Cook County IL joins Boulder and the Bay Area with a yes vote this week on a sugary drink tax.
Cook County IL joins Boulder and the Bay Area with a yes vote this week on a sugary drink tax. They continued the week’s winning streak for these measures and momentum for the movement builds as the mayor of Santa Fe announced today he will also be pursuing a two-cent tax on sugary drinks. The Cook County Board vote was 9-8 in favor of a one-cent tax on sweetened beverages. Harvard researchers found the Cook County tax has the potential to reduce diabetes, extend lives, and avert $222 million in health costs over 10 years. Combined, the seven Bay Area, Philadelphia, Boulder, and Cook County taxes will bring in estimated revenues of over $342 million per year. They will also extend thousands of lives and cut diabetes and obesity rates while saving more than $360 million in healthcare costs over the next decade. Read more.
Statement from our executive director Jim Krieger
“Today, Cook County became the seventh place in the nation to pass a sugary drink tax. Tax advocates have now won seven of the past seven tax campaigns, five of them in the past two days. Big Soda spent over $42 million this year alone to defeat taxes on sugary drinks but these seven communities have now taken on the likes of Coca-Cola and Pepsi and prevailed. Communities now know they can stand up to Big Soda and win. We expect to see many more tax measures pass in 2017.
I congratulate the Cook County Illinois Board for passing its sugary drink tax. This effort was led by Board President Toni Preckwinkle and supported by local and national health organizations. Now millions of people in Cook County will benefit from over $223 million in revenue to support community needs while reducing diabetes, extending lives, and averting over $222 million in health costs over 10 years. This brings the total number of people benefitting from sugary drink taxes across the nation to over 8 million people with over $342 million in projected revenue and over $360 million in health care savings.”
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