Community Groups Kick Off Campaign to Remove Alcohol Ads from NYC Public Transit
School’s Out For Summer:
Yesterday,
This event – organized by the Building Alcohol Ad-Free Transit (BAAFT) campaign – kicked off a series of activities that BAAFT and its partner organizations across the 5 boroughs will be holding all summer long to draw attention to the problem of alcohol ads on NYC transit.
“A subway car or station is no place for alcohol advertisements,” said NYC Council Member Daniel Dromm (D-Jackson Heights, Elmhurst).
Council Member Daniel Dromm has sponsored a NYC Council resolution calling on the MTA to remove alcohol advertising from the NYC public transit system.
Kylie Cortez, a youth leader with the Forward South Bronx Coalition said, “The alcohol advertising on NYC public transit has unjustly affected communities of color, especially in the Bronx.”
Other speakers noted the research confirming that alcohol ads contribute to youth drinking, with Dr. Kavitha Das of the Public Health Association of NYC (PHANYC) explaining how alcohol ads often glamorize drinking and lead young people into that behavior.
Faith leaders from the Christian, Jewish and Muslim communities also added the perspectives of their traditions.
Chris McKay, Youth Minister from the Bronx Church of God of Prophecy, said, “We won’t stop until we’ve passed this resolution, and gotten the MTA to remove these alcohol ads.
Building Alcohol Ad-Free Transit (BAAFT) is a citywide coalition working to protect the health and safety of NYC youth by removing alcohol advertising from the subways, busses, and property of the NYC public transit system. Over 160 organizations from across the 5 boroughs have signed on in support of BAAFT’s goal – including faith-based organizations, hospitals, medical associations, public health practitioners, LGBT centers, schools, settlement houses, community coalitions, prevention and treatment providers, and small businesses
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