Child advocacy group upset over McDonald’s ads on report cards
Associated Press
December 5, 2007
ORLANDO, Fla.
- An Orlando parent said she was appalled when her
9-year-old daughter brought home her report card cover
and it contained an advertisement for McDonald’s
promising free Happy Meals for good grades, attendance
and behavior.
Her complaint prompted the Boston-based child advocacy
group, Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood to
demand Wednesday that McDonald’s immediately stop the
report card advertising in the Seminole County School
District.
"The promotion takes in-school marketing to a new low,"
said Susan Linn, the co-founder and director of the
campaign, who said she had not contacted the restaurant
chain or the school district. The group issued its
demands in a news release.
"Children’s lives are just saturated with advertising
and marketing. Schools should be commercial free space,"
Linn said. "It bypasses parents and targets children
directly with the message that doing well in school
should be rewarded with a Happy Meal."
Regina Klaers, a spokeswoman for the district, said
school officials are not aware of the group’s demands
and only had a complaint from one parent.
"We haven’t seen the press release. We can’t respond to
it," Klaers said.
She defended the practice, saying advertisers have
sponsored the report card jackets for more than a decade
because it saves the district money.
McDonald’s paid $1,600 to print 27,000 jackets for
elementary school report cards. Before that, Pizza Hut
printed the covers for the past 10 years, she said.
The School Board will revisit the issue in the spring
when it considers who will sponsor next year’s covers,
she said.
The issue came to light last week when Susan Pagan’s
daughter, Cathy, a fourth-grader at Red Bug Elementary
School, brought home her report card and wanted to get a
free Happy Meal because she earned good grades.
Pagen told her daughter, "Our family does not eat at
fast food chains," Pagan said. "And, now I’m the bad
guy."
Pagan said she complained to school officials in an
e-mail about the advertising and received a telephone
call from Superintendent Bill Vogel. She said he told
her that she was the only person who complained and he
noted that McDonald’s offers some healthy alternatives.
With the emphasis on healthier eating and problems with
childhood obesity, she said she thought the advertising
was inappropriate.
She contacted Linn’s group in Boston.
"I’m outraged that McDonald’s is trying to exploit my
daughter’s achievement — and that the Seminole County
School Board would help facilitate this exploitation."
Pagan said she is not opposed to fast food, but she said
there are professional and appropriate ways in
addressing sponsorship and "not directly bombarding our
children with this marketing."
In a statement, William Whitman, a McDonald’s USA
spokesman, said, "This is a local program in Seminole
County, Florida, that promotes academic excellence and
rewards academic achievement. It is supported by the
School Board of Seminole County and widely supported by
the local community."
"McDonald’s does not advertise in schools. However, we
continue to support education initiatives in the
communities we serve," the statement said.
He noted the Happy Meal choices include Chicken
McNuggets made with white meat, hamburgers,
cheeseburgers, apple dippers, apple juice and low-fat
milk.
Campaign For A Commercial-Free Childhood is a national
coalition of health care professionals, educators,
advocacy groups and concerned parents who are trying to
counter what they claim is the harmful effects of
marketing to children.
