presenting calorie information about variable menu items that are
combination meals than are medians or means, but also pointed out that
ranges have a disadvantage in that they do not sufficiently convey the
necessary information to the consumer. One comment maintained that its
consumer research shows that calorie ranges are confusing and not
informative for variable menu items. Another comment recommended that
if calorie ranges are used, the calories for the menu options that are
included in that range must be disclosed, either on the menu, through
signs for foods on display, or through the device used to provide the
other written nutrition information required in section
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act.
Another comment provided sample menu boards that offered for sale
menu items in a meal described as ``You Pick 2'' (YP2), such as a meal
consisting of a half sandwich and a half salad. For each menu item, the
sample menu boards declared the number of calories in the menu item
when ordered by a consumer individually and when ordered as one of the
components of the ``You Pick 2'' meal, if available as a ``You Pick 2''
component (e.g., ``Chicken Caesar Salad, YP2 360, Whole 720''). The
comment asserted that declaring calories for each menu item
individually, rather than declaring the calories for all possible
combinations of its ``You Pick 2'' menu items in a range, was the best
way to ensure that consumers have the necessary information to make
choices about their calorie consumption.
(Response 79) We disagree that we should require calories to be
listed on a menu or menu board for each component of a variable menu
item that is a combination meal. In many cases, one or more components
of a variable menu item (such as the pancakes, eggs,
[[Page 71202]]
hash browns, bacon, and pork sausages in the comment's example) are
also included on a menu or menu board as standard menu items, and the
calories for such components would already be on the menu or menu board
when this is the case. However, we would not object if a covered
establishment voluntarily lists the calories for each component of a
variable menu item that is a combination meal, provided that the
covered establishment also complies with the format requirements for
declaring calories for variable menu items on menus and menu boards in
Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4) through (b)(2)(i)(A)(7).
Section 403(q)(5)(H)(v) of the FD&C Act provides, in relevant part,
that FDA shall establish standards for disclosing the nutrient content
for standard menu items that come in different flavors, varieties, or
combinations, but which are listed as a single menu item through means
determined by FDA, including ranges, averages, or other methods.
Accordingly, Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(i) through
(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(iii) require calorie declarations for combination
meals. Consistent with our selection of Option 4 for declaring calories
for variable menu items generally (see discussion in section XII.B),
Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(i) specifies that when the menu or menu
board lists two options for menu items in a combination meal (e.g., a
sandwich with a side salad or chips), the calories must be declared for
each option with a slash between the two calorie declarations (e.g.,
``350/450 calories''). Section 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(ii) specifies that
when the menu or menu board lists three or more options for menu items
in a combination meal (e.g., a sandwich with chips, a side salad, or
fruit), the calories must be declared as a range in accordance with the
requirements of Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(7) (e.g., ``350-500
calories'').
As such, the requirements for calorie declarations for combinations
meals in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(i) through (b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(iii)
are consistent with the view of comments asserting that ranges are a
better mechanism for presenting calorie information than are medians or
means. The requirements in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(i)
through(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(iii) also address the concerns of other comments
that ranges do not sufficiently convey the necessary information to the
consumer by limiting the use of a range to combination meals with three
or more options, and providing specific calorie information about each
option of a combination meal where only two options are available. In
addition, we find that the small sample size (n = 127) of the consumer
research submitted with one comment limits it as support for the
comment's assertion that calorie ranges are confusing and not
informative for variable menu items (Ref. 33). Further, although this
small study suggests possible consumer preference among different
declaration formats, it does not provide evidence about how consumers
understand and use the formats (Ref. 33).
Immediately following, in Response 80, we discuss the third
provision we are establishing in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6) regarding
the format of declaring calories on the menu or menu board for
combination meals--i.e., for ``upsize'' and ``downsize'' options for
combination meals.
Regarding the ``You Pick 2'' meal described by one comment, we note
that the sample menu board provided by the comment had a separate
section describing an opportunity for a consumer to combine standard
menu items for a special price, such as by combining any half sandwich
with any half salad. The comment's sample menu board declared the
number of calories for each standard menu item available for consumers
to combine for a special price (e.g., ``Chicken Caesar Salad, YP2 360,
Whole 720''). Generally, the calories for a combination meal must be
declared as a range in accordance with Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(7) as
required by Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(ii) if the menu or menu board
lists three or more options for the menu items in the combination meal.
However, in the sample menu boards provided by the comment, the section
describing an opportunity for a consumer to combine standard menu items
merely informed consumers of a special price when standard menu items
separately listed on the menu board, each with declared calories, are
combined in a ``mix and match'' situation. In this type of ``mix and
match'' situation, as displayed in the sample menu board provided by
the comment, a consumer would have the calorie information for each
standard menu item available for the consumer to combine before he or
she selects one or more standard menu items. Because the covered
establishment would be providing calorie declarations for each standard
menu item available for the consumer to combine on the menu or menu
board that would be visible to consumers when making order selections,
and taking into consideration space on menus and menu boards, we agree
with the comment that requiring the disclosure of additional calorie
ranges in such a situation, particularly where there are a large number
of combinations available, likely would not be necessary. For these
reasons, in this type of ``mix and match'' situation, where the menu or
menu board describes an opportunity for a consumer to combine standard
menu items for a special price (e.g., ``Combine Any Sandwich with Any
Soup or Any Salad for $8.99''), and the calories for each standard menu
item, including each size option as described in Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(iii) if applicable, available for the consumer to
combine are declared elsewhere on the menu or menu board, we would not
require a covered establishment to also declare the calories for the
combination in a range. To make this clear, Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(iv) of the final rule specifies that where the
menu or menu board describes an opportunity for a consumer to combine
standard menu items for a special price (e.g., ``Combine Any Sandwich
with Any Soup or Any Salad for $8.99''), and the calories for each
standard menu item, including each size option as described in Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(iii) if applicable, available for the consumer to
combine are declared elsewhere on the menu or menu board, the
requirements of Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(i), (ii), and
(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(iii) do not apply.
In establishing Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(iv), we have considered
space on menus and menu boards and how to minimize the burden on
covered establishments to comply with this rule while ensuring that the
requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act and other
applicable sections of the FD&C Act are satisfied and nutrition
information for standard menu items is made available to consumers in a
direct and accessible manner. Further, our approach to this ``mix and
match'' situation is similar to our approach to a situation where a
covered establishment includes packaged food (such as chips) as part of
a combination meal. As discussed later in this document (see section
XVII.H), a packaged food that is a food on display that bears Nutrition
Facts information, including the nutrition information specified in
section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act and Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(ii) satisfies the calorie disclosure requirement for self-
service food or food on display in section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii) of the
FD&C Act and Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii), so long as a consumer is able to
examine the calorie information on the label prior to purchase.
(Comment 80) As another example of complexities that may be raised
by certain variable menu items, we noted in the proposed rule that some
menus with combination meals list an option to increase the size of
components of those
[[Page 71203]]
meals for a discounted additional price (76 FR 19192 at 19209). ``Add
25 cents to Upgrade to Large Fries & Large Drink'' is an example of
such an option. We stated that we were considering whether those
listings should be labeled with the number or range of calories they
add to the standard combination meal, and requested comment on this
issue.
Several comments responded to this request for comment. In general,
these comments considered that calories should be declared for each
size of a menu item (such as ``upgrades'' or ``upsized options'' and
``downsized options'') offered on menus and menu boards. Some comments
linked the requirement to declare calories for different sizes to
different prices--e.g., by considering that calories must be declared
for any size option that has a distinct price on the menu or menu
board. Some comments addressed combination meals, including fixed
combination meals and combination meals that are variable menu items
and considered that calories should be declared for fixed or variable
combination meals available in multiple sizes.
(Response 80) We previously addressed comments directed to standard
menu items other than variable menu items when the menu or menu board
lists an option to change the size of the standard menu item (see
Response 66). Here, we focus on calorie declarations for ``upsized
options'' and ``downsized options'' for combination meals that are
variable menu items. Consistent with our selection of Option 4 (see
discussion in section XII.B), Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(iii)
specifies that when the menu or menu board includes a choice to
increase or decrease the size of a combination meal, the calorie
difference must be declared for the increased or decreased size with a
slash between two calorie declarations (e.g., ``Adds 100/150
calories,'' ``Subtracts 100/150 calories'') if the menu or menu board
lists two options for menu items in the combination meal, or as a range
in accordance with the requirements of Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(7)
(e.g., ``Adds 100-250 calories,'' ``Subtracts 100-250 calories'') if
the menu or menu board lists three or more options for menu items in
the combination meal.
For example, if a covered establishment offers for sale a
combination meal that is a variable menu item consisting of a sandwich
with fries or with onion rings, and the menu or menu board includes a
choice to increase the size of the fries or the onion rings, the number
of calories added by the larger size must be declared using a slash
(e.g., ``Adds 250/300 calories'') since there are only two options for
menu items in the combination meal (e.g., fries or onion rings).
As another example, if a covered establishment offers for sale a
combination meal that is a variable menu item consisting of a sandwich
with fries, onion rings, or tater tots, and the menu or menu board
includes an option to increase the size of the fries, onion rings, or
tater tots, the number of calories added by the larger size must be
declared as a range in accordance with the requirements of Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(7) (e.g., ``Adds 250-450 calories''), because there
are three options for menu items in the combination meal (e.g., fries,
onion rings, or tater tots).
(Comment 81) A few comments requested flexibility and recommended
that the rule allow a covered establishment to choose the option for
declaring calories for variable menu items that best fits its business
and menu, and display calories for variable menu items in the best way,
as determined by the establishment, that allows consumers to choose
healthier options. One comment presented a series of specific
recommendations for disclosing calories, including specific
recommendations that did not fit squarely within any of the five
options for disclosing calories for variable menu items discussed in
the proposed rule. This comment recommended that calories for variable
menu items be disclosed by (1) providing an average or range, for each
size or price of the variable menu item accompanied by the term ``Avg.
Cal''; (2) declaring calories for the flavors, components, or toppings
that make up that variable menu item elsewhere on the primary writing;
or (3) displaying the calorie amount for one preset ``build'' of the
variable menu item. Under the comment's third option, the ``build''
would be representative of a finished version of the typical order and
could not be a rarely ordered base product to which additional fixings
are added. The comment also recommended that a covered establishment
declare the calories for the additional options available for the
variable menu item in a separate writing (such as an electronic kiosk,
a nutrition brochure, a menu addendum, a nutrition poster, or an online
nutrition application) available before or at the point of sale.
For combination meals that are fixed, this comment recommended that
calories be disclosed by (1) providing total calories for the fixed
combination meal or (2) providing calories for each item or component
of the fixed combination meal elsewhere on the primary writing. For
combination meals that contain variable menu items, the comment
recommended that calories be disclosed by (1) providing calories as a
range reflecting the lowest and highest total meal calorie content
among the variations available; (2) providing a median or average
accompanied by the term ``Avg. Cal'' if the calories for all variations
within a variable combination meal are within 20 percent of the median
calorie value; (3) providing calorie information for each item of the
variable combination meal elsewhere on the primary writing; or (4)
providing the calories for one specified variation of the variable
combination meal. A covered establishment that elects to provide
calories for one specified variation of the combination meal would
identify the items in the variation specified, and disclose calories
for the other variations of the variable combination meal in a separate
writing available at the point of sale.
(Response 81) We decline the requests of these comments to allow a
covered establishment to determine the method for declaring calories
for variable menu items based on factors determined by the
establishment. While this rule provides flexibility where appropriate,
taking into account different business practices, standard menu items,
and menus and menu boards, it also provides for uniform nutrition
labeling requirements to be applied in covered establishments. Such
consistency was one of the primary purposes of section 4205 of the ACA
(see e.g., section 4205(c)). Further, section 403(q)(5)(H)(v) of the
FD&C Act specifically directs FDA to establish by regulation
requirements for disclosing nutrition information for variable menu
items through means determined by FDA. In addition, section
403(q)(5)(H)(x)(II)(bb) of the FD&C Act directs FDA to issue
regulations specifying the format and manner of the nutrition
information disclosure requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C
Act. This rule establishes requirements for disclosing the nutrition
information required under section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act while
also providing flexibility. For example, we are establishing specific
format requirements for calorie declarations for individual variable
menu items, toppings listed on a menu or menu board, and combination
meals (Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4) through (b)(2)(i)(A)(7)), and we
also are providing an exemption from the requirements for calorie
declarations for combination meals in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(i)
through
[[Page 71204]]
(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(iii) under the circumstances described in Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(iv). In addition, Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(3)
provides flexibility on where to place the term ``Calories'' or ``Cal''
on a menu or menu board, and Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1) provides
flexibility for the color and contrasting background of calorie
declarations. The calorie declaration requirements for variable menu
items in this rule help ensure that consumers get consistent
information when ordering from different covered establishments and
even when ordering within a single covered establishment. For example,
the approach suggested by the comments could lead to an inconsistent
presentation on the same menu or menu board within a single
establishment if a covered establishment determined that one approach
worked best for some of its menu items and another approach worked best
for other menu items.
(Comment 82) A few comments recommended that calories for
combination meals be declared for the standard, ``default,'' or most
popular build. As an example, one comment recommended that calories
declared for a combination meal include the calories for fries if the
meal is depicted on a menu board as including fries. As another
example, the comment recommended that calories declared for a
combination meal include the calories in a full-calorie drink if more
than 50 percent of a covered establishment's combination meals are sold
with a full-calorie drink. One comment considered that the standard or
default is the meal depicted that accounts for more than a majority (51
percent) of the sales for that meal.
(Response 82) We disagree with the comments in part. A combination
meal, including those described by the comments, could be listed on a
menu or menu board as a variable menu item, meaning that it could be
listed as a single menu item that comes in different flavors,
varieties, or combinations. Where a combination meal is listed on a
menu or menu board as a variable menu item, the meal would not have a
typical ``default build'' because some components that make up the meal
(e.g., hamburger, fries or onion rings, soft drink) come in different
flavors, varieties, or combinations that consumers are able to select.
Section 403(q)(5)(H)(v) of the FD&C Act requires, in relevant part,
that FDA establish by regulation standards for disclosing the nutrient
content for variable menu items, through means determined by FDA,
including ranges, averages, or other methods. Accordingly, we have
established the requirements for calorie declarations for variable menu
items that are combination meals in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(i)
through (b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(iii). These calorie declaration requirements
communicate the variability of calorie content in the combination meal
to consumers by providing the calorie information for each option when
there are only two options available or in a range when there are three
or more options available. In contrast, the methods for declaring
calories for combination meals that are variable menu items suggested
by the comments would not inform consumers that the calorie content of
their order selection may vary based on the options selected in the
combination meal.
Where a combination meal is not listed on a menu or menu board as a
variable menu item, but is instead listed as a menu item that comes in
only one flavor, variety, or combination, the combination meal would
have a ``default build.'' As with a combination meal that comes in
different sizes, in this situation, Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A) requires a
covered establishment to provide the number of calories contained in
the combination meal listed on the menu or menu board, as usually
prepared and offered for sale. (See discussion about fixed combination
meals offered for sale in different sizes in Response 66.)
F. Format Requirements for Declaring Calories for an Individual
Variable Menu Item, a Combination Meal, and Toppings as a Range, if
Applicable (Final Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(7))
As discussed previously in this document (see section XII.B), we
are revising Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4) to require Option 4. One such
revision (established in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(7)) specifies the
format requirements that must be followed when declaring calories as a
range. Under Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(7), calories that are declared as
a range must be in the format ``xx-yy,'' where ``xx'' is the caloric
content of the lowest calorie variety, flavor, or combination, and
``yy'' is the caloric content of the highest calorie variety, flavor,
or combination. We are establishing these specific format requirements
as a separate subparagraph so that the rule does not need to include
this format information each time the rule requires use of a range.
G. Exception for a Variable Menu Item When There Is No Clearly
Identifiable Upper Bound to the Range of Calories (Final Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(8))
Proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4) would require, in relevant
part, that if a variable menu item appears on the menu or menu board
and is a self-service food or food on display, and there is no clearly
identifiable upper bound to the range, e.g., all-you-can-eat buffet,
then the menu or menu board must include a statement, adjacent to the
name or price of the item, referring customers to the self-service
facility for calorie information, e.g., ``See buffet for calorie
declarations.'' This statement must appear in a type size no smaller
than the name or price of the variable menu item, whichever is smaller,
and in the same color or a color at least as conspicuous as that name
or price, with the same contrasting background as that name or price.
Comments that addressed this proposed provision supported it.
Therefore, we are finalizing it without change, except to:
Redesignate it as Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(8) and clarify
that it is an ``exception'' to the requirements of Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A) for calorie declarations that must be provided on
menus and menu boards;
Make a conforming change to Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A) to
acknowledge the exception in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(8);
Provide the same flexibility for the contrasting
background used for the statement referring customers to the self-
service facility for calorie declarations as for the calorie
declaration in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1);
Make the same conforming editorial change to the
requirement directed to the color of this statement as for the calorie
declaration in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1);
Make an editorial correction for clarity to insert ``the
type size of'' between ``no smaller than'' and ``the name or price.''
Characterizing the provisions of Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(8) as an
``exception'' will clarify that the requirements of Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1) through (b)(2)(i)(A)(7) do not apply when a
variable menu item appears on the menu or menu board and is a self-
service food or food on display, and there is no clearly identifiable
upper bound to the range of calories. Providing the same flexibility
for the contrasting background as for the contrasting backgrounds for
calorie declarations in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1) will provide a
consistent approach to background requirements on menus and menu
[[Page 71205]]
boards. Making the conforming editorial change to the requirement
directed to the color will promote consistency in terminology in the
rule.
With these changes, Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(8) specifies that if a
variable menu item appears on the menu or menu board and is a self-
service food or food on display, and there is no clearly identifiable
upper bound to the range, e.g., all-you-can-eat buffet, the menu or
menu board must include a statement, adjacent to the name or price of
the item, referring customers to the self-service facility for calorie
information, e.g., ``See buffet for calorie declarations.'' This
statement must appear in a type size no smaller than the type size of
the name or price of the variable menu item, whichever is smaller, and
in the same color or a color at least as conspicuous as that used for
that name or price, with the same contrasting background or a
background at least as contrasting as that used for that name or price.
H. Declaring Calories Using Interactive Menus or New Technology
(Comment 83) In the proposed rule, we recognized that the Internet
may allow for the use of different methods for disclosing calories,
such as by providing a calorie tracker in the ordering frame to tally
calories as customers make order selections (76 FR 19192 at 19209). We
requested comment on whether different methods should be used for
nutrient content declarations for interactive Internet menus in general
(76 FR 19192 at 19209). One comment asked that we acknowledge the
potential for advances in technology and establish a petition process
to request alternative methods of nutrition information disclosure via
technological innovations, e.g., via smart phone applications. The
comment also asked us to establish a process to approve methods that
reflect technological advances that we did not anticipate but that
comply with the statute.
(Response 83) We are not establishing a petition process to approve
future methods for calorie declarations at this time. As suggested by
the comment, we specifically acknowledged that potential technological
advances may allow for the use of different methods in disclosing
calories in covered establishments and requested comments on such
methods. To the extent that the technological advances described by the
comment provide methods for declaring calorie information in accordance
with section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act and Sec. 101.11, such
methods would be permissible. We will continue to consider whether
specific advances in technology may result in alternative methods for
nutrient content declarations under section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C
Act.
Later in this document (see Comment 113 and Response 113 in section
XVI.E), we address a similar comment from the perspective of new
technologies for providing written nutrition information.
XIII. Additional Requirements That Apply to Beverages That Are Not
Self-Service or on Display (Final Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(9))
(Comment 84) One comment noted that the proposed rule did not
address the issue of ice fill for the declaration of calories for
beverages. The comment asked us to permit covered establishments to
calculate calories based on their standard ice fill as long as the
level of ice fill is disclosed to consumers. The comment recommended
that we expressly permit, regardless of whether there is a standard ice
fill, the following statement regarding ice fill: ``Calorie content may
vary based on the amount of ice used.''
(Response 84) For beverages that are standard menu items and are
dispensed by an employee of a covered establishment (and, thus, are not
self-service), we acknowledge that some of the beverage would be
displaced by any ice added by the covered establishment. In addition,
the amount of beverage displaced may vary based on the amount and type
of added ice (e.g., crushed, cubed, shaved). Whereas some covered
establishments may dispense a standard beverage fill (i.e., a fixed
amount that is less than the full volume of the cup per cup size),
others may not. Likewise, whereas some covered establishments may have
a standard ice fill (i.e., a fixed amount of ice per cup size), others
may not. Accordingly, Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(9) of the final rule
requires that, for beverages that are not self-service, calories must
be declared based on the full volume of the cup served without ice,
unless the covered establishment ordinarily dispenses and offers for
sale a standard beverage fill (i.e., a fixed amount that is less than
the full volume of the cup per cup size) or dispenses a standard ice
fill (i.e., a fixed amount of ice per cup size). If the covered
establishment usually prepares and offers for sale a beverage using a
standard beverage fill or dispenses a standard ice fill, the covered
establishment must declare calories based on such standard beverage
fill or standard ice fill. Section 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(9) of the final
rule does not require a covered establishment to set a standard
beverage fill or standard ice fill. Instead, Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(9) requires the covered establishment to disclose
the number of calories contained in a beverage with a standard beverage
fill or ice fill ``as usually prepared and offered for sale,'' as
required by section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii) of the FD&C Act. The rule also
does not specify how a covered establishment should dispense a standard
beverage fill or standard ice fill. A covered establishment may choose
a method that is suited to its establishment--e.g., by using equipment
that automatically dispenses a volume specified by the establishment,
by using cups that have markings that enable an employee to manually
add a certain volume of beverage or ice, or by using a particular ice
scoop.
Section 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(9) is consistent with section
403(q)(5)(H)(ii) of the FD&C Act, which requires covered establishments
to declare on menus and menu boards the number of calories contained in
standard menu items listed on such menus and menu boards, as usually
prepared and offered for sale. In establishing Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(9), we considered among other things, reasonable
variations in serving sizes used by covered establishments, and
therefore are allowing covered establishments to disclose calories
based on the full volume of the cup served without ice, unless the
covered establishment ordinarily dispenses and offers for sale a
standard beverage fill or dispenses a standard ice fill. We do not
expect that a statement that the calorie content of the beverage may
vary based on the amount of ice used, such as the one suggested by the
comment, will be necessary in light of the requirements of Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(9).
In section XVII.D, we discuss ice fill for self-service beverages.
XIV. Comments and FDA Response on Proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B)--
Succinct Statement That Must Be on Menus and Menu Boards To Provide
Context About Calories in a Daily Diet
A. The Proposed Requirements
Proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B) would require the following
statement designed to enable consumers to understand, in the context of
a total daily diet, the significance of the calorie information
provided on menus and menu boards: A 2,000 calorie daily diet is used
as the basis for general nutrition advice; however, individual calorie
needs may vary.
In the proposed rule, we referred to the statement in this
provision as the ``succinct statement'' and discussed principles that
should be met to help
[[Page 71206]]
ensure that the succinct statement is designed to enable consumers to
understand, in the context of a total daily diet, the significance of
the calorie information provided on menus and menu boards (76 FR 19192
at 19210). These principles are:
The succinct statement should be succinct;
The succinct statement should be in plain language that
consumers can understand;
The total caloric value should be framed appropriately so
that it is not viewed as a recommendation for daily intake for every
consumer;
The succinct statement should give consumers a means to
compare the calorie declaration for a menu item to total calories; and
The succinct statement should inform consumers that
individual needs vary.
In the following paragraphs, we discuss comments on this proposed
provision. After considering these comments, we are:
Revising the succinct statement; and
Providing for an optional succinct statement (which this
document refers to as the ``children's succinct statement'') for use on
menus and menu boards targeted to children as a substitute for, or in
addition to, the succinct statement.
B. Principles for Establishing the Succinct Statement
(Comment 85) Several comments supported the principles we discussed
in the proposed rule for establishing the succinct statement.
(Response 85) We acknowledge these comments.
C. Wording of the Succinct Statement
(Comment 86) In the proposed rule, we signaled an intent to conduct
consumer research to evaluate consumer response to the proposed
succinct statement as well as to alternative succinct statements (which
we discussed in the proposal) (76 FR 19192 at 19210). One comment
supported such research, but suggested that more research should be
done to assess if there is a permanent behavioral change.
(Response 86) Although the proposed rule contemplated consumer
research to guide the design of the succinct statement, we are
foregoing such research at this time in light of the number of comments
providing useful insight regarding the proposed succinct statement,
related principles, and whether we should provide a succinct statement
for children.
(Comment 87) Several comments supported the proposed wording of the
succinct statement. Other comments opposed the proposed wording of the
succinct statement. Some comments considered that the information that
calorie needs vary should not be included because it is obvious, it
will clutter menus and menu boards, and there is no such phrase on
packaged food. Another comment expressed concern about the use of 2,000
calories in the succinct statement and recommended that the succinct
statement be better phrased to emphasize ``individual needs may vary,''
e.g., by including information that many adults need fewer than 2,000
calories. This comment opposed adding phrases about the amount of
exercise needed to burn a particular number of calories. One comment
asserted that the proposed succinct statement is not specific enough
and recommended that it focus on suggested calorie intake rather than
on a typical caloric intake.
(Response 87) We are retaining the use of 2,000 calories as an
appropriate reference value to include in the succinct statement. As
discussed in the proposed rule, the Nutrition Facts on packaged foods
uses 2,000 calories as a reference amount on which to base recommended
intake for some nutrients for individuals 4 years of age and older, and
the Nutrition Facts on packaged foods have been required for nearly 20
years. Moreover, a 2,000-calorie reference value is close to the
midpoint of the range of energy requirements for sedentary adults (76
FR 19192 at 19209).
We also are retaining information that individual calorie needs may
vary, albeit in shortened form (calorie needs vary). As discussed in
the proposed rule and emphasized by the comments, although 2,000
calories is an appropriate reference value, not everyone should eat
2,000 calories per day (76 FR 19192 at 19210). As a result, a factor
that FDA considered in establishing a succinct statement was whether
the succinct statement should be framed appropriately so that it is not
viewed as a recommendation for daily intake for every consumer because
individual calorie needs vary. For these reasons, we conclude that the
succinct statement should inform consumers that calorie needs vary.
(Comment 88) Several comments suggested specific revisions to the
succinct statement as follows:
``Most adults should eat less than 2,000 calories a day,
or less than 600 calories per meal.'' (A few comments cited New York
State Department of Health focus groups that showed participants
preferred per meal calorie messages over daily calorie messages. The
comments stated that consumers could not calculate the distribution of
a daily calorie budget between meals.)
``2,000 calories a day is an estimate of what adults need,
but individual needs vary.''
``Consumption of 2,000 calories each day is used as the
basis for general nutrition advice; however, individual daily calorie
needs may be higher or lower.''
``The recommended caloric intake for a day varies from
___-- to ___-- for adolescents and adults, from ___-- to ___-- for
school-age children, and from ___-- to ____-- for preschool children
above age 2 years, although diets may vary.''
``2,000 calories a day is used for general nutrition
advice, but calorie needs vary.''
``A 2,000 calorie daily diet is recommended for most
adults; however, individual needs vary depending on age, gender, and
physical activity.''
``To maintain a healthy diet, most adults need no more
than 2,000 calories per day. Caloric needs for most children and less
active adults range from 1,200 to 1,600 calories.'' One comment noted
that this statement reflects a separate range for children and
recommended that the statement with the range for children be on all
menus, not only children's menus.
(Response 88) We have revised Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B) to require
that the following succinct statement be posted on menus and menu
boards: 2,000 calories a day is used for general nutrition advice, but
calorie needs vary. Most of the suggested alternatives were variations
of the succinct statement we proposed. The alternative we selected
captures the principles discussed in the proposed rule in a more
concise fashion than the succinct statement that we proposed.
We disagree that the succinct statement should include the amount
of calories per meal because individuals can choose many different ways
to distribute their caloric intake throughout the day, and simply
dividing the total calories into three meals does not acknowledge this
variation or give consumers flexibility to distribute their own caloric
intake. In addition, section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act applies to
standard menu items offered for sale in a variety of covered
establishments, including establishments that do not serve foods that
may constitute meals, such as chain ice cream shops and chain pretzel
vendors.
We disagree that the succinct statement required on the menu or
menu board should include specific reference calorie intake values or
ranges for different ages or should specify the
[[Page 71207]]
types of factors (such as age, gender, and physical activity) that
impact the caloric needs of individuals. Such details are adequately
captured by the phrase ``calorie needs vary'' and would unnecessarily
increase the wordiness of the statement (i.e., make it less
``succinct''). Because the Nutrition Facts label on packaged foods has
been required for nearly 20 years, and the Nutrition Facts uses 2,000
calories as a reference amount, consumers are already familiar with
this single reference amount for daily calorie consumption for
individuals 4 years of age and older. However, as discussed later in
this document (see Comment 90 and Response 90), we are providing for
the optional use of a children's succinct statement on a menu or menu
board targeted to children as a substitute for, or in addition to, the
succinct statement.
(Comment 89) One comment noted that ``a 2,000 calorie diet'' may be
misleading without the terms ``daily'' or ``per day.'' The comment also
recommended adding a message that calorie content alone is not the only
nutritional factor to consider when choosing a diet for optimal health,
because a focus on calories may incorrectly lead consumers to choose
options that are nutrient poor instead of nutrient rich.
(Response 89) We agree that the succinct statement should provide
the context that 2,000 calories refers to a daily diet and the succinct
statement we are establishing in the final rule provides this context
by informing consumers that ``2,000 calories a day is used for general
nutrition advice.'' However, we disagree that the succinct statement
should state that calorie content alone is not the only nutritional
factor to consider. Sections 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I) and (II) of the FD&C
Act specifically require a covered establishment to disclose the number
of calories contained in standard menu items and post a ``succinct
statement concerning suggested daily caloric intake'' on menus or menu
boards. The succinct statement we are establishing in the final rule
adequately enables consumers to understand, in the context of a total
daily diet, the significance of the calorie information provided on the
menu or menu board, as required by sections 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I)(bb) and
(II)(bb) of the FD&C Act. By allowing consumers to compare the caloric
content of a standard menu item to the reference value of 2,000
calories a day, the succinct statement will enable consumers to make
informed and healthful dietary choices and highlight the potential
effects of additional calorie consumption throughout the day.
Further, as required by sections 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) and (IV) of
the FD&C Act, a covered establishment must also provide, in a written
form and upon consumer request, additional nutrition information, and
post on the menu or menu board a prominent, clear, and conspicuous
statement regarding the availability of this additional nutrition
information. Consumers therefore will have access to additional
nutrition information and are notified of the availability of this
information on the menu or menu board so that they are able to use the
information to make informed and healthful dietary choices.
D. Succinct Statement on Menus Targeted to Children
(Comment 90) In the proposed rule, we requested comment on whether
we should require a different succinct statement on menus that are
targeted to children (76 FR 19192 at 19210). One comment opposed a
separate succinct statement for children and a few comments recommended
such a statement. One comment recommended a separate children's
succinct statement if there is a separate children's menu. Another
comment recommended a different succinct statement for children's menus
to inform consumers that calorie needs differ because of age, sex, or
activity (the comment stated that calorie needs are about 1,000 to
1,400 calories for 2- to 3-year old children, and can be up to 2,200 to
2,700 calories for 14- to 18-year old active boys).
The comments suggested the following succinct statements for
children:
``Most children 4 to 8 years old need 1,500 calories a
day, or less than 500 calories a meal.''
``The daily calorie requirement for children 4 to 8 years
is about 1,500 calories, though individual needs vary.''
``Calorie needs for young children range from 1,000 to
2,000 calories per day and vary based on age and physical activity
levels.''
``Most children 4 to 8 years old need about 1,500 calories
a day including snacks, or fewer than 500 calories a meal.''
One comment suggested that we conduct consumer research on the
following succinct statements:
``Most children 4 to 8 years old need 1,500 calories a
day, or less than 500 calories a meal. Most children 2 to 3 years old
need 1,200 calories a day, or less than 400 calories a meal.''
``Children need smaller food portions than adults. Calorie
needs vary by child. For information on healthy eating, go to
www.choosemyplate.gov.''
``Children's calorie needs vary by age and the individual
child's nutrition and health status. Please consult your child's
physician or health care professional.''
(Response 90) We have revised Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B) to provide
for the optional use of either of the following children's succinct
statements on menus and menu boards targeted to children as a
substitute for, or in addition to, the succinct statement:
1,200 to 1,400 calories a day is used for general
nutrition advice for children ages 4 to 8 years, but calorie needs
vary.
1,200 to 1,400 calories a day is used for general
nutrition advice for children ages 4 to 8 years and 1,400 to 2,000
calories a day for children 9 to 13 years, but calorie needs vary.
Under Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B), a covered establishment may use one
of these children's succinct statements on a menu or menu board
targeted to children (e.g., on a standalone children's menu or menu
board, or in the children's section of a general menu or menu board) as
a substitute for, or in addition to, the succinct statement required in
Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B). To ensure consistency, a covered
establishment that includes a children's succinct statement on a menu
or menu board may only use the children's succinct statements listed in
Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B). If the covered establishment chooses not to
use the children's succinct statements listed in Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(B), it must use the succinct statement required in
Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B).
We realize that many covered establishments offer food selections
that may only be purchased for children under a certain age specified
by the covered establishment (e.g., under 9 years). Some of these
children's food selections are offered on separate children's menus,
while others are included on the general menu or menu board along with
items for all consumers. We have concluded that covered establishments
should have the option of providing a succinct statement more relevant
to children on menus and menu boards that provide food selections
targeted to children. Childhood obesity is an important public health
concern, and a succinct statement specifically targeted to the calorie
needs of children may enable parents and children to make informed
dietary choices.
We considered whether covered establishments should be required to
provide both the 2,000-calorie succinct statement and an additional
children's succinct statement on menus and menu boards. Sections
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I)(bb)
[[Page 71208]]
and (II)(bb) of the FD&C Act require that covered establishments post
on menus and menu boards ``a succinct statement concerning suggested
daily caloric intake . . . designed to enable the public to understand,
in the context of a total daily diet, the significance of the [calorie]
information'' provided on menus and menu boards. (Emphasis added.)
Therefore, it is reasonable to interpret these sections to only require
one succinct statement on menus and menu boards, and we are providing
for the optional use by a covered establishment of a children's
succinct statement on menus or menu boards targeted to children.
Accordingly, the rule does not require that a covered establishment
that includes a children's succinct statement on a menu or menu board
targeted to children also include the succinct statement required by
Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B) on that menu or menu board.
To develop the children's succinct statement, we used the 2010
Dietary Guidelines as the reference for the estimated calorie needs of
children (Ref. 3). The 2010 Dietary Guidelines are based on the review
of scientific evidence by a committee of scientific experts. The 2010
Dietary Guidelines provide information and advice for choosing a
healthy eating pattern that focuses on nutrient-dense foods and
beverages, and that contributes to achieving and maintaining a healthy
weight. One goal of the 2010 Dietary Guidelines is to aid policymakers
in designing and carrying out nutrition-related programs. As such, the
2010 Dietary Guidelines are well suited to serve as the reference for
the estimated calorie needs of children for the purpose of this rule.
As the comments noted, there is broad variability in the daily
caloric needs of children, and this variability is captured in table 2-
3 in the 2010 Dietary Guidelines. Table 2-3 reports the estimated
calorie needs per day by age, gender, and physical activity level. The
relevant data and information in table 2-3, which we used to develop
the children's succinct statement, covers four age groups (ages 2 to 3
years, 4 to 8 years, 9 to 13 years, and 14 to 18 years) and three
activity levels (sedentary, moderately active, and active). Male and
female children are grouped together in the group aged 2 to 3 years but
reported separately in the groups aged 4 to 8 years, 9 to 13 years, and
14 to 18 years. Although most comments suggesting specific wording for
the children's succinct statement focused on the calorie needs of
children ages 8 and younger, some covered establishments may offer food
selections targeted to somewhat older children--e.g., for ``kids under
12.'' Therefore, we focused on estimated caloric needs for children
aged 4 to 8 and children aged 9 to 13. We did not focus on the
estimated caloric needs for the youngest age group (aged 2 to 3 years)
and the oldest age group (aged 14 to 18 years). Although one comment
suggested that we include the youngest age group (aged 2 to 3 years),
we considered a number of factors and ultimately decided not to include
the youngest age group (aged 2 to 3 years) and the oldest age group
(aged 14 to 18 years). First, we considered space on menus and menu
boards, the types of standard menu items offered in covered
establishments, and different practices among covered establishments.
Second, we were concerned that a children's succinct statement with
four age groups would cross a reasonable threshold for one of the
principles governing the succinct statement--i.e., that it be succinct.
Third, we concluded that covered establishments might be deterred from
voluntarily posting a children's succinct statement on menus and menu
boards if such statement was not succinct. Fourth, children's menus are
typically not targeted to the youngest and the oldest age groups.
In developing the specific language of the two options for the
children's succinct statement, we considered the principles that apply
to the succinct statement, the comments, data and information discussed
in the proposed rule, and the wording established in Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(B) for the succinct statement. As with the succinct
statement, we concluded that the children's succinct statement should
be directed to an estimated daily caloric need rather than the amount
of calories per meal.
In contrast to the succinct statement, which uses a single
reference value (2,000 calories) regardless of age group, we concluded
that the children's succinct statement needed to both reflect a range
of calories and link that range of calories to a specific age group to
adequately enable parents and possibly some children to understand the
significance of the calorie information in the context of their total
daily diet. We focused on estimated caloric needs for sedentary
children and did not focus on additional calories consumed by active
children. This is consistent with our approach to the succinct
statement, where the 2,000 calorie daily diet does not take into
account additional calories consumed by persons such as athletes or
persons with a regular fitness regime. As with the succinct statement,
the children's succinct statement addresses the differential caloric
consumption associated with activity and other factors by informing
consumers that ``calorie needs vary.''
Table 2-3 in the 2010 Dietary Guidelines reports the same estimated
daily caloric needs for sedentary males and females aged 4 to 8 years
(i.e., 1,200 to 1,400 calories) and, thus, we selected 1,200 to 1,400
calories as the range to include for children aged 4 to 8 years in each
of the two options listed in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B) for the
children's succinct statements. Table 2-3 in the 2010 Dietary
Guidelines reports different estimated daily caloric needs for
sedentary males aged 9 to 13 years (i.e., 1,600 to 2,000 calories) and
sedentary females aged 9 to 13 years (i.e., 1,400 to 1,600 calories).
For the option listed in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B) for a children's
succinct statement that includes the estimated caloric needs of
children aged 9 to 13 years, we simply reported the range as the lowest
estimated caloric needs for sedentary males and females aged 9 to 13
years (i.e., 1,400 calories for females) and the highest estimated
caloric needs for sedentary males and females aged 9 to 13 years (i.e.,
2,000 calories for males). Thus, the listed option that includes the
group aged 9 to 13 years reports the range of estimated caloric needs
as 1,400 to 2,000 calories.
(Comment 91) One comment suggested that children's menus may
benefit from a traffic light concept (e.g., green, yellow, and red
signage) that indicates which foods should be eaten more or less
frequently.
(Response 91) Section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act generally
requires covered establishments to provide calorie declarations for
standard menu items on menus, menu boards, and signs adjacent to self-
service food and food on display, and other nutrition information in a
written form. Section 403(q)(5)(H) also requires covered establishments
to post on menus and menu boards a succinct statement concerning daily
caloric intake and a statement regarding the availability of the
written nutrition information. FDA is establishing requirements to
implement only what is specified in section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C
Act and information that is necessary for the efficient enforcement of
such requirements.
E. Requirements for the Succinct Statement To Be Prominent, Clear, and
Conspicuous
Proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(i)(2)(B)(1) would require that the
succinct statement be posted prominently and in a clear and conspicuous
manner in a type size no
[[Page 71209]]
smaller than the smallest calorie declaration appearing on the same
menu or menu board and in the same color or in a color at least as
conspicuous as the calorie declarations and with the same contrasting
background as the calorie declarations. In the proposed rule, we
recognized that some restaurants and similar retail food establishments
may have menu boards that list very few items in very large font. We
asked for comment on whether the succinct statement and statement of
availability should be tied to the type size for some menus that have
few items and that may be listed in large type size (76 FR 19192 at
19211).
In the following paragraphs, we discuss comments on this proposed
provision. After considering these comments, we are:
Revising the proposed provision to provide additional
flexibility for the contrasting background of the succinct statement;
Making a conforming editorial change to the requirement
for the color used for the succinct statement for grammatical
consistency; and
Making an editorial correction for clarity to insert ``the
type size of'' between ``no smaller than'' and ``the smallest calorie
declaration.''
(Comment 92) One comment suggested that the size of the succinct
statement be ``no smaller than the menu description or what any
ordinary person can read without any trouble.'' Due to space
limitations on menus, this comment considered that the succinct
statement should not be tied to the type size on menus that list
relatively few items that are listed in very large type size. One
comment asked us to permit a type size smaller than the smallest
calorie declaration appearing on the menu or menu board due to the
limited space on menu boards and the amount of text required to be
included in the statement. Another comment maintained that the succinct
statement takes up too much space and would force covered
establishments to decrease the type size used for calories. A few
comments suggested that we require the succinct statement to be no
smaller than the type size most frequently used throughout the menu and
in the same color and contrast, or in color and contrast at least as
conspicuous and contrasting as the color and contrast most frequently
used throughout the menu for the names of standard menu items.
(Response 92) We agree, in part, and disagree, in part, with these
comments. As a practical matter, the type size of the succinct
statement would, as requested by the comments, likely be no smaller
than the menu description or what any ordinary person can read without
any trouble, because Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B)(1) requires that the type
size for the succinct statement be no smaller than the smallest type
size of any calorie declaration and, under Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1),
the type size of the calorie declaration would be in a type size no
smaller than the type size of the name or the price of the associated
standard menu item, whichever is smaller. Because consumers typically
view the name and/or price of a standard menu item to place an order,
our decision to anchor the type size of the succinct statement to the
type size of information already on the menu or menu board acts, in
essence, as an objective and measurable performance standard and helps
ensure, among other things, that the succinct statement will be clear
and conspicuous to consumers and posted prominently, as required by
sections 403(q)(5)(H)(ii) and 403(f) of the FD&C Act.
We disagree that the type size, color, and contrast should be tied
to the type size, color, and contrast most frequently used throughout
the menu. Section 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(1) provides flexibility for the
type size, color, and contrasting background used for the calorie
declaration (and, accordingly, Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B)(1) provides
flexibility for the type size, color, and contrasting background used
for the succinct statement), by anchoring these three parameters to the
name or price of standard menu items. The suggestion in this comment
would establish an additional burden for a covered establishment,
particularly when a covered establishment has more than one menu or
menu board, to determine the type size most frequently used. The
comment provided no basis, such as apparent benefit for either the
restaurant or the consumer, to justify this additional burden.
However, we agree that we should provide additional flexibility for
the contrasting background of the succinct statement by permitting the
statement to be in a background at least as contrasting as that used
for the calorie declarations. Consequently, we have revised Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(B)(1) to do so. We also are making a conforming
editorial change to the grammatical construction of the requirement for
the color used for the succinct statement to match the grammatical
construction of the revised requirement for the contrasting background
used for the succinct statement. With these changes, Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(B)(1) requires that the succinct statement be posted
prominently and in a clear and conspicuous manner in a type size no
smaller than the smallest type size of any calorie declaration
appearing on the same menu or menu board and in the same color or in a
color at least as conspicuous as that used for the calorie
declarations, and with the same contrasting background or a background
at least as contrasting as that used for the calorie declarations
(emphasis added).
F. Placement of the Succinct Statement on Menus and Menu Boards
For menus, proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B)(2) would require that
the succinct statement appear on the bottom of each page of the menu.
On menu pages that also bear the statement regarding the availability
of the written nutrition information required in Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(C), proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B)(2) also would
require that the succinct statement appear directly above the statement
of availability required in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C). For menu boards,
proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B)(3) would require that the succinct
statement appear on the bottom of the menu board, immediately above the
statement of availability required in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C).
In the following paragraphs, we discuss comments on these proposed
provisions. After considering these comments, we have revised the
proposed provisions for placement of the succinct statement to provide
additional flexibility for the succinct statement to appear immediately
above, below, or beside the statement of availability of the written
nutrition information.
(Comment 93) Several comments agreed with the proposed placement
requirements for the succinct statement. One comment recommended that
covered establishments be permitted to put the succinct statement on a
separate sign near the menu boards because of space constraints.
(Response 93) We are not revising the rule to allow a covered
establishment to post the succinct statement on a separate sign near a
menu board as suggested by the comment. First, we are concerned that if
a covered establishment were to post the succinct statement on a
separate sign, the statement would not be posted prominently, and
therefore, consumers would not be able to use the statement to
understand, in the context of a total daily diet, the significance of
the calorie information that is provided on the menu board. Second,
this rule provides flexibility regarding posting calorie declarations
and other information on
[[Page 71210]]
menus and menu boards, including flexibility regarding the size of the
calorie declarations and placement of the statement of availability of
additional written nutrition information, such that covered
establishments have a number of ways to satisfy the requirements based
on their menus and menu boards and business operations. Lastly,
sections 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I)(bb) and (II)(bb) of the FD&C Act require
that covered establishments post the succinct statement on menus and
menu boards prominently and in a clear and conspicuous manner. The
comment's request would be inconsistent with the express requirements
of sections 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I)(bb) and (II)(bb) of the FD&C Act. Later
in this document, we discuss the requirements for placement of the
succinct statement on small signs for self-service food and food on
display that may meet the definition of a ``menu'' or ``menu board'' in
section 403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of the FD&C Act, in that such signs are the
primary writings of the establishment from which consumers make order
selections (see the discussion of Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(B) in section
XVII.G).
(Comment 94) A few comments expressed concern about the space that
the succinct statement would take on menus and the proposed requirement
that the statement appear on every page, in light of other statements
on menus (such as the advisory statements in our Food Code, footnotes
regarding daily availability of various menu items, and footnotes
referencing ``net weight before cooking''). The comments asserted that
menus would become cluttered. One comment asserted that the message we
want to convey would ``get lost in the noise at the bottom of each
page.'' The comments agreed that the succinct statement should appear
at the bottom of menus and menu boards, but asked us to clarify that it
would appear only once on each menu or menu board and not on each page
or panel. The comments recommended that for menus, the succinct
statement must appear either on the first or last page. One comment
suggested that the succinct statement need only appear on one panel of
the main menu board that is visible at all times to consumers.
One comment asserted that because space is finite, adding the
required succinct statement to multiple pages of a menu would lead to
removal of ``optional information,'' such as some menu offerings. This
comment expressed concern that menu items, such as seafood dishes, will
be dropped from menus to make room for this additional information to
appear on each page of the menu. The comment noted that the 2010
Dietary Guidelines have outlined the importance of including seafood in
a healthy diet, and that roughly 67 percent of the seafood consumed in
the United States is consumed away from the home.
(Response 94) We disagree that the succinct statement needs to
appear only once on menus. In particular, we are concerned that for
large multi-paged menus, consumers may not read the entire menu and
instead may turn to a specific section of the menu (e.g., the section
for burgers and sandwiches). Unless the succinct statement is on the
page for that particular section, it is possible that consumers could
miss the succinct statement and therefore be unable to use the
statement ``to understand, in the context of a daily diet, the
significance of the caloric information that is provided on the menu,''
as specified by section 403(q)(5)(H)(I)(bb) of the FD&C Act. Therefore,
in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B)(2), we are requiring the succinct statement
to appear on the bottom of each page of the menu.
However, we agree that the succinct statement needs to appear only
once on a menu board, including a menu board consisting of more than
one panel in one physical location (a multi-paneled menu board). For
the purpose of this rule, we consider such a multi-paneled menu board
to be a single menu board, provided that the entire multi-paneled menu
board is visible to consumers when consumers are placing order
selections for the standard menu items listed on such menu board. A
multi-paneled menu board is different from a menu with multiple pages
because all panels are visible to consumers when they place an order,
regardless of the specific panel containing the menu item the consumer
selects. A succinct statement on a single panel of a multi-paneled
board is likely to be clear and conspicuous to the consumer and posted
prominently, provided that the type size, color, and background of the
succinct statement meet the applicable requirements in Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(B)(1) and the entire multi-paneled menu board is
visible to consumers when consumers are placing order selections for
the standard menu items listed on such menu board.
Regarding one comment's assertion that requiring the succinct
statement to appear on each page of a menu could lead to the removal
from a menu or menu board of information that a covered establishment
views as optional, we note that a decision to remove ``optional
information'' or to drop certain menu items from menus belongs to the
covered establishment. The succinct statement is necessary on the
bottom of each page of a menu that includes standard menu items and
calorie information because the succinct statement is designed to
enable consumers ``to understand, in the context of a total daily diet,
the significance of the caloric information that is provided on the
menu,'' as required by section 403(q)(5)(H)(I)(bb) of the FD&C Act.
However, we have also considered the space on menus and therefore
provided flexibility where appropriate. For example, in addressing
comments on the statement of availability of written nutrition
information, we concluded that this statement of availability need
appear only once on a menu or menu board. In reaching that conclusion,
we considered the goals of the succinct statement and the statement of
availability, which are different (see the discussion of Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(C) in section XV.C).
(Comment 95) A few comments maintained that the proposed order of
the succinct statement (i.e., in relation to the statement of
availability of additional written nutrition information) limits
flexibility. The comments asserted that both statements could be just
as clear and conspicuous if they were placed in some other way.
(Response 95) We agree with the comments, and are providing
flexibility for the placement of the succinct statement in relation to
the statement of availability of the written nutrition information.
Consequently, we have revised Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B)(2) and
(b)(2)(i)(B)(3) to provide that on menu pages that also bear the
statement of availability and on menu boards, the succinct statement
must appear immediately above, below, or beside the statement of
availability. In addition, as an editorial change for consistency
throughout Sec. 101.11, we have revised the cross-references within
Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B)(2) and (b)(2)(i)(B)(3) referring to the
statement of availability to read ``the statement required by paragraph
(b)(2)(i)(C) of this section'' (i.e., Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C)). With
these changes, Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B)(2) requires that for menus, the
succinct statement must appear on the bottom of each page of the menu.
On menu pages that also bear the statement required by Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(C), the succinct statement must appear immediately
above, below, or beside the statement required by Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(C). In addition, with these changes Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(B)(3) requires that for menu boards, the succinct
statement must appear on the bottom of the menu board, immediately
above, below, or
[[Page 71211]]
beside the statement required by Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C).
XV. Comments and FDA Response on Proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C)--
Statement That Must Be on Menus and Menu Boards About Availability of
Written Nutrition Information
A. Proposed Wording of the Statement of Availability
Proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C) would require the following
statement regarding the availability of the additional written
nutrition information required in Sec. 101.11(b)(3)(i) on all forms of
the menu or menu board: Additional nutrition information available upon
request. In a correction document, we corrected the regulatory
designation of the requirement for the statement of availability to be
Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii) rather than Sec. 101.11(b)(3)(i) (76 FR 30050
at 30051).
One comment supported the wording of the statement of availability
and no comments opposed the wording. We are finalizing the proposed
wording of the statement of availability without change.
B. Requirements for the Statement of Availability To Be Prominent and
Conspicuous
Proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C)(1) would require that the
statement of availability be posted prominently and in a clear and
conspicuous manner in a type size no smaller than the smallest calorie
declaration appearing on the same menu or menu board and in the same
color or in a color at least as conspicuous as the caloric
declarations, and with the same contrasting background as the caloric
declarations.
In the following paragraphs, we discuss comments on this proposed
provision. After considering these comments, we are:
Revising the proposed provision to provide additional
flexibility for the contrasting background used for the statement of
availability;
Making a conforming editorial change to the requirement
for the color used for the statement of availability for grammatical
consistency; and
Making an editorial correction for clarity to insert
``type size of any'' between ``no smaller than the smallest'' and
``calorie declaration.''
(Comment 96) One comment recommended that the type size of the
statement of availability ``be no smaller than the menu description or
what any ordinary person can read without any trouble.'' Some comments
recommended that we permit a smaller type size for the statement of
availability. A few comments suggested that we require the statement of
availability to be in a type size no smaller than the type size most
frequently used throughout the menu. Some comments suggested that the
statement of availability be in the same color or a color at least as
conspicuous as the color most frequently used throughout the menu for
the names of standard menu items and with the same contrasting
background or a contrasting background at least as contrasting as the
background most frequently used throughout the menu for the names of
standard menu items.
(Response 96) These comments on the proposed requirements for type
size, color, and contrasting background of the statement of
availability are analogous to certain comments on the proposed
requirements for the succinct statement (see Comment 92), and our
response to these comments is analogous to our response to Comment 92
(see Response 92). Specifically, we disagree that a smaller type size
should be used for the statement of availability for the reasons
discussed in Response 92. We disagree that the type size, color, and
contrasting background of the statement of availability should be tied
to the type size, color, and contrasting background most frequently
used throughout the menu for the names of standard menu items for the
reasons discussed in Response 92. However, we agree that we should
provide additional flexibility for the contrasting background of the
statement of availability by permitting the statement to be in a
background at least as contrasting as that used for the calorie
declarations. Consequently, we have revised Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C)(1)
to do so. In addition, we are making a conforming editorial change to
the grammatical construction of the requirement used for the color of
the statement of availability to match the grammatical construction of
the revised requirement for the contrasting background used for the
statement of availability. We also are making an editorial correction
for clarity to insert ``type size of any'' between ``no smaller than
the smallest'' and ``calorie declaration.'' With these changes, Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(C)(1) requires that the statement of availability be
posted prominently and in a clear and conspicuous manner in a type size
no smaller than the smallest type size of any calorie declaration
appearing on the same menu or menu board and in the same color or in a
color at least as conspicuous as that used for the caloric
declarations, and with the same contrasting background or a background
at least as contrasting as that used for the caloric declarations.
(Emphasis added.) We conclude that the type size, color, and
contrasting background requirements for the statement of availability
in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C)(1) will help ensure that the statement of
availability is prominent, clear, and conspicuous, as required by
sections 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(IV) and 403(f) of the FD&C Act.
C. Placement of the Statement of Availability
For menus, proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C)(2) would require that
the statement of availability appear on the bottom of the first page
with menu items. For menus with more than two pages, it would also
require that the statement of availability appear either at the bottom
of every page with menu items (proposed Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(C)(2)(i)), or at the bottom of only the first page with
menu items, as long as a symbol (e.g., asterisk) clearly referring to
the required statement appearing on the first page of the menu follows
the term `Calories' or `Cal,' where the term first appears on each page
after the page with the statement (proposed Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(C)(2)(ii)). For menu boards, proposed Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(C)(3) would require that the statement of availability
appear on the bottom of the menu board immediately above or below the
succinct statement. In the following paragraphs, we discuss comments on
these proposed provisions. After considering these comments, we are:
Revising proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C)(2) to require
that the statement of availability appear on the first page of a menu
with menu items and to delete the proposed provisions that would have
required the statement of availability, or a symbol referring to the
statement of availability, on subsequent menu pages;
Revising both proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C)(2) and
(b)(2)(i)(C)(3) to provide that the statement of availability must
appear immediately above, below, or beside the succinct statement; and
Making additional editorial changes for consistency.
(Comment 97) Some comments supported the proposed requirements for
placement of the statement of availability. A few comments disagreed
with our proposal that a symbol (e.g., asterisk) can be used to refer
to the statement of availability on the first page, if the statement
does not appear on every page. These comments considered that requiring
the placement
[[Page 71212]]
of asterisks on each subsequent page in reference to a disclosure on
the first page with menu items would only confuse a reader who, upon
seeing an asterisk, has been trained since elementary school to look
for the associated footnote at the bottom of the page on which the
asterisk appears.
A few comments expressed concern about the space that the statement
of availability would take in light of other statements on menus (such
as consumer advisories), and recommended that the statement of
availability appear only once on the menu, either on the first or last
page. The comments agreed that the statement of availability should
appear at the bottom of menus and menu boards, but recommended that we
require that the statement appear only once on menus and menu boards,
and not on each page or panel. One comment recommended that covered
establishments be able to put the statement of availability on a
separate sign near the menu boards.
(Response 97) We are not revising the rule to allow a covered
establishment to post the statement of availability on a separate sign
near a menu board as suggested by the comment. This comment is
analogous to a comment on the proposed requirements for the placement
of the succinct statement (see Comment 93), and our response to this
comment is analogous to our response to Comment 93 (see Response 93).
Section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(IV) of the FD&C Act requires that covered
establishments post a prominent, clear, and conspicuous statement of
availability on menus and menu boards. The comment's request is
inconsistent with the express statutory direction. Later in this
document, we discuss the requirements for placement of the statement of
availability on small signs for self-service food and food on display
that may meet the definition of a ``menu'' or ``menu board'' in section
403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of the FD&C Act, in that such signs are the primary
writings of the establishment from which consumers make order
selections (see the discussion of Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(B) in section
XVII.G).
We agree that an asterisk referring to a statement on the first
page of a menu may confuse consumers. We also agree that the statement
of availability only needs to appear on one page of a menu. Unlike the
succinct statement, which is designed to enable the public to
understand the significance of the caloric information in the context
of a total daily diet and is therefore needed on each page of a menu
that includes standard menu items and calorie information, the
statement of availability informs consumers that there is additional
written nutrition information available on the premises of the covered
establishment upon request. We believe that posting the statement of
availability on one page of a menu will be adequate to achieve that
goal. Consequently, we have revised Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C)(2) to
require that the statement of availability appear on the first page of
a menu with menu items and to delete the proposed provisions that would
have required the statement of availability, or an asterisk referring
to the statement of availability, on subsequent menu pages.
(Comment 98) A few comments maintained that the proposed order of
the statement of availability in relation to the succinct statement
limits flexibility. The comments contended that both statements would
be just as clear and conspicuous if they were to appear in some other
position such as side by side or in some other place on the page.
(Response 98) For menu boards, we note that there was an
inconsistency in the proposed rule between the preamble and the
codified regarding the proposed order of the statement of availability
in relation to the succinct statement. According to the preamble, the
statement of availability would have been required to appear
immediately below the succinct statement (76 FR 19192 at 19211), while
in the codified text, proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C)(3) would
require that the statement of availability appear on the bottom of the
menu board immediately above or below the succinct statement. For both
menus and menu boards, we agree with the comments and are providing
additional flexibility for the placement of the statement of
availability of the written nutrition information in relation to the
succinct statement. We have revised proposed Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(C)(2) and (b)(2)(i)(C)(3) to provide that for menus and
menu boards, the statement of availability must appear immediately
above, below, or beside the succinct statement. For clarity and
consistency, we are specifying the placement of the statement of
availability in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C)(2) in relation to the succinct
statement even though proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C)(2) did not do
so.
XVI. Comments and FDA Response on Proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)--
Nutrition Information That Must Be Made Available in Written Form
A. Required Nutrients
Proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii) would require, in relevant part,
that:
Certain nutrition information for a standard menu item be
available in written form on the premises of the restaurant or similar
retail food establishment and provided to the customer upon request;
The nutrition information be presented in the order listed
and using the measurements listed, except as provided in Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B);
Rounding of these nutrients be in compliance with Sec.
101.9(c); and
Covered establishments include the following nutrition
information in the written form, as specified in Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(ii)(A)(1) through (b)(2)(ii)(A)(11):
1. Total number of calories derived from any source (cal)
2. Total number of calories derived from the total fat (fat cal)
3. Total fat (g)
4. Saturated fat (g)
5. Trans fat (g)
6. Cholesterol (mg)
7. Sodium (mg)
8. Total carbohydrate (g)
9. Dietary fiber (g)
10. Sugars (g)
11. Protein (g)
In the following paragraphs, we discuss comments on this proposed
provision. After considering these comments, we have revised the
provision to:
Replace the terms ``total number of calories derived from
any source'' and ``total number of calories derived from the total
fat'' with the terms ``total calories'' and ``calories from fat'';
Provide that covered establishments may use the
abbreviations allowed for Nutrition Facts for certain packaged foods in
Sec. 101.9(j)(13)(ii)(B); and
Clarify that the information must be provided on the
premises of the ``covered establishment'' rather than the ``restaurant
or similar retail food establishment'' (see the discussion in section
VI.I).
(Comment 99) One comment suggested that we come up with a standard
list of abbreviations for the nutrients for consistency and consumer
understanding. This comment pointed out that we proposed ``Cal'' as an
abbreviation for calories but did not suggest abbreviations for the
other nutrients.
(Response 99) We agree with this comment. Providing abbreviations
for the written nutrition information will improve the consistency of
the written nutrition information provided by different covered
establishments. Therefore, we have revised Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii) to
provide that covered establishments may use the abbreviations allowed
for Nutrition
[[Page 71213]]
Facts for certain packaged foods in Sec. 101.9(j)(13)(ii)(B) for the
nutrient information required to be disclosed in the written nutrition
information under section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act. For
example, a covered establishment may use ``sat fat'' for saturated fat
and ``cholest'' for cholesterol.
(Comment 100) One comment suggested that ``total number of calories
derived from any source'' (required under section 403(q)(1)(C) of the
FD&C Act) be changed to ``total number of calories,'' which, according
to the comment, is clear and concise.
(Response 100) We agree with the comment's suggestion that the term
``total number of calories derived from any source'' can be revised to
be more concise. Specifically, we are replacing the term ``total number
of calories derived from any source'' (which had been specified by
section 403(q)(1)(C) of the FD&C Act) with ``total calories.'' This
change is consistent with how the ``total number of calories derived
from any source'' is disclosed in the Nutrition Facts under Sec.
101.9. For consistency, we are making an analogous revision to replace
the term ``total number of calories derived from the total fat'' with
``calories from fat.'' This change is consistent with section
403(q)(1)(C) of the FD&C Act, and the declaration of ``total calories''
and ``calories from fat'' will be consistent with the terms used for
nutrition labeling for packaged food (see Sec. 101.9(c)).
(Comment 101) Several comments supported the proposed nutrients
that must be listed in the written nutrition information. Some comments
suggested that the written nutrition information also include the
weight in grams of the standard menu item. These comments considered
that the weight of the standard menu item is an important indicator of
portion size and allows consumers to compare similar products more
easily, and that including the weight of the standard menu item would
be consistent with the Nutrition Facts for packaged foods.
(Response 101) We disagree that we should require that the written
nutrition information include the weight in grams for each standard
menu item. Section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act specifically
requires covered establishments to provide in a written form, available
on the premises of the covered establishment and to the consumer upon
request, the nutrition information required under clauses (C) and (D)
of section 403(q)(1) of the FD&C Act. We are only requiring that
covered establishments provide in the written nutrition information the
nutrition information specified in section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the
FD&C Act, along with trans fat, for standard menu items as usually
prepared and offered for sale, or in the case of standard menu items
that are self-service food or food on display, by displayed food item
or per serving. Although the weight of a standard menu item may give
some indication of portion sizes, it does not necessarily correlate
with how many calories are contained in a food or with what nutrients
are in a food. For example, some foods may weigh less than other
similar foods but have more calories because of the source of the
calories. At this time, we conclude that the written nutrition
information required by Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(A) will allow consumers
to make comparisons between menu items and help inform their dietary
choices. A covered establishment may voluntarily provide the weight of
the standard menu item in the written nutrition information. We also
note that for some foods, the weight is already provided as part of the
name or description of the standard menu item on the menu or menu
board, e.g., a 10-ounce steak versus a 12-ounce steak.
(Comment 102) One comment recommended that the written nutrition
information include calcium, potassium, and phosphorus because patients
with kidney disease may have diabetes, hypertension, or both. The
comment suggested that covered establishments give information on the
need to limit these nutrients and to limit sodium.
(Response 102) We disagree with these comments. Section
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act requires in relevant part that
covered establishments provide, in written form, the nutrition
information required under clauses (C) and (D) of section 403(q)(1) of
the FD&C Act. Sections 403(q)(1)(C) and (D) of the FD&C Act do not
require the disclosure of calcium, potassium, and phosphorus in food
labeling. Section 403(q)(5)(H)(vi) of the FD&C Act provides that ``[i]f
the Secretary determines that a nutrient, other than a nutrient
required under [section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act], should
be disclosed for the purpose of providing information to assist
consumers in maintaining healthy dietary practices, the Secretary may
require, by regulation, disclosure of such nutrient in the written form
required under [section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act].''
However, the comment did not provide any supporting information showing
that the disclosure of calcium, potassium, and phosphorus in the
written nutrition information will assist consumers in maintaining
healthy dietary practices. At this time, we conclude that the nutrition
information specified in section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act,
along with trans fat information, is sufficient to assist consumers in
maintaining healthy dietary practices within the context of section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act. If we determine that other nutrient
information should be disclosed in the written form required under
section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act, we will make changes to
such requirements as appropriate. We note that consumers who have a
particular disease or health-related condition may be able to use the
written nutrition information to follow advice they have received from
a health care professional concerning dietary practices relevant to
their conditions.
(Comment 103) One comment asked us to permit voluntary declaration
of micronutrients such as vitamins and minerals.
(Response 103) We would not object to the voluntary declaration of
vitamins and minerals that may be declared on the Nutrition Facts Label
of a packaged food (see Sec. 101.9(c)(8)(ii)), provided that the
declaration is truthful and not misleading, as required by section
403(a)(1) of the FD&C Act.
(Comment 104) One comment recommended that if future changes are
made to the Nutrition Facts of packaged foods, then the requirements
for the written nutrition information should be made consistent with
such changes.
(Response 104) If future changes are made to the requirements
regarding the Nutrition Facts for packaged foods, we will consider
whether changes should also be made to the requirements regarding the
written nutrition information required by this rule.
(Comment 105) One comment recommended that the nutrient values in
the written nutrition information be reviewed and updated yearly or
when changes are made.
(Response 105) We agree, in part, and disagree, in part, with this
comment. Under Sec. 101.11(c), a covered establishment must have a
reasonable basis for its nutrient content declarations. Under section
403(a)(1) of the FD&C Act, covered establishments must also ensure that
their nutrient content declarations are truthful and not misleading. To
do so, a covered establishment would need to update the written
nutrition information when certain changes are made, e.g., as a result
of a recipe change that affects the nutrient content of a standard menu
item. However, we see no reason why nutrition information for a
standard
[[Page 71214]]
menu item must be updated on a recurring basis (such as yearly) when
there are no changes to the standard menu item or its method of
preparation.
(Comment 106) One comment recommended that covered establishments
provide references for their nutrient values to consumers on request.
(Response 106) We are not requiring a covered establishment to
provide supporting references for the nutrient values in its written
nutrition information to consumers upon request. Section 403(q)(5)(H)
of the FD&C Act generally requires covered establishments to provide
calorie and other nutrition information for standard menu items.
Further, as required by section 403(q)(5)(H)(iv) of the FD&C Act, a
covered establishment must have a reasonable basis for its nutrient
content disclosures. Covered establishments must also ensure that their
nutrient content disclosures are truthful and not misleading in
accordance with section 403(a)(1) of the FD&C Act. Section 403(q)(5)(H)
of the FD&C Act does not require that covered establishments provide
supporting references for their nutrient content disclosures to
consumers. However, we would not object if a covered establishment
provides this information voluntarily.
(Comment 107) Several comments generally agreed that trans fat must
be included with the written nutrition information. Some comments
expressed the view that providing information about trans fat is
warranted because of concern with partially hydrogenated vegetable
oils.
Comments that opposed including trans fat in the written nutrition
information generally focused on the distinction between ``industrial
trans fat'' (i.e., trans fat chemically manufactured from vegetable
oils) and trans fat naturally occurring in food such as ruminant
animals. Some comments expressed concern that listing such naturally
occurring trans fat in the written nutrition information, particularly
when it is present in small amounts, could lead to problems in States
and localities that have banned the use of trans fat in restaurants, or
could lead consumers to think that a covered establishment is breaking
State or local law. These comments stated that eliminating the
requirement to list trans fat in the written nutrition information, or
limiting the listing for trans fat to industrial trans fat, would
prevent such problems. Other comments expressed the view that the
health effects of naturally occurring trans fat from ruminants may be
different from the health effects of trans fat chemically manufactured
from vegetable oils. Some comments stated that, in Europe, scientists
and regulators have not singled out ruminant trans fat for pejorative
labeling. Some comments stated that naturally occurring trans fats
derived from high fat ruminant animal products (namely, beef and dairy
products) are converted to conjugated linoleic acid, which the comments
reported have been associated with health benefits. These comments
considered that industrial and naturally occurring trans fat should
therefore be distinguished on food nutrition labels and menus to give
consumers a more accurate assessment of nutritional quality.
(Response 107) We disagree that we should require the declaration
of only ``industrial trans fat'' in the written nutrition information.
For purposes of the current Nutrition Facts label, our regulatory
definitions of nutrients (such as for trans fat, total fat, or
saturated fat) have traditionally been based on chemical definitions.
For example, under Sec. 101.9(c)(2)(ii), the declaration of nutrition
information on the label and in labeling of a food must contain a
statement of the number of grams of trans fat in a serving, defined as
the sum of all unsaturated fatty acids that contain one or more
isolated (i.e., nonconjugated) double bonds in a trans configuration.
Analytically, this definition captures all trans fatty acid isomers
that have isolated bonds, regardless of the origin of the trans fatty
acid. For example, vaccenic acid (one of the most abundant trans fatty
acids in ruminant fat) is included in the chemical definition of trans
fat. Therefore, listing the sum of all unsaturated fatty acids that
contain one or more isolated double bonds in a trans configuration
regardless of the source of such trans fat is consistent with the
requirements for declaring the amount of trans fat in a packaged food
on the label for such food (see Sec. 101.9(c)(2)(ii)). Further, in the
rulemaking to require the declaration of trans fat, we responded to
comments regarding functional or metabolic aspects of trans fatty acids
(e.g., their metabolic transformations to other types of fatty acids)
rather than on their actual chemical structures, including potential
differences between trans fat from industrial sources and trans fat
from ruminant sources. We concluded that we should define trans fat
based on its chemical definition rather than any functional attributes
(68 FR 41434 at 41461, July 11, 2003). The comments provided
insufficient information to overturn the conclusion we previously
reached about declaring trans fat on the label of packaged food.
We also decline to require the declaration of ``industrial trans
fat'' in the written nutrition information because declaration of
ruminant trans fat may lead inspectors or consumers to believe that
covered establishments are violating State or local requirements in
jurisdictions that ban artificial trans fat. We recognize that, in the
United States, some jurisdictions, such as the State of California
(Ref. 34), New York City (Ref. 35), the City of Baltimore (Ref. 36),
and Montgomery County, Maryland (Ref. 37) have imposed restrictions on
the use of industrial trans fat ingredients in food service
establishments. However, a trans fat declaration of 0.5 grams or more
for a standard menu item in the written nutrition information of a
covered establishment does not necessarily mean that the covered
establishment is violating a State or local requirement that prohibits
industrial trans fat ingredients. So long as such standard menu item
does not contain the restricted trans fat ingredients and is otherwise
in compliance with the applicable State or local trans fat requirement,
a trans fat declaration of 0.5 grams or more for such standard menu
item could mean that the menu item contains a certain amount of
naturally occurring trans fat. States and localities would be able to
continue to enforce requirements restricting artificial trans fat
ingredients relying on the same measures they already use to determine
if establishments under their jurisdiction are using a prohibited
ingredient.
We also note that we recently published a tentative determination
that partially hydrogenated oils, the source of industrially produced
trans fat, are not generally recognized as safe for any use in food
based on current scientific evidence establishing the health risks
associated with the consumption of trans fat (78 FR 67169, November 8,
2013). If this determination is finalized, we will consider whether the
trans fat requirements of this rule should be amended.
B. Manner of Presentation of the Written Nutrition Information
Proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii) would require, in relevant part,
that the written nutrition information be presented in a clear and
conspicuous manner. We received several comments on this proposed
provision. After considering these comments, we have revised the
provision to specify that the written nutrition information must be
``clear and conspicuous,'' including in a color, type size, and in a
contrasting
[[Page 71215]]
background that render the information likely to be read and understood
by the ordinary individual under customary conditions of purchase and
use.
(Comment 108) One comment supported the proposed requirements that
the written nutrition information be clear and conspicuous. Some
comments asked us to give more guidance on format and on the standard
for the written nutrition information to be presented in a clear and
conspicuous manner--e.g., that it be easy to read, have a large enough
font, have a contrasting background, and not use all capital letters
for the names of standard menu items. One comment recommended that we
include specifications for font size.
(Response 108) We disagree that we should specify the particular
type size and contrasting background that must be used in the written
nutrition information, and prohibit the use of all capital letters for
the names of standard menu items in the written nutrition information.
Section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii) of the FD&C Act requires covered
establishments to provide the written nutrition information required by
section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act in a clear and
conspicuous manner. As discussed later in this document (see the
discussion of Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(D) in section XVI.E), we are
providing covered establishments with the flexibility to use different
types of media (e.g., flyers, posters, booklets, kiosks) to provide the
written nutrition information. Whether the written nutrition
information is clear and conspicuous depends on the media through which
a covered establishment chooses to provide the written nutrition
information. For example, a specific type size and contrasting
background may result in written nutrition information that is clear
and conspicuous on a tray liner or brochure, but not on a poster that a
consumer may view from several feet away. Thus, we are not establishing
specific requirements for type size, contrasting background, or use of
capital letters for the written nutrition information so that covered
establishments have the flexibility to provide the written nutrition
information in a clear and conspicuous manner based on the particular
media through which the information is presented.
However, we agree that some guidance is needed on the requirement
that the written nutrition information be provided in a clear and
conspicuous manner. Section 403(f) of the FD&C Act provides that a food
will be deemed to be misbranded ``[i]f any word, statement, or other
information required by or under authority of this Act to appear on the
label or labeling is not prominently placed thereon with such
conspicuousness (as compared with other words, statements, designs, or
devices, in the labeling) and in such terms as to render it likely to
be read and understood by the ordinary individual under customary
conditions of purchase and use.'' Accordingly, we conclude that in
order for the written nutrition information to be clear and
conspicuous, the information must be presented in a manner that renders
it likely to be read and understood by the ordinary individual under
customary conditions of purchase and use. Specifically, we have revised
Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii) to require that the written nutrition
information be presented in a clear and conspicuous manner, including
using a color, type size, and contrasting background that render the
information likely to be read and understood by the ordinary individual
under customary conditions of purchase and use. We are also revising
Sec. 101.11(f) to state that a standard menu item offered for sale in
a covered establishment shall be deemed misbranded under sections
201(n), 403(a), 403(f), and/or 403(q) of the FD&C Act if its label or
labeling is not in conformity with paragraph (b) or (c) of the section.
(Comment 109) One comment asked us to require that standard menu
items in the written nutrition information be listed in the same order
as they are on menus and menu boards.
(Response 109) We disagree that we should require covered
establishments to list standard menu items in the written nutrition
information in the same order as on menus and menu boards. The comment
provided no basis for why this particular order of listing standard
menu items is the only order that would be useful to consumers. We are
providing flexibility for a covered establishment to list its standard
menu items in the written nutrition information in a manner that is
best suited to its menu offerings, and conclude that the written
nutrition information can enable consumers to make informed dietary
choices regardless of the order in which the standard menu items are
listed.
(Comment 110) One comment responded to our request for comment on
whether to require that nutrients that are particularly important for
consumers with obesity and diabetes to monitor in order to maintain
healthy dietary practices (e.g., total calories, total fat, sodium,
sugar) be bolded or placed in a separate table of nutritional content
(76 FR 19192 at 19214-19215). This comment opposed such measures
because doing so would highlight the negative aspects of food even
though the food also has positive nutrients. Another comment supported
the bolding of nutrients of concern to consumers with obesity and
diabetes, such as saturated fat and sodium.
(Response 110) We disagree that we should decide whether to require
measures for highlighting nutrient declarations important to maintain
healthy dietary practices for consumers with obesity and diabetes based
on a concern that doing so would highlight the ``negative'' aspects of
a menu item even though the menu item also has ``positive'' aspects.
However, we did not receive sufficient information in the comments to
warrant adding a requirement to emphasize certain nutrients, and we are
not requiring such a requirement in this rule. The requirements for the
written nutrition information in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii) make nutrition
information available to consumers in a direct and accessible manner to
enable consumers to make informed and healthful dietary choices.
C. Nutrients in Insignificant Amounts
Proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B) would provide that if a standard
menu item contains insignificant amounts of all the nutrients required
to be disclosed in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(A), the establishment is not
required to include nutrition information regarding the standard menu
item in the written form. Proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B) would
explain, however, that if the covered establishment makes a nutrient
content claim or health claim, the establishment is required to provide
nutrition information on the nutrient that is the subject of the claim
in accordance with Sec. 101.10. Proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)
would provide that covered establishments may present the written
nutrition information in a simplified format for standard menu items
that contain insignificant amounts of six or more of the required
nutrients and proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)(1) would define what
is an insignificant amount.
We note that there is an inconsistency regarding the nutrients that
must be included in the simplified format between the preamble
discussion and the regulatory text in proposed Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)(2). In the preamble discussion, we stated: ``In
addition, we are proposing that the simplified format must include
information on the nutrients required in Sec. 101.9(f)(2)(i) and (ii)
(i.e., total calories, total fat, total carbohydrate, protein, and
sodium).'' (76 FR 19192 at 19213). However, proposed Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)(2)
[[Page 71216]]
specified that the simplified format must include information on total
carbohydrates, total fat, protein, and sodium, calories from fat, and
any other nutrients identified in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(A) that are
present in more than insignificant amounts. Proposed Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)(2) did not specify that the simplified format must
include information on total calories, as we intended. In addition,
proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)(2) did not make it clear that the
simplified format must include calories from fat only if calories from
fat are present in more than insignificant amounts, as would be
consistent with Sec. 101.9(f)(2)(ii). We have revised and
redesignating Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)(2) so that it contains three
separate subparagraphs that more clearly communicate the requirements.
As revised, Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)(2) requires that the simplified
format must include information, in a column, list, or table, on the
nutrients specified in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)(2)(i) and (ii).
Section 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)(2)(i) specifies that the simplified format
must include information on total calories, total fat, total
carbohydrates, protein, and sodium. Section 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)(2)(ii)
specifies that the simplified format must include calories from fat and
any other nutrients identified in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(A) that are
present in more than insignificant amounts. Section
101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)(3) specifies that if the simplified format is used,
the statement ``Not a significant source of ____--'' (with the blank
filled in with the names of the nutrients required to be declared in
the written nutrient information and calories from fat that are present
in insignificant amounts) must be included at the bottom of the list of
nutrients.
In the following paragraphs, we discuss comments on proposed Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)(2). We are finalizing it without change other than
to revise Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)(2) to correct the discrepancy
between the description of the proposed requirement in the preamble and
the regulatory text and to clarify the requirements.
(Comment 111) One comment recommended that the simplified format we
proposed in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)(2), when a standard menu item
contains insignificant amounts of more than one-half of the nutrients
required to be declared in the written nutrition information, include
information on fiber. The comment contended that fiber is an important
element in considering the overall nutritional value of a certain food,
both in addressing obesity and diabetes. The comment stated that only
knowing information on the total carbohydrates without information on
the fiber will not allow consumers to make sufficiently healthy choices
or will undermine their intent to do so.
(Response 111) If a standard menu item has an insignificant amount
of six or more of the required nutrients, the simplified format must
include information on total calories, total fat, total carbohydrates,
protein, and sodium (Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)(2)(i)) as well as
information on calories from fat and any other nutrient that is present
in the food in more than insignificant amounts (Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)(2)(ii)). Thus, if fiber is present in a standard
menu item at a level that is more than insignificant (i.e., one gram or
more), the amount of fiber must appear in the simplified format. On the
other hand, if an insignificant amount of fiber is present in a
standard menu item, the simplified format must disclose this
information through the statement, ``Not a significant source of ____--
'' (with the blank filled in with ``fiber'' since fiber is required to
be declared in the written nutrition information) (Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)(3)). Therefore, the simplified format for the
written nutrition information already must include information on
fiber, and there is no need to revise proposed Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B) to include fiber as recommended by the comment.
D. Variable Menu Items
Proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(C) would require that, for variable
menu items, the nutrition information listed in Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(ii)(A) must be declared as follows for each size offered
for sale:
(1) The nutrition information required in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(A)
must be declared for the basic preparation of the item and, separately,
for each topping, flavor, or variable component.
(2) If the calories and other nutrients are the same for different
flavors, varieties, and substitutable components of the combination
meal, each variety, flavor, and substitutable component of the
combination meal is not required to be listed separately. All items
that have the same nutrient levels could be listed together with the
nutrient levels listed only once.
In the proposed rule, we considered the following options for
providing the nutrition information in the written form for a variable
menu item:
Option 1. List the nutrition information for each nutrient
in the variable menu item as a range.
Option 2. List the nutrition information for each
component in the variable menu item (the proposed requirement).
Option 3. If a standard menu item only has two variations
(e.g. a sandwich with fruit or with fries), provide both numbers for
each nutrient in each option with a forward slash between (e.g., 450/
700). If three or more options are available, provide the range in
calories.
In the proposed rule, we stated that option 2 provides the consumer
with all the required nutrient information for each flavor or variety
of a variable item, or each component of a combination meal in a format
that facilitates quick comparisons between different menu items (76 FR
19192 at 19213). In the following paragraphs, we discuss comments on
this proposed provision. We are making no changes in response to these
comments.
However, similar to the specific format requirements we established
for declaring calories on a menu or menu board for toppings listed on a
menu or menu board, where the amount of the topping on the menu item
decreases based on the total number of toppings ordered, we are
establishing in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(C)(2) specific format
requirements for providing the written nutrition information for
toppings if the amount of the topping included on the basic preparation
of the menu item decreases based on the total number of toppings
ordered for the menu item (such as is sometimes the case with pizza
toppings). Section 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(C)(2) of the final rule specifies
that if the amount of the topping included on the basic preparation of
the menu item decreases based on the total number of toppings ordered
for the menu item, the nutrients for each topping must be declared as
single values representing the nutrients for each topping when added to
a one-topping menu item, specifying that the nutrient declaration is
for the topping when added to a one-topping menu item. The nutrients
for each topping must also be declared for each size of the menu item
offered for sale, as required by Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(C). We are
establishing requirements for providing the written nutrition
information for variable menu items offered for sale with the option of
adding toppings, and specifying the format and manner of such nutrient
content disclosures, as required by sections 403(q)(5)(H)(v) and
(x)(II)(bb) of the FD&C Act. Section 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(C)(2) helps
ensure that consumers are given accurate and consistent information
about the nutrient of each topping on a menu item. We would not object
if a covered establishment voluntarily includes a statement on the
written nutrition information explaining how the nutrients per topping
might fluctuate if ordering multiple toppings; for example,
[[Page 71217]]
such a statement regarding a pizza pie might say, ``Nutrient values per
topping may decrease as the number of toppings per pizza increases.''
Section 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(C)(2) is therefore consistent with the
requirements for declaring calories for toppings listed on the menu or
menu board, where the amount of the topping on the menu item decreases
based on the total number of toppings ordered.
Because we added this requirement in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(C)(2)
to address the potential variation in nutrient content for each topping
based on the total number of toppings ordered, proposed Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(ii)(C)(2), which allows items that have the same nutrient
values to be listed together with the nutrient values listed only once,
is renumbered for the final rule as Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(C)(3). We
are replacing the phrase ``substitutable component'' in two places in
the first sentence of Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(C)(3) with ``variable
component.'' We are making this change for consistency with the term
used in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(C)(1). We also are replacing the phrase
``nutrient levels'' in two places in the final sentence of Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(ii)(C)(3) with ``nutrient values.'' We are making this
change for consistency with Sec. 101.11(c), which we have revised to
consistently use the term ``values'' in the requirements for
determination of nutrient content.
(Comment 112) A few comments supported option 2. Some comments
opposed the use of slashes for different flavors and considered that
slashes would be confusing and unclear because consumers are not used
to nutrition information in restaurants.
(Response 112) We are retaining Option 2 in the rule for providing
the written nutrition information for variable menu items generally.
Option 2 does not specify the use of the slashes opposed by some
comments.
E. Form of the Written Nutrition Information
Proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(D) would permit the written
nutrition information required in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(A) to be
provided on a counter card, sign, poster, handout, booklet, loose leaf
binder, or electronic device such as a computer, or in a menu, or in
any other form that similarly permits the written declaration of the
required nutrient content information for all standard menu items.
Proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(D) would explain that if the written
information is not in a form that can be given to the customer upon
request, it must be readily available in a manner and location on the
premises that allows the customer/consumer to review the written
nutrition information upon request.
In the proposed rule, we discussed the flexibility provided by
proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(D) for the written nutrition
information and requested comment on whether we should be more
prescriptive in the format and manner of providing the written
nutrition information in order to ensure they are useful to consumers
(76 FR 19192 at 19214). We also stated that we would not object to the
use of tray liners or wrappers as a means to provide nutrition
information, as long as the tray liners or wrappers are available upon
request to the consumers, and the tray liner or wrapper contains
nutrition information for all standard menu items offered for sale at
the covered establishment (76 FR 19192 at 19214).
In the following paragraphs, we discuss comments on this proposed
provision. We are finalizing it without change, except for an editorial
change from ``written information'' to ``written nutrition
information'' in the final sentence. With this editorial change, Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(ii)(D) will consistently use the same phrase (``written
nutrition information'').
(Comment 113) One comment supported our proposal to permit
flexibility in how the written nutrition information would be provided
but questioned the use of wrappers, arguing that it is unlikely that
there would be enough room on a wrapper to list the nutrition
information for all standard menu items in a covered establishment and
to make the information easily readable. Another comment recommended
that Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(D) specify the media allowed for the
written nutrition information, with a petition and approval process for
alternate media, rather than include a ``catch-all phrase'' such as
``any other form that similarly permits the written declaration of the
required nutrient content information for all standard menu items,''
which was included in proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(D). Another
comment recommended that we expressly recognize that Nutrition Facts
labels can be used to convey the written nutrition information.
(Response 113) Section 101.11(b)(2)(ii) specifies that the written
nutrition information must be provided in a clear and conspicuous
manner, including using a color, type size, and contrasting background
that render the information likely to be read and understood by the
ordinary individual under customary conditions of purchase and use. A
covered establishment could use a wrapper if the written nutrition
information for all standard menu items offered for sale at the covered
establishment can be presented in a clear and conspicuous manner on the
wrapper, is available upon request to the consumers, in accordance with
Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii), and otherwise complies with the applicable
sections of the FD&C Act and Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii). For example, there
may be enough room on a wrapper to include the written nutrition
information for all standard menu items in a clear and conspicuous
manner when a covered establishment offers for sale a small number of
standard menu items.
In addition, Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii) ensures that the written
nutrition information is presented in a clear and conspicuous manner
without prescribing a list of allowed media or the exact format of the
written nutrition information. If we amended Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(D)
to specify the particular types of media that can be used by covered
establishments to provide the required written nutrition information,
as recommended by one comment, Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(D) would limit
the types of media that can be used by covered establishments,
including those developed based on technological advancements. Further,
Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii) would need to amended every time a covered
establishment sought to use a type of media not specified. Rather than
specify the media allowed for the written nutrition information, we
conclude that the public health goal of this rule would be better
served by providing flexibility to covered establishments to use any
media to provide the written nutrition information in the way that is
best suited to their establishments, as long as the written nutrition
information is available on the premises of the covered establishment
and to the consumer upon request, is clear and conspicuous, and
otherwise complies with the requirements of the applicable sections of
the FD&C Act and Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii). Providing such flexibility
satisfies the requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C
Act while taking into consideration the varying practices at different
covered establishments. With this flexibility, the petition and
approval process suggested by the comment is unnecessary.
We agree that Nutrition Facts labels can be used to provide the
written nutrition information required under Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii) for
packaged foods, and this rule provides flexibility to do so (see the
discussions of Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(C) in Response 133, and of Sec.
101.11(c)(1) in section XVIII).
(Comment 114) Some comments stated that the written nutrition
information should not have to be
[[Page 71218]]
provided with carry out menus. The comments recommended that carry out
menus could contain a link to the covered establishment's Internet menu
where the written nutrition information may be found. Another comment
stated that the written nutrition information should be permitted on
Internet menus but not required.
(Response 114) We agree with the comments stating that the written
nutrition information should not be required with carry out menus. We
are not requiring a specific manner for providing the written nutrition
information, as long as the written nutrition information is available
on the premises of the covered establishment and provided to the
consumer upon request, is disclosed in a clear and conspicuous manner,
and otherwise complies with the applicable sections of the FD&C Act and
Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii). If a consumer who orders from a menu such as a
carry out menu or an Internet menu requests the written nutrition
information, the covered establishment must provide the information to
the consumer. For example, if a covered establishment delivers a menu
item to a consumer, the covered establishment could deliver the written
nutrition information with the menu item if the consumer requests the
information. As another example, if a consumer orders from an Internet
menu, a covered establishment could provide the written nutrition
information on its Web site or include a link directing the consumer to
a Web site providing the written nutrition information. Similarly, as
suggested by the comments, a covered establishment could provide a link
on carry out menus that directs consumers to a Web site providing the
written nutrition information. We note that all menus, including carry
out menus, and menu boards must include a prominent, clear, and
conspicuous statement regarding the availability of the written
nutrition information, as required by section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(IV) of
the FD&C Act.
(Comment 115) Some comments recommended that we require that the
written nutrition information be readily available upon request to
consumers before ordering. The comments also recommended that the
information be provided in a manner that allows consumers to compare
the information between different menu items before ordering and
without losing their place in line or having to leave the table. The
comments stated that if the written nutrition information is not in a
form that can be given to the consumer upon request, it must be readily
available in a manner and location on the premises that allows the
consumer to review the written nutrition information when ordering
(i.e., the consumer should be able to see and review both the menu or
menu board and the written nutrition information at the same time). One
comment recommended that the information be provided at the place where
consumers place their orders and not upon request. One comment
recommended that we ensure that all consumers have access to the
information. The comment maintained that information on a poster or on
a computer in a fixed location may not be accessible to the mobility
impaired.
(Response 115) We decline to require that covered establishments
make the written nutrition information readily available to consumers
where consumers place their orders rather than providing such
information to consumers upon request. Section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of
the FD&C Act specifically requires covered establishments to provide
the written nutrition information ``to the consumer upon request.'' In
addition, nothing in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii) would preclude consumers
from requesting the written nutrition information before ordering. We
disagree that the rule must require a format and manner of providing
the written nutrition information that ensures that a consumer who
requests written nutrition information will avoid losing a place in an
ordering line or leaving a table. A covered establishment has
flexibility to use a format (e.g., a poster) that may be readily seen
by consumers even if they do not specifically ask to see it.
We agree that covered establishments must make the written
nutrition information available to all consumers, including consumers
with mobility impairment, upon request, and must ensure that the
information is presented in a clear and conspicuous manner to all
consumers. Section 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(D) specifically identifies formats
such as on a counter card, sign, poster, handout, booklet, loose leaf
binder, or electronic device such as a computer, or in a menu through
which a covered establishment may provide the written nutrition
information.
XVII. Comments and FDA Response on Proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)--
Requirements for Food That Is Self-Service or on Display
A. Applicability of Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i) to Food That Is Self-Service
or on Display
Under sections 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I)(aa) and (II)(aa) of the FD&C
Act, we proposed to establish requirements for the declaration of
calories for standard menu items on menus and menu boards in proposed
Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i). Under section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii), we proposed to
establish requirements for the declaration of calories for self-service
food and food on display in proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii). In the
proposed rule, we tentatively concluded that when self-service foods
and food on display appear on menus or menu boards, the menus or menu
boards must bear the calorie declarations required by sections
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I)(aa) and (II)(aa) of the FD&C Act (76 FR 19192 at
19216). In other words, we tentatively concluded that self-service food
and food on display that appear on a menu or menu board are subject to
both requirements for the declaration of calories--i.e., the
requirements in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i) applicable to declaration on a
menu or menu board and the requirements in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)
applicable to self-service food and food on display.
(Comment 116) One comment disagreed with our tentative conclusion
that the proposed requirements for calorie declaration of standard menu
items on menus and menu boards (Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)) apply to food
on display and self-service food that is also listed on menus and menu
boards. The comment asserted that this tentative conclusion is against
the plain language of section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act and that to
require covered establishments to label menu boards and display cases
is unnecessary. The comment asserted that only requiring calorie
labeling on signs adjacent to food on display and self-service food
would provide information at the point of ordering and therefore would
be more consistent with the requirement of section 403(q)(5)(H) of the
FD&C Act that calorie information be provided on menus and menu boards,
as defined in section 403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of the FD&C Act (``the primary
writing of the . . . establishment from which a consumer makes an order
selection'').
(Response 116) We disagree with this comment. The plain language of
section 403(q)(5)(H)(i) of the FD&C Act provides that ``in the case of
food that is a standard menu item . . . [the covered] establishment
shall disclose the information described in subclauses (ii) and (iii)''
(emphasis added). As discussed in the proposed rule, the word ``and''
between the references to subclause (ii) and subclause (iii) indicates
that for each standard menu item, including self-service food and food
on display, covered establishments must follow the requirements in
section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii) of the FD&C Act as applicable and section
403(q)(5)(H)(iii) of the FD&C Act as applicable. Further,
[[Page 71219]]
if Congress had meant for section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii) of the FD&C Act not
to apply to self-service food and food on display, it could have
included an exception for such foods within that section, as it did for
foods described in section 403(q)(5)(H)(vii) of the FD&C Act, but it
did not include such an exception. See e.g., Russello v. U.S., 464 U.S.
16, 23 (1983) (``[W]here Congress includes particular language in one
section of a statute but omits it in another section of the same
[statute], it is generally presumed that Congress acts intentionally
and purposely in the disparate inclusion or exclusion.'') (internal
citations omitted). In addition, a consumer may make his or her order
selection by using information provided on a traditional menu or menu
board or on a sign adjacent to a self-service food or food on display.
Disclosing calorie information for self-service food and food on
display on traditional menus and menu boards, where such menus and menu
boards list self-service food and food on display, and on signs
adjacent to self-service food and food on display would help ensure
that consumers are able to see the calorie declarations before making
order selections and is consistent with the plain language of sections
403(q)(5)(H)(ii) and (iii) of the FD&C Act.
Therefore, when a self-service food or food on display is listed on
a menu or menu board, the food is subject to both Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)
for declaration of calories on menus and menu boards and to Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(iii) for foods on display.
B. Placement of Calories for Self-Service Foods and Foods on Display
Proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A) would require that when a self-
service food or food on display is already accompanied by an individual
sign, adjacent to the food, that provides the food's name, price, or
both, the calories per item or per serving must be provided on the
sign. When a self-service food or food on display is not already
accompanied by an individual sign, adjacent to the food, that provides
the food's name, price, or both, the covered establishment must place a
sign adjacent to each food with the number of calories per serving or
per item in a clear and conspicuous manner.
In the following paragraphs, we discuss comments on this proposed
provision. After considering these comments, we have revised the
provision to provide more options for the declaration of calories for
self-service food and food on display and to require that if the
individual sign does not already include the serving, the amount of the
serving on which the calories are based must also be provided on the
sign, e.g., ``150 calories per scoop.''
We also are correcting the introductory text in Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(iii) by inserting a hyphen between ``self'' and
``service.''
(Comment 117) Several comments supported the requirements in
proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii). Some comments recommended that foods
on display be labeled with calorie information regardless of whether
the food is served by the customer or employee. Some comments asked us
to clarify that a calorie declaration is also required for displayed
foods such as pastries and doughnuts at bakeries and ice cream behind a
glass case in an ice cream shop.
(Response 117) The definition of ``self-service food'' includes
restaurant-type food that is served by the customers themselves, and
the definition of ``foods on display'' includes restaurant-type food
that is visible to the customer before the customer makes a selection.
In general, pastries, donuts, and ice cream on display, such as behind
a glass case, meet the definition of food on display. Under these
definitions, the requirements in proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii) apply
to standard menu items that are foods served by the customers
themselves as well as to standard menu items that are foods such as
pastries, donuts, and ice cream that are behind a glass case or in an
ice cream shop and are served by an employee.
(Comment 118) Some comments requested flexibility to determine the
placement of calorie information that works best for them. Some
comments recommended that the calorie declaration be permitted to be
placed on a single sign, or electronically via kiosks or touch screen
computers, and not on all individual signs. One comment asserted that,
for buffets, the layout and number of items make it difficult to
display signs for hundreds of items without cluttering the space or
obstructing the view. The comment also asserted that customers may
inadvertently move the signs, and therefore, the calorie declaration
should instead appear on counters or in display cases.
Some comments stated that buffets are unique because foods vary and
change often. For example, according to one comment, a restaurant may
have as many as 175 different menu items in a meal period. One comment
stated that the foods are changed multiple times a day, the items may
change from day to day, and the rotation of foods would create
confusion if the food signs are not accurately changed with each new
menu item.
One comment stated that the location and size of the food signs are
affected by health and safety regulations because the food signs could
lead to contamination of the food and because food signs adjacent to
heated areas or grills for food items cooked to order could create a
hazard. Moreover, the comment noted that multiple menu items may be
simultaneously prepared to order on open grills. This comment
recommended that these types of restaurants be permitted to place the
calorie information on individual signs adjacent to or in close
proximity to the food by using a variety of options (e.g., sneeze
guards; partition or placard; menu board or placard adjacent to the
buffet with all the items listed with nutrition content; pamphlet
adjacent to the buffet; written or electronically displayed information
using kiosks; tablet computers; or touch screen computers).
(Response 118) We agree that placing individual signs adjacent to a
self-service food or food on display may pose a hazard in certain
circumstances, such as when there is an open heat source (such as a
grill) in close proximity to the sign that could create a fire hazard.
We also agree that more flexibility is needed for foods that are
constantly being replenished or changed. Therefore, to provide more
flexibility and reduce the potential for a sign used to declare
calories for self-service food or food on display to create a hazard,
we have revised Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A) to allow covered
establishments to declare calories for standard menu items that are
self-service or on display, and the serving or unit used to determine
the calorie content (e.g., ``per scoop'' or ``per muffin''), using one
of the following options:
On a sign, adjacent to and clearly associated with the
corresponding food item;
On a sign attached to a sneeze guard with the calorie
declaration and the serving or unit used to determine the calorie
content above each specific menu item so that the consumer can clearly
associate the calorie declaration with the standard menu item. For
example, if a buffet has several menu items in the serving display case
including, in particular, a broccoli and cheese casserole, the sign
attached to the sneeze guard right above the broccoli and cheese
casserole may declare the calories, e.g., ``200 calories
[[Page 71220]]
per scoop.'' If it is not clear to which food the calorie declaration
and serving or unit refers, then the sign must also include the name of
the food, e.g., ``Broccoli and cheese casserole--200 calories per
scoop;'' or
On a single sign or placard listing the calorie
declaration for several menu items along with the names of the menu
items, so long as the sign or placard is located where a consumer can
view the name, calorie declaration, and serving or unit of a particular
menu item while the consumer is selecting that item. The sign must list
the names of the menu items along with their corresponding calorie
declarations. For example, for a soup station, the sign or placard must
list all the soups that are available at that station along with each
calorie declaration, e.g., ``chicken noodle soup, 125 calories per
cup,'' ``minestrone soup, 100 calories per cup.'' This sign may be
placed on the wall behind the station, on a sign at the beginning or
end of the station, or at another location so long as the consumer can
read the name, calorie declaration, and serving or unit of a particular
menu item while selecting the menu item.
Each option, when implemented appropriately, associates the calorie
declaration with the appropriate food on display or self-service food
to help ensure that consumers can see such declarations when making
their selections.
(Comment 119) In the proposed rule, we stated that placing a
separate sign with calorie information adjacent to a food that is
already accompanied by a sign bearing its name, price, or both, could
make it more difficult for consumers to clearly associate the calorie
information with its corresponding self-service food or food on display
(76 FR 19192 at 19215). We requested comment on whether establishments
that already provide an individual sign identifying each food on
display or self-service food with its name, price, or both should have
the option of providing a separate individual sign for each food on
display or self-service food for the calorie declaration, so long as
the sign with the calorie declaration is adjacent to and clearly
associated with its corresponding food.
One comment recommended that calories appear on the same sign as
the name or price of the food rather than on a separate sign, because
more than one sign could cause confusion.
(Response 119) We acknowledge the comment's concern, which mirrored
a concern we raised in the proposed rule. However, in light of the
recommendations in the comments describing the need for more
flexibility in declaring calories for self-service foods and foods on
display, we have concluded that there are a number of ways in which a
covered establishment can comply with section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii) of the
FD&C Act to provide calorie declarations for self-service foods and
foods on display based on the establishment's particular operations,
including the use of a separate sign placed adjacent to a self-service
food or food on display that is clearly associated with the food (see
Comment 118 and Response 118). Therefore, we have revised Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A) by removing the sentence requiring that when a
self-service food or food on display is already accompanied by an
individual sign, adjacent to the food, that provides the food's name,
price, or both, the calories per item or per serving must be provided
on the sign. In addition, we have revised Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A) by
providing options for a covered establishment to provide calorie
declarations on signs for self-service food and food on display,
including the options described in Response 118. We are making these
changes based on the reasons discussed in Response 118 and because we
recognize that existing individual signs for these foods may be quite
small and either not have enough space for the calorie declaration, or
cause the sign to be so crowded that the calorie declaration may not be
easily read or clear and conspicuous enough for the consumer to read
the information. (See, e.g., the discussions in Comment 126 and
Response 126, and in Comment 127 and Response 127, about the
requirements for type size of the calorie declaration when a self-
service food or food on display is already accompanied by a sign with
the food's name, price, or both.)
C. Declaring Calories ``Per Item'' or ``Per Serving''
Proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(1) would specify that for
purposes of Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A), ``per item'' means per each
discrete unit offered for sale, for example, a bagel, a slice of pizza,
a muffin, or a multi-serving food such as a whole cake. Proposed Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(2) would specify that for purposes of Sec.
101.10(b)(2)(iii)(A), ``per serving'' means: (1) Per each common
household measure, e.g., cup, scoop, tablespoon, offered for sale as
dispensed using a serving instrument such as a scoop, ladle, cup, or
measuring spoon; or (2) per unit of weight offered for sale, e.g., per
half pound or pound.
In the following paragraphs, we discuss comments on these proposed
provisions. After considering these comments, we are:
Deleting ``a multi-serving food such as a whole cake''
from the list of examples of what the rule means by ``per item.'' As
discussed in section VI.C, the definition of ``restaurant-type food''
established in the rule includes food that is usually eaten on the
premises, while walking away, or soon after arriving at another
location, and whole cakes that are self-service food or food on display
are not likely to meet this definition.
Providing the options to declare calories ``per serving
instrument'' or ``per common household measure'' in separate
subparagraphs, rather than in the same subparagraph, to emphasize that
these are distinct alternatives for declaration of calories ``per
serving.''
Revising the examples of what we mean by ``per unit of
weight offered for sale'' to be ``per quarter pound'' or ``per 4
ounces.'' We are making this change because examples of a quarter pound
or 4 ounces are more likely to reflect a serving of self-service food
or food on display.
Changing Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(1) and
(b)(2)(iii)(A)(2) to read ``paragraph (b)(2)(iii)(A) of this section''
rather than ``Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)'' to be more consistent with
FDA's general practice. We note that the proposed rule had identified
the cross-reference as ``Sec. 101.10(b)(2)(ii)(A).'' We revised this
to ``Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)'' in the correction document, but did
not identify the format change at that time.
(Comment 120) One comment suggested that the portion of the
standard menu item used to calculate the calorie content also be
clearly displayed in the same font, color, and size as the item name
and be posted on or next to the available food on display or self-
service food.
(Response 120) We agree that the serving or unit of a standard menu
item that is a self-service food or food on display used to determine
the calorie content for such food must be included in the calorie
declaration. Without information about the serving or unit of a self-
service food or food on display, the consumer would not be able to
ascertain the calorie content of the amount of food that would be
consumed. This would defeat the purpose of the calorie declaration.
Therefore, we have revised Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A) to require that
the calorie declaration for foods on display and self-service food
include the serving or unit on which the calorie content is based. The
requirements in
[[Page 71221]]
Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(3)(ii) for font size and color will apply to
the entire calorie declaration, including the serving or unit used to
determine calorie content. (See the discussion of Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(3)(ii) in section XVII.E.2.)
(Comment 121) One comment asked us to allow a covered establishment
to list nutrition information for standard menu items that are self-
service or on display per serving size and requested clarification on
how the RACC would be used in this case. The comment asked us to keep
in mind that many retailers would like to align their calorie
declarations for menu items with serving sizes for packaged food so as
not to have two different serving sizes.
(Response 121) In Response 65 in section XI, we explained why a
calorie declaration for a multiple-serving standard menu item that is
not self-service or on display must declare ``the number of calories
contained in the standard menu item, as usually prepared and offered
for sale'' instead of per RACC (to the extent that there is a RACC for
such standard menu item). Similarly, we disagree that a calorie
declaration for a standard menu item that is a self-service food or
food on display should be declared per RACC or per serving size used on
packaged food, unless such RACC or serving size is the portion or
serving used by the covered establishment to display or otherwise offer
such standard menu item for sale. Self-service food and food on display
may be portioned differently than a RACC or serving size used on
packaged food. Section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act does not require a
covered establishment to prepare and offer standard menu items in
particular sizes or amounts, such as RACCs or serving sizes used on
packaged foods. Instead, section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii) of the FD&C Act
expressly requires covered establishments to disclose the number of
calories for self-service foods and foods on display ``per displayed
food item or per serving.'' Accordingly, a covered establishment may
choose the portion or serving of the food that it offers for sale, and
must base the calorie declaration for a self-service food or food on
display per displayed item (e.g., ``per muffin'') or per serving (e.g.,
``per scoop'') as offered for sale.
(Comment 122) A few comments expressed concern with portion sizes
and with declaring nutrient values for items that vary in size and
content (e.g., baked potato, chicken breast). Some comments asked for
guidance on serving sizes for calorie declarations pertaining to foods
on display. One comment asked us to clarify that the calories should be
declared per item or serving as offered for sale and not for a portion
of a food item that is smaller than the food offered for sale. For
example, a covered establishment that offers a large muffin for sale
should be required to declare calories per item (i.e., the large
muffin) and should not be permitted to declare calories per serving and
describe the large muffin as containing two servings.
One comment maintained that calories of foods at salad bars should
be declared per cup and not per serving. Several comments asked us to
require that calories be based on serving utensil sizes where possible.
One comment recommended that we require the same serving size as for
packaged food if no utensil is used. The comment suggested that
calories be declared per cup if tongs are used for lettuce at a salad
bar. The comment suggested that the rule be revised to include:
(iii) The following must be provided for food that is self-service
or on display.
``(1) Calories must be provided for each standard serving size
offered, e.g., each beverage cup size offered for a fountain beverage
dispenser or each container size available for a deli salad.
(2) For purposes of Sec. 101.10(b)(2)(iii)(A), ``per item''' means
per each discrete unit offered for sale--for example, a bagel, a
muffin, a sandwich, or a multi-serving food, such as a whole cake.
(3) If the item is not sold as a discrete unit, it can be labeled
per serving. For purposes of Sec. 101.10(b)(2)(iii)(A), ``per
serving''' means:
(i) Per each scoop or container as dished up using the serving
instrument provided, such as a ladle, cup, or measuring spoon, or per
weight or container-size offered, such as a quarter pound of potato
salad or a container of soup.
(ii) If the item is not served using a ladle or other measuring
instrument or per container size, the item must be labeled in the
common household measure closest to the Reference Amount Customarily
Consumed (RACC) for that item, e.g., per cup or tablespoon.''
(Response 122) We agree that a calorie declaration for a self-
service food or food on display per displayed food item should be
declared for the entire item as offered for sale and not based on a
portion of the food item that is smaller than the food item offered for
sale. For example, if a covered establishment offered a muffin for sale
as a self-service food or food on display, the establishment should
declare calories for the entire muffin rather than just a portion of
the muffin (e.g., one-half or one-third of the muffin) because the
entire muffin is the standard menu item offered for sale by the
establishment.
We also agree with the comment asserting that the rule should be
revised to require that when a self-service food or food on display is
offered for sale per displayed food item, meaning per a discrete unit
offered for sale, such as a bagel, a slice of pizza, or a muffin, the
calorie declaration for such food should be based on the discrete unit
offered for sale rather than another amount. In the proposed rule, we
tentatively concluded that for self-service food or food on display
that is displayed per item, where the item represents one serving, the
calorie declaration should be per item (76 FR 19215). We affirm this
conclusion.
We also agree with the comment asserting that the rule should be
revised to require that when a self-service food or food on display is
not offered for sale per displayed food item, the calorie declaration
for such food should be based on the serving offered for sale. In the
proposed rule, we tentatively concluded that for self-service food or
food on display that is not displayed per item (e.g., potato salad at a
buffet or ice cream at an ice cream parlor), the calorie declaration
should be per serving (76 FR 19215). We affirm this conclusion.
For these reasons, we have revised Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A) to
further specify that a covered establishment must declare calories for
a self-service food or food on display per displayed food item, or if
the food is not sold in a discrete unit, per serving as offered for
sale. Under Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(1), ``per displayed food item''
means per each discrete unit offered for sale, for example, a bagel, a
slice of pizza, or a muffin. Accordingly, if a covered establishment
offers a food that is self-service or on display for sale in a discrete
unit, such as a muffin, the establishment would have to declare
calories for the food per such discrete unit offered for sale, and not
based on a different amount.
As discussed in Response 65 and Response 121, we disagree that the
rule should require that calories for self-service food and food on
display be declared per RACC and, therefore, we are not revising Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(2) to require that an item that is not served
using a measuring instrument be labeled in the common household measure
closest to the RACC for that item. However, we agree that specifying
that calories for a self-service food or food on display be disclosed
per displayed food item, if applicable, and providing other options to
declare calories ``per serving
[[Page 71222]]
instrument'' and ``per common household measure'' in separate
subparagraphs, as suggested by this same commenter, would provide a
clearer framework regarding how calorie declarations must be provided
for self-service foods and foods on display. Therefore, in addition to
the revisions we made to Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(1) as described
previously, we have revised Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(2)(i) to specify
that, for the purposes of Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A), ``per serving''
means (1) per serving instrument used to dispense the food offered for
sale, provided that the serving instrument dispenses a uniform amount
of the food (e.g., a scoop or ladle); or (2) if a serving instrument
that dispenses a uniform amount of food is not used to dispense the
food, per each common household measure (e.g., cup or tablespoon)
offered for sale or per unit of weight offered for sale (e.g., per
quarter pound or per 4 ounces). As revised, Sec. Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(1), and (b)(2)(iii)(A)(2)(i) to
(b)(2)(iii)(A)(2)(ii) establish a logical hierarchy for determining how
to declare calories for a self-service food or food on display. For
example, if a covered establishment offered a self-service food for
sale in a discrete unit, such as a muffin, the establishment would have
to declare calories for the muffin as a whole. If the covered
establishment offered another self-service food for sale, but the food
was not offered for sale in a discrete unit, such as pasta salad, the
establishment would have to declare calories for the food ``per
serving'' as defined in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(2). Under Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(2)(i), the covered establishment would have to
declare calories for the pasta salad per serving instrument used to
dispense the pasta salad if the serving instrument dispensed a uniform
amount of the food (e.g., per scoop or ladle). If the covered
establishment used a serving instrument that does not dispense a
uniform amount of the food, such as tongs, declaring calories per that
serving instrument used to dispense the food would not be appropriate
because the calorie declarations would not always be consistent with
the amount of food dispensed, and therefore the covered establishment
would look to the remaining options to declare calories, which include
declaring calories per common household measure or per unit of weight
offered for sale (in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(2)(ii)). If a covered
establishment offers food for sale per unit of weight, and the unit of
weight offered for sale is in ounces, then it would be required to
declare calories per ounce (or per some number of ounces)--i.e., using
the same unit of weight (ounces) as the unit of weight offered for
sale.
We disagree that we should establish specific examples of portion
sizes in the rule or add details such as specifying that a ``container
of soup'' is an appropriate portion size for soup. A covered
establishment has flexibility to establish the portion sizes for
standard menu items offered for sale in such establishment.
As discussed in section VI.C, the definition of ``restaurant-type
food'' generally covers food that usually is eaten on the premises,
while walking away, or soon after arriving at another location. Foods
(such as whole cakes and deli salads that are sold from a display case
rather than from a salad bar) that are grocery-type items that
consumers usually store for use at a later time or customarily further
prepare would not be included within the meaning of ``restaurant-type
food.'' Thus, we have deleted ``a multi-serving food such as a whole
cake'' from Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(1). We decline to add ``deli
salad'' as an example in what we mean by ``per serving'' because doing
so could incorrectly imply that a deli salad sold at a deli counter as
a grocery-type item is likely to be covered by the rule. We are adding
Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(2)(iii) to specify what we mean by ``per
serving'' for self-service beverages--i.e., per total number of fluid
ounces in the cup in which a self-service beverage is served and, if
applicable, the description of the cup size (e.g., ``140 calories per
12 fluid ounces (small)''). See Response 125 in the next section of
this document for an explanation of this new provision.
(Comment 123) One comment noted that some foods on display are
offered in different flavors or varieties such as ice cream or
doughnuts. The comment asked us to clarify that a covered establishment
may disclose the nutrition information for such items by using a range
per serving (or one of the other options being considered for other
variable menu items).
(Response 123) A standard menu item on display may meet the
definition for a variable menu item in Sec. 101.11(a) when it is
offered for sale in different flavors, varieties, or combinations, and
is listed on a menu or menu board as a single menu item. When this is
the case, the format requirements for variable menu items in Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4) through (b)(2)(i)(A)(8) would apply to calories
declared on the menu or menu board. Accordingly, to the extent that
standard menu items on display offered for sale in different flavors or
varieties are listed as single menu items on menus or menu boards, a
covered establishment would be required to declare calories on such
menus and menu boards for such foods using the same methods applicable
to other variable menu items, including ranges, as specified in Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4) through (b)(2)(i)(A)(8). However, when these
foods are on display, they would also be subject to the requirements of
section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii) of the FD&C Act and Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii).
For a standard menu item that is a self-service food or food on
display, section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii) of the FD&C Act requires the covered
establishment to ``place adjacent to each food offered a sign that
lists the calories per displayed food item or per serving'' (emphasis
added). Typically, a standard menu item that is on display is presented
to the consumer as a unique menu item, in that the food is made visible
to the consumer, and the consumer can see what other standard menu
items are available, including other standard menu items that come in
different flavors, varieties, or combinations, such as various muffins
or pastries in a display case. Because these standard menu items
typically are on display in a manner that allows consumers to see each
menu item individually, as well as the other menu items available,
including menu items offered in different flavors or varieties, the way
in which these items are offered for sale is not analogous to standard
menu items that come in different flavors or varieties but are listed
as a single menu item on a menu or menu board. For example, a covered
establishment may offer for sale different flavors of ice cream (e.g.,
vanilla, chocolate, strawberry) in individual containers in a display
case visible to consumers. In this situation, because the consumer can
see each flavor of ice cream offered for sale, the consumer should also
be able to see the number of calories contained for each flavor of ice
cream offered for sale. As a result, the covered establishment would be
required to place a sign adjacent to each flavor of ice cream in the
display case that lists the calories per each individual displayed food
item or per serving in accordance with Sec. 101.11(b)(iii).
D. Declaring Calories ``Per Serving'' for Self-Service Beverages
In the proposed rule, we discussed the serving size of beverages
following our discussion of the declaration of calories for self-
service food and food on display ``per item'' and ``per serving'' (76
FR 19192 at 19216). We recognized that covered establishments may have
different sizes for beverages that are
[[Page 71223]]
listed on the menu as small, medium, and large and stated that we were
considering whether the amount of calories declared should be based on
the number of ounces. In the proposed rule, we anticipated that if we
adopt this view in the final rule, we would not object to the covered
establishment listing the number of ounces as part of the size
declaration, e.g., ``140 calories per 12 ounces (small).'' We requested
and received comment on this issue. After considering these comments,
we are establishing a new provision to specify that, for beverages that
are self-service or on display, ``per serving'' means per total number
of fluid ounces in the cup in which a self-service beverage is served
and, if applicable, the description of the cup size (e.g., ``140
calories per 12 fluid ounces (small)'') (Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(2)(iv)). As an operational companion to new Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(2)(iii), we also are establishing a new provision
(Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(3)(iii)) to require that calorie
declarations for self-service beverages be accompanied by the term
``fluid ounces'' and, if applicable, the description of the cup size
(e.g., ``small,'' ``medium''). (See also Response 129 in section
XVII.E.3 of this document.)
(Comment 124) One comment noted that the proposed rule did not
address the issue of ice fill for the declaration of calories for
beverages. The comment asked us to permit covered establishments to
calculate calories based on their standard ice fill as long as the
level of ice fill is disclosed to consumers. The comment recommended
that we expressly permit, regardless of whether there is a standard ice
fill, the following statement regarding ice fill: ``Calorie content may
vary based on the amount of ice used.''
(Response 124) We previously addressed this comment with respect to
beverages that are not self-service (see the discussion of Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(9) in section XIII). Under section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii)
of the FD&C Act, calories for standard menu items that are self-service
foods and foods on display, including ``soft drinks,'' must be declared
``per displayed food item or per serving'' (emphasis added). For
beverages that are self-service, the actual amount of a beverage
dispensed by consumers will vary depending on the size of the cup and
the amount of ice or beverage that a consumer may add to the cup. For
these reasons, the provisions we are establishing in this rule for
self-service beverages require declaration of calories based on the
full volume of the cup (i.e., without ice), and do not provide for the
declaration of calories based on a standard beverage fill or standard
ice fill. (See discussion of Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(2)(iii) of the
final rule immediately following.)
We would not object to a covered establishment posting a statement
(at the self-service beverage dispenser, on the menu or menu board, or
both) indicating that the calories for the self-service beverages may
vary depending on the amount of ice dispensed (e.g., ``calorie content
may vary based on the amount of ice used'').
(Comment 125) One comment asserted that calories for self-service
beverages should not be listed for an ``appropriate serving size'' such
as 12 ounces because this may not correspond to the sizes that are
actually sold in the covered establishment.
(Response 125) We agree that the number of ounces in a beverage cup
may vary between covered establishments and we agree that the rule
should not establish ``an appropriate serving size'' for self-service
beverages. We also agree that consumers should be given calorie
information based on the number of ounces in the cup which the consumer
uses to dispense a self-service beverage. Section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii) of
the FD&C Act provides that calories for self-service foods and foods on
display be declared ``per displayed food item or per serving''
(emphasis added). For self-service beverages, the serving units depend,
in part, on the cups provided by the covered establishment to consumers
for use at the self-service beverage dispenser. The actual amount of
beverage dispensed by consumers will vary based on the size of the cup
and the amount of beverage that a consumer dispenses into the cup. As
already discussed in Response 124, the actual amount of beverage
dispensed by consumers also will vary based on the amount of ice that a
consumer may add to the cup, and in contrast to some non-self-service
beverages offered for sale by a covered establishment, self-service
beverage dispensers typically do not have a standard beverage fill or
standard ice fill. In addition, for any given establishment, the cups
provided for self-service beverages may be in a single size or may be
in different sizes, e.g., in cups labeled ``small,'' ``medium,'' or
``large.'' Further, as already noted, covered establishments may have
different sizes for beverages that are listed on menus as small,
medium, and large. For these reasons, we are specifying that, for self-
service beverages, calories ``per serving'' within the meaning of
section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii) of the FD&C Act must be based on the number
of ounces in the cup in which the beverage is served.
Therefore, Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(2)(iii) of the final rule
specifies that, for purposes of Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A), ``per
serving'' means, for beverages that are self-service, per total number
of fluid ounces in the cup in which a self-service beverage is served
and, if applicable, the description of the cup size (e.g., ``140
calories per 12 fluid ounces (small)''). As an operational companion to
Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(2)(iii), we also are establishing specific
format requirements applicable to the declaration of calories for self-
service beverages.
Section 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(3)(iii) of the final rule requires
that, for self-service beverages, calorie declarations must be
accompanied by the term ``fluid ounces'' and, if applicable, the
description of the cup size (e.g., ``small,'' ``medium''). By providing
the number of fluid ounces in the cup in which the self-service
beverage is served and a description of the size of the cup, if
applicable, along with the calories for the self-service beverage, the
calorie declaration will provide necessary context regarding the amount
of the beverage (i.e., the number of fluid ounces dispensed) upon which
to base the number of calories for the self-service beverage. This
information will enable consumers to determine how many calories are
contained in a serving of the self-service beverage in a direct and
consistent manner.
E. Manner of Declaring Calories for Self-Service Foods and Foods on
Display
1. Increments of Calories
Proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(3)(i) would require that
calories for self-service food and food on display be declared to the
nearest 5-calorie increment up to and including 50 calories and to the
nearest 10-calorie increments above 50 calories except that amounts
less than 5 calories may be expressed as zero.
We received no comments on this proposed provision and are
finalizing it without change, except for an editorial change to express
``nearest 10-calorie increments'' in the singular (i.e., ``nearest 10-
calorie increment'').
2. Requirements for Declaration of Calories To Be Clear and Conspicuous
Proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(3)(ii) would require that if
the food is not already accompanied by a sign with the food's name,
price, or both, the calorie declaration, accompanied by the term
``Calories'' or ``Cal'', must appear on a
[[Page 71224]]
sign adjacent to the standard menu item in a clear and conspicuous
manner if the food is not already accompanied by a sign with the food's
name, price or both. If the food is already accompanied by a sign with
the food's name, price, or both, the calorie declaration and the term
``Calories'' or ``Cal'' must appear on that sign in a type size no
smaller than the name or price of the menu item whichever is smaller,
in the same color or a color that is at least as conspicuous as that
name or price using the same contrasting background. Proposed Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(3)(ii) inadvertently included the clause ``if the
food is not already accompanied by a sign with the food's name, price,
or both'' in two locations within the provision.
In the proposed rule, we requested comment on whether additional or
more specific formatting requirements are necessary (76 FR 19192 at
19215). In the following paragraphs, we discuss comments on the
proposed provision. We also discuss comments in response to our
specific request on whether additional or more specific formatting
requirements are necessary. After considering these comments, we are
finalizing it with the following changes:
For consistency with the provisions we are establishing in
Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A), we are specifying that the calorie
declarations must include the amount of the serving on which the
calories are based.
For consistency with the provisions we are establishing in
Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii), we are making a series of changes to address
options that a covered establishment can use to declare calories for
self-service food or food on display, including the use of an
additional sign even if a food is already accompanied by a sign with
the food's name, price, or both.
To provide for a consistent approach to the requirements
for a contrasting background throughout the rule, we are providing
additional flexibility for the contrasting background used for the
calorie declaration and making a conforming editorial change to the
grammatical construction of the requirement for the color used for the
calorie declaration.
As an editorial correction for clarity, we are inserting
``the type size of'' between ``no smaller than'' and ``the name or
price.''
(Comment 126) One comment recommended that we require the calorie
declaration to be clear and conspicuous but not in a type size as large
as the food's name or price. The comment maintained that if these foods
already have signs, there is likely no room for calorie declarations.
One comment pointed out that fountain machines have small signs or
``valve decals'' on which the name is placed. According to the comment
these valve decals can be as small as 0.7 x 1 inches to 5.25 x 5.25
inches and these signs do not have enough space to list the calorie
declarations. The comment recommended that a covered establishment not
have to list the calories adjacent to the dispenser if calories for
fountain drinks are listed on menus and menu boards and the written
nutrition information is available, because to do so would be
burdensome.
One comment asked us to allow a covered establishment to use a sign
or placard placed adjacent to the fountain beverage machine that lists
the calories. Another comment recommended that calorie declarations for
self-serve beverages be posted on menus, menu boards, or brochures, and
not at the dispensers. One comment recommended that calorie
declarations be listed both on the menu boards and the dispenser for
each type of beverage dispensed.
One comment noted that brand names are stylized and therefore the
names of beverages may be in different type sizes. The comment
maintained that tying the type size of the calories to the name of the
beverage would result in differing sizes for calories, which could be
confusing.
(Response 126) Section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii) of the FD&C Act requires
covered establishments to place adjacent to each standard menu item
that is a self-service food or food on display, including self-service
beverages, a sign that lists calories per displayed food item or per
serving. As discussed previously in this document (see Response 116), a
covered establishment must also declare calories on a menu or menu
board, and follow all applicable requirements of Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)
for declaration of calories on the menu or menu board, when self-
service food or food on display is listed on the menu or menu board.
We acknowledge that there may be space limitations on signs used
for self-service food (including valves used for self-service
beverages) and foods on display. As already discussed in section
XVII.B, we have revised Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A) to provide more
options for the declaration of calories for self-service food and food
on display, including the use of additional signs, signs attached to a
sneeze guard, or a single sign or placard listing the calorie
information for several standard menu items that are self-service or on
display provided that certain conditions are met. These options provide
additional flexibility for a covered establishment that offers self-
service foods, including self-service beverages, to declare the
calories in a manner that works best for it. For example, a covered
establishment has an option to declare the calories on a sign separate
from the sign containing the food's name and price, provided the
calories are clearly associated with the particular food item. Doing so
would no longer link the type size requirements for a self-service
beverage to those for the name of the beverage. As a result, we have
revised Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(3)(ii) to provide that if a calorie
declaration for a self-service food or food on display is provided on a
sign that includes the food's name, price, or both, the calorie
declaration, accompanied by the term ``Calories'' or ``Cal'' and the
amount of the serving or displayed food item on which the calorie
declaration is based, must be in a type size no smaller than the type
size of the name or price of the food, whichever is smaller, in the
same color, or a color that is at least as conspicuous as that used for
the name or price, using the same contrasting background, or a
background at least as contrasting.
(Comment 127) One comment addressed the different proposed
requirement for self-service food and food on display depending on
whether the food is already accompanied by a sign with the food's name,
price, or both. If the food is already accompanied by such a sign, the
comment said that the proposed provision would be prescriptive with
respect to type size, color, and contrast requirements for the calorie
declarations, whereas if the food is not already accompanied by such a
sign, the proposed provision would be less prescriptive by merely
requiring that calorie declarations be ``clear and conspicuous.'' The
comment asked us to revise the rule to establish the less prescriptive
requirement that the calorie information be clear and conspicuous
regardless of whether the food is accompanied by a sign with the name
or price of the food. The comment considered that a prescriptive
requirement linked to type size, color, and contrast requirements of
the food's name, price, or both would be misleading because it would
imply that the number of calories in a food, which is just one
attribute of the food, is as important as the name of a food.
One comment stated that the type size of calorie declarations
should be no smaller than the name or price, whichever is larger.
Another comment stated that the calories for food on display should be
permitted to be
[[Page 71225]]
displayed in a font that is smaller than the font size of the name of
the menu item. (By ``menu item,'' we assume that the comment means the
food's name, price, or both.) One comment suggested that the provision
be revised to include ``The calorie information on the sign must be
readable from the point where consumers are choosing their food, and it
must be readily apparent which sign labels which item, both by
proximity and by including the name of the product on the sign.''
(Response 127) We disagree that we should require the type size of
the calorie declaration for food on display to be no smaller than the
type size of the name or price, whichever is larger. All other
requirements of this rule that anchor a type size to information
already presented to consumers allow a covered establishment to use a
type size no smaller than (rather than no larger than) the type size of
the information already presented, and the comment provided no basis
for why the rule should have a different standard for calorie
declarations on signs for food on display and self-service food.
We also disagree that calories for food on display and self-service
food should be permitted to be displayed in a font that is smaller than
the font size of the name or price of the menu item. Because consumers
need to see the name and price to place an order, anchoring the type
size of the calorie declaration to the type size of information already
on the sign acts, in essence, as an objective and measurable
performance standard for whether a disclosure is clear, conspicuous,
and prominent. Thus, we do not agree that a smaller type size should be
used for the calorie declaration, because doing so would no longer
provide for such an objective and measurable performance standard.
Therefore, we are retaining the type size requirements for the calorie
declaration for food on display and self-service food that are already
accompanied by individual signs. However, to be consistent with changes
we are making to other provisions of the rule, we have revised Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(3)(ii) to provide additional flexibility for the
contrasting background of the calorie declaration by permitting the
calorie declaration to be in a background at least as contrasting as
that used for the name or price of the menu item. We also are making a
conforming editorial change to the grammatical construction of the
requirement for the color used for the calorie declaration to match the
grammatical construction of the revised requirement for the contrasting
background used for the calorie declaration. We also are making an
editorial correction to insert ``the type size of'' between ``no
smaller than'' and ``the name or price.''
No comments suggested specific formatting requirements for calorie
declarations when there are no pre-existing signs with the name or
price of the food to which the calorie declaration can be anchored.
Covered establishments have the flexibility to post the calorie
information in a manner that ensures that it is clear, conspicuous, and
prominent.
3. Manner of Declaring Calories for Self-Service Beverages
In the proposed rule, we stated that the self-service beverage
dispenser itself must have calorie declarations for each flavor or
variety offered, such that the calorie declaration is clearly
associated with its corresponding flavor or variety (76 FR 19192 at
19216). We received comment on calorie declarations for self-service
beverages. After considering these comments, we are adding a new
provision to require, for self-service beverages, that calorie
declarations be accompanied by the term ``fluid ounces'' and, if
applicable, the description of the cup size (e.g., ``small,''
``medium'').
(Comment 128) A few comments recommended that calories be posted at
self-service fountain dispensers for each beverage size offered in the
covered establishment. One comment asked us to permit a sign or placard
placed adjacent to a fountain beverage machine to separate calorie
ranges for specific subcategories, e.g., regular soda, diet soda, milk,
coffees, teas, juice by cup size. A few comments recommended that
calorie declarations should provide the amount of calories as a range
per size.
(Response 128) We agree that calories must be posted at self-
service fountain dispensers for each beverage size offered in the
covered establishment. As noted previously, section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii)
of the FD&C Act requires covered establishments to place adjacent to
each standard menu item that is a self-service food or food on display,
including self-service beverages, a sign that lists calories per
displayed food item or per serving. As already discussed (see section
XVII.B), Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A) provides several options for where
and how a covered establishment could place a sign or placard.
Earlier in this document, we discussed another comment directed to
the declaration of calories for self-service beverages (see Comment 126
and Response 126). A self-service standard menu item, including a self-
service beverage, is subject to Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i) (in addition to
Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)) when such food is listed on a menu or menu
board (see Comment 116 and Response 116). The format requirements for
variable menu items in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4) through
(b)(2)(i)(A)(7) would apply to calorie declarations on a menu or menu
board. Accordingly, to the extent that self-service beverages offered
for sale in different flavors or varieties are listed as single menu
items on menus or menu boards (e.g., ``soft drinks''), a covered
establishment would be required to declare calories on such menus and
menu boards for such foods using the same methods applicable to other
variable menu items, including ranges, as specified in Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(4) through (b)(2)(i)(A)(8). However, at the point of
self-service, a self-service beverage would be subject to the
requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii) of the FD&C Act and Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(iii). For a standard menu item that is a self-service
food, such as a self-service beverage, section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii) of the
FD&C Act requires the covered establishment to ``place adjacent to each
food offered a sign that lists the calories per displayed food item or
per serving.'' Typically, a self-service fountain beverage machine
separately dispenses each flavor or variety of beverage from individual
valves or dispensers that list the flavor or variety of the beverage
(such as orange soda, cola, diet cola), and the consumer can see what
beverage flavors and varieties are available. Otherwise, consumers
would not be able to determine which flavor or variety of beverage is
dispensed from a particular valve or dispenser at the self-service
fountain beverage machine. Because these self-service beverages
typically are presented in a manner that allows consumers to see each
beverage individually, as well as the other beverages available,
including other beverages offered in different flavors or varieties,
the way in which these standard menu items are offered for sale is not
analogous to standard menu items that come in different flavors or
varieties but are listed as a single menu item on a menu or menu board.
Further, because consumers can see flavor or variety of self-service
beverage offered for sale, the consumer should also be able to see the
number of calories contained in each flavor or variety offered for sale
at the self-service machine. For these reasons, calories must be
declared for each specific flavor or type of beverage available at a
self-service machine rather than declared as a range.
[[Page 71226]]
(Comment 129) A few comments recommended that covered establishment
should declare the amount of calories for self-service beverages based
on the number of ounces served. A few other comments opposed declaring
the number of calories per ounces served. These comments contended that
it is more practical to estimate the size of a beverage with a
household measure than to guess the ounces without measuring the
beverage. The comments maintained that calories per ounce would be
confusing. One comment stated that there is not enough space on menus
for declaring the number of calories per ounce served.
(Response 129) We disagree that declaring calories based on the
volume in fluid ounces for self-service beverages, as required by Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(2)(iii) of the final rule, would be overly
confusing. Fluid ounces are commonly used to describe the volume of
beverages in packaged food sold in the United States and, thus,
consumers who purchase beverages likely would be familiar with ``fluid
ounces'' in the context of beverages. Further, as discussed previously
(see Response 125), Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(2)(iii) of the final
rule specifies that, for self-service beverages, ``per serving'' means
per total number of fluid ounces in the cup in which a self-service
beverage is served and, if applicable, the description of the cup size
(e.g., ``140 calories per 12 fluid ounces (small)''). As an operational
companion to Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(2)(iii), we also are
establishing in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(3)(iii) of the final rule
specific format requirements applicable to the declaration of calories
for self-service beverages. Section 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(3)(iii) of the
final rule requires that, for self-service beverages, calorie
declarations must be accompanied by the term ``fluid ounces'' and, if
applicable, the description of the cup size (e.g., ``small,''
``medium''). For example, calories could be declared as ``small Orange
Fizz (12 fluid ounces)--150 calories.'' Accordingly, the calorie
declaration will provide information regarding the number of fluid
ounces served, and in some cases, the size of the cup, along with the
number of calories. Typically, self-service beverages are offered for
sale, including listed or otherwise separated by price, based on size
(e.g., ``small--$1.59,'' ``12 ounces--$1.59''), and the sizes are
described using general descriptors (e.g., ``small,'' ``medium,'' or
``large,'') or by fluid ounces. Therefore, in such situations,
consumers will have further context regarding the number of fluid
ounces served in a self-service beverage, and, in some cases, the size
of the cup.
F. Applicability of Requirements for Written Nutrition Information,
Succinct Statement, and Statement of Availability to Self-Service Foods
and Foods on Display
In the proposed rule, we tentatively concluded that covered
establishments must provide written nutrition information for self-
service foods and foods on display that are standard menu items as
required by section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act (76 FR 19192
at 19216).
(Comment 130) One comment argued that applying certain requirements
of section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii) of the FD&C Act to self-service food and
food on display is not a reasonable construction of the statute, given
that calorie disclosure requirements for self-service food and food on
display appear ``in a wholly different subclause.'' The comment
asserted that because the ``subclause'' (section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii)) of
the FD&C Act) does not require additional written nutrition information
or a succinct statement concerning suggested daily caloric intake and
section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii) of the FD&C Act does, Congress deliberately
omitted those requirements from section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii) of the FD&C
Act. The comment argued that, given that every word excluded from a
statute must be presumed to have been excluded intentionally, it is not
permissible to interpret the statute to require covered establishments
to provide additional written nutrition information and a succinct
statement concerning suggested daily caloric intake for self-service
food and food on display.
(Response 130) We agree in part, and disagree in part, with the
comment. As we discussed in the proposed rule and Response 116, section
403(q)(5)(H)(i) of the FD&C Act states, ``in the case of food that is a
standard menu item . . . [the covered] establishment shall disclose the
information described in subclauses (ii) and (iii)'' (emphasis added).
The word ``and'' between the references to subclauses (ii) and (iii),
as opposed to a disjunctive ``or,'' indicates that covered
establishments must follow the requirements in subclause (ii) for all
standard menu items, as applicable, and subclause (iii) for all
standard menu items, as applicable.
We acknowledge that a principle of statutory interpretation is that
``where Congress includes particular language in one section of a
statute but omits it in another section of the same [statute], it is
generally presumed that Congress acts intentionally and purposely in
the disparate inclusion or exclusion.'' Russello v. U.S., 464 U.S. 16,
23 (1983) (internal citations omitted). We considered this principle
when interpreting section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act. Section
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act--the section requiring additional
written nutrition information--omits certain important words. Sections
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I), (II), and (IV) of the FD&C Act specify that
certain disclosures must appear ``on the menu,'' ``on the menu board,''
and ``on the menu or menu board,'' respectively. Section
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act does not mention menus or menu
boards at all. Because section 403(q)(5)(H)(i) of the FD&C Act states
that covered establishments must disclose the information in section
403(q)(5)(H)(ii) and (iii) of the FD&C Act for standard menu items, it
is reasonable to apply section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act to
standard menu items, regardless of whether they appear on menus or menu
boards. Therefore, the rule requires that covered establishments
provide the additional written nutrition information described in
section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act for all standard menu
items, including self-service food and food on display regardless of
whether such standard menu items appear on menus or menu boards.
We agree that the succinct statement concerning suggested daily
caloric intake is required only on menus or menu boards, based on the
plain language of sections 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I)(bb) and
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(II)(bb) of the FD&C Act. Similarly, the statement of
availability of the written nutrition information is only required on
menus or menu boards, based on the plain language of section
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(IV) of the FD&C Act.
We discuss the specific requirements related to the succinct
statement and statement of availability for self-service food and food
on display in the next section. We discuss the specific requirements
related to the written nutrition information for self-service food and
food on display in section XVII.H.
G. Succinct Statement and Statement of Availability for Self-Service
Foods and Foods on Display
Proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(B) would require that for food on
display identified by a menu (meaning an identifying sign) adjacent to
the food itself, the statement that puts the calorie
[[Page 71227]]
information in the context of a recommended total daily caloric intake
as required by Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(B) and the statement regarding the
availability of the additional written nutrition information required
by Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(C) must be provided in one of two ways.
Proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(B) would permit these two statements
to appear either on the sign adjacent to the standard menu item or on a
separate, larger sign, in close proximity to the food on display, that
can be easily read as the consumer is making order selections. Proposed
Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(B) would explain that this requirement is
satisfied if the two statements appear on a large menu board that can
be easily read as the consumer is viewing the food on display.
In the following paragraphs, we discuss comments on this proposed
provision. After considering these comments, we have revised the
provision to clarify that the requirements to provide the statement
that puts the calorie information in the context of a recommended total
daily caloric intake (also referred to as the ``succinct statement'')
and the statement of availability for foods on display apply to all
types of food on display, including those that are self-service.
Further, we are also providing further flexibility for how to satisfy
those requirements.
(Comment 131) In the proposed rule, we noted that signs identifying
food on display placed adjacent to such foods meet the definition of a
``menu'' or ``menu board'' within the meaning of section
403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of the FD&C Act, in that such signs are the primary
writings of the establishment from which consumers make order
selections (76 FR 19192 at 19217). Further, we noted that, as a result,
the requirements to disclose the succinct statement and statement of
availability on menus and menu boards under sections
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I)(bb), (II)(bb), and (IV) of the FD&C Act would apply
to such small signs (76 FR 19192 at 19217). However, we noted that the
requirements to post the statements on small signs seem to pose
difficulties given the size of such signs, and from a consumer's
perspective, it is probably unnecessary for the two statements to
appear on every single individual identifying sign.
Taking these issues into consideration, along with the space on
small signs that constitute menus and menu boards, as provided in
section 403(q)(5)(H)(x) of the FD&C Act, we tentatively concluded that
each individual sign could be considered its own menu, but that a set
of signs that are in close proximity to each other, such as those that
might identify items in a bakery display counter, could be viewed
together as the primary writing from which consumers choose among those
items to order (76 FR 19192 at 19217). As a result, we proposed in
Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(B) that covered establishments may place the
succinct statement and statement of availability on individual specific
signs or on a separate, larger sign, in close proximity to food on
display, that can be easily read as the consumer is making his or her
order selection (76 FR 19192 at 19217). In addition, we tentatively
concluded that signs identifying food on display that are the primary
writing from which consumers select the corresponding items to order
and are in close proximity to the menu board, such that the menu board
can be easily read as the consumer is viewing the food on display,
could be considered part of that menu board.
One comment asserted that menu boards, tags, and other signs within
an establishment are used by consumers to identify standard menu items
and make order selections. The comment argued, however, that tags or
other signs should not be considered menus or menu boards because a
menu board lists multiple items from which a consumer can make an order
selection.
One comment argued that if the succinct statement and statement of
availability already appeared on a menu board, they should not have to
appear again on signs adjacent or in close proximity to self-service
foods or foods on display. The comment stated that the final rule
should provide that posting the statement of availability and the
succinct statement on the menu board of the covered establishment is
sufficient to inform consumers who are selecting food on display and
self-service food.
(Response 131) We agree that an individual small sign adjacent to a
self-service food or food on display that contains the name (or image)
and price of a standard menu item, and that can be used by a consumer
to make an order selection from the establishment at the time the
consumer is viewing the sign would meet the definition of a menu or
menu board within the meaning of section 403(q)(5)(H)(xi) of the FD&C
Act. As a result, the requirements of sections 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(I)(bb),
(II)(bb), and (IV) of the FD&C Act for a succinct statement and
statement of availability apply to such signs. However, as we noted in
the proposed rule, the obligation to provide the succinct statement and
statement of availability on every individual small sign likely would
pose difficulties given the small size of these individual signs, and
it likely would not be necessary, from a consumer's perspective, for
the two statements to appear on every individual sign (76 FR 19192 at
19217). Considering these factors and the limited space on these
individual small signs that constitute menus or menu boards, as
described by section 403(q)(5)(H)(x)(II) of the FD&C Act, we conclude
that, while each individual sign could be considered its own menu, a
set of signs that are in close proximity to each other could also be
viewed together as the primary writing from which consumers choose
among items in making order selections. Further, we conclude that a
covered establishment can satisfy the requirements for posting a
succinct statement and statement of availability for self-service foods
and foods on display by posting such statements on the individual sign
adjacent to the food itself, on a separate, larger sign, in close
proximity to the food that can be easily read as the consumer is making
an order selection, or on a large menu board that can be easily read as
the consumer is ordering the food. Accordingly, we are retaining Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(iii)(B) and making revisions for clarity. We have revised
Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(B) to clarify that the provision applies to
food that is self-service or on display and is identified by an
individual sign adjacent to the food itself where such sign meets the
definition of a menu or menu board under paragraph (a) of this section.
As an inadvertent error, proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(B) opened
with the clause ``For food on display'' and did not specifically
identify food that is self-service as being covered by the proposed
requirements for providing the succinct statement and statement of
availability on signs that are menus. As a practical matter, food that
is ``self-service'' is ``on display'' and, thus, the requirements apply
to ``self-service food'' regardless of whether ``self-service food'' is
specified or not. Comments that addressed proposed Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(iii)(B) from the perspective of both food on display and
self-service food implicitly acknowledged that self-service foods would
be subject to proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(B). Moreover, Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(iii)(B) is a subparagraph of Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii),
which establishes requirements for ``food that is self-service or on
display.'' For clarity, and to ensure that covered establishments are
aware that Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(B) and the flexibility it provides
applies to self-service foods identified by a menu adjacent to the food
itself, we have revised the opening clause of
[[Page 71228]]
Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(B) to read ``For food that is self-service or
on display . . .'' We also are making associated edits throughout the
provision to remove any narrow reference only to food that is on
display.
H. The Written Nutrition Information That Must Be Provided for Food
That Is Self-Service or on Display
Proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(C) would require that the
nutrition information in written form required by Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(ii) be provided for food that is self-service or on
display, except for packaged food that bears nutrition labeling
information required by Sec. 101.9 if the packaged food, including its
label, can be examined by a consumer before purchasing the food. In the
following paragraphs, we discuss comments on this proposed provision.
After considering these comments, we have revised Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(iii)(C) to clarify the regulatory requirements that apply
to the nutrition labeling information on the packaged food.
(Comment 132) One comment asked us to provide more detail on what
format establishments may use to provide the written nutrition
information for foods on display and self-service food to ensure that
the information is readily available and easily readable.
(Response 132) Section 101.11(b)(2)(ii) both requires that written
nutrition information be available for standard menu items and
establishes format requirements for that written nutrition information.
With one exception, the format requirements of Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)
apply to standard menu items that are self-service food or food on
display. See Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii) and the discussion of Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(ii) in section XVI. The exception is for packaged foods,
insofar as they bear nutrition labeling required by section
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act and Sec. 101.11(b)(ii)(2)(D). We
discuss this exception further in Response 133.
(Comment 133) Two comments asked us to broaden the exception in
Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(C) for packaged food in compliance with Sec.
101.9, regardless of whether the nutrition information can be examined
prior to purchase. One comment pointed out that some packaged
confectioneries may be placed near the cash register in a covered
establishment. The comment stated that these confectioneries may be
exempt from the nutrition labeling requirements of Sec. 101.9 because
they have fewer than 12 square inches of available label space or may
be in gift packages. This comment stated that if a food is subject to
and in compliance with Sec. 101.9, it should not also be subject to
Sec. 101.11. The comment maintained that a food should be required to
comply with one nutrition labeling regulation or the other, but not
both. Another comment stated that some foods, such as food in small
packages, foods with insignificant amounts of all the nutrients
required on the labels of packaged food (e.g., bottled water) and foods
sold in gift packages, which may provide the nutrition information
inside the box or package, should be exempt from the menu labeling
requirements even though their nutrient content cannot be examined by
consumers prior to purchase. The comment also stated that if these
foods included front of package labeling, they would lose the exemption
from nutrition labeling.
(Response 133) Section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act does not
establish any new requirements regarding the labels of packaged food.
Furthermore, to clarify that the requirements of Sec. 101.11 do not
affect the exemptions from nutrition labeling under Sec. 101.9(j)(2)
and (j)(3), we proposed conforming amendments to Sec. 101.9(j)(2) and
(j)(3). As discussed in the proposed rule, the NLEA amendments to the
FD&C Act included an exemption, at sections 403(q)(5)(A)(i) and (ii) of
the FD&C Act, for nutrition labeling for food that is ``served in
restaurants or other establishments in which food is served for
immediate human consumption'' or ``sold for sale or use in such
establishments'' (76 FR 19192 at 19193 (citing 21 U.S.C.
343(q)(5)(A)(i)). The NLEA amendments also included an exemption for
food of the type described in section 403(q)(5)(A)(i) of the FD&C Act
that is primarily processed and prepared in a retail establishment,
ready for human consumption, ``offered for sale to consumers but not
for immediate human consumption in such establishment and which is not
offered for sale outside such establishment.'' (21 U.S.C.
343(q)(5)(A)(ii)). We issued regulations for these exemptions at Sec.
101.9(j)(2) and (j)(3); however, these exemptions were contingent on
there being no nutrient content claims or other nutrition information
in any context on the labeling or in the labeling or advertising. As
discussed in section IV.B, we are finalizing the conforming amendments
to Sec. 101.9(j)(2) and (j)(3). Likewise, as discussed in section
IV.B, we also have made a conforming amendment to Sec. 101.9(j)(4),
which applies to foods that contain insignificant amounts of nutrients
and food components required to be included in the declaration on
nutrition information under Sec. 101.9(c). As a result, a food that is
exempt from the requirements of Sec. 101.9 under Sec. 101.9(j)(2),
(j)(3), and (j)(4) would not fall out of such exemption by complying
with the requirements of Sec. 101.11. We also note that, for a
standard menu item that contains insignificant amounts of all of the
nutrients required in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(A), including, if
applicable, a packaged food, a covered establishment generally would
not be required to provide written nutrition information for that
standard menu item (see Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii)(B)).
Section 101.11 does not change the food label requirements under
Sec. 101.9(h)(3) for food products with separately packaged
ingredients or foods where a package contains a variety of foods, or an
assortment of foods, and is in a form intended to be used as a gift.
Similarly, Sec. 101.11 does not change the exception at Sec.
101.9(j)(13)(i) for foods in small packages that have a total surface
area of less than 12 square inches of available label space. To the
extent that such foods are offered for sale in covered establishments,
they generally would fall within the exceptions at Sec. 101.9(j)(2)
and (j)(3); when this is the case, the conforming amendments to Sec.
101.9(j)(2) and (j)(3) would preserve the pre-existing exemptions under
Sec. 101.9 for such foods.
While section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act does not establish any
new requirements regarding the labels of packaged food, there may be
some situations in which a covered establishment (rather than the
manufacturer of a packaged food) must disclose nutrition information
for a food on display or a self-service food that is a packaged food,
such as a packaged food that is offered for sale at a cash register in
a covered establishment. For example, if a standard menu item, such as
a package of chips, is on display (e.g., a package of chips that is
part of a combination meal or listed individually on a menu or menu
board and is available at a cash register), the covered establishment
would be required to post a calorie declaration on a sign adjacent to
the package of chips and provide written nutrition information for the
package of chips unless the label for the chips bears calorie and
certain other nutrition information and can be examined by the consumer
prior to purchase. Further, the covered establishment would be required
to post a calorie declaration for the package of chips on a menu and
menu board to the extent the package of chips is listed on such menu
and menu board.
In the proposed rule, we tentatively concluded that a packaged food
that is self-service or food on display that bears
[[Page 71229]]
nutrition information required by section 403(q)(1) of the FD&C Act and
Sec. 101.9 satisfies the calorie disclosure requirement for self-
service food or food on display in section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii) of the
FD&C Act and the written nutrition information requirement of section
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act (see 76 FR 19192 at 19217 and
19235). In addition, we tentatively concluded that, in such a
situation, a covered establishment would still be required to post
calorie declarations on menus and menu boards for packaged foods that
are standard menu items and are listed on such menus and menu boards
(e.g., where ``chips'' is listed on a menu board and refers to packaged
bags of chips that are available as self-service foods or foods on
display) (76 FR 19192 at 19217). We affirm these conclusions; however,
we have revised the exception at Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(C).
Under proposed Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(C), self-service food and
food on display would be subject to the written nutrition information
requirement of Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii), except for packaged food that
bears nutrition labeling information required by Sec. 101.9 if the
packaged food can be examined by a consumer before purchasing. In
response to comments regarding a food that is in compliance with Sec.
101.9 but does not otherwise bear nutrition labeling, we have revised
the exception at Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii)(C) to clarify in relevant part
that a covered establishment is not required to provide the written
nutrition information in Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii) for a packaged food,
insofar as that packaged food bears the nutrition information specified
in section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act and the written
nutrition information requirements of Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii). For
example, if the package of chips described previously includes
Nutrition Facts information, including the nutrition information
specified in section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act and Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(ii), a covered establishment would not be required to
provide written nutrition information for the chips as required by
Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii), provided that the packaged food, including its
label, can be examined by a consumer before purchasing the food.
However, if the package of chips does not bear the nutrition
information specified in section 403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act
and Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii) (e.g., because it is exempt from the
nutrition label requirements of Sec. 101.9, such as a food in a small
package that has fewer than 12 square inches of available label space
as provided by Sec. 101.9(j)(13)), the covered establishment would be
required to provide written nutrition information for the chips as
required by Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii). Moreover, if the package of chips
does not bear the nutrition information specified in section
403(q)(5)(H)(ii)(III) of the FD&C Act and Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(ii), the
food would not satisfy the calorie disclosure requirement for self-
service food or food on display in section 403(q)(5)(H)(iii) of the
FD&C Act, and the covered establishment would be required to disclose
the number of calories contained in the package of chips on a sign
adjacent to the food, in accordance with Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(iii). In
either situation, the establishment would be required to post a calorie
declaration for the package of chips on the menu and menu board to the
extent the package of chips is listed on such menu and menu board, as
required by Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i).
XVIII. Comments and FDA Response on Proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(1) to
(c)(5)--Determination of Nutrient Content (Final Sec. 101.11(c)(1) to
(c)(2))
Under section 403(q)(5)(H)(iv) of the FD&C Act, a covered
establishment must have a reasonable basis for its nutrient content
disclosures, including nutrient databases, cookbooks, laboratory
analyses, and other reasonable means, as described in Sec. 101.10.
Proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(1) would establish this reasonable basis
requirement in this rule.
In addition, proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(2), (c)(3), (c)(4), and
(c)(5) would establish requirements for determining compliance with
proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(1). As discussed in the proposed rule, because
the nutrition information that is required to be disclosed by covered
establishments is a subset of the nutrition information required in
Sec. 101.9, we modeled proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(2), (c)(3), (c)(4),
and (c)(5) after our regulation for compliance with the nutrition
labeling requirements for packaged foods in Sec. 101.9(g) (76 FR 19192
at 19218). In brief, for purposes of compliance, proposed Sec.
101.11(c)(2), (c)(3), (c)(4), and (c)(5) would establish the following:
Proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(2) would define two classes of
nutrients. ``Class I'' nutrients would be ``added'' nutrients and
``Class II'' nutrients would be ``naturally occurring'' (indigenous)
nutrients in standard menu items;
Proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(3) would establish conditions
under which a standard menu item with a nutrient declaration of
protein, total carbohydrate, or dietary fiber would be deemed to be
misbranded under section 403(a) of the FD&C Act, including a
requirement that, for Class II protein, total carbohydrate, or dietary
fiber, the nutrient content of an appropriate composite of a standard
menu item not be less than 80 percent of the declared value;
Proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(4) would establish conditions
under which a standard menu item with a nutrient declaration of
calories, sugars, total fat, saturated fat, trans fat, cholesterol, or
sodium would be deemed to be misbranded under section 403(a) of the
FD&C Act, including a requirement that the nutrient content of an
appropriate composite of a standard menu item not be more than 20
percent in excess of the declared value; and
Proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(5) would allow for reasonable
excesses of protein, total carbohydrate, dietary fiber and reasonable
deficiencies of calories, sugars, total fat, saturated fat, trans fat,
cholesterol, or sodium.
Comments commonly referred to the combined provisions of proposed
Sec. 101.11(c)(3) and (c)(4) as ``the 80/120 rule.''
In the following paragraphs, we discuss comments on proposed Sec.
101.11(c)(1), (c)(2), (c)(3), (c)(4), and (c)(5). After considering
these comments, we are:
Finalizing Sec. 101.11(c)(1) with several changes and
making a companion change to the substantiation requirements of
proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(6) (which is being established in Sec.
101.11(c)(3));
Replacing proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(2), (c)(3), (c)(4),
and(c)(5) with a new Sec. 101.11(c)(2); and
Establishing revised certification requirements (in Sec.
101.11(c)(3)(i)(G), (c)(3)(ii)(D), (c)(3)(iii)(E), and (c)(4)(iv)(E))
directed to reasonable steps that a covered establishment takes to
ensure that the method of preparation (e.g., types and amounts of
ingredients in the recipe, cooking temperatures) and amount of a
standard menu item offered for sale adhere to the factors on which the
nutrient values were determined.
(Comment 134) One comment asserted that the menu labeling
requirements would have an impact on the manufacturers of foods sold to
covered establishments, because covered establishments would look to
the food manufacturers to supply them with the nutrition information
that the covered establishments must provide to consumers. For the most
part, food manufacturers do not currently provide restaurants and
similar retail food establishments with this information. The comment
maintained that some manufacturers may elect to provide the nutrition
information in inserts and
[[Page 71230]]
other forms of labeling, which will require development of guidelines
on how the nutrition information should be provided to restaurant
customers.
One comment asked us to consider nutritional information provided
by a producer to a covered establishment to be a reasonable basis for
the covered establishment's nutrition declarations. Another comment
maintained that because food suppliers are not required to provide
nutrition information to retailers, compliance with the rule will be
challenging for covered establishments. The comment asked us to
consider requiring suppliers to provide nutrition information to
covered establishments.
(Response 134) The nutrition labeling provisions of this rule only
apply to covered establishments as specified in Sec. 101.11(a).
Section 4205 of the ACA does not require distributors of food sold to
covered establishments to provide nutrition information to those
establishments. In addition, section 4205 of the ACA did not remove or
amend section 403(q)(5)(G) of the FD&C Act, which provides that the
nutrition labeling requirements of section 403(q)(1) through (4) of the
FD&C Act do not apply to ``food which is sold by a food distributor if
the distributor principally sells food to restaurants and other
establishments in which food is served for immediate human consumption
and does not manufacture, process, or repackage the food it sells.''
Accordingly, this rule does not require distributors of food sold to
covered establishments to provide nutrition information to covered
establishments. Nevertheless, we have revised Sec. 101.11(c)(1), in
relevant part, to expressly specify that the use of Nutrition Facts on
labels on packaged foods that comply with the nutrition labeling
requirements of section 403(q)(1) of the FD&C Act and Sec. 101.9 is an
additional means that may be used as a reasonable basis to determine
nutrient values.
We encourage cooperation between food distributors and covered
establishments so that covered establishments are able to efficiently
comply with the requirements of this rule. We would consider nutrition
information otherwise provided by food distributors to covered
establishments for food sold by such distributors to be captured within
the provision that nutrient values may be determined by using ``other
reasonable means'' provided that such nutrition information is truthful
and not misleading and otherwise in compliance with the requirements of
sections 403(a)(1) and (q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act and Sec. 101.11.
We also have revised Sec. 101.11(c)(1) to include another example
of ``other reasonable means''--i.e., FDA nutrient values for raw fruits
and vegetables in Appendix C of part 101 and FDA nutrient values for
cooked fish in Appendix D of part 101. We developed this nutrition
information to encourage retail stores that sell raw fruits,
vegetables, and cooked fish to participate in the voluntary point-of-
purchase nutrition program (Sec. Sec. 101.42 through 101.45).
(Comment 135) Many comments agreed that a covered establishment
must have a reasonable basis for its nutrient content disclosures and
the means for determining them, which include nutrient databases,
cookbooks, laboratory analyses, and other reasonable means, as
described in Sec. 101.10. Some comments suggested that we replace the
language in proposed Sec. 101.11(c) with the language in Sec.
101.13(q)(5)(ii). Section 101.13(q)(5) sets forth requirements for
nutrient content claims for food served in restaurants or other
establishments in which food is served for immediate consumption or
which is sold for sale or use in such establishments. Section
101.13(q)(5)(ii) provides that for nutrient content claims made for
such food, in lieu of analytical testing, compliance may be determined
using a reasonable basis for concluding that the food that bears the
claim meets the definition for the claim. It continues by stating that
this reasonable basis may derive from recognized databases for raw and
processed foods, recipes, and other means to compute nutrient levels in
the foods or meals and may be used provided reasonable steps are taken
to ensure that the method of preparation adheres to the factors on
which the reasonable basis was determined (e.g., types and amounts of
ingredients, cooking temperatures). Furthermore, according to Sec.
101.13(q)(5)(ii), firms making claims on foods based on this reasonable
basis criterion are required to provide to appropriate regulatory
officials on request the specific information on which their
determination is based and reasonable assurance of operational
adherence to the preparation methods or other basis for the claim.
(Response 135) We agree that some aspects of Sec. 101.13(c)(5)(ii)
that we did not include in Sec. 101.11(c) should be added to the rule.
In particular, Sec. 101.13(c)(5)(ii) requires that reasonable steps be
taken to ensure that the method of preparation adheres to the factors
on which the reasonable basis was determined (e.g., types and amounts
of ingredients, cooking temperatures) when the reasonable basis for a
nutrient disclosure is derived using databases for raw and processed
foods, recipes, or other means (e.g., means other than analytical
testing). As discussed later in this document (see Comment 136),
several comments opposed our proposal for using a compliance approach
for determining compliance modeled after Sec. 101.9(g) and some
comments discussed the problems that can occur when the preparation of
a menu item does not adhere to a recipe or deviates from the parameters
used as the reasonable basis. In Response 136, we discuss the
provisions of Sec. 101.11(c)(2) that we are establishing in this rule
in lieu of the provisions of proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(2), (c)(3),
(c)(4), and (c)(5) that were modeled after Sec. 101.9(g). Those new
provisions specify, in relevant part, that a covered establishment must
take reasonable steps to ensure that the method of preparation (e.g.,
types and amounts of ingredients, cooking temperatures) and amount of a
standard menu item offered for sale adhere to the factors on which its
nutrient values were determined.
We also agree that Sec. 101.11(c) should require, among other
things, that a covered establishment provide to FDA on request specific
information about the basis for its nutrient declarations and
reasonable assurance of operational adherence to the preparation
methods used as the basis for its nutrient declarations. As discussed
in Response 136, we have revised the rule to establish these
requirements.
We disagree that Sec. 101.11(c) need specify that a reasonable
basis may derive from recognized databases for raw and processed foods,
recipes, and other means to compute nutrient levels in the foods or
meals ``in lieu of analytical testing.'' Proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(1)
already provides for the use of databases, cookbooks, and ``other
reasonable means'' in addition to analytical testing. However, we
acknowledge that this may not have been clear in part because we used
the conjunction ``and'' in proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(1). To make clear
that any of the listed means for determining nutrient content may be
used, we have revised Sec. 101.11(c)(1) to replace the conjunction
``and'' with the conjunction ``or'' in the second sentence.
As a companion change, we have revised proposed Sec.
101.11(c)(6)(iv)(A) (which is renumbered as Sec. 101.11(c)(3)(iv)(A)
in the final rule), which addresses the information that must be
provided to FDA, within a reasonable period of time upon request,
[[Page 71231]]
when ``other reasonable means are used to provide the nutrition
information.'' To emphasize that ``other reasonable means'' does not
require analytical testing, Sec. 101.11(c)(3)(iv)(A)) now requires a
detailed description of the ``means'' (rather than the ``method'') used
to determine the nutrition information.
We are finalizing Sec. 101.11(c)(1) with the following additional
changes:
We are substituting the term ``nutrient declarations'' for
the term ``nutrient disclosures'' for consistency in terms used
throughout Sec. 101.11. For example, Sec. 101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)
establishes requirements to ``declare'' calories, and Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(i)(A)(3) refers to calorie ``declarations.''
We are clarifying that nutrient databases may be used to
determine nutrient values regardless of whether they use computer
software programs. For example, a covered establishment may use a
nutrient database that both lists nutrient values for certain food
items and provides software that a covered establishment could use to
calculate nutrient values for a standard menu item prepared with
several of the listed foods in varying amounts. Alternatively, a
covered establishment may use a nutrient database that lists nutrient
values for certain food items, but does not provide such software. In
such a circumstance, a covered establishment would perform and document
its own calculations.
We are substituting the term ``nutrient values'' for the
proposed term ``nutrient levels.'' We are making this change throughout
Sec. 101.11(c), as well as throughout the rule, to consistently use
the single term ``nutrient values.''
We are deleting ``as described in Sec. 101.10.'' Section
403(q)(5)(H)(iv) of the FD&C Act provides that a restaurant or similar
retail food establishment shall have a reasonable basis for its
nutrient content disclosures, including nutrient databases, cookbooks,
laboratory analyses, and other reasonable means, as described in 21 CFR
101.10 (or any successor regulation) or in a related FDA guidance.
Section 101.10 requires nutrition labeling for a restaurant food that
bears a nutrient content or health claim, except that information on
the nutrient amounts that are the basis for the claim may serve as the
functional equivalent of complete nutrition information. Under Sec.
101.10, nutrient levels may be determined by nutrient databases,
cookbooks, or analyses or by other reasonable bases that provide
assurance that the food or meal meets the nutrient requirements for the
claim. In this rule, Sec. 101.11(c)(1) is patterned after Sec.
101.10, as required by section 403(q)(5)(H)(iv) of the FD&C Act, in
that it provides for nutrient values to be determined by nutrient
databases, cookbooks, or analyses or by other reasonable bases.
However, given that we incorporated the applicable regulatory text from
Sec. 101.10 into Sec. 101.11(c)(1), there is no need to refer to
Sec. 101.10 within Sec. 101.11(c)(1). Indeed, including ``as
described in Sec. 101.10'' within Sec. 101.11(c)(1) could mistakenly
signal, to both covered establishments and investigators who would
evaluate compliance with this rule, that a covered establishment must
look to Sec. 101.10 to determine how to fully comply with Sec.
101.11(c)(1).
As finalized, Sec. 101.11(c)(1) states that a covered
establishment must have a reasonable basis for its nutrient
declarations. Nutrient values may be determined by using nutrient
databases (with or without computer software programs), cookbooks,
laboratory analyses, or other reasonable means, including the use of
Nutrition Facts on labels on packaged foods that comply with the
nutrition labeling requirements of section 403(q)(1) of the FD&C Act
and Sec. 101.9, FDA nutrient values for raw fruits and vegetables in
Appendix C of part 101 of the chapter, or FDA nutrient values for
cooked fish in Appendix D of part 101 of the chapter.
(Comment 136) One comment agreed with our proposal for using an
approach for determining compliance modeled after Sec. 101.9(g). The
comment recognized that the proposed approach is consistent with the
accuracy standards for Nutrition Facts information and stated that even
relatively small variances can be significant in influencing
cardiovascular health.
The majority of comments opposed our proposal for using an approach
for determining compliance modeled after Sec. 101.9(g), particularly
with respect to using the ``80/120 rule'' for compliance purposes. Some
comments maintained that the proposed criteria for compliance modeled
after Sec. 101.9(g) are not consistent with Sec. 101.10. Some
comments stated that use of the ``80/120 rule'' for determining
compliance with the menu labeling requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H)
of the FD&C Act contradicts 20 years of FDA precedence regarding
determining compliance for nutrient content claims made for restaurant
foods. The comments referred to our statements in the final rule
establishing Sec. 101.10 regarding claims for restaurant food (58 FR
2302 at 2387, January 6, 1993) and in our 2008 guidance for restaurant
food (Ref. 10). Based on these statements, the comments asserted that
we understood the difficulty in determining compliance for restaurant
foods making nutrient content claims or health claims and acknowledged
the variations unique to restaurant foods (e.g., by recognizing that
restaurant foods are generally hand assembled and, therefore, subject
to individual product variation), and therefore did not require that
restaurants conduct nutrient analyses for such claims. The comments
asserted that reasons such as these led us to require in Sec. 101.10
that restaurants have a reasonable basis for making a nutrient content
or health claim, and that the proposed rule did not provide any factual
basis or evidence that the circumstances that justified the original
``reasonable basis standard'' have changed.
Some comments asserted that using the ``80/120 rule'' for
determining compliance with the menu labeling requirements of section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act was not the intent of Congress. Some
comments considered that use of the ``80/120 rule'' would make the
reasonable basis statutory provision at section 403(q)(5)(H)(iv) of the
FD&C Act irrelevant. Some comments asserted that use of the ``80/120
rule'' in the proposed rule contradicts the plain language of section
403(q)(5)(H)(iv) of the FD&C Act, and therefore, violates the
Administrative Procedure Act (APA). One comment asserted that section
4205 of the ACA proposes a specific standard at section
403(q)(5)(H)(iv) of the FD&C Act for determining nutrient content
disclosures under section 4205, and such a specific standard ``does not
permit an agency to impose a more rigorous standard than one required
by Congress.'' The comment stated that under the framework articulated
in Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resource Defense Counsel, 467 U.S.
837 (1984), ``courts ask as the threshold question of `whether Congress
has directly spoken to the precise question at issue,'' and ``[i]f the
intent of Congress is clear, that is the end of the matter.'' The
comment stated that section 4205 of the ACA is unambiguous ``in
adopting the pre-existing reasonable basis standard'' in Sec. 101.10
to determine compliance with the nutrition labeling requirements of
section 4205, and ``this reflects a clear directive to FDA which does
not contemplate, nor permit, any deviation of the kind contemplated in
the proposed rule.''
Some comments asserted that Congress expressly directed us to
consider ``standardization of recipes and methods of preparation,
reasonable variation in serving size and
[[Page 71232]]
formulation of menu items . . . inadvertent human error, training of
food service workers, variations in ingredients, and other factors'' in
issuing regulations to implement section 4205 of the ACA, including
those regarding reasonable basis. The comments maintained that by
including this language in section 403(q)(5)(H)(x) of the FD&C Act and
directing us to consider such factors, Congress demonstrated its
familiarity with the challenges involved in requiring nutrition
labeling for restaurant food, identifying many of the same factors that
led us to implement the reasonable basis standard in Sec. 101.10.
Some comments maintained that it is not practical to require a
compliance standard for covered establishments that is the same as had
been developed for packaged food manufacturers that use modern
manufacturing calibrated equipment and methods for which the ``80/120
rule'' is appropriate. Some comments asserted that restaurant food is
not standardized like packaged food. For example, some comments
explained that the mere addition of five to seven extra French fries in
an order of small fries would increase calories more than 20 percent
and make the food product misbranded under the ``80/120 rule.'' The
comment stated, as an example, that cheese sticking together and an
extra squirt of mayonnaise in a food are not negligent practices, but
would make the nutrient content declaration for the food out of
compliance. Another comment stated that if a lobster tail is 6 ounces
rather than 5 ounces, the calories would be 20 percent higher. Some
comments asserted that using the ``80/120 rule'' for compliance is
impractical and will require frequent analysis that will add costs.
Some comments contrasted manufacturers that test for nutrient
variations at a single point or a handful of points of manufacture with
restaurants that have thousands of points of manufacture, each of which
would require separate analysis. One comment asserted that the ``80/120
standard'' was not practicable and is inflexible for covered
establishments and would create increased and unnecessary compliance
and litigation costs for covered establishments.
One comment asked us to provide flexibility for variations in
portion size and recipes and allow for disparities between the amount
of a food used to calculate the calories and the actual size that might
be served to or taken by customers. This comment recommended that the
final rule create specific guidelines for displaying caloric
information for non-uniform menu items (e.g. fresh fruit or pieces of
chicken).
Some comments pointed to the variability in the nutrient content of
restaurant foods based on changes in ingredients and recipes, and
seasonal changes in the ingredients as reasons for why complying with
the ``80/120 rule'' would be difficult. One comment noted that moisture
leaves hot foods at hot-food bars after a certain period of time and as
a result nutrient values for such foods change from those values listed
in recipe books. The comment asked us to expand the tolerance by 10
percent at both ends if we kept compliance requirements similar to the
``80/120 rule'' rather than a more flexible ``reasonable basis''
standard. Some comments pointed out that there is variability in menu
items due to using locally grown ingredients and that the nutrient
content of these ingredients can vary by region. One comment asserted
that if we do not account for this variation in the final rule, it will
be a disincentive to covered establishments to use local farmers and
suppliers.
One comment asserted that use of the ``80/120 rule'' will
discourage voluntary opting in by restaurants and similar retail food
establishments not covered by section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act,
which would lead to less national uniformity. The comment stated that
many State and local restaurant menu labeling laws measure compliance
using a standard akin to ``the Federal reasonable basis standard'' and
even where no State nutrition labeling laws apply, a restaurant making
nutrient content claims would be subject to the ``reasonable basis
standard'' under 21 U.S.C. 343(r) (i.e., Sec. 101.10). Therefore,
according to the comment, under the proposed rule, small-chain
restaurants voluntarily registering with us to be subject to the
Federal requirements would subject themselves to more potential
liability under the ``Federal 80/120 standard'' and would thus be less
likely to voluntarily participate in the Federal menu labeling scheme.
The comment maintained that in turn, there would be less national
uniformity in menu labeling, consumers would see less consistent
nutrition information on menus, and State and local inspectors would
have to apply a more complex patchwork of regulatory schemes.
One comment asserted that the ``80/120 rule'' imposes a stricter
compliance standard for foods with smaller amounts of a particular
nutrient that should be consumed in limited quantities (e.g., fat and
cholesterol) because the ``80/120 rule'' measures compliance as a
percentage of the declared nutrient levels. For example, a deviation of
1 gram of fat in a salad declared to have 3 grams of fat would make the
covered establishment out of compliance. The comment asserted that this
is a disincentive for low fat, low sodium foods and is contrary to the
purpose of the rule.
One comment recommended that the amount of protein, total
carbohydrates, and dietary fiber contained in an appropriate composite
of a standard menu item be equal to the declared value, not at least 80
percent of the declared value.
(Response 136) Proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(2), (c)(3), (c)(4), and
(c)(5) were modeled after Sec. 101.9(g), including use of the ``80/120
rule.'' Based on what the comments said, we believe that some comments
misinterpreted the proposed rule as requiring covered establishments to
determine nutrition information through laboratory analyses only. We
did not intend to suggest such a limited requirement. Laboratory
analysis was merely one of several options we proposed to establish in
Sec. 101.11(c)(1) to satisfy the requirement for a reasonable basis
for nutrient levels. Instead, proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(2), (c)(3),
(c)(4), and (c)(5), were provisions modeled after Sec. 101.9(g),
including use of the ``80/120 rule,'' explaining how we would determine
whether a covered establishment is in compliance with the requirement
(in proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(1)) for a covered establishment to have a
reasonable basis for its nutrient disclosures. We did not intend for
proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(2), (c)(3), (c)(4), and (c)(5) to require a
covered establishment to use laboratory analyses in all circumstances
to determine nutrition information for standard menu items. A covered
establishment would have been free to choose any reasonable basis so
long as it produced accurate results.
While we do not agree with some of the comments, particularly those
asserting that our proposal to use the ``80/120 rule'' to determine
compliance would violate the APA, we agree that using the ``80/120
rule'' for determining compliance with the nutrition labeling
requirements likely would raise practical problems such as some of
those described in the comments. Given these practical problems, we
have replaced proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(2), (c)(3), (c)(4), and (c)(5)
with other requirements in a new Sec. 101.11(c)(2). First, Sec.
101.11(c)(2) specifies that nutrient declarations for standard menu
items must be accurate and consistent with the specific basis used to
determine nutrient values. For example, for a nutrient declaration to
be accurate, a covered establishment that relies on a
[[Page 71233]]
nutrient database for a list of nutrient values, and then uses those
nutrient values to perform its own calculation of the nutrient values
in a standard menu item, must correctly add the nutrient values for all
ingredients in the standard menu item taking into consideration the
recipe and ingredient amounts used to prepare the standard menu item
among other factors. Second, Sec. 101.11(c)(2) also specifies that a
covered establishment must take reasonable steps to ensure that the
method of preparation (e.g., types and amounts of ingredients in the
recipe, cooking temperatures) and amount of a standard menu item
offered for sale adhere to the factors on which its nutrient values
were determined. Accordingly, under Sec. 101.11(c)(2), a covered
establishment that selects a recipe from a cookbook and relies on the
cookbook's nutrition information for such recipe as a basis for the
establishment's nutrient declarations must take reasonable steps to
ensure that employees who prepare the standard menu item do not depart
from that recipe, including the recipe's instructions and ingredient
amounts. For example, if a covered establishment determines nutrition
information for a turkey sandwich based on a recipe along with
nutrition information provided in a cookbook for the turkey sandwich,
and the recipe specifies using one tablespoon of mayonnaise, the
establishment must take reasonable steps to ensure that its employees
use one tablespoon of mayonnaise when preparing the turkey sandwich--
e.g., through appropriate instruction about the importance of the
consistent application of one tablespoon of mayonnaise to satisfy the
requirements of this rule.
Although we recognize inadvertent human error and variations in
ingredients, covered establishments must ensure that the nutrient
declarations are truthful and not misleading in part by having standard
methods of preparation for standard menu items and taking reasonable
steps to ensure that the methods of preparation used for a standard
menu item adhere to the factors on which the nutrient levels were
determined. To make clear that a covered establishment has this
responsibility, we are also replacing each of the proposed requirements
(in proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(6)(i)(H), (c)(6)(ii)(D), (c)(6)(iii)(D),
and (c)(6)(iv)(E)) for a certification statement regarding the recipe
used to prepare the standard menu item with a requirement for a
statement signed and dated by a responsible individual employed at the
covered establishment certifying that the covered establishment has
taken reasonable steps to ensure that the method of preparation (e.g.,
types and amounts of ingredients in the recipe, cooking temperatures)
and amount of a standard menu item offered for sale adhere to the
factors on which its nutrient values were determined. These provisions
are in Sec. 101.11(c)(3)(i)(G), (c)(3)(ii)(D), (c)(3)(iii)(E), and
(c)(3)(iv)(E) of the final rule. (See the discussion of these
provisions in section XIX.)
We acknowledge that the calorie content of non-uniform menu items
such as whole fresh fruit and pieces of chicken vary depending on the
size and, in some cases composition (e.g., chicken breast, thigh, or
drumstick) of the items. A covered establishment may take such
variation into consideration when determining the calorie content and
calorie declaration for the menu item. For example, a covered
establishment could base its nutrient declarations on the average size
of a piece of fruit, or on a weighted average of nutrient values for a
box of chicken that contains a fixed number of chicken breasts, thighs,
or drumsticks.
In assessing compliance with Sec. 101.11(c), we will consider the
factors and criteria specified in both Sec. 101.11(c)(1) and (c)(2),
including whether the establishment took reasonable steps to ensure
that the method of preparation for a standard menu item adheres to the
factors on which the reasonable basis was determined. We will assess
compliance on a case by case basis, taking into consideration a number
of factors, including the covered establishment's nutrition labeling,
the method (e.g., laboratory analysis, nutrient database, cookbook, or
nutrient information provided on the labels of packaged food) used by
the covered establishment to determine nutrition information, and the
steps taken by the establishment to ensure that the method of
preparation and amount of a standard menu item adhered to the factors
on which its nutrient values were determined. Further, we may conduct
our own analysis, including laboratory analysis, as needed, including
if we find that nutrient declarations appear to be false or misleading
or the basis upon which the covered establishment based its nutrient
declaration appears to be unreasonable or is otherwise questionable.
XIX. Comments and FDA Response on Proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(6)--
Substantiation Documentation (Final Sec. 101.11(c)(3))
Proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(6) would require that a restaurant or
similar retail food establishment provide to FDA, within a reasonable
period of time upon request, information substantiating nutrient values
including the method and data used to derive these nutrient levels.
Proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(6) would require that covered establishments
provide the following information:
For nutrient databases:
[cir] The identity of the database used.
[cir] The recipe or formula used as a basis for the nutrient
declarations. The recipe posted on the database must be identical to
that used by the restaurant or similar retail food establishment to
prepare the menu item.
[cir] For the specified amounts of each ingredient identified in
the recipe, a detailed listing (e.g., printout) of the amount of each
nutrient that that ingredient contributes to the menu item.
[cir] If this information is not available because the nutrition
information was derived from a computer program, which is designed to
provide only a final list of nutrient values for the recipe, a
certificate of validation attesting to the accuracy of the computer
program.
[cir] A detailed listing (e.g., printout) of the nutrient values
determined for each menu item.
[cir] If this information is not derived through the aid of a
computer program which provides a final nutrient analysis for the menu
item, worksheets used to determine the nutrient values for each of
these menu items.
[cir] Any other information pertinent to the final nutrient levels
of the menu item (e.g., information about what might cause slight
variations in the nutrient profile such as moisture variations).
[cir] A statement signed by a responsible individual employed by
the covered establishment that can certify that the information
contained in the nutrient analysis is complete and accurate and that
the recipe used to prepare the menu item is identical to that used for
the nutrient analysis.
For published cookbooks that contain nutritional
information for recipes in the cookbook:
[cir] The name, author, and publisher of the cookbook used.
[cir] If available, information provided by the cookbook about how
the nutrition information for the recipes was obtained.
[cir] A copy of the recipe used to prepare the menu item and a copy
of the nutrition information for that menu item as provided by the
cookbook.
[[Page 71234]]
[cir] A statement signed by a responsible individual employed by
the covered establishment certifying that the recipe used to prepare
the menu item by the restaurant or similar retail food establishment is
the same recipe provided in the cookbook. (Recipes may be divided as
necessary to accommodate differences in the portion size derived from
the recipe and that are served as the menu item but no changes may be
made to the proportion of ingredients used.).
For analyses:
[cir] A copy of the recipe for the menu item used for the nutrient
analysis.
[cir] The identity of the laboratory performing the analysis.
[cir] Copies of analytical worksheets used to determine and verify
nutrition information.
[cir] A statement signed by a responsible individual employed by
the covered establishment that can certify that the information
contained in the nutrient analysis is complete and accurate and an
additional signed statement certifying that the recipe used to prepare
the menu item is identical to that used for the nutrient analysis.
For nutrition information provided by other reasonable
means:
[cir] A detailed description of the method used to determine the
nutrition information.
[cir] Documentation of the validity of that method.
[cir] A recipe or formula used as a basis for the nutrient
determination. The recipe used in determining these nutrient values
must be the same recipe used by the restaurant and similar retail food
establishment to prepare the item.
[cir] Any data derived in determining the nutrient values for the
menu item; and
[cir] A statement signed by a responsible individual employed by
the covered establishment that can certify that the information
contained in the nutrient analysis is complete and accurate and that
the recipe used to prepare the menu item is identical to that used for
the nutrient analysis.
In the following paragraphs, we discuss comments on the proposed
substantiation requirements. After considering comments, including
comments (discussed in the previous section of this document) that
caused us to remove proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(2), (c)(3), (c)(4), and
(c)(5), we are:
Redesignating proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(6) as Sec.
101.11(c)(3);
Clarifying the applicability of the requirements by
replacing the term ``restaurant or similar retail food establishment''
with ``covered establishment'' in the introductory paragraph in Sec.
101.11(c)(3) and in the subparagraph in Sec. 101.11(c)(3)(ii)(D).
Providing that the statement certifying that the
information contained in the nutrient analysis is complete and accurate
may be signed by a responsible individual employed by ``the covered
establishment or its parent entity'' (proposed Sec.
101.11(c)(6)(i)(H), (c)(6)(iii)(D), and (c)(6)(iv)(E), redesignated as
Sec. 101.11(c)(3)(i)(F), (c)(3)(iii)(D), and (c)(6)(iv)(D),
respectively);
Requiring a certification that the covered establishment
has taken reasonable steps to ensure that the method of preparation
(e.g., types and amounts of ingredients, cooking temperatures in the
recipe) and amount of a standard menu item offered for sale adhere to
the factors on which its nutrient values were determined;
Requiring that all certification statements be dated as
well as signed;
Specifying what we mean by ``the identity of the database
used'' in proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(6)(i)(A) (redesignated as Sec.
101.11(c)(3)(i)(A));
Combining and replacing certain proposed details of the
substantiation documentation when nutrient databases are used (i.e.,
proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(6)(i)(C), (c)(6)(i)(D), and (c)(6)(i)(F)) with
requirements (in Sec. 101.11(c)(3)(i)(C)) to present the requirements
in a simplified and streamlined format;
Specifying what we mean by ``the identity of the
laboratory performing the analysis'' in proposed Sec.
101.11(c)(6)(iii)(B) (redesignated as Sec. 101.11(c)(3)(iii)(B));
Specifying that copies of analytical worksheets used to
determine and verify nutrition information must include the analytical
method in proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(6)(iii)(C) (redesignated as Sec.
101.11(c)(3)(iii)(C));
Revising proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(6)(iv)(A) (redesignated
as Sec. 101.11(c)(3)(iv)(A)) to require a detailed description of the
``means'' (rather than the ``method'') used to determine the nutrition
information ``by other reasonable means'';
Deleting proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(6)(iv)(B) and
redesignating proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(6)(iv)(C), (c)(6)(iv)(D) and
(c)(6)(iv)(E) as Sec. 101.11(c)(3)(iv)(B), (c)(3)(iv)(C), and
(c)(3)(iv)(D), respectively; and
Revising proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(6)(iv)(D) (redesignated
as Sec. 101.11(c)(3)(iv)(C)) to provide an example of any ``data
derived in determining the nutrient values.''
In addition, as nonsubstantive editorial changes we are:
Replacing all instances of the term ``nutrient levels''
with the term ``nutrient values'' to consistently use the same term
throughout Sec. 101.11(c);
Replacing all instances of the term ``menu item'' with
``standard menu item'' to emphasize that the requirements for
determination of nutrient content apply only to standard menu items;
and
Adding the conjunction ``and'' between Sec.
101.11(c)(3)(i)(F) and Sec. 101.11(c)(3)(i)(G), between Sec.
101.11(c)(3)(ii)(C) and Sec. 101.11(c)(3)(ii)(D), between Sec.
101.11(c)(3)(iii)(D) and Sec. 101.11(c)(3)(iii)(E), and between Sec.
101.11(c)(3)(iv)(D) and Sec. 101.11(c)(3)(iv)(E), to clarify that all
of the items listed under Sec. 101.11(c)(3)(i), Sec.
101.11(c)(3)(ii), Sec. 101.11(c)(3)(iii), and Sec. 101.11(c)(3)(iv)
are required.
(Comment 137) As discussed in more detail in section XVIII (see
Comment 136), several comments opposed the nutrient determination
requirements in proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(2), (c)(3), (c)(4), and
(c)(5).
(Response 137) As discussed in more detail in section XVIII (see
Response 136), we are deleting those requirements from the rule. Some
comments misinterpreted these provisions, e.g., by concluding that we
intended to require the use of laboratory analysis as a reasonable
basis in all circumstances. To reduce the potential for future
misunderstanding about the substantiation provisions in the final rule,
we have made the following revisions to the requirements for
substantiation documentation.
First, we have revised proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(6)(iii)
(redesignated as Sec. 101.11(c)(3)(iii) in the final rule) to clarify
that the analyses governed by the provision are ``laboratory
analyses.'' Some of the specific requirements of Sec.
101.11(c)(3)(iii)) (such as for analytical worksheets) may not apply to
other means used by a covered establishment as a reasonable basis for
its nutrient determinations.
Second, we are providing more specific information about the
requirements for substantiation information. Specifically:
We have revised proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(6)(i)(A)
(redesignated as Sec. 101.11(c)(3)(i)(A) in the final rule) to specify
that substantiation documentation for nutrient databases must include
the name and version (including the date of the version) of the
database, and, as applicable, the name of the applicable software
company and any Web site address for the database. The name and version
of a database would include the name and version of
[[Page 71235]]
the computer software, if applicable. Any database suitable for use as
a reasonable basis for the purposes of Sec. 101.11 would have a name
and version number; in some cases, the version number is a date. The
version number is necessary to fully identify a database because
databases may be updated to reflect more recent data and information,
and nutrient values generated with one version of a database may be
different from nutrient values generated by a different database. If,
for example, a covered establishment used ``version x'' of a database
for its nutrient determinations, and we used ``version y'' of that
database to evaluate compliance with the nutrient determination
requirements of rule, we inadvertently could conclude that the covered
establishment is out of compliance with the rule if the nutrient values
we obtained using ``version y'' do not match those obtained using
``version x.'' Some databases may be provided by a public source (such
as USDA), whereas others may be provided by a private vendor. If we
have any questions about the database, we may need to contact the
public source or private vendor. Some databases are available on the
Internet; the Web site address would enable us to obtain any necessary
followup information on an Internet-based database.
We have revised proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(6)(iii)(B)
(redesignated as Sec. 101.11(c)(3)(iii)(B) in the final rule) to
specify that substantiation documentation for laboratory analyses must
include the name and address of the laboratory. Some laboratories that
conduct nutrient analyses have more than one facility, and the name of
the laboratory alone would not be sufficient to identify the laboratory
that conducted the analysis.
We have revised proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(6)(iv)(D)
(redesignated as Sec. 101.11(c)(3)(iv)(C) in the final rule) to
provide ``nutrition information about the ingredients used, including
the source of the nutrient information'' as an example of what we mean
by any ``data derived in determining nutrient values.''
Third, we are reorganizing and combining the provisions of proposed
Sec. 101.11(c)(6)(i)(C), (c)(6)(i)(D), and (c)(6)(i)(F) (in Sec.
101.11(c)(3)(i)(C)) to simplify the requirements and make them more
clear. In particular, we reorganized the requirements to clarify that
the substantiation documentation that would be provided to FDA can vary
depending on characteristics of the database. For example, in some
cases, the information and calculations provided by a database are
transparent to a person using the database, whereas, in other cases,
such information and calculations are not transparent to the user.
Section Sec. 101.11(c)(3)(i)(C) addresses these different situations
in separate subparagraphs (i.e., in Sec. 101.11(c)(3)(i)(C)(1) and
(c)(3)(i)(C)(2)). Under Sec. 101.11(c)(3)(i)(C)(1), the substantiation
information for nutrient databases must include information on: (1) The
amount of each nutrient that the specified amount of each ingredient
identified in the recipe contributes to the menu item; and (2) How the
database was used including calculations or operations (e.g.,
worksheets or computer printouts) to determine the nutrient values for
the standard menu items. Under Sec. 101.11(c)(3)(i)(C)(2), if the
information in Sec. 101.11(c)(3)(i)(C)(1) is not available, the
substantiation documentation for nutrient databases must include
certification attesting that the database will provide accurate results
when used appropriately and that the database was used in accordance
with its instructions.
Fourth, we have revised proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(6)(iii)(C)
(redesignated as Sec. 101.11(c)(3)(iii)(C) in the final rule) to
specify that copies of analytical worksheets used to determine and
verify nutrition information must include the analytical method used to
determine and verify nutrition information. An analytical worksheet
cannot be evaluated for compliance purposes unless the method is
identified. A key aspect of evaluating analytical results is
determining whether the procedure was carried out correctly, by
comparing the data in the work sheets to the procedure in the
applicable analytical method.
(Comment 138) One comment recommended that covered establishments
provide references for their nutrient values to consumers on request.
Another comment recommended that establishments be required to maintain
the reasonable basis verification only at headquarters, ``and not in-
store and available upon customer request or online.'' This comment
considered that providing hard copies on site at many locations would
be costly, administratively burdensome, and environmentally
unsustainable.
(Response 138) We did not propose to require that the
substantiation documentation be available to consumers in a covered
establishment or online. The provisions for making substantiation
documentation available to us were directed to our enforcement of the
rule rather than to informing consumers. Hard copies of the
substantiation documentation would only need to be provided to FDA
``within a reasonable period of time upon request.'' Thus, a covered
establishment need not generate any hard copies of the substantiation
information until we request the information. We would request
substantiation documentation from individual covered establishments
during inspections. However, a covered establishment could wait to
physically obtain substantiation documentation generated by its
corporate headquarters or parent entity until we ask for it, provided
that the covered establishment can obtain the information within a
reasonable period of time.
(Comment 139) One comment stated that it was unclear whether each
independently operated unit, including a franchisee, will have to
substantiate the accuracy of the nutrient information. Some comments
disagreed that the responsible person of the covered establishment
needs to sign a statement certifying that the nutrient analysis is
complete and accurate and that recipes used to prepare menu items are
identical to those used for the nutrient analysis. The comments
asserted that this information is mostly gathered at corporate
headquarters and there is no comparable requirement for packaged food.
(Response 139) We agree, in part, and disagree, in part, with these
comments. We agree that the responsible individual certifying that the
nutrient analysis is complete and accurate need not be employed at the
covered establishment; instead, the individual could be employed at the
establishment's corporate headquarters or parent entity. Whether such
individual is employed at the covered establishment or the
establishment's corporate headquarters or parent entity, it is critical
that the individual who signs the certification has a factual basis for
certifying that the nutrient analysis is complete and correct.
We disagree that a responsible individual employed at the covered
establishment's corporate headquarters or parent entity, rather than a
responsible individual employed at the covered establishment, could
sign a certification regarding the use of a recipe within a covered
establishment. A responsible individual employed at the establishment's
corporate headquarters or parent entity likely would not have a factual
basis for certifying the actions of a specific covered establishment
because the individual would not be present in the establishment where
the standard items are prepared, and, thus, likely could not certify
the actions the establishment takes to comply with the rule.
[[Page 71236]]
After considering these comments, we have revised the requirements
for certification statements (i.e., proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(6)(i)(H),
(c)(6)(ii)(D), (c)(6)(iii)(D), and (c)(6)(iv)(E), which we have
renumbered in the final rule as described in the following sentences)
to distinguish certifications that must be signed and dated by a
responsible individual employed at the covered establishment from
certifications that may be signed and dated by a responsible individual
employed at either the covered establishment or at its corporate
headquarters or parent entity. First, Sec. 101.11(c)(3)(i)(F),
(c)(3)(iii)(D), and (c)(6)(iv)(D) of the final rule require a statement
signed and dated by a responsible individual, employed at the covered
establishment or its corporate headquarters or parent entity, who can
certify that the information contained in the nutrient analysis is
complete and accurate. We are using the term ``parent entity'' in
addition to ``corporate headquarters'' because some business entities
may not be ``corporations.''
Second, Sec. 101.11(c)(3)(i)(G), (c)(3)(ii)(D), (c)(3)(iii)(E),
and (c)(6)(iv)(E) of the final rule require a statement signed and
dated by a responsible individual employed at the covered establishment
certifying that the covered establishment has taken reasonable steps to
ensure that the method of preparation (e.g., types and amounts of
ingredients in the recipe, cooking temperatures) and amount of a
standard menu item offered for sale adhere to the factors on which its
nutrient values were determined.
We are requiring that all certification statements be dated as well
as signed. A date is standard practice on such documents and would be
necessary, for example, to establish whether a certification signed in
advance by a responsible individual at the parent entity can address
nutrient analyses conducted over time.
(Comment 140) One comment opposed the proposed requirement that a
covered establishment turn over its recipes to a governmental agency,
because a covered establishment cannot be assured that its proprietary
information will be protected and will not make it into the hands of
competitors or unscrupulous governmental employees looking to sell or
pass on trade secrets.
(Response 140) While we understand that some establishments may
have concerns about the confidentiality of information inspected by FDA
under Sec. 101.11, we emphasize that we protect confidential
information from disclosure, consistent with applicable statutes and
regulations. Our disclosure of information is subject to the Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA) (5 U.S.C. 552), the Trade Secrets Act (18 U.S.C.
1905), the FD&C Act, and our implementing disclosure regulations under
part 20 (21 CFR part 20), which include protection for confidential
commercial or financial information and trade secrets. To the extent
that the comment is asserting that we have no procedures in place to
protect the confidentiality of proprietary information, we disagree. We
receive trade secret or confidential information on a regular and
recurring basis. As noted previously, trade secrets and commercial or
financial information that are privileged or confidential are protected
from disclosure under the FOIA, the Trade Secrets Act, the FD&C Act,
and our implementing disclosure regulations (see, e.g., 21 U.S.C.
331(j), 18 U.S.C. 1905; 21 CFR 20.61(c)). Our disclosure regulations
set forth specific procedures for assuring such protection (see part
20). A covered establishment that provides substantiation documentation
to us may identify any information in such documentation that the
establishment considers to be trade secret or confidential commercial
or financial information (21 CFR 20.61(d)). Information so marked will
not be disclosed to the extent such information is protected under the
FOIA and our disclosure regulations (part 20).
(Comment 141) A few comments asserted that the proposed requirement
that a responsible individual of the covered establishment certify that
the recipe used for the standard menu item is identical to that used
for the nutrient analysis is unreasonable and beyond the scope of the
law. The comments considered that Congress directed us (in section
403(q)(5)(H)(x)(II)(aa) of the FD&C Act) to consider standardization of
recipes, reasonable variation in serving size and formulation of menu
items, inadvertent human error, training of food service workers,
variations in ingredients, and other factors. One comment noted that
this certification is not required by statute, and considered that it
is not clear what regulatory purpose it would serve. The comments
asserted that it is unreasonable to expect a covered establishment to
prepare a standard menu item in a manner that is identical to the
recipe on each given day. A few comments opposed asking employees to
attest that they have followed recipes exactly and considered such a
requirement to be unfair to employees because there are several factors
that affect the recipe such as seasonal variations, market availability
of certain ingredients, and modifying recipes to accommodate regional
taste preferences. One comment suggested deleting the following
proposed requirements in Sec. 101.11(c)(6):
For nutrient databases
[cir] The recipe posted on the database must be identical to that
used by the restaurant or similar retail food establishment to prepare
the menu item.
[cir] For the specified amounts of each ingredient identified in
the recipe, a detailed listing (e.g., printout) of the amount of each
nutrient that that ingredient contributes to the menu item.
[cir] If this information is not available because the nutrition
information was derived from a computer program, which is designed to
provide only a final list of nutrient values for the recipe, a
certificate of validation attesting to the accuracy of the computer
program.
[cir] A statement signed by a responsible individual employed by
the covered establishment that can certify that the information
contained in the nutrient analysis is complete and accurate and that
the recipe used to prepare the menu item is identical to that used for
the nutrient analysis.
For published cookbooks that contain nutritional
information for recipes in the cookbook:
[cir] A copy of the recipe used to prepare the menu item and a copy
of the nutrition information for that menu item as provided by the
cookbook.
[cir] A statement signed by a responsible individual employed by
the covered establishment certifying that the recipe used to prepare
the menu item by the restaurant or similar retail food establishment is
the same recipe provided in the cookbook. (Recipes may be divided as
necessary to accommodate differences in the portion size derived from
the recipe and that are served as the menu item but no changes may be
made to the proportion of ingredients used.)
For analyses:
[cir] A statement signed by a responsible individual employed by
the covered establishment that can certify that the information
contained in the nutrient analysis is complete and accurate and an
additional signed statement certifying that the recipe used to prepare
the menu item is identical to that used for the nutrient analysis.
For nutrition information provided by other reasonable
means:
[cir] The word ``detailed'' from the provision in Sec.
101.11(c)(6)(iv)(A).
[cir] Documentation of the validity of that method.
[cir] A statement signed by a responsible individual employed by
the covered establishment that can certify that the
[[Page 71237]]
information contained in the nutrient analysis is complete and accurate
and that the recipe used to prepare the menu item is identical to that
used for the nutrient analysis.
(Response 141) As discussed in Response 136, we are replacing each
requirement (in proposed Sec. Sec. 101.11(c)(6)(i)(H), (c)(6)(ii)(D),
(c)(6)(iii)(D), and (c)(6)(iv)(E)) that a responsible individual of the
covered establishment certify that the recipe used for the standard
menu item is identical to that used for the nutrient analysis used to
prepare the standard menu item with a requirement for a statement
signed and dated by a responsible individual employed at the covered
establishment certifying that the establishment has taken reasonable
steps to ensure that the method of preparation (e.g., types and amounts
of ingredients in the recipe, cooking temperatures) and amount of a
standard menu item offered for sale adhere to the factors on which its
nutrient values were determined. Therefore, Sec. 101.11(c) will not
require a responsible individual of the covered establishment to
certify that the recipe used for the standard menu item is identical to
that used for the nutrient analysis used to prepare the standard menu
item; nor will it require that a covered establishment prepare a
standard menu item using a recipe that is identical to that used in a
database (as proposed in Sec. 101.11(c)(6)(i)(B)). Nevertheless, a
covered establishment must ensure that its nutrition labeling is
truthful and not misleading and that it has a reasonable basis for its
nutrient content disclosures, as further discussed in Response 136.
As requested in Comment 136 and discussed in Response 136, we have
revised the rule to require (in Sec. 101.11(c)(2)) that the covered
establishment take reasonable steps to ensure that the method of
preparation (e.g., types and amounts of ingredients in the recipe,
cooking temperatures) and amount of a standard menu item offered for
sale adhere to the factors on which its nutrient values were
determined. As discussed in Response 135, we have revised proposed
Sec. 101.11(c)(6)(iv)(A) (which is renumbered as Sec.
101.11(c)(3)(iv)(A) in the final rule), which addresses the information
that must be provided to FDA, within a reasonable period of time upon
request, when ``other reasonable means are used to provide the
nutrition information.'' To emphasize that ``other reasonable means''
does not require analytical testing, Sec. 101.11(c)(3)(iv)(A))
requires a detailed description of the ``means'' (rather than the
``method'') used to determine the nutrition information.
We also have removed proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(6)(iv)(B), which
would have required documentation of the validity of the method for
``nutrition information provided by other reasonable means.'' As
evidenced by the examples we now provide of ``other reasonable means''
in Sec. 101.11(c)(1), ``documentation of validity of that method''
generally would not apply to ``other reasonable means'' that are
reasonably foreseeable.
Other than by removing proposed Sec. 101.11(c)(6)(iv)(B) and the
proposed provisions requiring that the recipe used to prepare a
standard menu item be identical to the recipe used to determine the
nutrition information for the standard menu item described previously,
we are not deleting the remaining specific proposed provisions that one
comment recommended deleting. The comment provided no explanation or
basis for deleting those specific provisions. Further, these provisions
establish requirements for substantiating determination of nutrient
content for standard menu items provided by covered establishments. As
we discussed in the proposed rule (76 FR 19192 at 19219), to determine
whether a covered establishment has a reasonable basis for its nutrient
content disclosures, as required by section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C
Act, and whether a standard menu item is otherwise misbranded under
section 403(a)(1) of the FD&C Act, we must have access to the
information substantiating the covered establishment's determination of
nutrient content. Without these requirements, which provide access to
substantiation documentation, we would not be able to efficiently
determine whether a covered establishment's nutrition labeling is
truthful and not misleading. Further, without access to substantiation
documentation of the basis of a covered establishment's nutrient
content disclosures, including recipe and ingredient information, we
would not be able to determine whether an establishment has a
reasonable basis for its nutrition content disclosures, as required by
section 403(q)(5)(H)(iv) of the FD&C Act. Accordingly, such
requirements are necessary for the efficient enforcement of the FD&C
Act.
XX. Comments and FDA Response on Proposed Section 101.11(d)--Voluntary
Registration To Elect To Be Subject to the Rule
Proposed Sec. 101.11(d)(1) would provide that a restaurant or
similar retail food establishment that is not part of a chain with 20
or more locations doing business under the same name and offering for
sale substantially the same menu items could voluntarily register to
provide the nutrition information required by Sec. 101.11(b), and that
in doing so they would no longer be subject to non-identical State or
local nutrition labeling requirements. Proposed Sec. 101.11(d)(2)
would provide that the authorized official of a restaurant or similar
retail food establishment as defined, may register with FDA. Proposed
Sec. 101.11(d)(3) would list the types of information (in brief, the
contact information of each restaurant or similar retail food
establishment, as well as contact information of an official onsite,
trade names the restaurant or similar retail food establishment uses,
preferred mailing address, and certification) that a restaurant or
similar retail food establishment would need to provide to us in order
to register voluntarily. Proposed Sec. 101.11(d)(3) and (d)(4) would
also describe the mechanism for submission by email, fax, mail, or
online form. Finally, proposed Sec. 101.11(d)(5) would require re-
registration every other year within 60 days prior to the expiration of
the current registration with FDA, and would provide that registration
will automatically expire if not renewed.
In the following paragraphs, we discuss comments on these proposed
provisions. We are finalizing them with the following changes for
clarity.
We are amending the titles of Sec. 101.11(d)(4) and
(d)(5) by replacing the question mark in each title with a period
because these titles are not questions.
We are deleting the revision date of Form FDA 3757 (i.e.,
7/10) from Sec. 101.11(d)(3). The FDA form number is sufficient to
identify the form. Moreover, the revision date may change as a result
of the renewal of the form every 3 years under the Paperwork Reduction
Act.
We are moving proposed Sec. 101.11(d)(3)(vi) and
(d)(3)(vii) to be subparagraphs of Sec. 101.11(d)(4) rather than Sec.
101.11(d)(3) and redesignating them as Sec. 101.11(d)(4)(i) and
(d)(4)(ii), respectively. These provisions are directed to ``How to
register'' rather than to ``What information is required?''
For clarity, we are adding the form number (i.e., Form FDA
3757) to the second sentence of Sec. 101.11(d)(4).
For completeness, we have added ``.gov'' to the end of the
email address provided for voluntary registration under Sec.
101.11(d)(4)(i). The complete email address now reads
``menulawregistration@fda.hhs.gov.''
We have revised the format of the cross-reference, within
Sec. 101.11(d)(4) to Sec. 101.11(d)(3) to read ``paragraph (d)(3)
[[Page 71238]]
of this section'' rather than ``Sec. 101.11(d)(3).'' We note that the
proposed rule had identified the cross-reference as ``Sec.
101.11(c)(3).'' We revised this to ``Sec. 101.11(d)(3)'' in the
correction document, but did not revise the format at that time.
(Comment 142) One comment supported the proposed registration
requirements. One comment recommended that retail food establishments
not covered by section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act, regardless of
whether they have fewer than 20 locations or if the sale of food is not
the primary business activity, be allowed to elect to become subject to
the requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act by registering
biannually with us. One comment referred to our discussions in the
proposed rule that establishments such as cafeterias in schools and
hospitals would not be covered by the rule under the proposed
definition of ``restaurant or similar retail food establishment'' (see
Footnote 1 at 76 FR 19192 at 19197 and discussion at 19230). This
comment asked us to clarify whether there are some establishments
(e.g., hospitals or school cafeterias) that are not restaurants or
similar retail food establishments and therefore cannot voluntarily
register to be subject to the Federal menu labeling requirements. The
comment also asked us to clarify whether certain food service
contractor facilities can voluntarily register even if other facilities
in the overall set of operations do not. The comment recommended that
we allow a restaurant or similar retail food establishment to
voluntarily register on an establishment-by-establishment basis and not
require the chain or company to make a single corporate-wide
determination. The comment asked us to allow a food service contract
business to register some of their establishments in order to make
well-informed decisions on whether to register the other establishments
and modify their establishments and contracts accordingly (``rolling
adoption''). The comment also asked if there were requirements for
opting out of the Federal requirements after voluntarily registering.
The comment asked whether a restaurant or similar retail food
establishment is required to be covered by the menu labeling
requirements for a specific length of time, once it has voluntarily
registered.
(Response 142) The final rule defines ``restaurant or similar
retail food establishment'' to mean a retail establishment that offers
for sale restaurant-type food, except if it is a school as defined in 7
CFR 210.2 or 220.2. Under Sec. 101.11(d), a restaurant or similar
retail food establishment, as defined in Sec. 101.11(a), that is not
part of a chain with 20 or more locations doing business under the same
name and offering for sale substantially the same menu items (and,
thus, is not subject to the requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H) of the
FD&C Act) may voluntarily register to be subject to the requirements
established in this rule. It does not matter whether the sale of food
is the establishment's primary business activity, because the
definition of restaurant or similar retail food establishment in this
rule does not include a primary business test. Many establishments that
would not have been a ``restaurant or similar retail food
establishment'' under the definition we proposed (including
establishments in hospitals) would be a restaurant or similar retail
food establishment under the definition established in this rule (see
the discussion of the definition of restaurant or similar retail food
establishment in section VI.B). Whether any such establishment is
automatically covered by the rule generally would depend on whether the
establishment satisfies all other criteria in the definition of
``covered establishment'' (i.e., part of a chain with 20 or more
locations doing business under the same name (regardless of the type of
ownership, e.g., individual franchises) and offering for sale
substantially the same menu items).
Section 403(q)(5)(H)(ix) of the FD&C Act provides that an
authorized official of any restaurant or similar retail food
establishment not subject to the requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H)
may elect to become subject to the requirements by registering with
FDA. Accordingly, any establishment that meets the definition for a
restaurant or similar retail food establishment, as provided in Sec.
101.11(a), that is not already subject to the requirements of section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act can voluntarily register to become subject
to the requirements under Sec. 101.11(d). Establishments that do not
meet the definition of ``restaurant or similar retail food
establishment'' (e.g., drug stores that do not offer for sale any
restaurant-type food) cannot voluntarily register.
Under Sec. 101.11(d), an authorized official is permitted to
register an individual restaurant or similar retail food establishment
on an establishment-by-establishment basis, in that the authorized
official may register a single restaurant or similar retail food
establishment or multiple restaurants or similar retail food
establishments within a chain on a single registration form, provided
that the individual is authorized to do so for all of the restaurants
or similar retail food establishments included on the form (Form FDA
3757) submitted. Whether a decision to register is made on an
establishment-by-establishment basis or is a corporate-wide decision
applying to many or all establishments within a chain is a matter for
the restaurant or similar retail establishments and any corporate
management to determine. This is as true for restaurants or similar
retail food establishments operated by contractors as it is for other
restaurants or similar retail food establishments.
The rule does not establish a date by which a restaurant or similar
retail food establishment must register in order to ``opt in'' as a
covered establishment and, thus, establishments within a chain could
approach the voluntary registration using the ``rolling adoption''
requested by one comment.
A restaurant or similar retail food establishment that has
voluntarily registered under Sec. 101.11 must comply with the
requirements of sections 403(a)(1), 403(f), and 403(q)(5)(H) of the
FD&C Act and Sec. 101.11 for 2 years after the date of registration
and may not ``opt out'' until the 2 years has passed. If the restaurant
or similar retail food establishment wants to ``opt out,'' the
mechanism to do so would be to let the registration lapse (i.e., not
re-register) after the 2 years have passed.
XXI. Comments and FDA Response on Proposed Sec. 101.11(e)--Signatures
Proposed Sec. 101.11(e) would provide that signatures obtained
under the voluntary registration provisions that meet the definition of
electronic signatures in Sec. 11.3(b)(7) would be exempt from the
requirements of part 11 of the CFR (requirements for electronic records
and signatures).
We received no comments on this proposed provision and are
finalizing it without change.
XXII. Comments and FDA Response on Proposed Sec. 101.11(f)--
Misbranding
Proposed Sec. 101.11(f) would provide that ``a standard menu item
offered for sale in a covered establishment'' would be ``deemed
misbranded under sections 201(n), 403(a), and/or 403(q) of the Federal
Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act if its label or labeling is not in
conformity'' with the requirements for nutrition labeling and
determination of nutrient content at Sec. 101.11(b) and (c).
While we received no comments on this proposed provision, we are
finalizing this provision with one change. We are including a reference
to section 403(f) of the FD&C Act to clarify
[[Page 71239]]
that failure to comply with the requirements of Sec. 101.11(b) could
cause a food to be misbranded under section 403(f) of the FD&C Act.
Section 403(f) of the FD&C Act provides that a food shall be deemed
misbranded ``if any word, statement, or other information required by
or under authority of this Act to appear on the label or labeling is
not prominently placed thereon with such conspicuousness (as compared
with other words, statements, designs, or devices, in the labeling) and
in such terms as to render it likely to be read and understood by the
ordinary individual under customary conditions of purchase and use.''
For example, as discussed in Response 127, if a calorie declaration for
a standard menu item that is a self-service food or food on display is
not declared in a manner that complies with Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(iii)(A)(3)(ii), in that the declaration is not clear and
conspicuous, the standard menu item would be misbranded under section
403(f) of the FD&C Act in addition to section 403(q) of the FD&C Act.
XXIII. Comments and FDA Response on Effective Date
A. Proposed Effective Date and Request for Comment
The proposed rule specified that the final rule would become
effective 6 months from the date of its publication in the Federal
Register (76 FR 19192 at 19219). We noted that compliance is expected
to yield significant public health benefits because consumers will have
calorie and other nutrition information when they make menu choices.
Because of this benefit, we stated that it is reasonable to make the
requirements effective as soon as practicable. We recognized, however,
the potential difficulties of implementing the rule in this timeframe,
and requested comment on whether the effective date should be extended
for a greater period of time after the publication of the final rule.
In particular, we requested comment on whether a 9-month or 1-year
implementation timeframe would be more appropriate.
We also requested comment, supported by data, concerning how much
time is needed for covered establishments to come into compliance with
the rule, including, if possible, data on whether specific provisions
of the rule can be more quickly implemented than others. We also
requested comment on whether we should provide for staggered
implementation based on the size of a chain or of a specific franchisee
and again requested that suggestions be supported by data.
B. Comments on Proposed Effective Date
(Comment 143) Many comments supported our proposed 6-month
effective date. Some comments noted that State and local jurisdictions
with menu labeling requirements implemented and enforced the
requirements in 6 or 7 months. One comment stated that many large
chains have already conducted nutrient analyses for their menu items.
In contrast, another comment reported the implementation time frames
for 12 State and local requirements. This comment noted that
restaurants subject to State or local menu labeling requirements have
had no less than 6 months to comply with such requirements. This
comment reported that one city (Philadelphia) provided more than 1 year
for compliance and one State (Oregon) provided 6 months for
implementation of Phase 1 of its requirements, and an additional year
for compliance with Phase 2 of its requirements. This comment urged us
to allow establishments at least 1 year to come into compliance with
the Federal requirements.
Several comments opposed the 6-month effective date and requested
an effective date of at least 1 year. Some comment noted that an
effective date of at least 1 year would be necessary for covered
establishments to develop and install redesigned menus. In particular,
one comment from national associations representing a number of
restaurants estimated that there are 250,000 to 275,000 covered
restaurants in the United States, not including similar retail food
establishments that would be covered under the rule. This comment
recommended that we adopt an implementation period of not less than 1
year after the publication of the final rule and noted that extending
the time period to 1 year would allow most restaurants to incorporate
adding calorie declarations to menus and associated menu redesigns with
regular menu replacement cycles, thereby reducing costs. This comment
identified several specific steps necessary for covered establishments
to comply with the rule, including:
``Digest the final rule,'' including determining what are
menus and menu boards, what are standard menu items, what are custom
orders, and what are temporary menu items or otherwise excluded foods;
Determine nutrient content levels and ensure that their
bases for determining such nutrient information are sound;
Prepare and print written nutrition information;
Redesign menus and menu boards to include calories;
Roll out new menus and menu boards simultaneously to chain
restaurants nationwide;
Update food preparation procedures to ensure consistency
and ensure that reasonable steps are in place to ensure standard menu
items are prepared consistently;
Create processes where information related to standard
menu items, e.g., ingredients supplier data, is periodically updated;
and
Develop and conduct training.
This comment also presented the following estimated time frames to
conduct some of these steps:
Four weeks to digest the requirements of the rule;
Twenty-four weeks to design new layouts, obtain reviews
and approvals, and for production and kitting; and
Eight weeks for shipping.
Other comments that supported a 1-year effective date presented
similar reasons, noting that a 1 year effective date would allow
restaurants to properly review the final rule, analyze covered food
items, and incorporate nutrition labeling into their truck stop and
travel plaza restaurants. Some comments expressed concern that demand
for menu item nutrient analysis and redesigning menu boards will
skyrocket upon publication of the final rule, thereby overwhelming
testing laboratories and companies that design menus and menu boards.
(Response 143) We agree that covered establishments will need more
than 6 months to come into compliance with the rule, including making
changes to menus and menus boards. While some establishments already
are subject to State or local nutrition labeling requirements for foods
sold in such establishments, others are not. Moreover, even those
establishments that already are subject to State or local requirements
nutrition labeling requirements may not be required to disclose such
nutrition information in the format and manner specified in section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act and this rule. We carefully considered the
activities and associated time frames identified by the comments,
including the comment from national organizations representing
restaurants, and we agree that the rule should provide for an effective
date of 1 year to comply with the Federal requirements. Most comments,
even the comment noting that one State and one local
[[Page 71240]]
government provided more than 1 year for full implementation, requested
an effective date of ``at least 1 year.''
We also agree that a time frame that enables establishments to make
changes to menus and menu boards during a time period that coincides
with their regular menu replacement cycles would save time and
resources. In addition, we acknowledge that companies that design and
produce menu boards will receive many orders to update menu boards to
comply with the rule. We note that a covered establishment that
experiences difficulty obtaining new menus or menu boards as a result
of increased demand as the effective date draws near will have other
ways to comply with the rule without replacing the menus or menu
boards. For example, we would not object if a covered establishment
declares calorie information by applying stickers or pieces of paper to
menus or menu boards. For packaged foods, we have taken the position
for some time that the Nutrition Facts label may be printed on a
sticker and affixed to a package, as long as the sticker adheres to the
product under the intended storage conditions (Ref. 38; see L16). We
also have long taken the position that stickers may be used to make
changes in labeling such as correcting label mistakes provided that the
final label is correct and complies with all regulations at the time of
retail sale, the stickers do not cover other mandatory labeling, and
the stickers adhere tightly (Ref. 38, see L55).
Likewise, we acknowledge that there could be some increased demand
for nutrient analysis by testing laboratories as the effective date
draws near. Importantly, the rule does not require analytical testing
of standard menu items; analytical testing is merely one option
available to a covered establishment to determine nutrient values.
Other options include use of nutrient databases, cookbooks, or other
reasonable means, including the use of Nutrition Facts on labels on
packaged foods that comply with the nutrition labeling requirements of
section 403(q)(1) of the FD&C Act and Sec. 101.9, FDA nutrient values
for raw fruits and vegetables in Appendix C of part 101, or FDA
nutrient values for cooked fish in Appendix D (see Sec. 101.11(c)(1)).
In addition, as noted by the comments, many establishments that are
part of large chains have already determined nutrient values for their
menu items. As discussed in Response 138 and Response 139, this rule
provides that corporate headquarters or a parent entity, rather than
each individual covered establishment, may determine and certify
nutrient values, as requested by comments. Thus, to the extent
establishments' corporate headquarters or parent entity have determined
nutrient values for standard menu items offered for sale in such
establishments, individual covered establishments can come into
compliance with this rule without significantly overwhelming testing
laboratories, even if such establishments choose analytical testing as
the means to determine nutrient values.
For all of these reasons, and as discussed in more detail in
section XXIII.C, we have established an effective date for this rule
that is 1 year from the date of publication of this document. Thus, the
final rule is effective on December 1, 2015.
(Comment 144) One comment that recommended a minimum of 12 to 18
months for establishments to comply with the rule provided information
about its experience from a 2010 rollout of new menu boards for all its
domestic stores. This comment identified the following steps and
corresponding time frames for this 2010 rollout:
2 months to develop new menu board templates for the seven
types of menu boards for its various types of store locations (mall
stores, mall kiosks, mall carts, stadium stores, stadium carts, etc.);
8 months to develop, program, and test an ordering site to
accommodate more than 850 individual store menus;
2 months to receive the orders and lay out all custom menu
boards; and
2 months to produce and ship new menu boards to its
stores.
(Response 144) We appreciate that this comment provided its
specific experience from a company-wide rollout of new menu boards. The
steps identified by this comment are similar to the steps identified by
the comment from national associations representing restaurants,
although with longer timeframes. However, as discussed in Comment 143
these national associations also noted that extending the time period
to 1 year would allow most restaurants to incorporate adding calorie
declarations to menus and associated menu redesigns with regular menu
replacement cycles. We therefore disagree that the time frames
experienced by one entity during a company-initiated rollout of new
menu boards should determine the time frame for compliance by all
covered establishments.
(Comment 145) Some comments requested an effective date of more
than 12 months. One comment requested an 18-month effective date
because it considered that many requirements are still unclear. Another
comment requested an 18-month to 2-year effective date for similar
retail food establishments, even if there is a shorter time for
restaurants. According to this comment, establishments need time to
comply properly with the requirements and rushing through compliance
could result in mistakes that may be confusing to consumers and would
require additional industry resources to correct.
A few comments requested a 2-year effective date. One comment
asserted that there will be a steep learning curve and time is needed
to train employees and develop and print display materials. A few
comments maintained that a 2-year compliance period is appropriate
because, according to one comment, we used a 2-year uniform compliance
period when implementing the NLEA. According to another comment, a 2-
year timeframe is reasonable as long as nutrition information is
available in brochures and online.
(Response 145) We disagree that an effective date over 1 year (such
as 18 months or 2 years, as suggested by the comments) is necessary.
Many comments seeking a longer effective date focused on the need to
train employees. Such training does not need to wait until all
implementation activities are complete--e.g., such training can begin
while an establishment is waiting for delivery of its revised menus and
menu boards.
We also disagree with the comment asserting that similar retail
food establishments need more time than restaurants to comply with the
rule. The comment provided no basis for why similar retail food
establishments should be treated differently from restaurants or why
such establishments would need more time for compliance than
restaurants.
We discuss the applicability of the uniform compliance date in
section XXIII.C.
(Comment 146) One comment asserted that there will be an unfair
competitive advantage for larger companies because of the ability of
larger companies to leverage their market position with the menu board
producers. One comment requested a grace period to come into compliance
if a covered establishment has adopted and followed a reasonable
program to monitor changing nutrient values and update menus and menu
boards at reasonable intervals coinciding with typical cycles.
(Response 146) In the proposed rule, we specifically requested that
comments about whether we should provide for staggered implementation
based on the size of a chain or of a specific franchisee be supported
by data. The comment
[[Page 71241]]
asserting that there will be an unfair competitive advantage for larger
companies (because of their ability to leverage their market position
with the menu board producers) provided no data for its assertion;
therefore we have no information that could assist us in considering
whether or how much additional time might be appropriate. Further, as
discussed in Response 143, covered establishments can use a number of
ways to comply with this rule without replacing menus or menu boards;
for example, they can apply stickers or pieces of paper to menus or
menu boards. For these reasons, we do not believe there is a sufficient
basis to establish a staggered implementation period based on the size
of the chain or of a specific franchise.
Nevertheless, we can work with establishments that are not in
compliance by the effective date of this rule on a case-by-case basis,
taking into consideration a number of factors, including specific steps
an establishment has taken towards compliance.
(Comment 147) One comment requested that we allow 1 year for
implementation, rather than 6 months, to provide covered establishments
with adequate time to come into compliance given contractual
requirements. For example, the comment said that it maintains a
database with over 35,000 recipes which, in turn, may be modified or
adapted by the specific restaurant or similar retail food establishment
for local needs and tastes, limitations of the establishment,
contractual specifications, and other restrictions (e.g., an
establishment's determinations as to types of offerings). In addition,
the comment stated that contractors rely on suppliers to provide
nutritional information and, therefore, we should allow adequate time
to retrieve data from these sources.
(Response 147) As discussed in section XXIII.C, we are establishing
an effective date of 1 year from the date of publication of this rule.
We note that the comment refers to recipes that may be modified or
adapted by a specific restaurant or similar retail food establishment.
In section VI.F, we discuss how such modifications can affect whether
an establishment is offering for sale substantially the same menu items
(and, thus, satisfies this criterion in the definition of covered
establishment).
C. Effective Date and Compliance Date for This Rule
We are establishing the effective date to be 1 year from the date
of publication of this document, i.e., the final rule is effective on
December 1, 2015, (see DATES). We believe that extending the effective
date from 6 months to 1 year provides sufficient time for covered
establishments to come into compliance with the requirements without a
significant negative impact on public health.
We expect covered establishments to come into compliance with the
requirements of this rule by December 1, 2015, i.e., the same date as
the effective date of this rule. Although we are issuing this final
rule after January 1, 2013, there is sufficient justification for
establishing a compliance date of December 1, 2015, to enforce the
provisions of this final rule, rather than January 1, 2016, which FDA
has established as the next uniform compliance date for other food
labeling changes required by food labeling regulations that are issued
between January 1, 2013, and December 31, 2014 (77 FR 70885; November
28, 2012). Typically, our uniform compliance dates for food labeling
regulations focus on changes made to the requirements for labels of
packaged foods and seek to minimize the economic impact of such label
changes, in relevant part, by allowing manufacturers to come into
compliance with such regulations by one particular compliance date
rather than several different dates (e.g., 77 FR 70885; 75 FR 78155
(December 15, 2010)). By providing one uniform compliance date, we
enable manufacturers to avoid multiple short-term label revisions that
would otherwise occur if not for the uniform compliance date. However,
this rule does not establish requirements for the labels of packaged
foods, and therefore would not cause food label revisions comparable to
other food labeling regulations typically addressed by our uniform
compliance dates. In addition, standard menu items offered for sale in
covered establishments were not subject to Federal nutrition labeling
requirements before the enactment of section 4205 of the ACA. As a
result, unlike packaged foods, standard menu items currently are not
subject to several different Federal food labeling regulations that may
provide for different compliance dates. Further, a comment from
national associations representing restaurants reported that extending
the time period from the 6 months that we proposed, to 1 year, would
allow most restaurants to comply with the rule as part of regular menu
replacement cycles, thereby lessening costs. For these reasons, along
with the reasons discussed previously, we believe that 1 year is
sufficient time for covered establishments to come into compliance with
the requirements of this rule. Waiting until FDA's next uniform
compliance date of January 1, 2016, would create unnecessary delay in
the enforcement of this rule and could minimize public health benefits.
XXIV. Comments and FDA Response on Compliance
In the proposed rule, we noted that some provisions of section 4205
of the ACA became requirements immediately upon enactment of the law
and that we intended to exercise enforcement discretion until after we
had completed notice and comment rulemaking. We encouraged our State
and local partners to proceed in a similar way. We requested comment on
how we should implement the rule, including whether specific provisions
of the rule can be more quickly implemented than others (76 FR 19192 at
19220).
(Comment 148) One comment asked us to develop a protocol for
checking the accuracy of the nutritional information provided by
covered establishments. One comment recommended that we undertake
random testing as resources allow. Another comment recommended that
testing be done annually and kept on a public file to ensure that the
portions continue to be within 5 percent tolerance of the original
nutritional information. The comment suggested that if deviations are
found, the company would either retest in 30 days or pay a penalty fee
that would be passed to a childhood obesity campaign.
(Response 148) The rule provides several options for how covered
establishments can determine nutrition information. While analytical
testing of standard menu items may be appropriate in some cases (e.g.,
when the reasonable basis that a covered establishment uses to
determine nutrient values is analytical testing), we expect our routine
approach to evaluating the accuracy of the nutrition information to be
based on the particular facts at issue, including the reasonable basis
used by the covered establishment, which may be means other than
analytical testing. Consistent with our approach to inspection of food
processing facilities, we do not expect to establish a public file with
the results of any testing we conduct. Under the Freedom of Information
Act and our regulations in part 20, a person who wishes to see the
results of our inspections may submit a request to do so.
Regarding the comment suggesting that we develop a protocol for
checking the accuracy of the nutritional
[[Page 71242]]
information provided by covered establishments, we decline to include
such a protocol for checking the accuracy of the nutritional
information in the rule at this time. Section 101.11(c) includes
requirements for determining nutrient content and section XVII further
discusses such requirements, including the requirement that nutrient
declarations be accurate and consistent with the specific basis used to
determine nutrient values. After we have had experience in evaluating
compliance with the rule, we will consider whether to develop such a
protocol.
(Comment 149) A few comments asked us to clarify our enforcement
strategy and quickly establish an enforcement protocol. One comment
stated that the proposed rule is virtually silent on how the menu
labeling requirements will be enforced and encouraged us to permit the
industry to comment on our enforcement strategy before it is included
in the rule. One comment recommended that we issue guidance documents
to the industry to better clarify matters of uncertainty that will
persist following issuance of the rule.
One comment asked us to provide details on the penalties for
noncompliance. Another comment recommended that we issue warning
letters prior to instituting civil penalties against a covered
establishment, particularly if the proposed rule's ambiguities are not
clarified in the final rule. The comment maintained that a covered
establishment may have made a good faith effort to comply and that
warning letters will encourage compliance and inform establishments how
they have fallen short of compliance. The comment recommended that we
use a tiered penalty structure, whereby minor violations (e.g.,
inadequate font size of nutrition information) are treated less harshly
than more serious violations (e.g., a clear lack of effort to place
calorie information on printed menus). The comment also encouraged us
to have a progressive penalty system for violations, whereby first
violations are treated less harshly (e.g., a warning letter) than
repeated violations. The comment maintained that this is especially
crucial in the first few years the rules are being implemented as
covered establishments familiarize themselves with the new
requirements.
(Response 149) We are establishing these regulations under sections
201(n), 403(a)(1), 403(f), and 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act, as well as
under section 701(a) of the FD&C Act. As discussed in the proposed rule
and in section XXII, failure to comply with the rule will render the
food misbranded under section(s) 201(n), 403(a), 403(f), or 403(q) of
the FD&C Act (76 FR 19192 at 19219). Penalties are already set forth in
the FD&C Act, and violations of Sec. 101.11 may result in enforcement
action consistent with those penalties. For example, introducing,
delivering for introduction, or receiving a misbranded food in
interstate commerce, or misbranding a food while it is in interstate
commerce or being held for sale after shipment in interstate commerce,
are prohibited acts under section 301 of the FD&C Act (21 U.S.C. 331),
carrying criminal penalties under section 303 of the FD&C Act (21
U.S.C. 333). In addition, under section 302 of the FD&C Act (21 U.S.C.
332), the United States can bring a civil action in Federal court to
enjoin a person who commits a prohibited action. Under section
304(a)(1) of the FD&C Act (21 U.S.C. 334(a)(1)), a food that is
misbranded when introduced into or while in interstate commerce or
while held for sale after shipment in interstate commerce may be seized
by order of a Federal court. We expect to issue guidance to help
covered establishments with compliance.
The tiered enforcement approach described by the comment is similar
to the approach we currently take for other misbranded food, and we
generally expect our enforcement approach to misbranding violations of
this rule to be similar to that for other misbranded food.
Nevertheless, enforcement will be considered on a case-by-case basis
depending on the specific facts and circumstances.
(Comment 150) One comment asked us to focus our enforcement actions
on helping with compliance, rather than seeking monetary penalties, at
least until establishments have an opportunity to fully adopt the
requirements. This comment maintained that flexibility is needed in the
initial phases of implementation for facilities that operate under
Federal Government contracts so that they can continue to comply with
requirements mandated by specific Government Agencies. As a result, the
comment recommended that we provide flexibility for contract food
providers that provide services to Government facilities under a
specified program.
(Response 150) We recognize that covered establishments will need
time to comply with the nutrition labeling requirements of this rule
during the initial phase of implementation. To provide more time to do
so, this rule is not becoming effective until 1 year after the date of
publication of this document (see the discussion in section XXIII.C of
this document).
A covered establishment has responsibility to comply with all
requirements of the rule. We acknowledge that a covered establishment
may need to update its business and contractual relationships with its
suppliers in order to do so.
(Comment 151) One comment asked us to permit stores to register
points of contact to which we will address enforcement because
experience shows that involving ``corporate parents'' of individual
franchises or the owner of multi-store chains is the most effective way
to manage enforcement issues. The comment recommended that we notify
these contacts in the event of an enforcement action. Similarly, the
comment recommended that we designate specific contacts for informal
guidance and advice and develop a menu labeling hotline telephone
number or email address to which store operators can ask specific
questions. The comment considered that doing so would increase
compliance and ease the administrative burden on its members.
(Response 151) Each individual restaurant or similar retail food
establishment is responsible for disclosing the required nutrition
information for its standard menu items and otherwise complying with
the requirements of sections 403(q)(5)(H), 403(a)(1), and 403(f) of the
FD&C Act and Sec. 101.11. Persons exercising authority and supervisory
responsibility over such establishments may also be held liable for
violations of the FD&C Act. See Response 3. Our decisions regarding
enforcement actions will be determined on a case by case basis. In
general, we intend to notify a ``corporate parent'' as appropriate (see
e.g., Refs. 39 and 40). Although Sec. 101.11(d) provides for voluntary
registration for restaurants and similar retail food establishments
that are not subject to the nutrition labeling requirements of section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act, and requires contact information, these
requirements only apply to such establishments that would not be
subject to the rule without registering.
We already maintain a telephone hotline where industry may contact
us for questions about compliance with our regulations (1-888-SAFEFOOD
(1-888-723-3366)). Staff who are assigned to the hotline will have or
obtain the information to answer questions about this rule. In
addition, a covered establishment may direct questions to the contact
person identified in this document (see FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT), to the contact telephone number provided in any subsequent
[[Page 71243]]
guidance, and to a general email mailbox for industry questions
(industry@fda.gov). A covered establishment also may send written
inquiries to Center for Food Safety and Applied Nutrition (HFS-009),
Food and Drug Administration, 5100 Paint Branch Pkwy., College Park, MD
20740.
(Comment 152) A few comments recommended that we preapprove menus
and menu boards. One of these comments recommended that we do so even
if a fee was required. The comment maintained that an approval process
would alleviate covered establishments from having to pay the costs to
replace menus that they thought met the menu labeling requirements.
(Response 152) We decline the request of these comments. Section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act does not require that we preapprove menus
and menu boards, nor do we have the resources to do so at this time.
Section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act and this rule set forth and
specify the requirements for menus and menu boards such that a covered
establishment should be able to determine whether its menu or menu
board meets the applicable requirements. Further, a covered
establishment may contact us with questions about compliance, as
discussed previously in Response 151.
(Comment 153) One comment asked us to clarify that compliance is
the responsibility of each establishment and that if someone fails to
comply, only that standard menu item in the particular establishment is
misbranded. The comment expressed concern that without clarity on this
point, States and localities may cite franchisors for violations by
franchisees, and plaintiffs' attorneys may sue franchisors for
violations by franchisees under consumer protection laws.
(Response 153) With regard to what food is misbranded if there is a
failure to comply with the regulations, this would be determined based
on the particular facts of the situation (see also Response 3).
(Comment 154) Some comments asked us to allow flexibility for when
a covered establishment must update menus to reflect changes in
nutrient content. One of these comments asked us to clarify that any
temporary inconsistencies resulting from periodic updating will not
result in a violation of the law. The comment expressed concern that
nutrient values may change because of ingredient changes, use of
different suppliers, suppliers updating nutritional analysis with no
changes in formulation, and reformulation of menu items based on
consumer feedback. The comment asked us to state that values found not
current will not raise a compliance issue if the covered establishment
can demonstrate that it has adopted a reasonable program to monitor
changing values and that it updates materials at reasonable intervals
based on the manner and frequency in which it changes menus and other
labeling. The comment also recommended that covered establishments be
able to update their menus and menu boards at reasonable intervals
coinciding with typical cycles to change menus and, at a maximum,
values that require updating be updated at least once a year. One
comment asked that the final rule clearly state that covered
establishments are responsible for maintaining the accuracy of their
nutrient declarations, including keeping this information up-to-date as
their menus change.
(Response 154) Nutrition labeling for a standard menu item must be
truthful and not misleading, consistent with the specific basis used to
determine nutrient values, and otherwise in compliance with the
requirements of sections 403(a)(1), 403(f), and 403(q)(5)(H) of the
FD&C Act and Sec. 101.11. We recognize that changes in nutrition
information for standard menu items could cause a covered establishment
to change a menu or menu board even if the list of menu items has not
changed. In general, revised nutrition must be posted before serving
the food. Compliance will be determined on a case-by-case basis
depending on the specific facts and circumstances. We recommend that a
covered establishment coordinate changes in menu items that are
significant enough to affect nutrient content with the introduction of
new items that also require updating a menu or menu board to help
minimize costs. As discussed in Response 143, covered establishment may
also use measures such as stickers to update nutrient content on menus
or menu boards.
(Comment 155) Several comments requested clarification on who would
enforce the rule. One comment asked that delegation of inspection
authority to the States be explicit, and asserted that the provision in
21 U.S.C. 337 authorizing States to enforce Federal law has rarely been
used. This comment stated that we could use 21 U.S.C 372(a)(1)(A) to
provide technical assistance and funding to States and locals for
enforcement. The comment suggested that we set up a simple process for
local health inspectors to report violations to us, e.g., a postcard to
be filled in and sent to us with a tear off receipt to be left with the
restaurant manager. The comment also suggested that we develop a system
to collect and store reports of violations in a database. A few
comments recommended that the final rule specify that enforcement
procedures of States are not affected by section 4205 of the ACA.
One comment recommended that we work with headquarters of chain
restaurants and similar retail food establishments to ensure compliance
and then have our District Offices assess compliance in the States.
One comment stated that States and locals cannot be expected to
enforce the Federal menu labeling requirements without significant
funding. The comment stated that the enforcement process in its State
is already overburdened and, therefore, the Federal Government should
enforce the requirements. Other comments recommended that we rely on
States and localities and provide training and funding. A few comments
stated that historically restaurant inspections are done by the States
and localities, and one comment recommended that we use the contractual
regime of food safety inspections used with the enforcement of the
NLEA. One comment stated that local restaurant inspectors can add the
enforcement of menu labeling to their current inspections. One comment
recommended that we enforce fines and penalties for noncompliance and
direct any resulting funds to inspection programs enforcing the menu
labeling requirements.
One comment stated that it is not always practical for States and
locals to enforce section 4205 of the ACA as delegates of FDA; rather
we should encourage and support enactment of identical requirements
that fit into local and State food codes.
One comment suggested that the rule include specific provisions
that would be binding on State and local jurisdictions relative to
enforcing the rule. The comment stated that the right to a notice of a
violation, the opportunity to cure a violation, and the opportunity to
have a re-inspection before an adverse decision by the enforcing agent,
e.g. a citation, vary enormously from jurisdiction to jurisdiction, at
the State and at the local level. The comment suggested that we include
specifics such as:
The enforcement agency at initial inspection provides
written notice of violations;
The enforcement agency gives the establishment a period of
time to cure the violations (e.g., 15-30 days);
The enforcement agency would re-inspect after cure period;
and
If violations are not cured, the enforcement agency would
issue
[[Page 71244]]
adverse decision applying fine or other action that would apply under
the enforcement agency's regulations or applicable State or local laws.
The comment stated that these actions would only apply to calorie
labeling and not to other violations related to safety.
(Response 155) Collectively, these comments address three
mechanisms by which States (and, in some cases, local jurisdictions)
could have a role in enforcing the provisions of section 403(q)(5)(H)
of the FD&C Act and this rule:
In general, a State or political subdivision of a State
may establish food nutrition labeling requirements that are identical
to applicable Federal requirements, including the requirements of this
rule. In this case, the State or local jurisdiction would act on its
own behalf to enforce its own requirements, albeit requirements that
are identical to the Federal requirements.
Under 702(a)(1)(A) of the FD&C Act (21 U.S.C.
372(a)(1)(A)), FDA is authorized to conduct examinations and
investigations for the purposes of the FD&C Act through any health,
food, or drug officer or employee of any State, Territory, or political
subdivision thereof (such as a locality), duly commissioned to act on
behalf of FDA. In this case, the State or local representative would
act on our behalf to enforce the Federal requirements.
In general, under section 310(b) of the FD&C Act (21
U.S.C. 337(b)), a State may bring in its own name and within its
jurisdiction proceedings for the civil enforcement, or to restrain
violations, of section 403(q) of the FD&C Act, including the nutrition
labeling requirements for standard menu items under section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act, if the food that is the subject of the
proceedings is located in the State provided that other requirements
and conditions are met. In this case, the State acts on its own behalf
to enforce the Federal requirements.
We have successfully partnered with States to conduct examinations
and inspections in other contexts, including inspections of food
processing facilities on our behalf (Ref. 41). We expect to continue to
cooperatively leverage the resources of Federal, State, and local
Government Agencies as we strive to obtain industry-wide compliance
with this rule.
XXV. Final Regulatory Impact Analysis
FDA has examined the impacts of this final rule under Executive
Order 12866, Executive Order 13563, the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601-612), and the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (Pub. L.
104-4). Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 direct Agencies to assess all
costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, when
regulation is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize
net benefits (including potential economic, environmental, public
health and safety, and other advantages; distributive impacts; and
equity). We have developed a detailed Regulatory Impact Analysis (RIA)
that presents the benefits and costs of this final rule (Ref. 42) which
is available at https://www.regulations.gov (enter Docket No. FDA-2011-
F-0172). The full economic impact analyses of FDA regulations are no
longer (as of April 2012) published in the Federal Register but are
submitted to the docket and are available at https://www.regulations.gov. We also post the full economic impact analyses of
FDA regulations at the following Web site: https://www.fda.gov/AboutFDA/ReportsManualsForms/Reports/EconomicAnalyses/default.htm.
This rule is designated an ``economically'' significant rule, under
section 3(f)(1) of Executive Order 12866. Accordingly, the rule was
reviewed by OMB. In particular, Executive Order 12866 directs each
Agency engaged in rulemaking to ``identify the problem that it intends
to address''--that is, the essential purpose of the rule. As a separate
step in its rulemaking, Executive Order 12866 directs the Agency to
``assess both the costs and the benefits of the intended regulation . .
. , recognizing that some costs and benefits are difficult to
quantify.''
Executive Order 13563 confirms that ``each agency is directed to
use the best available techniques to quantify anticipated present and
future benefits and costs as accurately as possible. Where appropriate
and permitted by law, each Agency may consider (and discuss
qualitatively) values that are difficult or impossible to quantify.''
Here, the essential purpose of the rule is to make nutrition
information for certain foods available to consumers in a direct,
accessible, and consistent manner to enable consumers to make informed
and healthful dietary choices. The full analysis--contained in the
RIA--of anticipated and quantifiable costs and benefits from the
promulgation of the rule does not alter this fundamental purpose. Nor
does it fully capture the unquantifiable benefits of greater consumer
understanding regarding dietary choices and their impact on health.
The Regulatory Flexibility Act requires Agencies to analyze
regulatory options that would minimize any significant impact of a rule
on small entities. According to our analysis, we believe that the final
rule will have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of
small entities, and we have accordingly analyzed regulatory options
that would minimize the economic impact of the rule on small entities
consistent with statutory objectives. We have crafted the final rule to
provide flexibility for compliance.
Section 202(a) of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 requires
that Agencies prepare a written statement, which includes an assessment
of anticipated costs and benefits, before proposing ``any rule that
includes any Federal mandate that may result in the expenditure by
State, local, and tribal governments, in the aggregate, or by the
private sector, of $100,000,000 or more (adjusted annually for
inflation) in any one year.'' The current threshold after adjustment
for inflation is $141 million, using the most current (2013) Implicit
Price Deflator for the Gross Domestic Product. FDA has determined that
this final rule has met the threshold under the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act.
The analyses that we have performed to examine the impacts of this
final rule under Executive Order 12866, Executive Order 13563, the
Regulatory Flexibility Act, and the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
1995 are included in the RIA (Ref. 42).
We had prepared a ``Preliminary Regulatory Impact Analysis'' (Ref.
43) in connection with the proposed rule. We also included sections
titled ``Summary of Preliminary Regulatory Impact Analysis'' and
``Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis'' in the preamble to the
proposed rule (76 FR 19192 at 19220 through 19225). We received
comments on our analysis of the impacts presented in those sections,
and the RIA (Ref. 42) contains our responses to those comments.
XXVI. Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
This final rule contains information collection provisions that are
subject to review by OMB under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (the
PRA) (44 U.S.C. 3501-3520). A description of these provisions is given
in this section of the document with estimates of the annual reporting,
recordkeeping, and third-party disclosure burden. Included in each
burden estimate is the time for reviewing instructions, searching
existing data sources, gathering and maintaining the data needed, and
completing and reviewing each collection of information.
[[Page 71245]]
We had included a section titled ``Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995'' in the preamble to the proposed rule (76 FR 19192 at 19225
through 19229). We received one comment on our analysis of the burdens
presented in that section.
(Comment 156) One comment stated that the recordkeeping burdens of
the proposed rule would impose millions of dollars in cost per year.
The comment stated that these burdens are needless.
(Response 156) We disagree that the burdens are needless. Providing
accurate, clear, and consistent nutrition information, including the
calorie content of foods, in restaurants and similar retail food
establishments will make such nutrition information available to
consumers in a direct and accessible manner to enable consumers to make
informed and healthful dietary choices.
We invite comments on these topics: (1) Whether the proposed
collection of information is necessary for the proper performance of
FDA's functions, including whether the information will have practical
utility; (2) the accuracy of FDA's estimate of the burden of the
proposed collection of information, including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used; (3) ways to enhance the quality,
utility, and clarity of the information to be collected; and (4) ways
to minimize the burden of the collection of information on respondents,
including through the use of automated collection techniques, when
appropriate, and other forms of information technology.
Title: Information Collection Provisions of the Final Rule on Food
Labeling: Nutrition Labeling of Standard Menu Items in Restaurants and
Similar Retail Food Establishments
A. Reporting Requirements
Description of Respondents: The likely respondents to this
information collection are restaurants and similar retail food
establishments that voluntarily elect to be subject to the Federal
requirements of this rule by registering with FDA. These establishments
include chain retail food establishments and eating and drinking places
such as full- and limited-service restaurants, snack bars (including,
for example, ice cream, donut, and bagel shops and similar
establishments), cafeterias and drinking places, managed food service
facilities, grocery stores, supermarkets, convenience stores, general
merchandise stores, lodging facilities, recreational venues, sports
venues, performing arts venues, and movie theaters.
Description: Restaurants and similar retail food establishments not
subject to the ACA's requirements may voluntarily elect to be subject
to the Federal requirements by registering with FDA. Authorized
officials for restaurants and similar retail food establishments must
provide FDA with the following information on Form FDA 3757: Their
contact information including name, address, phone number, and email
address for their authorized official; the contact information
including name, address, phone number, and email address for each
restaurant or similar retail food establishment being registered, as
well as the name and contact information for an official onsite, such
as the owner or manager, for each specific restaurant or similar retail
food establishment; all trade names the restaurant or similar retail
food establishment uses; preferred mailing address, if different from
location address for each establishment; and certification that the
information submitted is true and accurate, that the person submitting
it is authorized to do so, and that each registered restaurant or
similar retail food establishment will be subject to the requirements
of section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act and Sec. 101.11 of the final
rule.
To keep the establishment's registration active, the authorized
official of the restaurant or similar retail food establishment must
register every other year within 60 days prior to the expiration of the
establishment's current registration with FDA. Registration will
automatically expire if not renewed.
Table 1--Estimated Reporting Burden \1\
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of
Number of responses per Total annual Average burden
21 CFR part 101 respondents respondent per responses per response (in Total hours
year hours)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Initial Burden (annualized
over 3 years):
Sec. 101.11(d) Initial 3,559 1 3,559 2............... 7,118
Registration.
Annual Burden:
Sec. 101.11(d) 5,340 1 5,340 0.5 (30 minutes) 2,670
Registration Renewal.
------------------------------------------------ ---------------
Total Burden Hours........ .............. .............. .............. ................ 9,788
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ There are no capital costs or operating and maintenance costs associated with this collection of
information.
We lack data on the number of restaurants and similar retail food
establishments that might voluntarily register to comply with this
final rule. We do not expect the net benefit for voluntary registration
for many non-covered establishments to be positive and in the RIA (Ref.
42) we indicate that as of the conducting of this analysis, no
establishments have voluntarily registered with FDA. Therefore we did
not estimate a significant burden in the RIA. However, in the event
that a few register anyway, or find positive incentive to do so, for
the purposes of this PRA analysis, we estimate the burden such
establishments will face. We believe that implementation of the final
rule, and the resulting attention to the nutrition content of standard
menu items, may give non-covered establishments an incentive to
voluntarily disclose calorie and other nutrition information. We
believe that the only types of establishments that would likely face a
positive incentive to voluntarily register are some restaurants and
some grocery, convenience, and general merchandise stores that do not
already provide this information in some form or another at the point
of purchase. We estimate that 5 percent of these establishments may
register, or 10,678 [(5% volunteer x 47% no nutrition info x 348,200
non-covered restaurants) + (5% volunteer x 49,900 non-covered grocery,
convenience, and general merchandise stores)] (Refs. 44 and 45). We
estimate it will require approximately 2 hours per initial
registration. Given 10,678 establishments and one initial registration
per establishment at 2 hours per registration, we estimate the initial
hourly burden for these establishments is 21,356 hours (10,678
establishments x 1 initial registration per establishment x 2 hours per
registration). Annualizing
[[Page 71246]]
this value over 3 years yields 7,118 hours per year (10,678
establishments/3 years x 1 initial registration per establishment x 2
hours per registration). (10,678 establishments/3 years = 3,559
establishments per year.)
We expect that renewal registrations will require substantially
less time because establishments are expected to be able to affirm or
update the existing information in an online account in a way similar
to other FDA firm registration systems. We estimate that re-
registration will take 30 minutes (0.5 hours) for each registrant. This
would indicate that biennial registration would impose a burden of
5,340 hours (10,678 establishments x 0.5 hours) every 2 years, or 2,670
hours every year (10,678 establishments/2 years x 0.5 hours).
B. Recordkeeping Requirements
The preamble to the proposed rule provided an estimate of the
recordkeeping burden, which consisted of the burden associated with
nutrition analysis and the burden associated with generating,
providing, or maintaining records. Upon further consideration, we have
omitted the burden estimate associated with generating or maintaining
records previously estimated in the proposed rule because the rule does
not require restaurants and similar retail food establishments to
generate or maintain records. This section now includes only the burden
estimate associated with providing information substantiating nutrient
values of standard menu items to FDA as required by the final rule.
Further, as discussed in section C of this analysis, we have included a
burden estimate for nutrition analysis as part of the third party
disclosure burden, since the total time, effort, or financial resources
expended by covered establishments to declare nutrition information
likely includes time, effort, or financial resources to determine the
nutrition content of covered menu items.
Description of Respondents
The likely respondents to this information collection are
restaurants and similar retail food establishments that are subject to
the Federal requirements of this rule or that volunteer to be subject
to the rule. These establishments include chain retail food
establishments and eating and drinking places such as full- and
limited-service restaurants, snack bars (including, for example, ice
cream, donut, and bagel shops and similar establishments), cafeterias
and drinking places, and managed food service facilities. Chain retail
food establishments would also include some grocery stores,
supermarkets, convenience stores, general merchandise stores, lodging
facilities, recreational venues, sports venues, performing arts venues,
and movie theaters (Ref. 46).
Description
The paperwork burden for the recordkeeping requirements of the
final rule is to provide substantiation of the nutrient values of
standard menu items to FDA. The likely respondents for the nutrition
analysis are restaurants and similar retail food establishments that
are subject to the Federal requirements of this rule or that volunteer
to be subject to the rule. These establishments must produce records
with information substantiating nutrient values for their standard menu
items.
The likely respondents are the universe of retail food
establishments and retail chains that are covered by the final rule.
Our estimate includes eating and drinking places such as full- and
limited-service restaurants, snack bars including, for example, ice
cream, donut, and bagel shops and similar establishments, cafeterias
and drinking places, and managed food service facilities. Covered
establishments also include some grocery stores, supermarkets,
convenience stores, general merchandise stores, lodging facilities,
recreational venues, sports venues, performing arts venues, and movie
theaters.
Table 2--Estimated Recordkeeping Burden \1\
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual
21 CFR part 101 Number frequency per Total annual Hours per record Total hours
recordkeepers recordkeeper records
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Initial Burden (Annualized over 3 years)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sec. 101.8(c)(2)(i)(A) Initial Nutrition 69,017 1 69,017 0.25 (15 minutes)....................... 17,254
Analysis Records.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual Burden
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sec. 101.8(c)(2)(i)(A) Recurring Nutrition 30,059 1 30,059 0.25 (15 minutes)....................... 7,515
Analysis Records.
------------------------------------------------ ---------------
Total Burden Hours........................ .............. .............. .............. ........................................ 24,769
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ There are no capital costs or operating and maintenance costs associated with this collection of information.
Initial Nutrition Analysis
We estimate the annual number of the largest restaurant chains that
will need to produce substantiation of their standard menu items to be
541 (503 covered restaurant chains + 38 voluntary restaurant chains)
with an average of 117 unique menu items that will require an initial
nutrition analysis. This leads to 63,297 (541 chains x 117 items)
individual chains-specific restaurant records. In addition to chain-
level nutrition analysis, each individual restaurant establishment will
likely have a small variety of standard menu items that are unique to
the individual establishment. We estimate there are 11,684 restaurants
establishments (10,866 covered + 818 voluntary) with establishment-
specific items. Each of these restaurant establishments has an average
of five establishment-specific menu items. This leads to 58,420 (11,684
establishments x 5 items) individual establishment-specific restaurant
records.
In addition to restaurants, other similar retail food
establishments have both chain-specific and establishment-specific menu
items. Other covered retail food establishments include: Grocery
stores, supermarkets, convenience stores, general merchandise stores,
lodging facilities, recreational venues, sports venues, performing arts
venues, and movie theaters. We estimate there are 691 grocery,
convenience, and general merchandise (GCGM) store chains (660 covered +
31 voluntary) with an average of 40 menu items each (= 27,640 records);
5,309 GCGM establishments
[[Page 71247]]
(5,060 covered + 249 voluntary) with an average of 5 establishment-
specific menu items each (= 26,545 records); 50 managed food service
(MFS) chains with an average of 80 menu items (= 4,000 records); 450
MFS establishments with an average of 5 establishment-specific menu
items (= 2,250 records); 100 lodging chains with an average of 40 menu
items (= 4,000 records); 620 lodging establishments with an average of
5 establishment-specific menu items (= 3,100 records); 250 sports,
recreation and entertainment (SRE) chains with an average of 59 menu
items (= 14,750 records); and 610 SRE establishments with an average of
5 establishment-specific menu times (= 3,050 records). In total, we
estimate there are 207,052 records (63,297 restaurant chain-level +
58,420 restaurant establishment-level + 27,640 GCGM chain-level +
26,545 GCGM establishment-level + 4,000 MFS chain-level + 2,250 MFS
establishment-level + 4,000 lodging chain-level + 3,100 lodging
establishment-level + 14,750 SRE chain-level + 3,050 SRE establishment-
level). Annualized over 3 years, this value yields 69,017 (= 207,052
records/3 years) per year. We estimate that each nutrition analysis
will require a burden of 15 minutes to produce each record. We estimate
the total recordkeeping burden for the initial nutrition analysis to be
17,254.25 hours (= 69,017 records x 0.25 hours per record).
Recurring Nutrition Analysis
From Mintel Menu Insights data, we estimate that restaurant chains
introduced, on average, 24 new menu items in 2009 (Ref. 47). Because
the final requirements do not apply to temporary menu items, daily
specials, and foods that are part of a customary market test, only a
fraction of these items will need nutrition analysis. We estimate that
existing restaurant chains or individual establishments would need new
nutrition analysis for 25 percent of new standard menu items, or six
new standard menu items per year. If in addition to these new standard
menu items, chains need nutrition analysis on 6 reformulated standard
menu items, there would be a total of 12 nutrition analyses per chain
needed on an annual basis. Thus we estimate there will be 26,904 annual
records associated with new or reformulated items of covered chains [=
(1,151 restaurant chains + 691 GCGM chains + 50 MFS chains + 100
lodging chains + 250 SRE chains) x 12 menus items].
In addition we estimate that each year there will be the number of
covered chains to increase in each category as companies expand. As
discussed in the final RIA, each year there will be some existing non-
covered chains that, through expansion of their business, will become
subject to the rule's requirements (for example, a chain expanding from
19 to 20 locations). We estimate there will be 20 new restaurant
chains, each with an average of 117 menu items; 5 new GCGM chains each
with an average of 40 menu items; 3 new MFS chains each with an average
of 80 menu items; 2 new lodging chains each with an average of 40 menu
items; 5 new SRE chains each with an average of 59 menu items. Thus we
estimate there will be 3,155 annual records [= (20 restaurants x 117
items) + (5 GCGM x 40 items) + (3 MFS x 80 items) + (2 lodging x 40
items) + (5 SRE x 59 items] associated with nutrition analysis for new
covered chains.
Based on data from FDA's Recordkeeping Cost Model, we estimate that
it will take approximately 15 minutes per standard menu item for
providing the information of nutrition analysis to FDA (Ref. 48). We
estimate the total recurring recordkeeping burden for the nutrition
analysis to be 7,515 hours [(26,899 records for new/reformulated
standard menu items under existing chains + 3,155 records for items
under new chains) x 0.25 hours per record)].
C. Third-Party Disclosure Requirements
Description of Respondents: Restaurants and similar retail food
establishments that are subject to statutory menu labeling requirements
or that voluntarily elect to be subject to the Federal requirements by
registering with FDA.
Description: There will be five types of third-party disclosure
burdens under the rule related to: Initial nutrition analysis, initial
menu replacement, chain-level written nutrition information,
establishment-level nutrition information, recurring nutrition
analysis, and recurring menu replacement.
Table 3--Estimated Third Party Disclosure Burden
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of Total operating
21 CFR Part 101 Number of disclosures Total annual Average burden per disclosure Total and maintenance
respondents per respondent disclosures hours costs
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Initial Burden (Annualized over 3 years)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sec. 101.8(c)(2)(i)(A) Initial 69,017 1 69,017 4................................ 276,068 .................
Nutrition Analysis.
Sec. 101.8(c)(2)(i)(A) Initial Menu 106,168 1 106,168 0.5 (30 minutes)................. 53,084 $248,767,000
Replacement.
Sec. 101.8(c)(2)(i)(A) Written 1,632 1 1,632 3................................ 4,896 .................
Nutrition Information Chain-level.
Sec. 101.8(c)(2)(i)(A) Written 18,673 1 18,673 0.5 (30 minutes)................. 9,337 .................
Nutrition Information Establishment-
level.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual Burden
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sec. 101.8(c)(2)(i)(A) Recurring 30,054 1 30,054 4................................ 120,216 .................
Nutrition Analysis.
Sec. 101.8(c)(2)(i)(A) Recurring Menu 700 1 700 0.5 (30 minutes)................. 350 $529,000
Replacement.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total.............................. .............. .............. .............. ................................. 463,951 $249,296,000
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 71248]]
Initial Nutrition Analysis
The first burden is the time and effort expended by restaurants and
other retail food establishments to determine the nutrition content of
their covered menu items, which we refer to as ``Nutrition Analysis.''
A nutrition analysis entails the burden of determining nutrition
content for covered and voluntary establishment menus by analyzing the
food product and summarizing the nutritional information results. Note
that the recordkeeping portion of this burden was estimated in the
previous subsection.
Our estimate for the annual number of the restaurant and similar
retail food chains and individual establishments that will be burdened
with initial nutrition analysis is identical to our estimate for the
chains and establishments under the recordkeeping subsection. The total
number of respondents estimated for the third-party disclosure burden
of initial nutrition analysis is 207,052. Annualized over 3 years, this
value becomes 69,017. We estimate that each nutrition analysis will
require a burden of 4 hours (this estimate of 4 hours was used in the
final RIA (Ref. 42)), thus total burden for the initial nutrition
analysis is 276,068 hours (207,052 records/3 years x 4 hours per
record).
Recurring Nutrition Analysis
The second burden is the time and effort expended by restaurants
and other retail food establishments in recurring nutrition analysis.
As discussed in the recordkeeping subsection of this PRA, recurring
nutrition analysis will be required for new and reformulated standard
menu items. Our estimate for the annual number of the restaurant and
similar retail food chains and individual establishments that will be
burdened with recurring nutrition analysis is identical to our estimate
for the chains and establishments under the recordkeeping subsection.
The total number of respondents estimated for the third-party
disclosure burden of recurring nutrition analysis is 30,054. We
estimate that each nutrition analysis will require a burden of 4 hours
(this estimate of 4 hours was used in the final RIA (Ref. 42)), thus
total third party disclosure burden recurring nutrition analysis is
120,216 hours (30,054 records x 4 hours per record).
Initial Menu Replacement
The third burden is for the time expended by restaurants and
similar retail food establishments to physically produce and install
the menus, menu boards that include the new calorie declarations, which
we refer to as ``Calorie Declaration Signs.'' As described in the final
RIA (Ref. 42), chain retail food establishments will need to redesign
and replace their existing menus and menu boards in order to comply
with the final requirements. For full service restaurants and drinking
places with only personal menus and no menu boards, this burden will be
relatively low. Most menus are replaced frequently anyway as they wear
out, are lost, or as prices and menu items change. For many of these
establishments, the burden of updating menus to comply with the final
requirements would be limited to design and associated administrative
hours.
The longer lifespan of menu boards in limited-service eating places
would likely require the redesign of menu/menu boards and the
replacement of one or more menu boards. In addition, some chains would
need to update self-serve and display signs. The number of menus that
an establishment will keep on hand is highly variable. A full-service
restaurant, where each order is placed using a menu, will need more
than a quick-service establishment that uses menus just for takeout
orders. The number of menus is also tied to the seating capacity of the
restaurant, and whether the menu is laminated or paper. Because paper
menus are more fragile and cheaper to print in bulk, an establishment
may keep a large reserve in stock, whereas establishments using more
durable and expensive laminated menus may only keep a few extra on
hand. Estimates for the burden of updating menu boards, other major
displays that serve as menus, such as electronic displays, or major
materials needed to disclose calories for self-serve or displayed foods
to comply with the final requirements, will vary widely across chains
and establishments because of different menu board and display types.
As described in the RIA, we estimate that the average full-service
restaurant establishment must discard and reprint one menu for each
seat, plus 10 extra, for a total of 91 menus per restaurant each year.
We estimate that GCGM stores have an average of two menu boards per
establishment based on public comments that we received. We estimate
that MFS and SRE establishments will each have an average of one menu
board. Lodging establishments generally have menus instead of menu
boards, and we estimate the menu replacement burden for establishments
in the lodging sector to be 87 menu replacements per establishment.
Since each covered and voluntarily registered establishment will need
to replace menus and/or menu boards, we estimate this total value to be
318,505 (= 248,610 restaurants + 53,095 GCGM + 4,500 MFS + 6,200
lodging + 6,100 SRE). (In the previous calculation, 248,610 restaurants
= 231,200 covered restaurants + 17,410 voluntary; and 53,095 GCGM =
50,600 covered + 2,495 voluntary.) Annualized over 3 years, this value
becomes 106,168 (= 318,505/3 years). We estimate the labor burden for
ordering new menus and menu boards to be 30 minutes (0.5 hours) per
establishment. Thus the total burden for initial menu replacement is
53,084 hours per year. At an average wage (which includes an extra 50
percent to account for overhead costs and employee benefits) of $30 per
hour for managers across the covered industries, the labor burden comes
to $1,593,000 (= 53,084 hours x $30 per hour). In the final RIA (Ref.
42), we estimated the total average costs associated with initial menu
replacement to be $250.36 million. This value takes into consideration
costs of menu/menu board design, printing, and installation.
Subtracting the labor costs of ordering new menus, $1,593,000, from the
total costs for initial menu replacement, $250,360,000, yields total
initial operating and maintenance costs of $248,767,000.
Recurring Menu Replacement for New Chains
The fourth burden is for the time expended by new restaurants and
similar retail food establishments to physically replace menus and menu
boards that include the new calorie declarations. All restaurants and
similar retail food chains that become covered as the number of their
associated establishments grows beyond the coverage threshold of 20
will need to replace their menus and menu boards. We estimated in the
final RIA (Ref. 42) that the annual number of new covered restaurants
and similar retail food establishments is 700. Again, we estimate the
labor burden for ordering new menus and menu boards to be 30 minutes
(0.5 hours) per establishment. Thus the total annual burden for
recurring menu replacement is 350 hours per year. At an average wage
(which includes an extra 50 percent in overhead costs and employee
benefits) of $30 per hour for managers across the covered industries,
the recurring labor burden comes to $11,000 (= 350 hours x $30 per
hour). In the final RIA, we estimated the total average annual
operating and maintenance costs associated with recurring menu
replacement to be $540,000. This value
[[Page 71249]]
takes into consideration costs of menu/menu board design, printing, and
installation. Subtracting the recurring labor costs of ordering new
menus, $11,000, from the total costs for recurring menu replacement of
$540,000, yields total recurring operating and maintenance costs of
$529,000.
Written Nutrition Information
The fifth burden is for the time expended by restaurants and
similar retail food establishments to make written nutrition
information available to customers upon request. The number of chains
(and associated establishments) that do not already provide this
information was estimated in the recordkeeping subsection under initial
nutrition analysis, or 1,632 chains (503 covered restaurant + 38
voluntary restaurant + 660 covered GCGM + 31 voluntary GCGM + 50
covered MFS + 100 covered lodging + 250 covered SRE) and 18,673
establishments with establishment specific-menu items (10,866 covered
restaurant + 818 voluntary restaurant + 5,060 covered GCGM + 249
voluntary GCGM + 450 covered MFS + 620 covered lodging + 610 covered
SRE). We estimate the time it takes to provide written nutrition
information at the chain level to be 3 hours per respondent. Since the
average number of establishment-specific menu items is only five per
establishment, we estimate the time it takes to provide written
nutrition information at the establishment level (for those menu items
that are specific only to the establishment) to be 30 minutes per
respondent. Thus the total burden hours for chain-level and
establishment level written nutrition information disclosure are 4,896
and 9,336.5 hours, respectively. Therefore the total third party
disclosure burden for the rule is 463,950.5 hours with total operating
and maintenance costs of $249,296,000.
To ensure that comments on information collection are received, OMB
recommends that written comments be faxed to the Office of Information
and Regulatory Affairs, OMB, Attn: FDA Desk Officer, FAX: 202-395-7285,
or emailed to oira_submission@omb.eop.gov. All comments should be
identified with the OMB Control Number 0910-NEW, and title
``Information Collection Provisions of the Final Rule on Food Labeling:
Nutrition Labeling of Standard Menu Items in Restaurants and Similar
Retail Food Establishments.'' Also include the FDA docket number found
in brackets in the heading of this document.
In compliance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C.
3507(d)), we have resubmitted the information collection provisions of
this final rule to OMB for review, because the final rule provides
additional modifications to Sec. 101.11. These requirements will not
be effective until we obtain OMB approval. Interested persons are
requested to submit comments regarding information collection to OMB
(see DATES and ADDRESSES).
Prior to the effective and compliance date of this final rule, we
will publish a notice in the Federal Register announcing OMB's decision
to approve, modify, or disapprove the information collection provisions
in this final rule. An Agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person
is not required to respond to, a collection of information unless it
displays a currently valid OMB control number.
XXVII. Federalism
We have analyzed this final rule in accordance with the principles
set forth in Executive Order 13132. Section 4(a) of the Executive order
requires Agencies to ``construe . . . a Federal statute to preempt
State law only where the statute contains an express preemption
provision or there is some other clear evidence that the Congress
intended preemption of State law, or where the exercise of State
authority conflicts with the exercise of Federal authority under the
Federal statute.'' Federal law includes an express preemption provision
that preempts ``any requirement for nutrition labeling of food that is
not identical to the requirement of section 403(q) [of the FD&C Act]
[21 U.S.C. 343(q)]'', except that this provision does not apply ``to
food that is offered for sale in a restaurant or similar retail food
establishment that is not part of a chain with 20 or more locations
doing business under the same name (regardless of the type of ownership
of the locations) and offering for sale substantially the same menu
items unless such restaurant or similar retail food establishment
complies with the voluntary provision of nutrition information
requirements under section 403(q)(5)(H)(ix) [of the FD&C Act].'' In the
proposed rule, we provided an interpretation of the preemptive
provisions of section 4205 of the ACA, as well as an alternative
interpretation (76 FR 19192 at 19203). (21 U.S.C. 343-1(a)(4)). The
final rule creates requirements for nutrition labeling of food under
section 403(q) of the FD&C Act that would preempt certain non-identical
State and local nutrition labeling requirements.
Section 4205 of the ACA also includes a Rule of Construction
providing that ``Nothing in the amendments made by [section 4205] shall
be construed--(1) to preempt any provision of State or local law,
unless such provision establishes or continues into effect nutrient
content disclosures of the type required under section 403(q)(5)(H) of
the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act [21 U.S.C. 343(q)(5)(H)] (as
added by subsection(b)) and is expressly preempted under subsection
(a)(4) of such section; (2) to apply to any State or local requirement
respecting a statement in the labeling of food that provides for a
warning concerning the safety of the food or component of the food; or
(3) except as provided in section 403(q)(5)(H)(ix) of the Federal Food,
Drug, and Cosmetic Act [21 U.S.C. 343(q)(5)(H)(ix)] (as added by
subsection (b)), to apply to any restaurant or similar retail food
establishment other than a restaurant or similar retail food
establishment described in section 403(q)(5)(H)(i) of such Act.'' (See
Pub. L. 111-148, Sec. 4205(d), 124 Stat. 119, 576 (2010).)
We interpret the provisions of section 4205 of the ACA related to
preemption to mean that States and local governments may not impose
nutrition labeling requirements for food sold in a covered
establishment, as defined in Sec. 101.11(a), unless the State or local
requirements are identical to the Federal requirements. In other words,
States and localities cannot have additional or different nutrition
labeling requirements for food sold either in (1) chain retail food
establishments or (2) restaurants and similar retail food
establishments not subject to the requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H)
of the FD&C Act that voluntarily elect to be subject to the
requirements by registering biannually under section 403(q)(5)(H)(ix).
Otherwise, for certain food that is not subject to the nutrition
labeling requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act, States
and localities may establish or continue to impose nutrition labeling
requirements. First, States and localities can have nutrition labeling
requirements for food sold in restaurants or similar retail food
establishments that are not part of a chain with 20 or more locations
doing business under the same name and offering for sale substantially
the same menu items that have not voluntarily registered under section
403(q)(5)(H)(ix) of the FD&C Act.
Second, States and localities can have nutrition labeling
requirements for foods offered for sale in other establishments
described in sections
[[Page 71250]]
403(q)(5)(A)(i) or (ii) of the FD&C Act that are exempt from the
nutrition labeling requirements of sections 403(q)(1) to (q)(4) of the
FD&C Act under section 403(q)(5)(A)(i) or (ii) of the FD&C Act,
provided that such food is not required to have nutrition labeling
under section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act. For example, certain foods
sold in schools and transportation carriers would not be required to
have nutrition labeling under sections 403(q)(1) to (q)(4) of the FD&C
Act (see section 403(q)(5)(A)(i) and (ii) of the FD&C Act and Sec.
101.9(j)(2) and (j)(3)), or under section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act
because these establishments are not covered establishments within the
meaning of Sec. 101.11(a). Under our interpretation of the Rule of
Construction in section 4205(d)(1) of the ACA, nutrition labeling for
food sold from such establishments would not be ``nutrient content
disclosures of the type required under section 403(q)(5)(H)(viii) [of
the FD&C Act]'' and, therefore, would not be preempted. As a result,
States and localities would be able to continue to require nutrition
labeling for foods sold from establishments that are exempt from the
nutrition labeling requirements of section 403(q)(1) to (q)(4) of the
FD&C Act and not subject to nutrition labeling requirements of section
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act.
In addition, the express preemption provisions of section
403(A)(a)(4) of the FD&C Act do not preempt any State or local
requirement respecting a statement in the labeling of food that
provides for a warning concerning the safety of the food or component
of the food.
The preamble to the proposed rule (76 FR 19192 at 19229 to 19230)
described an alternative interpretation of the preemption provisions of
section 4205 of the ACA that could leave less room for States and
localities to require nutrition labeling for food sold in restaurants
or similar retail food establishments. Under this alternative
interpretation, State or local nutrition labeling requirements for food
sold in establishments that are not ``restaurants or similar retail
food establishments,'' would be ineligible for the exception to the
preemption in section 403(A)(a)(4) of the FD&C Act, because that
exception by its literal terms only covers nutrition labeling
requirements for food offered for sale in certain restaurants or
similar retail food establishments, specifically those not subject to
the nutrition labeling requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C
Act. Under this alternative interpretation, States and localities could
not have nutrition labeling requirements for certain foods offered for
sale in non-restaurants and similar retail food establishments unless
they successfully petitioned us. Federal law provides that, upon
petition, FDA may exempt State or local requirements from the express
preemption provisions of section 403A(a)(4) of the FD&C Act under
certain conditions. (See 21 U.S.C. 343-1(b).) We have issued
regulations at Sec. 100.1 (21 CFR 100.1) describing the petition
process that is available to State and local governments to request
such exemptions from preemption.
In addition, under this alternative interpretation, there would be
foods in certain establishments for which the Federal Government has
not required nutrition labeling and for which States and localities
would also be precluded from establishing such labeling requirements
unless they successfully petitioned us and a rulemaking was completed.
This approach would risk creating a regulatory gap that would be
inconsistent with the purposes of section 4205 of the ACA. It would
also impose a restriction and burden on the States and localities that
is inconsistent with the Federalism principles expressed in Executive
Order 13132, as well as a substantial administrative burden on FDA in
the event States petition for exemption.
We requested comment on our interpretation of section 4025 of the
ACA related to preemption, as well as the alternative interpretation.
We also requested comment on the use of the petition process in this
context and on other potential interpretations that interested persons
could identify as appropriate given both the preemption-related
language of section 4205 of the ACA and the statutory goals.
(Comment 157) Several comments agreed with our interpretation of
the preemption provisions of section 4205 of the ACA. A few of these
comments recommended that the final rule include an explicit statement
that the scope of the law's preemptive effect is coextensive with the
law's nutrition labeling requirements; that is, the only State and
local provisions that are preempted are those that explicitly require
the type of menu labeling set forth in section 4205 of the ACA at a
covered establishment. For example, the comments stated that if we
decide not to cover movie theaters, hospitals, and other establishments
or decide to exempt alcohol beverages from menu labeling in the final
rule, then States and localities can enact laws to cover them. Another
comment stated that an express statement about preemption will
encourage States and localities to pass laws that fill in the gaps and
to pass identical laws.
One comment disagreed with our proposed interpretation of the
preemption provisions and its outcome. The comment stated that
narrowing the exception for preemption is consistent with Congress'
purpose to preempt the growing patchwork of State and local menu
labeling laws. In addition, the comment stated that, while the
alternative interpretation would result in a ``regulatory gap'' with
some establishments not covered by Federal, State, and local menu
labeling laws, Congress could amend the FD&C Act, if it chose to do so.
(Response 157) We agree with the comments asserting that the
preemptive effect of the Federal menu labeling requirements of section
4205 of the ACA is limited to State and local requirements that impose
additional or different nutrition labeling requirements for food that
is covered by the Federal requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H) of the
FD&C Act and Sec. 101.11. We also agree that the alternative
interpretation described in the proposed rule (76 FR 19192 at 19230)
would restrict State and local authorities and create a regulatory gap
that would be inconsistent with the purposes and language of section
4205 of the ACA and the Federalism principles expressed in Executive
Order 13132.
We disagree with the comment that suggested that the alternative
interpretation is more consistent with congressional intent to preempt
the ``patchwork'' of State and local laws on menu labeling and that the
solution for the ``regulatory gap'' under that interpretation would be
for Congress to amend the FD&C Act again. Congress did create a uniform
national menu labeling scheme for certain foods in certain facilities
described in section 4205 of the ACA. However, nothing in the
legislative history suggests that Congress intended to create a
category of foods in establishments for which neither the Federal
Government nor State or local governments could require menu labeling.
We think it is more consistent with the purposes of section 4205 of the
ACA, which provides valuable nutrition information to consumers, to
allow State and local governments to require menu labeling for food not
covered by Federal law. The language of section 4205(c) of the ACA
amending section 403A of the FD&C Act is consistent with our final
interpretation. This amendment includes an exception from preemption
for food sold in restaurants or similar retail food establishments that
are not restaurants or establishments subject to the requirements of
403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C Act.
[[Page 71251]]
For these reasons, we interpret the provisions of section 4205 of
the ACA related to preemption to mean that State and local governments
may not establish or continue in effect nutrition labeling requirements
for food covered by the Federal requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H) of
the FD&C Act and Sec. 101.11, unless the State or local requirements
are identical to the Federal requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H) of
the FD&C Act and Sec. 101.11. In other words, States and localities
cannot have additional or different nutrition labeling requirements for
food sold either from: (1) Chain retail food establishments; or (2)
restaurants and similar retail food establishments not otherwise
subject to the requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H) and Sec. 101.11
who voluntarily elect to be subject to those requirements by
registering biannually with FDA in accordance with section
403(q)(5)(H)(ix) of the FD&C Act and Sec. 101.11(d). For food sold in
restaurants and similar retail establishments not subject to the
nutrition labeling requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C
Act, States and localities may impose nutrition labeling requirements.
(Comment 158) Several comments agreed with our interpretation of
the Rule of Construction. One comment agreed that warning statements
are not preempted but asked us to clarify that this does not mean just
microbiological hazards.
A few comments recommended that we codify the Rule of Construction.
The comments asserted that the absence of codified provisions in the
rule regarding the Rule of Construction could lead to confusion in
properly interpreting the statute. The comments maintained that the
lack of codified provisions in the rule for a similar Rule of
Construction in the NLEA (see 21 U.S.C. 343-1 note) has led to
confusion and to court decisions that have not taken that rule into
account. The comments maintained that ensuring that the Rule of
Construction is explicitly set out in Title 21 of the Code of Federal
Regulations could help to avoid similar problems with the menu labeling
law.
(Response 158) With respect to our interpretation of the Rule of
Construction in section 4205(d) of the ACA, we reiterate that State or
local requirements for statements in food labeling providing for
warnings concerning food safety are not preempted. We agree with the
comment that food safety in this context is not limited to
microbiological hazards. We are not persuaded by the comments
suggesting that we add a codified statement to Sec. 101.11 restating
the Rule of Construction at section 4205(d) of the ACA. We have
highlighted the existence of the Rule of Construction and have
explained our interpretation of section 4205(d) of the ACA both in the
preamble to the proposed rule and in the preamble to this final rule.
We do not think that codifying the Rule of Construction in section
4205(d) in our regulations is needed either to prevent confusion in
interpreting the statute or to assure that courts consider section
4205(d) when appropriate.
(Comment 159) Some comments asked us to address the meaning of
``identical'' in section 403A(a)(4) of the FD&C Act, which excludes
from preemption State and local requirements that are identical to
Federal requirements under section 403(q) of the FD&C Act. The comments
recommended that the final rule explicitly state that ``identical''
refers to the effect of the law and does not mean that a State or local
requirement must be identical in wording of the law.
(Response 159) In response to the comments asserting that we revise
the rule to clarify the meaning of ``identical'' within the context of
section 403A(a)(4) of the FD&C Act, we note that we have already issued
a regulation at Sec. 100.1 that explains the meaning of ``not
identical to'' in the context of section 403A of the FD&C Act in
describing the petition process available to State and local
governments to request an exemption from the express preemption
provisions of section 403A of the FD&C Act under section 403A(b).
Section 100.1(c)(4) provides in relevant part that, within the context
of section 403A of FD&C Act, ``not identical to'' does not refer to the
specific words in the State or local requirement but instead means that
the State or local requirement directly or indirectly imposes
obligations or contains provisions concerning the labeling of food
that: (1) Are not imposed by or contained in the applicable provision
(including any implementing regulation) of section 403 of the FD&C Act;
or (2) differ from those specifically imposed by or contained in the
applicable provision (including any implementing regulation) of section
403 of the FD&C Act.
Accordingly, a State or local nutrition labeling requirement for
food covered by the requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H) of the FD&C
Act and Sec. 101.11 that directly or indirectly imposes obligations or
contains labeling provisions that: (1) Are not imposed by or contained
in section 403(q) of the FD&C Act and Sec. 101.11; or (2) differ from
those specifically imposed by or contained in section 403(q) of the
FD&C Act and Sec. 101.11 would be ``not identical to'' the Federal
requirements and therefore would be preempted under section 403A(a)(4)
of the FD&C Act. Because the meaning of the phrase ``not identical
to,'' within the context of section 403A of the FD&C Act, is already
described in Sec. 100.1 and is further explained here, we decline to
revise the rule to clarify the meaning of ``identical'' as suggested by
the comments.
(Comment 160) A few comments recommended that we support
development of State and local laws that are identical. The comments
recommended that we help the States and localities by making staff
available to help assess the proposed language of State or local law
for potential conflicts with Federal law and providing model
legislation, which should be made part of the Model Food Code.
(Response 160) As discussed in section XXIV, a State or local
jurisdiction may establish requirements, identical to those established
in this rule, in its own food codes and then enforce its own food
codes. Whether we can help States and localities assess the proposed
language of State or local law for potential conflicts with Federal law
will depend on resources available at the time of any requests for such
assistance. However, at this time, we do not expect to have resources
to provide model legislation for use by States and localities. We
recommend that States and localities who wish to establish
requirements, in their own food codes, identical to those established
in this rule adapt Sec. 101.11 for their own use.
(Comment 161) One comment asked us to describe the basis on which
establishments that opt into the program can be assured that preemption
applies. The comment asserted that if a facility complies with the
Federal requirements under its food service contract as agreed to by
the Federal Government, that establishment must be fully protected from
State and local menu labeling action. The comment also stated that a
facility's compliance with the terms of a Federal Government contract
must suffice as certification that the facility is in compliance with
all FDA menu labeling provisions and the facility should be permitted
to opt into our program without any additional requirements.
(Response 161) As provided in 403(q)(5)(H)(ix) of the FD&C Act,
authorized officials of restaurants and similar retail establishments
that are not subject to the requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H) may
elect to be subject to those requirements by registering biannually
with FDA, as specified in Sec. 101.11(d). Under section 403A(a)(4) of
[[Page 71252]]
the FD&C Act, an establishment that ``complies with the voluntary
provision of nutrition information requirements of 403(q)(5)(H)(ix)''
brings itself within the scope of Federal preemption of State and local
laws. The comment appears essentially to be seeking FDA's assurances
that a facility's compliance with the terms of a Federal contract to
provide food services would (1) suffice for ``opting in'' to the
voluntary program and (2) guarantee that State and local menu labeling
action against the facility is prohibited. We decline to provide such
assurances. The requirements for voluntarily ``opting in'' to be
subject to the Federal menu labeling requirements are set forth in
Sec. 101.11(d). Preemption of certain State and local requirements
follows from voluntarily becoming subject to the requirements of Sec.
101.11. The effects of following the terms of Federal contracts to
procure food services are outside the scope of this rulemaking.
XXVIII. Environmental Impact
We have determined under 21 CFR 25.30(k) that this action is of a
type that does not individually or cumulatively have a significant
effect on the human environment. Therefore, neither an environmental
assessment nor an environmental impact statement is required.
XXIX. References
The following references have been placed on display in the
Division of Dockets Management (HFA-305), Food and Drug Administration,
5630 Fishers Lane, Rm. 1061, Rockville, MD 20852, and may be seen by
interested persons between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m., Monday through Friday,
and are available electronically at https://www.regulations.gov. (FDA
has verified all the Web site addresses in this reference section, but
FDA is not responsible for any subsequent changes to the Web sites
after this document publishes in the Federal Register).
1. Flegal, K.M., M.D. Carroll, C.L. Ogden, et al., ``Prevalence and
Trends in Obesity Among U.S. Adults 1999-2008,'' Journal of the
American Medical Association, 303:235-241, 2010.
2. Ogden, C.L., M.D. Carroll, L.R. Curtin, et al., ``Prevalence of
High Body Mass Index in U.S. Children and Adolescents, 2007-2008,''
Journal of the American Medical Association, 303:242-249, 2010.
3. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) and USDA,
``2010 Dietary Guidelines for Americans,'' 7th ed., Washington DC:
U.S. Government Printing Office, 2010. Available at https://www.cnpp.usda.gov/DGAs2010-PolicyDocument.htm. Accessed on November
3, 2014.
4. Lin, B.H., J. Guthrie, and E. Fraz[atilde]o. ``Nutrient
Contribution of Food Away From Home,'' America's Eating Habits:
Changes and Consequences, chapter 12, Elizabeth Fraz[atilde]o (ed.),
USDA Agriculture Information Bulletin No. (AIB-750), pp. 213-242,
May 1999.
5. FDA Reports & Research Internet Web page: ``Backgrounder--
Keystone Forum on Away-From-Home Foods: Opportunities for Preventing
Weight Gain and Obesity Report,'' Keystone Center, June 2006.
6. USDA, Economic Research Service, ``Table 10: Food Away From Home
as a Share of Food Expenditures,'' Food CPI and Expenditures: Food
Expenditure Tables. Available at https://www.ers.usda.gov/data-products/food-expenditures.aspx. Accessed on November 3, 2014.
7. Burton, S., E.H. Creyer, J. Kees, et al., ``Attacking the Obesity
Epidemic: The Potential Health Benefits of Providing Nutrition
Information in Restaurants,'' American Journal of Public Health,
96(9):1669-1675, September 2006.
8. FDA, ``Draft Guidance for Industry: Questions and Answers
Regarding Implementation of the Menu Labeling Provisions of Section
4205 of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010,''
2010.
9. 112th Congress, House of Representatives, H. Rept. 112-101,
``Agriculture, Rural Development, Food and Drug Administration, and
Related Agencies Appropriations Bill, 2012,'' June 3, 2011.
10. FDA, ``Guidance for Industry: A Labeling Guide for Restaurants
and Other Retail Establishments Selling Away-From-Home Foods,''
April 2008.
11. Food Marketing Trends. ``U.S. Grocery Shopper Trends'', 2010.
12. Sutherland Statutes 21.4, 7th ed., 2009.
13. 155 Cong. Rec. S5522 (May 14, 2009) (statement of Senator
Harkin).
14. Commissioner, New York State Department of Agriculture and
Markets and Commissioner, New York State Department of Health.
``Memorandum of Understanding Between the New York State Department
of Health and the New York State Department of Agriculture and
Markets Concerning the Inspection of Food Service Establishments and
Food Processing Establishments'', 2010.
15. Webster's Third New International Dictionary, p. 369, 2002.
16. The American Heritage Online Dictionary. Available at https://ahdictionary.com/word/search.html?q=chain. Accessed on November 3,
2014.
17. Merriam-Webster Dictionary. Available at https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/chain. Accessed on November 3, 2014.
18. Webster's Third New International Dictionary, pp. 1327-1328,
2002.
19. The American Heritage Online Dictionary. Available at https://ahdictionary.com/word/search.html?q=location. Accessed on November
3, 2014.
20. The American Heritage Online Dictionary. Available at https://ahdictionary.com/word/search.html?q=writing. Accessed on November 3,
2014.
21. Merriam-Webster Dictionary. Available at https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/writing. Accessed on November 3, 2014.
22. Webster's Third New International Dictionary, p. 2641, 2002.
23. Merriam-Webster Dictionary. Available at https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/primary. Accessed on November 3, 2014.
24. The American Heritage Online Dictionary. Available at https://ahdictionary.com/word/search.html?q=primary. Accessed on November 3,
2014.
25. Webster's Third New International Dictionary, p. 1800, 2002.
26. 2A Sutherland Statutory Construction 137, 7th ed., 2009.
27. McDonald's and North America Consumer and Business Insights,
``Drive-Thru Caloric Information Online Customer Satisfaction
Survey'', 2011.
28. FDA Memorandum, Chung-Tung Jordan Lin, to the File, ``Review of
Comment Submitted by McDonald's USA to Docket No. FDA-2011-F-0172,
on the Use of Stanchions at Drive-Through Windows to Disclose
Calories in Standard Menu Items in Restaurants and Similar Retail
Food Establishments,'' January 27, 2012.
29. Harkin, DeLauro Respond to Proposed Menu Labeling Rules. April
1, 2011. Available at https://www.harkin.senate.gov/press/release.cfm?i=332329. Accessed on November 3, 2014.
30. U.S. Department of the Treasury, Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and
Trade Bureau. TTB Ruling Number: 2013-2, May 28, 2013.
31. Cunningham, S.K., The Bartender's Black Book, 10th ed., 2011.
32. Comment from Hyman, Phelps, and McNamara on behalf of Dominoes,
Appendix 3, 2011.
33. FDA Memorandum, Chung-Tung Jordan Lin, to the File, ``Review of
Comment Submitted by Culver Franchising Systems, Inc,. to Docket No.
FDA-2011-F-0172, on the Calorie Declaration Option of Not Using
Caloric Ranges for Combination Meals and Variable Menu Items,''
February 29, 2012.
34. California Health and Safety Code, Section 114377.
35. New York City Health Code, Section 81.08.
36. Baltimore City Health Code Section 6-507.
37. County Council for Montgomery County Maryland, Resolution No.
16-134, 2007.
38. FDA, ``Guidance for Industry: A Food Labeling Guide,'' 2008.
39. FDA, ``Regulatory Procedures Manual,'' chapter 4.
40 FDA, ``Regulatory Procedures Manual,'' chapter 6, section 5.
41. FDA, ``State Contracts,'' available at https://www.fda.gov/ForFederalStateandLocalOfficials/PartnershipsContracts/StateContracts/default.htm, 2012.
42. FDA, ``Food Labeling: Nutrition Labeling of Standard Menu Items
in Restaurants
[[Page 71253]]
and Similar Retail Food Establishments. Final Regulatory Impact
Analysis,'' Docket No. FDA-2011-F-0172, 2014.
43. ``Food Labeling: Nutrition Labeling of Standard Menu Items in
Restaurants and Similar Retail Food Establishments. Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking,'' Docket No. FDA-2011-F-0172, Preliminary
Regulatory Impact Analysis, 2011.
44. U.S. Census Bureau. County Business Patterns, United States
NAICS 2000-2008. October 18, 2010.
45. Wootan, M.G., M. Osborn. ``Availability of Nutrition Information
From Chain Restaurants in the United States. American Journal of
Preventive Medicine, 30(3):266-268, 2006.
46. U.S. Census Bureau. North American Industry Classification
System. 2007. October 18, 2010.
47. Mintel Menu Insights. New Menu Items at Restaurants. 2010.
48. Eastern Research Group I. Evaluation of Recordkeeping Costs for
Food Manufacturers, Final Report. Sertkaya, A, A. Berlind, S. Erdem,
editors. Contract No. 223-01-2461, Task Order Number 5. 2007.
List of Subjects
21 CFR Part 11
Administrative practice and procedure, Computer technology,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
21 CFR Part 101
Food labeling, Nutrition, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Therefore, under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act and under
authority delegated to the Commissioner of Food and Drugs, 21 CFR parts
11 and 101 are amended as follows:
PART 11--ELECTRONIC RECORDS; ELECTRONIC SIGNATURES
0
1. The authority citation for 21 CFR part 11 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 21 U.S.C. 321-393; 42 U.S.C. 262.
0
2. Section 11.1 is amended by adding paragraph (g) to read as follows:
Sec. 11.1 Scope.
* * * * *
(g) This part does not apply to electronic signatures obtained
under Sec. 101.11(d) of this chapter.
PART 101--FOOD LABELING
0
3. The authority citation for 21 CFR part 101 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 1453, 1454, 1455; 21 U.S.C. 321, 331, 342,
343, 348, 371; 42 U.S.C. 243, 264, 271.
0
4. Section 101.9 is amended by revising paragraph (j)(1)(i), the
introductory text of paragraphs (j)(2) and (3), and the first sentence
of paragraph (j)(4) to read as follows:
Sec. 101.9 Nutrition labeling of food.
* * * * *
(j) * * *
(1)(i) Food offered for sale by a person who makes direct sales to
consumers (e.g., a retailer) who has annual gross sales made or
business done in sales to consumers that is not more than $500,000 or
has annual gross sales made or business done in sales of food to
consumers of not more than $50,000, Provided, That the food bears no
nutrition claims or other nutrition information in any context on the
label or in labeling or advertising. Claims or other nutrition
information subject the food to the provisions of this section, Sec.
101.10, or Sec. 101.11, as applicable.
* * * * *
(2) Except as provided in Sec. 101.11, food products that are:
* * * * *
(3) Except as provided in Sec. 101.11, food products that are:
* * * * *
(4) Except as provided in Sec. 101.11, foods that contain
insignificant amounts of all of the nutrients and food components
required to be included in the declaration of nutrition information
under paragraph (c) of this section, Provided, That the food bears no
nutrition claims or other nutrition information in any context on the
label or in labeling or advertising. * * *
* * * * *
0
5. Section 101.10 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 101.10 Nutrition labeling of restaurant foods whose labels or
labeling bear nutrient content claims or health claims.
Nutrition labeling in accordance with Sec. 101.9 shall be provided
upon request for any restaurant food or meal for which a nutrient
content claim (as defined in Sec. 101.13 or in subpart D of this part)
or a health claim (as defined in Sec. 101.14 and permitted by a
regulation in subpart E of this part) is made, except that information
on the nutrient amounts that are the basis for the claim (e.g., ``low
fat, this meal provides less than 10 grams of fat'') may serve as the
functional equivalent of complete nutrition information as described in
Sec. 101.9. For the purposes of this section, restaurant food includes
two categories of food. It includes food which is served in restaurants
or other establishments in which food is served for immediate human
consumption or which is sold for sale or use in such establishments. It
also includes food which is processed and prepared primarily in a
retail establishment, which is ready for human consumption, which is of
the type described in the previous sentence, and which is offered for
sale to consumers but not for immediate human consumption in such
establishment and which is not offered for sale outside such
establishment. For standard menu items that are offered for sale in
covered establishments (as defined in Sec. 101.11(a)), the information
in the written nutrition information required by Sec.
101.11(b)(2)(ii)(A) will serve to meet the requirements of this
section. Nutrient levels may be determined by nutrient databases,
cookbooks, or analyses or by other reasonable bases that provide
assurance that the food or meal meets the nutrient requirements for the
claim. Presentation of nutrition labeling may be in various forms,
including those provided in Sec. 101.45 and other reasonable means.
0
6. Section 101.11 is added to subpart A to read as follows:
Sec. 101.11 Nutrition labeling of standard menu items in covered
establishments.
(a) Definitions. The definitions of terms in section 201 of the
Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act apply to such terms when used in
this section. In addition, for purposes of this section:
Authorized official of a restaurant or similar retail food
establishment means the owner, operator, agent in charge, or other
person authorized by the owner, operator, or agent in charge to
register the restaurant or similar retail food establishment, which is
not otherwise subject to section 403(q)(5)(H) of the Federal Food,
Drug, and Cosmetic Act, with FDA for the purposes of paragraph (d) of
this section.
Combination meal means a standard menu item that consists of more
than one food item, for example a meal that includes a sandwich, a side
dish, and a drink. A combination meal may be represented on the menu or
menu board in narrative form, numerically, or pictorially. Some
combination meals may include a variable menu item or be a variable
menu item as defined in this paragraph where the components may vary.
For example, the side dish may vary among several options (e.g., fries,
salad, or onion rings) or the drinks may vary (e.g., soft drinks, milk,
or juice) and the customer selects which of these items will be
included in the meal.
Covered establishment means a restaurant or similar retail food
establishment that is a part of a chain with 20 or more locations doing
business under the same name (regardless of the type of ownership,
e.g., individual franchises) and offering for sale substantially the
same menu
[[Page 71254]]
items, as well as a restaurant or similar retail food establishment
that is registered to be covered under paragraph (d) of this section.
Custom order means a food order that is prepared in a specific
manner based on an individual customer's request, which requires the
covered establishment to deviate from its usual preparation of a
standard menu item, e.g., a club sandwich without the bacon if the
establishment usually includes bacon in its club sandwich.
Daily special means a menu item that is prepared and offered for
sale on a particular day, that is not routinely listed on a menu or
menu board or offered by the covered establishment, and that is
promoted by the covered establishment as a special menu item for that
particular day.
Doing business under the same name means sharing the same name. The
term ``name'' refers to either:
(i) The name of the establishment presented to the public; or
(ii) If there is no name of the establishment presented to the
public (e.g., an establishment with the generic descriptor ``concession
stand''), the name of the parent entity of the establishment. When the
term ``name'' refers to the name of the establishment presented to the
public under paragraph (i) of this definition, the term ``same''
includes names that are slight variations of each other, for example,
due to the region, location, or size (e.g., ``New York Ave. Burgers''
and ``Pennsylvania Ave. Burgers'' or ``ABC'' and ``ABC Express'').
Food on display means restaurant-type food that is visible to the
customer before the customer makes a selection, so long as there is not
an ordinary expectation of further preparation by the consumer before
consumption.
Food that is part of a customary market test means food that
appears on a menu or menu board for less than 90 consecutive days in
order to test consumer acceptance of the product.
Location means a fixed position or site.
Menu or menu board means the primary writing of the covered
establishment from which a customer makes an order selection,
including, but not limited to, breakfast, lunch, and dinner menus;
dessert menus; beverage menus; children's menus; other specialty menus;
electronic menus; and menus on the Internet. Determining whether a
writing is or is part of the primary writing of the covered
establishment from which a customer makes an order selection depends on
a number of factors, including whether the writing lists the name of a
standard menu item (or an image depicting the standard menu item) and
the price of the standard menu item, and whether the writing can be
used by a customer to make an order selection at the time the customer
is viewing the writing. The menus may be in different forms, e.g.,
booklets, pamphlets, or single sheets of paper. Menu boards include
those inside a covered establishment as well as drive-through menu
boards at covered establishments.
Offering for sale substantially the same menu items means offering
for sale a significant proportion of menu items that use the same
general recipe and are prepared in substantially the same way with
substantially the same food components, even if the name of the menu
item varies, (e.g. ``Bay View Crab Cake'' and ``Ocean View Crab
Cake''). ``Menu items'' in this definition refers to food items that
are listed on a menu or menu board or that are offered as self-service
food or food on display. Restaurants and similar retail food
establishments that are part of a chain can still be offering for sale
substantially the same menu items if the availability of some menu
items varies within the chain. Having the same name may indicate, but
does not necessarily guarantee, that menu items are substantially the
same.
Restaurant or similar retail food establishment means a retail
establishment that offers for sale restaurant-type food, except if it
is a school as defined by 7 CFR 210.2 or 220.2.
Restaurant-type food means food that is:
(i) Usually eaten on the premises, while walking away, or soon
after arriving at another location; and
(ii) Either:
(A) Served in restaurants or other establishments in which food is
served for immediate human consumption or which is sold for sale or use
in such establishments; or
(B) Processed and prepared primarily in a retail establishment,
ready for human consumption, of the type described in paragraph (ii)(A)
of this definition, and offered for sale to consumers but not for
immediate human consumption in such establishment and which is not
offered for sale outside such establishment.
Self-service food means restaurant-type food that is available at a
salad bar, buffet line, cafeteria line, or similar self-service
facility and that is served by the customers themselves. Self-service
food also includes self-service beverages.
Standard menu item means a restaurant-type food that is routinely
included on a menu or menu board or routinely offered as a self-service
food or food on display.
Temporary menu item means a food that appears on a menu or menu
board for less than a total of 60 days per calendar year. The 60 days
includes the total of consecutive and non-consecutive days the item
appears on the menu.
Variable menu item means a standard menu item that comes in
different flavors, varieties, or combinations, and is listed as a
single menu item.
(b) Requirements for nutrition labeling for food sold in covered
establishments--(1) Applicability. (i) The labeling requirements in
this paragraph (b) apply to standard menu items offered for sale in
covered establishments.
(ii)(A) The labeling requirements in this paragraph (b) do not
apply to foods that are not standard menu items, including:
(1) Items such as condiments that are for general use, including
those placed on the table or on or behind the counter; daily specials;
temporary menu items; custom orders; food that is part of a customary
market test; and
(2) Self-service food and food on display that is offered for sale
for less than a total of 60 days per calendar year or fewer than 90
consecutive days in order to test consumer acceptance.
(B) The labeling requirements of paragraph (b)(2)(iii) of this
section do not apply to alcoholic beverages that are foods on display
and are not self-service foods.
(2) Nutrition information. (i) Except as provided by paragraph
(b)(2)(i)(A)(8) of this section, the following must be provided on
menus and menu boards:
(A) The number of calories contained in each standard menu item
listed on the menu or menu board, as usually prepared and offered for
sale. In the case of multiple-serving standard menu items, this means
the calories declared must be for the whole menu item listed on the
menu or menu board as usually prepared and offered for sale (e.g.,
``pizza pie: 1600 cal''); or per discrete serving unit as long as the
discrete serving unit (e.g., pizza slice) and total number of discrete
serving units contained in the menu item are declared on the menu or
menu board, and the menu item is usually prepared and offered for sale
divided in discrete serving units (e.g., ``pizza pie: 200 cal/slice, 8
slices''). The calories must be declared in the following manner:
(1) The number of calories must be listed adjacent to the name or
the price of the associated standard menu item, in a type size no
smaller than the type size of the name or the price of the
[[Page 71255]]
associated standard menu item, whichever is smaller, in the same color,
or a color at least as conspicuous as that used for the name of the
associated standard menu item, and with the same contrasting background
or a background at least as contrasting as that used for the name of
the associated standard menu item.
(2) To the nearest 5-calorie increment up to and including 50
calories and to the nearest 10-calorie increment above 50 calories,
except that amounts less than 5 calories may be expressed as zero.
(3) The term ``Calories'' or ``Cal'' must appear as a heading above
a column listing the number of calories for each standard menu item or
adjacent to the number of calories for each standard menu item. If the
term ``Calories'' or ``Cal'' appears as a heading above a column of
calorie declarations, the term must be in a type size no smaller than
the smallest type size of the name or price of any menu item on that
menu or menu board in the same color or a color at least as conspicuous
as that used for that name or price and in the same contrasting
background or a background at least as contrasting as that used for
that name or price. If the term ``Calories'' or ``Cal'' appears
adjacent to the number of calories for the standard menu item, the term
``Calories'' or ``Cal'' must appear in the same type size and in the
same color and contrasting background as the number of calories.
(4) Additional requirements that apply to each individual variable
menu item:
(i) When the menu or menu board lists flavors or varieties of an
entire individual variable menu item (such as soft drinks, ice cream,
doughnuts, dips, and chicken that can be grilled or fried), the
calories must be declared separately for each listed flavor or variety.
Where flavors or varieties have the same calorie amounts (after
rounding in accordance with paragraph (b)(2)(i)(A)(2) of this section),
the calorie declaration for such flavors or varieties can be listed as
a single calorie declaration adjacent to the flavors or varieties,
provided that the calorie declaration specifies that the calorie amount
listed represents the calorie amounts for each individual flavor or
variety.
(ii) When the menu or menu board does not list flavors or varieties
for an entire individual variable menu item, and only includes a
general description of the variable menu item (e.g. ``soft drinks''),
the calories must be declared for each option with a slash between the
two calorie declarations where only two options are available (e.g.,
``150/250 calories'') or as a range in accordance with the requirements
of paragraph (b)(2)(i)(A)(7) of this section where more than two
options are available (e.g., ``100-250 calories'').
(iii) When the menu or menu board describes flavors or varieties
for only part of an individual variable menu item (such as different
types of cheese offered in a grilled cheese sandwich (e.g., ``Grilled
Cheese (Cheddar or Swiss)''), the calories must be declared for each
option with a slash between the two calorie declarations where only two
options are available (e.g., ``450/500 calories'') or as a range in
accordance with the requirements of paragraph (b)(2)(i)(A)(7) of this
section where more than two options are available (e.g., ``450-550
calories'').
(5) Additional requirements that apply to a variable menu item that
is offered for sale with the option of adding toppings listed on the
menu or menu board. When the menu or menu board lists toppings that can
be added to a menu item (such as pizza or ice cream):
(i) The calories must be declared for the basic preparation of the
menu item as listed (e.g., ``small pizza pie,'' ``single scoop ice
cream'').
(ii) The calories must be separately declared for each topping
listed on the menu or menu board (e.g., pepperoni, sausage, green
peppers, onions on pizza; fudge, almonds, sprinkles on ice cream),
specifying that the calories are added to the calories contained in the
basic preparation of the menu item. Where toppings have the same
calorie amounts (after rounding in accordance with paragraph
(b)(2)(i)(A)(2) of this section), the calorie declaration for such
toppings can be listed as a single calorie declaration adjacent to the
toppings, provided that the calorie declaration specifies that the
calorie amount listed represents the calorie amount for each individual
topping.
(iii) The calories for the basic preparation of the menu item must
be declared for each size of the menu item. The calories for each
topping listed on the menu or menu board must be declared for each size
of the menu item, or declared using a slash between the two calorie
declarations for each topping where only two sizes of the menu item are
available (e.g., ``adds 150/250 cal'') or as a range for each topping
in accordance with the requirements of paragraph (b)(2)(i)(A)(7) of
this section where more than two sizes of the menu item are available
(e.g., ``adds 100-250 cal''). If a slash between two calorie
declarations or a range of calorie declarations is used, the menu or
menu board must indicate that the variation in calories for each
topping arises from the size of the menu item to which the toppings are
added.
(iv) If the amount of the topping included on the basic preparation
of the menu item decreases based on the total number of toppings
ordered for the menu item (such as is sometimes the case with pizza
toppings), the calories for each topping must be declared as single
values representing the calories for each topping when added to a one-
topping menu item, specifying that the calorie declaration is for the
topping when added to a one-topping menu item.
(6) Additional requirements that apply to a combination meal.
Except as provided in paragraph (b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(iv) of this section:
(i) When the menu or menu board lists two options for menu items in
a combination meal (e.g., a sandwich with a side salad or chips), the
calories must be declared for each option with a slash between the two
calorie declarations (e.g., ``350/450 calories'').
(ii) When the menu or menu board lists three or more options for
menu items in a combination meal (e.g., a sandwich with chips, a side
salad, or fruit), the calories must be declared as a range in
accordance with the requirements of paragraph (b)(2)(i)(A)(7) of this
section (e.g., ``350-500 calories'').
(iii) When the menu or menu board includes a choice to increase or
decrease the size of a combination meal, the calorie difference must be
declared for the increased or decreased size with a slash between two
calorie declarations (e.g., ``Adds 100/150 calories,'' ``Subtracts 100/
150 calories'') if the menu or menu board lists two options for menu
items in the combination meal, or as a range in accordance with the
requirements of paragraph (b)(2)(i)(A)(7) of this section (e.g., ``Adds
100-250 calories,'' ``Subtracts 100-250 calories'') if the menu or menu
board lists three or more options for menu items in the combination
meal.
(iv) Where the menu or menu board describes an opportunity for a
consumer to combine standard menu items for a special price (e.g.,
``Combine Any Sandwich with Any Soup or Any Salad for $8.99''), and the
calories for each standard menu item, including each size option as
described in paragraph (b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(iii) of this section if
applicable, available for the consumer to combine are declared
elsewhere on the menu or menu board, the requirements of paragraphs
(b)(2)(i)(A)(6)(i), (ii), and (iii) of this section do not apply.
(7) Additional format requirements for declaring calories for an
individual variable menu item, a combination meal, and toppings as a
range, if
[[Page 71256]]
applicable. Calories declared as a range must be in the format ``xx-
yy,'' where ``xx'' is the caloric content of the lowest calorie
variety, flavor, or combination, and ``yy'' is the caloric content of
the highest calorie variety, flavor, or combination.
(8) Exception for a variable menu item that has no clearly
identifiable upper bound to the range of calories: If the variable menu
item appears on the menu or menu board and is a self-service food or
food on display, and there is no clearly identifiable upper bound to
the range, e.g., all-you-can-eat buffet, then the menu or menu board
must include a statement, adjacent to the name or price of the item,
referring customers to the self-service facility for calorie
information, e.g., ``See buffet for calorie declarations.'' This
statement must appear in a type size no smaller than the type size of
the name or price of the variable menu item, whichever is smaller, and
in the same color or a color at least as conspicuous as that used for
that name or price, with the same contrasting background or a
background at least as contrasting as that used for that name or price.
(9) Additional requirements that apply to beverages that are not
self-service. For beverages that are not self-service, calories must be
declared based on the full volume of the cup served without ice, unless
the covered establishment ordinarily dispenses and offers for sale a
standard beverage fill (i.e., a fixed amount that is less than the full
volume of the cup per cup size) or dispenses a standard ice fill (i.e.,
a fixed amount of ice per cup size). If the covered establishment
ordinarily dispenses and offers for sale a standard beverage fill or
dispenses a standard ice fill, the covered establishment must declare
calories based on such standard beverage fill or standard ice fill.
(B) The following statement designed to enable consumers to
understand, in the context of a total daily diet, the significance of
the calorie information provided on menus and menu boards: ``2,000
calories a day is used for general nutrition advice, but calorie needs
vary.'' For menus and menu boards targeted to children, the following
options may be used as a substitute for or in addition to the succinct
statement: ``1,200 to 1,400 calories a day is used for general
nutrition advice for children ages 4 to 8 years, but calorie needs
vary.''; or ``1,200 to 1,400 calories a day is used for general
nutrition advice for children ages 4 to 8 years and 1,400 to 2,000
calories a day for children ages 9 to 13 years, but calorie needs
vary.''
(1) This statement must be posted prominently and in a clear and
conspicuous manner in a type size no smaller than the smallest type
size of any calorie declaration appearing on the same menu or menu
board and in the same color or in a color at least as conspicuous as
that used for the calorie declarations and with the same contrasting
background or a background at least as contrasting as that used for the
calorie declarations.
(2) For menus, this statement must appear on the bottom of each
page of the menu. On menu pages that also bear the statement required
by paragraph (b)(2)(i)(C) of this section, this statement must appear
immediately above, below, or beside the statement required by paragraph
(b)(2)(i)(C) of this section.
(3) For menu boards, this statement must appear on the bottom of
the menu board, immediately above, below, or beside the statement
required by paragraph (b)(2)(i)(C) of this section.
(C) The following statement regarding the availability of the
additional written nutrition information required in paragraph
(b)(2)(ii) of this section must be on all forms of the menu or menu
board: ``Additional nutrition information available upon request.''
(1) This statement must be posted prominently and in a clear and
conspicuous manner in a type size no smaller than the smallest type
size of any calorie declaration appearing on the same menu or menu
board and in the same color or in a color at least as conspicuous as
that used for the caloric declarations, and with the same contrasting
background or a background at least as contrasting as that used for the
caloric declarations.
(2) For menus, the statement must appear on the bottom of the first
page with menu items immediately above, below, or beside the succinct
statement required by paragraph (b)(2)(i)(B) of this section.
(3) For menu boards, the statement must appear on the bottom of the
menu board immediately above, below, or beside the succinct statement
required by paragraph (b)(2)(i)(B) of this section.
(ii) The following nutrition information for a standard menu item
must be available in written form on the premises of the covered
establishment and provided to the customer upon request. This nutrition
information must be presented in the order listed and using the
measurements listed, except as provided in paragraph (b)(2)(ii)(B) of
this section. Rounding of these nutrients must be in compliance with
Sec. 101.9(c). The information must be presented in a clear and
conspicuous manner, including using a color, type size, and contrasting
background that render the information likely to be read and understood
by the ordinary individual under customary conditions of purchase and
use. Covered establishments may use the abbreviations allowed for
Nutrition Facts for certain packaged foods in Sec.
101.9(j)(13)(ii)(B):
(A)(1) Total calories (cal);
(2) Calories from fat (fat cal);
(3) Total fat (g);
(4) Saturated fat (g);
(5) Trans fat (g);
(6) Cholesterol (mg);
(7) Sodium (mg);
(8) Total carbohydrate (g);
(9) Dietary fiber (g);
(10) Sugars (g); and
(11) Protein (g).
(B) If a standard menu item contains insignificant amounts of all
the nutrients required to be disclosed in paragraph (b)(2)(ii)(A) of
this section, the establishment is not required to include nutrition
information regarding the standard menu item in the written form.
However, if the covered establishment makes a nutrient content claim or
health claim, the establishment is required to provide nutrition
information on the nutrient that is the subject of the claim in
accordance with Sec. 101.10. For standard menu items that contain
insignificant amounts of six or more of the required nutrients, the
declaration of nutrition information required by paragraph
(b)(2)(ii)(A) of this section may be presented in a simplified format.
(1) An insignificant amount is defined as that amount that allows a
declaration of zero in nutrition labeling, except that for total
carbohydrates, dietary fiber, and protein, it must be an amount that
allows a declaration of ``less than one gram.''
(2) The simplified format must include information, in a column,
list, or table, on the following nutrients:
(i) Total calories, total fat, total carbohydrates, protein, and
sodium; and
(ii) Calories from fat, and any other nutrients identified in
paragraph (b)(2)(ii)(A) of this section that are present in more than
insignificant amounts.
(3) If the simplified format is used, the statement ``Not a
significant source of ___--'' (with the blank filled in with the names
of the nutrients required to be declared in the written nutrient
information and calories from fat that are present in insignificant
amounts) must be included at the bottom of the list of nutrients.
(C) For variable menu items, the nutrition information listed in
paragraph (b)(2)(ii)(A) of this section must be declared as follows for
each size offered for sale:
(1) The nutrition information required in paragraph (b)(2)(ii)(A)
of this section
[[Page 71257]]
must be declared for the basic preparation of the item and, separately,
for each topping, flavor, or variable component.
(2) Additional format requirements for toppings if the amount of
the topping included on the basic preparation of the menu item
decreases based on the total number of toppings ordered for the menu
item (such as is sometimes the case with pizza toppings). The nutrients
for such topping must be declared as single values representing the
nutrients for each topping when added to a one-topping menu item,
specifying that the nutrient declaration is for the topping when added
to a one-topping menu item.
(3) If the calories and other nutrients are the same for different
flavors, varieties, and variable components of the combination meal,
each variety, flavor, and variable component of the combination meal is
not required to be listed separately. All items that have the same
nutrient values could be listed together with the nutrient values
listed only once.
(D) The written nutrition information required in paragraph
(b)(2)(ii)(A) of this section may be provided on a counter card, sign,
poster, handout, booklet, loose leaf binder, or electronic device such
as a computer, or in a menu, or in any other form that similarly
permits the written declaration of the required nutrient content
information for all standard menu items. If the written nutrition
information is not in a form that can be given to the customer upon
request, it must be readily available in a manner and location on the
premises that allows the customer/consumer to review the written
nutrition information upon request.
(iii) The following must be provided for a standard menu item that
is self-service or on display.
(A) Calories per displayed food item (e.g., a bagel, a slice of
pizza, or a muffin), or if the food is not offered for sale in a
discrete unit, calories per serving (e.g., scoop, cup), and the serving
or discrete unit used to determine the calorie content (e.g., ``per
scoop'' or ``per muffin'') on either: A sign adjacent to and clearly
associated with the corresponding food; (e.g., ``150 calories per
scoop''); a sign attached to a sneeze guard with the calorie
declaration and the serving or unit used to determine the calorie
content above each specific food so that the consumer can clearly
associate the calorie declaration with the food, except that if it is
not clear to which food the calorie declaration and serving or unit
refers, then the sign must also include the name of the food, e.g.,
``Broccoli and cheese casserole--200 calories per scoop''; or a single
sign or placard listing the calorie declaration for several food items
along with the names of the food items, so long as the sign or placard
is located where a consumer can view the name, calorie declaration, and
serving or unit of a particular item while selecting that item.
(1) For purposes of paragraph (b)(2)(iii)(A) of this section, ``per
displayed food item'' means per each discrete unit offered for sale,
for example, a bagel, a slice of pizza, or a muffin.
(2) For purposes of paragraph (b)(2)(iii)(A) of this section, ``per
serving'' means, for each food:
(i) Per serving instrument used to dispense the food offered for
sale, provided that the serving instrument dispenses a uniform amount
of the food (e.g., a scoop or ladle);
(ii) If a serving instrument that dispenses a uniform amount of
food is not used to dispense the food, per each common household
measure (e.g., cup or tablespoon) offered for sale or per unit of
weight offered for sale, e.g., per quarter pound or per 4 ounces; or
(iii) Per total number of fluid ounces in the cup in which a self-
service beverage is served and, if applicable, the description of the
cup size (e.g., ``140 calories per 12 fluid ounces (small)'').
(3) The calories must be declared in the following manner:
(i) To the nearest 5-calorie increment up to and including 50
calories and to the nearest 10-calorie increment above 50 calories
except that amounts less than 5 calories may be expressed as zero.
(ii) If the calorie declaration is provided on a sign with the
food's name, price, or both, the calorie declaration, accompanied by
the term ``Calories'' or ``Cal'' and the amount of the serving or
displayed food item on which the calories declaration is based must be
in a type size no smaller than the type size of the name or price of
the menu item whichever is smaller, in the same color, or a color that
is at least as conspicuous as that used for that name or price, using
the same contrasting background or a background at least as contrasting
as that used for that name or price. If the calorie declaration is
provided on a sign that does not include the food's name, price, or
both, the calorie declaration, accompanied by the term ``Calories'' or
``Cal'' and the amount of the serving or displayed food item on which
the calorie declaration is based must be clear and conspicuous.
(iii) For self-service beverages, calorie declarations must be
accompanied by the term ``fluid ounces'' and, if applicable, the
description of the cup size (e.g., ``small,'' ``medium'').
(B) For food that is self-service or on display and is identified
by an individual sign adjacent to the food itself where such sign meets
the definition of a menu or menu board under paragraph (a) of this
section, the statement required by paragraph (b)(2)(i)(B) of this
section and the statement required by paragraph (b)(2)(i)(C) of this
section. These two statements may appear on the sign adjacent to the
food itself; on a separate, larger sign, in close proximity to the food
that can be easily read as the consumer is making order selections; or
on a large menu board that can be easily read as the consumer is
viewing the food.
(C) The nutrition information in written form required by paragraph
(b)(2)(ii) of this section, except for packaged food insofar as it
bears nutrition labeling information required by and in accordance with
paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of this section and the packaged food, including
its label, can be examined by a consumer before purchasing the food.
(c) Determination of nutrient content. (1) A covered establishment
must have a reasonable basis for its nutrient declarations. Nutrient
values may be determined by using nutrient databases (with or without
computer software programs), cookbooks, laboratory analyses, or other
reasonable means, including the use of Nutrition Facts on labels on
packaged foods that comply with the nutrition labeling requirements of
section 403(q)(1) of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act and Sec.
101.9, FDA nutrient values for raw fruits and vegetables in Appendix C
of this part, or FDA nutrient values for cooked fish in Appendix D of
this part.
(2) Nutrient declarations for standard menu items must be accurate
and consistent with the specific basis used to determine nutrient
values. A covered establishment must take reasonable steps to ensure
that the method of preparation (e.g., types and amounts of ingredients,
cooking temperatures) and amount of a standard menu item offered for
sale adhere to the factors on which its nutrient values were
determined.
(3) A covered establishment must provide to FDA, within a
reasonable period of time upon request, information substantiating
nutrient values including the method and data used to derive these
nutrient values. This information must include the following:
(i) For nutrient databases:
(A) The name and version (including the date of the version) of the
database,
[[Page 71258]]
and, as applicable, the name of the applicable software company and any
Web site address for the database. The name and version of a database
would include the name and version of the computer software, if
applicable;
(B) The recipe or formula used as a basis for the nutrient
declarations;
(C)(1) Information on:
(i) The amount of each nutrient that the specified amount of each
ingredient identified in the recipe contributes to the menu item; and
(ii) How the database was used including calculations or operations
(e.g., worksheets or computer printouts) to determine the nutrient
values for the standard menu items;
(2) If the information in paragraph (c)(3)(i)(C)(1) of this section
is not available, certification attesting that the database will
provide accurate results when used appropriately and that the database
was used in accordance with its instructions;
(D) A detailed listing (e.g., printout) of the nutrient values
determined for each standard menu item.
(E) Any other information pertinent to the final nutrient values of
the standard menu item (e.g., information about what might cause slight
variations in the nutrient profile such as moisture variations);
(F) A statement signed and dated by a responsible individual,
employed at the covered establishment or its corporate headquarters or
parent entity, who can certify that the information contained in the
nutrient analysis is complete and accurate; and
(G) A statement signed and dated by a responsible individual
employed at the covered establishment certifying that the covered
establishment has taken reasonable steps to ensure that the method of
preparation (e.g., types and amounts of ingredients in the recipe,
cooking temperatures) and amount of a standard menu item offered for
sale adhere to the factors on which its nutrient values were
determined.
(ii) For published cookbooks that contain nutritional information
for recipes in the cookbook:
(A) The name, author, and publisher of the cookbook used;
(B) If available, information provided by the cookbook or from the
author or publisher about how the nutrition information for the recipes
was obtained;
(C) A copy of the recipe used to prepare the standard menu item and
a copy of the nutrition information for that standard menu item as
provided by the cookbook; and
(D) A statement signed and dated by a responsible individual
employed at the covered establishment certifying that that the covered
establishment has taken reasonable steps to ensure that the method of
preparation (e.g., types and amounts of ingredients in the recipe,
cooking temperatures) and amount of a standard menu item offered for
sale adhere to the factors on which its nutrient values were
determined. (Recipes may be divided as necessary to accommodate
differences in the portion size derived from the recipe and that are
served as the standard menu item but no changes may be made to the
proportion of ingredients used.)
(iii) For laboratory analyses:
(A) A copy of the recipe for the standard menu item used for the
nutrient analysis;
(B) The name and address of the laboratory performing the analysis;
(C) Copies of analytical worksheets, including the analytical
method, used to determine and verify nutrition information;
(D) A statement signed and dated by a responsible individual,
employed at the covered establishment or its corporate headquarters or
parent entity, who can certify that the information contained in the
nutrient analysis is complete and accurate; and
(E) A statement signed and dated by a responsible individual
employed at the covered establishment certifying that the covered
establishment has taken reasonable steps to ensure that the method of
preparation (e.g., types and amounts of ingredients in the recipe,
cooking temperatures) and amount of a standard menu item offered for
sale adhere to the factors on which its nutrient values were
determined.
(iv) For nutrition information provided by other reasonable means:
(A) A detailed description of the means used to determine the
nutrition information;
(B) A recipe or formula used as a basis for the nutrient
determination;
(C) Any data derived in determining the nutrient values for the
standard menu item, e.g., nutrition information about the ingredients
used with the source of the nutrient information;
(D) A statement signed and dated by a responsible individual,
employed at the covered establishment or its corporate headquarters or
parent entity, who can certify that the information contained in the
nutrient analysis is complete and accurate; and
(E) A statement signed and dated by a responsible individual
employed at the covered establishment certifying that the covered
establishment has taken reasonable steps to ensure that the method of
preparation (e.g., types and amounts of ingredients in the recipe,
cooking temperatures) and amount of a standard menu item offered for
sale adhere to the factors on which its nutrient values were
determined.
(d) Voluntary registration to be subject to the menu labeling
requirements--(1) Applicability. A restaurant or similar retail food
establishment that is not part of a chain with 20 or more locations
doing business under the same name and offering for sale substantially
the same menu items may voluntarily register to be subject to the
requirements established in this section. Restaurants and similar
retail food establishments that voluntarily register will no longer be
subject to non-identical State or local nutrition labeling
requirements.
(2) Who may register? The authorized official of a restaurant or
similar retail food establishment as defined in paragraph (a) of this
section, which is not otherwise subject to paragraph (b) of this
section, may register with FDA.
(3) What information is required? Authorized officials for
restaurants and similar retail food establishments must provide FDA
with the following information on Form FDA 3757:
(i) The contact information (including name, address, phone number,
and email address) for the authorized official;
(ii) The contact information (including name, address, phone
number, and email address) of each restaurant or similar retail food
establishment being registered, as well as the name and contact
information for an official onsite, such as the owner or manager, for
each specific restaurant or similar retail food establishment;
(iii) All trade names the restaurant or similar retail food
establishment uses;
(iv) Preferred mailing address (if different from location address
for each establishment) for purposes of receiving correspondence; and
(v) Certification that the information submitted is true and
accurate, that the person submitting it is authorized to do so, and
that each registered restaurant or similar retail food establishment
will be subject to the requirements of section 403(q)(5)(H) of the
Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act and this section.
(4) How to register. Authorized officials of restaurants and
similar retail food establishments who elect to be subject to
requirements in section 403(q)(5)(H) of the Federal Food, Drug, and
Cosmetic Act can register by visiting https://www.fda.gov/food/ingredientspackaginglabeling/labelingnutrition/ucm217762.htm. FDA has
created a form (Form 3757) that contains fields requesting the
information in paragraph (d)(3) of this section and made the form
available at
[[Page 71259]]
this Web site. Registrants must use this form to ensure that complete
information is submitted.
(i) Information should be submitted by email by typing complete
information into the form (PDF), saving it on the registrant's
computer, and sending it by email to menulawregistration@fda.hhs.gov.
(ii) If email is not available, the registrant can either fill in
the form (PDF) and print it out (or print out the blank PDF and fill in
the information by hand or typewriter), and either fax the completed
form to 301-436-2804 or mail it to FDA, CFSAN Menu and Vending Machine
Registration, White Oak Building 22, Rm. 0209, 10903 New Hampshire
Ave., Silver Spring, MD 20993.
(5) When to renew the registration. To keep the establishment's
registration active, the authorized official of the restaurant or
similar retail food establishment must register every other year within
60 days prior to the expiration of the establishment's current
registration with FDA. Registration will automatically expire if not
renewed.
(e) Signatures. Signatures obtained under paragraph (d) of this
section that meet the definition of electronic signatures in Sec.
11.3(b)(7) of this chapter are exempt from the requirements of part 11
of this chapter.
(f) Misbranding. A standard menu item offered for sale in a covered
establishment shall be deemed misbranded under sections 201(n), 403(a),
403(f) and/or 403(q) of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act if its
label or labeling is not in conformity with paragraph (b) or (c) of
this section.
Dated: November 19, 2014.
Leslie Kux,
Associate Commissioner for Policy.
[FR Doc. 2014-27833 Filed 11-25-14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4164-01-P