96-19645. Food Labeling; Nutrient Content Claims and Health Claims; Restaurant Foods  

  • [Federal Register Volume 61, Number 150 (Friday, August 2, 1996)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 40320-40332]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 96-19645]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
    21 CFR Part 101
    
    [Docket No. 93N-0153]
    RIN 0910-AA19
    
    
    Food Labeling; Nutrient Content Claims and Health Claims; 
    Restaurant Foods
    
    AGENCY: Food and Drug Administration, HHS.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is amending its food 
    labeling regulations to remove the provisions that exempt restaurant 
    menus from the requirements for how nutrient content claims and health 
    claims are to be made and from the requirements for the provision of 
    nutrition information with respect to the nutrients that are the basis 
    for the claim, when claims are made. Because a significant number of 
    meals are consumed outside of the home, the extension of these 
    requirements to menus will help to increase the awareness of the 
    American consumer to the relationships between diet and health. FDA is 
    issuing this final rule at this time in response to a decision by the 
    United States District Court for the District of Columbia.
    
    DATES: This regulation is effective May 2, 1997. Written comments on 
    the information collection requirements should be submitted by October 
    1, 1996.
    
    ADDRESSES: Submit written comments on the information collection 
    requirements to the Dockets Management Branch (HFA-305), Food and Drug 
    Administration, 12420 Parklawn Dr., rm. 1-23, Rockville, MD 20857. All 
    comments should be identified with the docket number found in brackets 
    in the heading of this document. Persons who believe it would be useful 
    for the agency to hold a public meeting on what is required by this 
    rule should also send their letters to the Dockets Management Branch.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Michelle A. Smith, Center for Food 
    Safety and Applied Nutrition (HFS-158), Food and Drug Administration, 
    200 C St. SW., Washington, DC 20204, 202-205-5099.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. Background
    
    A. Requirements for Nutrition Labeling and Nutrient Content Claims and 
    Health Claims
    
        The Nutrition Labeling and Education Act of 1990 (the 1990 
    amendments) and the final regulations that implement the 1990 
    amendments (58 FR 2066, January 6, 1993, as modified at 58 FR 44020, 
    August 18, 1993) provide for a number of fundamental changes in how 
    food is labeled, including mandatory nutrition labeling on most foods, 
    uniform definitions for terms that characterize the level of nutrients 
    in a food, and the use of claims about the relationship between 
    nutrients and diseases or health-related conditions. These changes 
    apply to virtually all foods in the food supply, including foods sold 
    in restaurants.
        The provision on nutrition labeling that was added to the Federal 
    Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (the act) by the 1990 amendments, section 
    403(q) (21 U.S.C. 343(q)), includes an exemption for foods that are 
    served or sold in restaurants or other establishments in which food is 
    served for immediate human consumption (section 403(q)(5)(A)(i)). This 
    exemption, however, is contingent on there being no claims or other 
    nutrition information on the label or labeling, or in the advertising, 
    for the food. The use of nutrient content claims, health claims, or 
    other nutrition information on the label or labeling of a food sold in 
    a restaurant or other establishment in which food is served for 
    immediate consumption will subject that food to the nutrition labeling 
    provisions of the act (see sections 403 (q) and (r) of the act and 
    Sec. 101.9 (j)(2)(i) through (j)(2)(iii) (21 CFR 101.9 (j)(2)(i) 
    through (j)(2)(iii))). Consistent with these provisions, in this 
    discussion the term ``restaurant foods'' refers to foods served in 
    restaurants and in other establishments in which food that is ready for 
    human consumption is sold (e.g., institutional food service, 
    delicatessens, catering) or sold only in such establishments. Firms 
    selling such foods will be referred to as ``restaurants,'' and 
    responsible individuals in these firms will be referred to as 
    ``restaurateurs.''
        In the January 6, 1993, final rules on nutrient content claims and 
    health claims (entitled ``Food Labeling: Nutrient Content Claims, 
    General Principles, Petitions, Definitions of Terms; Definitions of 
    Nutrient Content Claims for the Fat, Fatty Acid, and Cholesterol 
    Content of Food'' (58 FR 2302); and ``Food Labeling; General 
    Requirements for Health Claims for Food'' (58 FR 2478), respectively 
    (hereinafter referred to as the ``nutrient content claims final rule'' 
    and the ``health claims final rule,'' and collectively, as the ``claims 
    final rules'')), the agency concluded that if claims on restaurant 
    foods are to be useful to consumers, they must be valid. Thus, FDA 
    stated that the same standards will apply to restaurant foods as to 
    other foods with respect to basic definitions for nutrient content 
    claims. FDA also stated that when a restaurant makes explicit or 
    implied reference to a food or substance in food, and directly or 
    indirectly links that substance to an effect on a disease or health-
    related condition (i.e., when both basic elements of a health claim are 
    present), the restaurant must comply with the health claims regime (58 
    FR 2478 at 2516). At the same time, FDA acknowledged that how a 
    restaurant demonstrates compliance with these requirements is a 
    difficult matter. FDA pointed out, in the claims final rules (58 FR 
    2302 at 2386 and 58 FR 2478 at 2515), that it is not obligated under 
    the act to regulate claims on restaurant foods in a manner identical to 
    that in which it regulates claims on packaged foods. In the nutrient 
    content claims final rule (58 FR 2302), the agency amended Sec. 101.10 
    Nutrition labeling of restaurant foods (21 CFR 101.10) to provide 
    flexibility for restaurants in determining compliance with FDA's 
    requirements for the claims regime and in providing nutrition labeling 
    for foods that bear a claim.
        Consequently, although restaurant food must comply with the same 
    standards as other foods to bear a claim, the way in which a restaurant 
    determines the nutrient content of a food or meal, and the way in which 
    nutrition information is communicated to consumers, may be different 
    for restaurant foods than for foods from other sources. For example, 
    Sec. 101.10 provides that nutrient levels in restaurant foods may be 
    determined through the use of nutrient data bases, cookbooks, or other 
    reasonable bases that provide assurance that the food or meal meets the 
    nutrient requirements for the claim. For compliance purposes,
    
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    a restaurant is required to provide information on its reasonable basis 
    for making a claim. Further, restaurants making a claim are required to 
    provide consumers, upon request, with nutrition information on the 
    nutrient that is the subject of the claim. However, Sec. 101.10 
    provides that nutrition labeling may be presented in various forms, 
    including those provided in Sec. 101.45 (21 CFR 101.45) for raw fruit, 
    vegetables, and fish, or by other reasonable means.
        Thus, although FDA encourages restaurants to provide full nutrition 
    information according to Sec. 101.9 whenever possible, the agency has 
    determined that information on the nutrient amounts that are the bases 
    for claims (e.g., if the claim is a ``low fat'' claim, the nutrition 
    information must only state that ``this meal provides less than 10 
    grams of fat'') may, in a restaurant setting, serve as the functional 
    equivalent of complete nutrition information as described in 
    Sec. 101.9. Further, this information may be provided by reasonable 
    means, e.g., in a flier, brochure, poster, notebook, or orally. FDA 
    concluded that these flexibilities (e.g., the ``reasonable basis'' 
    criterion) would help to ensure that a restaurateur is provided with a 
    readily achievable way to make claims for his or her food, while the 
    consumer is provided with a reasonable assurance that the claim is 
    valid (58 FR 2302 at 2387 and 58 FR 2478 at 2516).
        The claims final rule contained two additional provisions. First, 
    Sec. 101.13(q)(5) (21 CFR 101.13(q)(5)) exempts nutrient content claims 
    made on menus from the requirement that such claims comply with the 
    requirements and definitions governing nutrient content claims. There 
    is a similar provision with respect to health claims made on restaurant 
    menus in Secs. 101.10 and 101.14 with respect to nutrition labeling 
    requirements for a restaurant food that makes a nutrient content claim 
    or a health claim. The agency's decision to exempt restaurant menus 
    from the requirements for nutrient content claims and health claims was 
    based, in part, on the frequency with which menus change (sometimes 
    daily) (58 FR 2302 at 2388 and 58 FR 2478 at 2517).
        Second, because of concerns about the demands that the new labeling 
    requirements would impose on small restaurants, FDA decided to use its 
    enforcement discretion to delay for 1 year the effective date of its 
    regulations governing the use of claims by these firms. The agency 
    defined ``small restaurants'' as ``restaurant firms consisting of 10 or 
    fewer establishments'' (58 FR 2302 at 2388 and 58 FR 2478 at 2517). 
    Consequently, FDA provided that its requirements for health claims and 
    nutrient content claims on restaurant labeling (except menus) would be 
    effective on May 8, 1993, and May 8, 1994, respectively, for other than 
    small restaurants (i.e., restaurant firms with more than 10 
    establishments), and on May 8, 1994, and May 8, 1995, for small 
    restaurants.
        FDA concluded that these additional measures of flexibility would 
    help to ensure that restaurants, especially small restaurants, would 
    not be deterred by the 1990 amendments from providing useful nutrition-
    related information to their customers. It is the latter two decisions 
    that FDA decided to reconsider.
    
    B. Decision to Reconsider
    
        Among the final rules that FDA issued in the Federal Register of 
    January 6, 1993, was one entitled ``Food Labeling Regulations 
    Implementing the Nutrition Labeling and Education Act of 1990; 
    Opportunity for Comments'' (58 FR 2066) (hereinafter referred to as the 
    ``implementation final rule''). Among other things, the implementation 
    final rule provided 30 days for the submission of comments on technical 
    issues, such as inconsistencies or unintended consequences of specific 
    provisions not raised in earlier comments. Two comments received during 
    the technical comment period criticized the menu exemption and 
    questioned its legality under both the 1990 amendments and the 
    Administrative Procedure Act (the APA). One comment received during the 
    technical comment period maintained that the effort required for small 
    restaurants to comply with the new labeling requirements is no 
    different from that required by medium and large restaurants. Another 
    comment argued that delaying the effective dates for small restaurants 
    is not consistent with the 1990 amendments.
        After careful consideration of the comments and further study of 
    the administrative record, the agency decided to reconsider these 
    provisions. Based on its reconsideration, in the Federal Register of 
    June 15, 1993 (58 FR 33055), FDA proposed to remove the exemption for 
    menus from the coverage of the claims provisions. In this proposed rule 
    (hereinafter referred to as the June 15, 1993, proposed rule), FDA 
    tentatively concluded that the menu exemption is not consistent with 
    the act or with the statutory charge provided by the 1990 amendments. 
    FDA stated that it was concerned that health claims and nutrient 
    content claims in menus will be of little utility if they fail to 
    comply with the standards in the claims regulations, which are designed 
    to ensure the validity of these claims. Further, FDA stated that the 
    menu exemption could create a situation in which confusion about the 
    valid information provided by authorized claims in non-menu labeling 
    would result from the use of unauthorized claims in menus. FDA 
    emphasized that (except for the deletion of the menu exemption) the 
    proposed amendments do not alter the substance or status of the current 
    regulations governing the use of nutrient content claims and health 
    claims in restaurants (58 FR 33055 at 33057). Finally, the agency noted 
    that it is virtually impossible to distinguish menus from other types 
    of restaurant labeling, such as signs, placards, and other point of 
    purchase information, that are covered by the claims final rules.
        FDA also tentatively concluded that, in establishing dates of 
    applicability for its requirements, it had no reasonable basis for 
    differentiating among restaurants based on size. Consequently, the 
    agency proposed to remove the provisions that delayed by 1 year the 
    effective dates for compliance for small restaurants. However, because 
    the agency was unable to publish a final rule before the May 8, 1994, 
    and May 8, 1995, compliance dates for non-menu labeling, this aspect of 
    the proposal, i.e., to shorten the delay in effective dates for small 
    restaurant firms, is moot. Therefore, FDA is withdrawing that aspect of 
    its June 15, 1993, proposed rule.
        In deciding whether to publish a final rule, several concerns were 
    raised for the agency's consideration. These concerns involved 
    evaluation of the extent to which the nutrient content claims and 
    health claims that were being made on restaurant menus failed to meet 
    FDA's definitions, and of whether consumers were experiencing confusion 
    or were concerned about variations between the labeling of restaurant 
    and packaged foods. Concerns were also raised about whether both 
    nutrient content claims and health claims needed to be covered, about 
    whether the regulations would cause restaurants to stop making claims 
    and/or the associated foods, and about what the effect of the 
    regulations would be on small restaurants.
        Before the agency had fully resolved these issues, other events 
    intervened. As noted in the June 15, 1993, proposed rule, FDA had been 
    sued by two public interest groups and two individuals on the grounds 
    that the menu exemption violates the 1990 amendments and the 
    Administrative Procedure Act (Public
    
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    Citizen, Inc., et al. v. Shalala, Civil Action No. 93 0509 (D.D.C.)). 
    On June 28, 1996, the court declared that the parts of the regulations 
    that exempted restaurant menus from the nutrient content claim and 
    health claim provisions of the 1990 amendments are contrary to the 
    statute and ordered FDA to amend its regulations to include menus. 
    Therefore, FDA is issuing this final rule. However, as explained below, 
    in doing so, the agency remains committed to ensuring that the changes 
    made by this final rule do not adversely affect either small 
    restaurants or the flow of information from restaurant menus to 
    consumers.
    
    II. Comments
    
        The agency received 37 letters, each containing 1 or more comments 
    on its June 15, 1993, proposed rule, from consumers and consumer 
    groups, restaurateurs, trade associations, registered dieticians, 
    academia, and State officials. Some letters supported the proposal to 
    delete the exemption for restaurant menus, stating, for example, that 
    exempting restaurant menus that make claims from the new labeling 
    requirements would undermine the ability of consumers to make improved 
    dietary choices. Conversely, other letters opposed applying the new 
    labeling requirements to restaurant menus, stating that the 
    requirements are burdensome and not appropriate for a restaurant 
    situation. Many of these comments, however, expressed confusion as to 
    how the agency would implement its requirements with respect to 
    restaurant foods.
        In response to the latter comments, FDA prepared a guidance 
    document on the labeling of restaurant foods. The agency announced in 
    the Federal Register of September 19, 1995 (60 FR 48516), the 
    availability of the guidance document. The agency also published, as an 
    appendix to that notice of availability, answers to some of the most 
    frequently asked questions. The guidance document, entitled ``Food 
    Labeling: Questions and Answers, Volume II; A Guide for Restaurants and 
    Other Retail Establishments,'' explains how FDA will implement its 
    requirements for restaurant labeling that bears a health claim or 
    characterizes the level of a nutrient in a food.
        Several comments addressed issues that are outside the scope of 
    this rulemaking, such as modifying the criteria for nutrient content 
    and health claims set out in the claims final rules. These comments are 
    not responded to in this document. A summary of the comments that did 
    address the proposal, and the agency's responses, follow.
    
    A. Menu Exemption
    
        1. A number of comments supported the proposal, stating that FDA is 
    legally bound to include menus under the 1990 amendments. Comments 
    stated that restaurant menus are labeling under the act and appropriate 
    case law and, as such, are covered by the 1990 amendments. Comments 
    further stated that Congress neither provided for nor intended an 
    exemption for menus, and, therefore, FDA cannot grant one.
        Other comments cited the importance of restaurant foods in the 
    American diet, stating that applying the requirements of the 1990 
    amendments to menus would play a critical role in the ability of 
    consumers to make healthy dietary choices. Comments maintained that 
    menus are the primary means by which a consumer discovers information 
    about the foods available in a restaurant. Thus, these comments argued, 
    the new labeling requirements should apply to all types of restaurant 
    labeling, including menus. As evidence of the need to apply the new 
    requirements to restaurant menus, several comments submitted menus 
    that, in their opinion, bear claims that do not comply with FDA's 
    requirements.
        Conversely, a number of comments maintained that many restaurateurs 
    currently offer ``healthier'' menu items and promote the nutritional 
    quality of these foods to consumers in a variety of ways that are 
    truthful and not misleading. These comments maintained that applying 
    the requirements of the 1990 amendments to restaurant menus is 
    redundant and unnecessary because restaurant menus are already covered 
    by section 403(a) of the act. Several comments stated that menus are 
    also regulated by States and, because they are considered to be 
    advertising, by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC).
        FDA agrees that many restaurants currently provide consumers with 
    useful information in a way that is not inconsistent with FDA's new 
    requirements. Nonetheless, FDA concludes, based at least in part on the 
    act, that it is necessary to make the proposed changes. Thus, the 
    agency disagrees with the comments that state that applying the 
    requirements of the 1990 amendments to restaurant menus is redundant 
    and unnecessary.
        As stated in the nutrient content claims final rule (58 FR 2302 at 
    2388), before the 1990 amendments, when restaurants provided nutrition 
    information they were subject to Sec. 101.10, FDA's pre-1990 amendment 
    nutrition labeling regulation. FDA enforcement of that regulation was 
    virtually nonexistent, however. Further, while section 403(a) of the 
    act prohibits labeling that is ``false or misleading in any 
    particular,'' section 403(r) provides for requirements with respect to 
    claims that are in addition to those established in section 403(a) of 
    the act. FDA's statutory charge under the 1990 amendments is to ensure 
    that nutrient content claims and health claims made for food accurately 
    characterize the food and are scientifically valid. Finally, although 
    FTC has jurisdiction over national advertising, restaurant menus are 
    more akin to labeling than advertising in their use and function. Thus, 
    they are appropriately included within the regulatory scheme designed 
    for food labeling.
        FDA notes that restaurant foods are an important part of the food 
    supply. As stated in the nutrient content claims final rule (58 FR 2302 
    at 2387), as much as 30 percent of the American diet is composed of 
    foods prepared in food service operations. The agency agrees with 
    comments that menus are a primary source of information for consumers 
    making purchase decisions in a restaurant or other establishment where 
    food is sold for immediate consumption.
        In the claims final rules, the agency justified the menu exemption 
    on the grounds that it will help ensure that restaurants are not 
    deterred by the requirements of the 1990 amendments from providing 
    useful nutrition-related information. FDA also noted that fast food 
    chains and other restaurants frequently use non-menu media, such as 
    posters and placards, to convey nutrition information to consumers, and 
    stated that it would focus its efforts on these media. However, FDA 
    notes that menus are used to present information about the choices 
    available in a restaurant or other establishment in which food is 
    served for immediate consumption. Consequently, FDA concludes that 
    menus that bear a nutrient content claim, health claim, or other 
    nutrition information have a significant bearing on the ability of 
    consumers to select foods that are useful in maintaining healthy 
    dietary practices. Therefore, FDA finds that claims on restaurant menus 
    should be subject to the same standards as claims on other food labels 
    and in labeling.
        FDA finds that, if it were to maintain the exemption for restaurant 
    menus, it would have no specific criteria for determining whether a 
    nutrient content claim made in a menu appropriately describes the food, 
    or for determining whether a health claim is scientifically valid. 
    Consequently, there would be no assurance that claims made in
    
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    restaurant menus are consistent with claims on other restaurant 
    labeling or on the labeling of other foods, or that such claims would 
    help consumers select foods that are useful in maintaining healthy 
    dietary practices.
        On further review of the legislative history, FDA noted that 
    section 405 of the act (21 U.S.C. 345), which authorizes exemptions to 
    the act, was amended by the 1990 amendments to state: ``This section 
    does not apply to the labeling requirements of section 403(q) and 
    403(r).'' Because the menu exemption is an exemption from section 
    403(r) of the act, FDA tentatively concluded that it is barred by 
    section 405 of the act.
        FDA also noted that section 403(r)(5)(B) of the act limits the 
    extent to which the nutrient content claims and health claims 
    provisions of the act apply to restaurants by, e.g., exempting 
    restaurant foods from certain disclosure statements that apply to 
    claims on packaged food labels. In its discussion of whether Congress 
    intended to apply the 1990 amendments to restaurant menus (58 FR 33055 
    at 33056), the agency cited a sponsors' report explaining this section. 
    That report stated that restaurants that use nutrient content claims in 
    connection with the sale of a food must comply with regulations issued 
    by the Secretary of Health and Human Services under section 
    403(r)(2)(A)(I). In that report, the sponsors specifically gave the 
    example of the use of the word ``light'' or ``low'' on a menu as the 
    type of labeling that must comply with FDA's requirements (136 
    Congressional Record H5841 (July 30, 1990)). This part of the bill was 
    passed by the Senate unchanged. Thus, FDA concludes that the menu 
    exemption is not consistent with the congressional intent in adopting 
    the 1990 amendments, and that there is no basis for exempting menus 
    from the coverage of section 403(r) of the act. (See also Public 
    Citizen v. Shalala, supra.)
        2. A number of comments stated that consumers' need for useful 
    nutrition information outweighs any burden that the requirements might 
    place on restaurants making claims on their menus. One comment stated 
    that it did not believe that the new requirements would be burdensome 
    for restaurants because, according to the comment, a ``good'' 
    restaurant ordinarily keeps track of ingredient quantities to evaluate 
    food preparation costs. Several comments stated that ample resources 
    exist to aid restaurants in developing menu items that comply with 
    FDA's requirements. They noted that applying the new requirements to 
    menus would not interfere with a restaurant's ability to provide 
    dietary guidance on a menu, e.g., to identify those foods with a 
    nutrient content such that the food could be helpful to consumers in 
    achieving a diet consistent with the dietary guidelines of a 
    professional health organization.
        A number of comments stated that it is important that claims be 
    used in a consistent manner across the food industry. One comment 
    argued that exempting menus from the nutrient content claims and health 
    claims provisions would create an uneven playing field between 
    restaurateurs and food processors. Another comment maintained that the 
    need for a single rule for the use of claims is further evidenced by 
    FTC's decision to adopt FDA's definitions for nutrient content claims.
        Conversely, a number of comments stated that the menu exemption 
    provides critical flexibility to the restaurant industry. Comments 
    cited numerous differences between restaurant foods and standardized, 
    processed foods, including: Ingredient supply sources, methods of 
    preparation, and marketing. One comment stated that many food service 
    operations find the new regulations to be burdensome and poorly suited 
    to the food service industry. Another comment argued that the nutrition 
    labeling regulations would impose a greater burden on restaurants than 
    on food manufacturers because restaurants may change their menus more 
    than once a day, for example, between lunch and dinner. Several 
    comments stated that revoking the menu exemption would create a barrier 
    to the dissemination of beneficial information to the consumer, would 
    increase the cost of creating and promoting nutritionally improved 
    foods, and would ultimately limit the number of nutritionally improved 
    foods in restaurants.
        In response to comments that compliance with the requirements of 
    the 1990 amendments will be burdensome, FDA notes that these rules 
    place no affirmative requirements on restaurants that do not make 
    claims. In other words, a restaurant would be in complete compliance 
    with the new regulations if it simply refrained from making a nutrient 
    content claim or a health claim. However, FDA does not believe such a 
    situation would be the most desirable outcome.
        As stated in the nutrient content claims final rule (58 FR 2302), 
    two of the goals of the 1990 amendments are to provide for information 
    that can assist consumers in maintaining healthy dietary practices and 
    to encourage product innovation through the development and marketing 
    of improved foods. FDA has concluded that, for information to be useful 
    to consumers, nutrient content and health claims must be valid. At the 
    same time, the agency has recognized that there are sources of 
    variation unique to restaurant foods (e.g., methods of preparation). 
    Consequently, to ensure that the new requirements do not place an 
    unreasonable burden on restaurants, FDA has included a number of 
    provisions to provide flexibility in how these requirements can be met 
    in a restaurant situation. For example, as stated above, 
    Secs. 101.13(q)(5)(ii) and 101.14(d)(2)(vii)(B) provide that a 
    restaurant may make a nutrient content claim or a health claim for a 
    food as long as it has a ``reasonable basis'' for believing that the 
    food contains the requisite level of the nutrient in question (58 FR 
    2302 at 2387 and 58 FR 2478 at 2516). The ``reasonable basis'' 
    criterion provides that nutrient content levels may be determined by 
    use of nutrient data bases, cookbooks, analyses, or other sources that 
    provide reasonable assurance that the food meets the criteria for a 
    claim.
        FDA also notes that restaurants may develop and market menu items 
    that help consumers to achieve certain dietary goals without subjecting 
    the food to the requirements of the 1990 amendments. For example, 
    restaurants may offer alternative selections whose value in a diet that 
    conforms to dietary guidelines may be recognized by consumers without 
    elaboration, e.g., raw vegetables, steamed vegetables, pasta with a 
    tomato based sauce instead of a cream sauce, a grain dish, or a fresh 
    fruit plate. Optional preparation or serving methods may be highlighted 
    on menus by statements such as ``may be prepared with half the oil on 
    request,'' ``smaller portions,'' or ``dressings and sauces available on 
    the side.''
        Further, foods that meet the dietary guidelines of a recognized 
    dietary authority or health professional organization may be 
    highlighted without subjecting the food to the nutrient content claims 
    regime, provided the statement that a food meets dietary guidelines 
    does not go on to characterize the level of a nutrient in the food 
    (Sec. 101.13(q)(5)(iii)). For example, a restaurateur may signal to 
    consumers by the use of a term or symbol that a meal is formulated in 
    complete accordance with the Dietary Guidelines for Americans (e.g., 
    moderate calories, less than 30 percent of calories from fat, less than 
    10 percent of calories from saturated fat, emphasis on vegetables, 
    fruits, and grain products,
    
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    and moderate use of sugars and sodium). Likewise, dietary guidance 
    that, within the context of the labeling, does not meet the definition 
    of a health claim, i.e., does not include both the food or substance 
    element and the disease-related element (e.g., ``eating five fruits and 
    vegetables a day is an important part of a healthy diet''), would be 
    considered dietary guidance and not a health claim subject to section 
    403(r) of the act (Sec. 101.14(a)(1)). FDA advises that foods bearing 
    statements outside the coverage of section 403(r) of the act are still 
    subject to section 403(a) of the act, which requires that the label be 
    truthful and not misleading, and to section 201(n) of the act which 
    describes the circumstances in which labeling is misleading.
        The agency acknowledges that a significant effort will be required 
    on the part of some restaurants to examine their meals and menus to 
    ensure that they are in compliance with the new regulations. However, 
    many of the comments that argued that the requirements for nutrient 
    content claims and health claims would be burdensome for restaurants 
    consistently evidenced a significant misunderstanding of the relevant 
    provisions, such as the application of ``reference amounts customarily 
    consumed'' and the need for a ``reference food'' when making some types 
    of claims. For example, several comments seemed to believe that 
    restaurants would be forced to alter their portion sizes to be 
    identical to the established reference amounts. Another comment 
    expressed the belief that restaurants would be required to declare the 
    serving size of its food as the same as the reference amount, even if 
    the amount served differed from the reference amount. A number of 
    comments expressed concern that restaurateurs would be required to 
    develop recipes for, analyze, and market, a reference food for every 
    food that bears a claim. Several comments maintained that there is not 
    enough room on menus to provide the nutrition information that they 
    assumed FDA would require.
        The agency advises that there is no basis for the concerns 
    expressed by these comments. In a January 6, 1993, final rule, entitled 
    ``Food Labeling; Serving Sizes'' (58 FR 2229) (hereinafter referred to 
    as the ``serving size final rule''), FDA defined reference amounts, and 
    the serving sizes derived from them, on the basis of the amount of food 
    customarily consumed per eating occasion (reference amount customarily 
    consumed or ``reference amount'') in order to facilitate comparison of 
    the nutrient content of similar foods. FDA established reference 
    amounts for 139 food product categories (Sec. 101.12 (21 CFR 101.12)). 
    The agency provided that, in order to make certain nutrient content 
    claims or health claims, a food must meet the criteria for the claim 
    based on the amount of the particular nutrient present in the reference 
    amount of the food. For example, the reference amount for all soups is 
    245 grams (g) based on a serving size of 1 cup. However, restaurants 
    may offer soup in more than one portion size, e.g., by the cup and by 
    the bowl. In order to bear a ``low fat'' claim a cup of soup may 
    contain up to 3 g of fat per reference amount (245 g). If this same 
    soup is served to customers in a bowl that contains 367 g of soup (367 
    g serving/245 g per reference amount for all soups = 1.5), it may 
    contain up to 4.5 g of fat (3 g of fat per reference amount x 1.5 = 4.5 
    g of fat) and still be labeled ``low fat.''
        Criteria for claims on meals and main dishes (as defined in 
    Sec. 101.13(l) and (m)) are generally based on the level of a nutrient 
    in 100 g of the food. For example, a ``low fat'' meal weighing 333 g 
    can contain up to 10 g of fat (333 g serving /100 g = 3.3; 3 g of fat 
    per 100 g of food x 3.3 = 10 g of fat). Again, a restaurant serving a 
    larger portion of a meal or main dish item is not at a disadvantage 
    compared to other food sources when making a ``low fat'' claim. FDA 
    advises, however, that some claims, e.g., ``free'' claims and 
    cholesterol claims, have additional criteria based on the labeled or 
    actual serving size. The criteria for specific nutrient content and 
    health claims are set out in part 101 (21 CFR part 101).
        FDA advises that it is not necessary for restaurants to produce and 
    market a reference food in order to sell a food that bears a claim. 
    Reference foods are necessary only for comparative nutrient content 
    claims, i.e., claims about the level of a nutrient in one food compared 
    to another, such as ``reduced sodium'' or ``less fat.'' Provisions for 
    the use of data bases and other means to determine nutrient values for 
    an appropriate reference food are set out in Sec. 101.13(j)(1)(ii). FDA 
    also advises that, while restaurants are required to provide nutrition 
    information on request for foods that make a claim, FDA is providing 
    considerable flexibility in Sec. 101.10 as to the type of nutrition 
    information that must be provided and on how this information can be 
    provided. For example, in a restaurant situation, nutrition information 
    may be presented in various forms, including those provided in 
    Sec. 101.45 and by other reasonable means (e.g., using posters, fliers, 
    brochures, notebooks, or communicated orally by restaurant staff). In 
    sum, FDA notes that the types of misconceptions presented by these 
    comments have resulted in a perception of burdens that do not in fact 
    exist.
        Given the flexible provisions, such as the ``reasonable basis'' 
    criterion that the agency set out in the claims final rules, FDA 
    concludes that most restaurants that wish to make claims will be able 
    to do so. Further, as stated in several comments, many resources, 
    including Federal, State, and local governments; professional health 
    organizations; and dietary professionals, are available to aid 
    restaurants in their efforts to comply with FDA's requirements. 
    Moreover, as stated above, FDA has made available the labeling guidance 
    document to assist restaurants and other retail establishments in 
    developing or revising their labeling to comply with the new 
    requirements.
        Although these resources will likely be sufficient to meet the 
    needs of restaurateurs for information, FDA is willing, if necessary, 
    to take other steps to help restaurants, particularly small 
    restaurants, to understand and respond to the requirements established 
    in this final rule. The agency requests that restaurateurs contact the 
    agency (see address above) if they believe that it would be useful to 
    have a national meeting or regional meetings to discuss what is 
    required for health or nutrient content claims made on menus to comply 
    with FDA's regulations. If the agency receives a sufficient expression 
    of interest, it will hold such a meeting or meetings. If it decides to 
    hold a meeting, FDA will provide ample notice of the time and place in 
    the Federal Register.
        While FDA acknowledges that some restaurants may discontinue 
    offering improved food selections because menus have to comply with the 
    requirements for claims, the agency concludes that most restaurants 
    will continue to work to develop improved foods about which they can 
    make claims. Consumer interest in improved food choices provides a 
    continuing incentive for such efforts. The number of menus that 
    currently bear claims and other nutrition information evidences the 
    impact of consumer demand. FDA intends to work, as described above, to 
    help restaurants to minimize the number of claims that are removed and 
    to monitor the extent of this effect.
        3. One comment argued that the First Amendment to the Constitution 
    protects menus through its guarantee of freedom of the press. Another 
    comment stated that FDA is not authorized to regulate restaurant foods 
    under the Tenth
    
    [[Page 40325]]
    
    Amendment, as this power is not one provided for in Article I, Section 
    8, of the Constitution.
        The agency disagrees. FDA's authority to regulate the content of 
    the labels and labeling of food in interstate commerce has been broadly 
    upheld against First Amendment and other constitutional challenges. The 
    agency's authority to regulate food labeling, including the labeling of 
    restaurant foods, is discussed at length in the claims final rules (58 
    FR 2302 at 2392 and 58 FR 2478 at 2524), which are incorporated herein 
    by reference. The comments did not provide any information, or make any 
    arguments, that the agency has not previously considered and found to 
    be without merit.
        4. Several comments maintained that FDA cannot legally justify 
    reversing its policy with respect to restaurant menus. These comments 
    maintained that FDA has received no new information or facts since the 
    claims final rules on which to base its reconsideration. They further 
    maintained that the proposal to delete the menu exemption without, in 
    the comments' opinion, adequately explaining the departure from the 
    past norm constitutes arbitrary and capricious rulemaking and is a 
    violation of the APA.
        FDA disagrees with these comments. An agency may always change its 
    mind and alter its policies. Conference of State Bank Examiners v. 
    Office of Thrift Supervision, 792 F. Supp. 837, 845 (D.D.C. 1992). 
    While the burden is on the agency to justify the change from the status 
    quo, that justification need not consist of an affirmative 
    demonstration that the status quo is wrong. It may also consist of a 
    demonstration that there is no cause to believe that the status quo is 
    right, so that the existing rule has no rational basis to support it. 
    Center for Auto Safety v. Peck, 751 F.2d 1336, 1349 (D.C. Cir. 1985).
        Concern about whether a rational basis existed for the agency's 
    rule is exactly what motivated FDA. In its June 15, 1993, proposed 
    rule, the agency pointed out that, in confronting the issue of what 
    defines a menu in the wake of the publication of the January 6, 1993, 
    final rules, it found that it was virtually impossible to distinguish 
    menus from other types of restaurant labeling, such as signs, placards, 
    and other types of point of purchase information that are covered under 
    the agency's rules (58 FR 33055 at 33056). Thus, the agency had ample 
    basis to be concerned about the distinction that it had drawn in the 
    final rules. This concern was underscored by technical comments that 
    the agency received on the menu exemption (id). The conclusion that the 
    agency has reached based on its consideration of the comments that it 
    received on the June 15, 1993, proposed rule is that there is, in fact, 
    no rational basis for distinguishing menus from other types of 
    restaurant labeling, and, therefore, FDA is revoking the provisions 
    that established that distinction.
        5. One comment objected to what it perceived as the agency's 
    inability to define menus in the June 15, 1993, proposed rule. The 
    comment maintained that this problem was not a reasonable basis for 
    deleting the menu exemption. The comment argued that, at the least, FDA 
    should issue an advanced notice of proposed rulemaking on this issue.
        FDA believes that the comment misinterpreted the agency's statement 
    in the June 15, 1993, proposed rule (58 FR 33055 at 33056), about 
    distinguishing between menus and other restaurant labeling. FDA did not 
    say that it could not define menus, but rather, that the agency found 
    that it is virtually impossible to distinguish menus from other types 
    of restaurant labeling, such as signs, placards, and other point of 
    purchase information, that the agency said in the claims final rules 
    would be covered.
        The agency notes that if its problem were one of defining ``menu,'' 
    it has numerous sources to which it could turn. Webster's II New 
    Riverside University Dictionary defines ``menu'' as ``A list of the 
    food and drink available or to be served for a meal.'' Comments 
    received during the 30-day technical comment period to the claims final 
    rules provided additional guidance, stating that a menu ``includes any 
    medium available to consumers in a restaurant that can be consulted in 
    making a purchasing decision in terms of food selection or price.'' One 
    comment stated that ``A broad range of formats are used to convey 
    selection and price information on which consumers rely. These formats 
    are all properly ``menus'.''
        However, the problem that the agency stated that it was having in 
    June of 1993 was one of drawing a rational distinction that would 
    justify its treatment of menus on the one hand and of other types of 
    restaurant labeling on the other. Such a distinction is particularly 
    difficult to draw given that some of the same types of restaurant media 
    that FDA said were covered in the claims final rules, e.g., signs, 
    posters, and placards, are used, like menus, to convey purchase 
    information to consumers. Both menus and non-menu media may be used to 
    provide restaurant patrons with information about the foods available 
    in a restaurant.
        Accordingly, for the foregoing reasons, FDA is amending its food 
    labeling regulations by removing the provisions of the regulations that 
    exempt nutrient content claims and health claims made on restaurant 
    menus from the coverage of these regulations. Specifically, FDA is 
    amending the regulations by removing: (1) From Sec. 101.10, pertaining 
    to nutrition labeling of restaurant foods, the language that reads ``* 
    * * (except on menus)''; (2) from Sec. 101.13(q)(5), pertaining to 
    nutrient content claims on restaurant foods, the language that reads 
    ``* * * (except on menus)''; and (3) from Sec. 101.14(d)(2)(vii)(B), 
    pertaining to health claims on restaurant foods, the language that 
    reads ``* * * (except if the claim is made on a menu).'' Thus, the 
    requirements of FDA's food labeling regulations will be applied to all 
    forms of restaurant labeling, including menus, signs, posters, or 
    placards, that bear a nutrient content claim, health claim, or 
    otherwise characterize the level of a nutrient in a food.
        6. One comment suggested that FDA specify that the term ``menu'' 
    applies to all types of menus, including wallboards, take- out menus, 
    and menus delivered to the table.
        FDA advises that, in the claims final rules, it differentiated 
    between menus and non-menu media by describing those media that it did 
    not consider to be menus, e.g., posters, signs, and placards. However, 
    as discussed in response to the preceding comment, the agency has 
    determined that it is virtually impossible to distinguish between menus 
    and other media that are used to convey purchase information to 
    consumers. Therefore, FDA is amending its food labeling regulations by 
    removing the provisions that exempt menus from the coverage of these 
    regulations. Because the requirements will be applied to all forms of 
    restaurant labeling that bear a claim, the issue of distinguishing 
    between menus and non-menu labeling is rendered moot.
    
    B. Modification of Effective Date
    
        The claims final rules provided that regulations governing the use 
    of health claims in restaurant labeling (other than menus) would become 
    effective on May 8, 1993, except for small restaurant firms consisting 
    of 10 or fewer establishments for which these provisions were to become 
    effective 1 year later, i.e., May 8, 1994. With respect to the use of 
    nutrient content claims and other nutrition information in restaurant 
    labeling (except for menus), FDA's requirements were to
    
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    become effective on May 8, 1994, for medium and large restaurant firms 
    and on May 8, 1995, for small firms.
        In the claims final rules, FDA stated that it recognized that a 
    significant effort would be necessary on the part of restaurants to 
    show that they have a reasonable basis to believe that their food 
    complies with FDA's regulations for the use of nutrient content claims 
    and health claims. At that time, the agency believed that it would be 
    especially difficult for small restaurants to become familiar with 
    Federal requirements and to determine how to apply these requirements 
    to their individual food selection and preparation methods in a short 
    time. Consequently, FDA had decided that small restaurants should be 
    given the additional time (i.e., 1 year) to come into compliance.
        During the technical comment period, FDA received information that 
    convinced the agency that it was appropriate to reconsider its decision 
    to delay the effective date of the claims requirements for small 
    restaurants. Thus, in its June 15, 1993, proposed rule (58 FR 33055 at 
    33057), FDA proposed to modify the delay in the effective dates for 
    small restaurant firms. However, based in part on numerous demands 
    associated with implementing the 1990 amendments and the agency's 
    limited resources, this speed-up did not happen. FDA's efforts to move 
    up those dates have effectively been rendered moot by the agency's 
    inability to issue a final rule. Consequently, the following comments 
    are now only relevant as they apply to restaurant menus.
    1. Delay for Small Restaurants
        7. One comment argued that compliance would be more difficult for 
    small firms compared to large restaurant chains because of limited 
    resources. The comment did not, however, provide any information that 
    the agency had not previously considered. Another comment maintained 
    that an extension for small restaurants is justified by the ``lack of 
    real harm'' to the public from such a delay.
        Conversely, the majority of letters that addressed the proposed 
    modification in effective dates supported the agency's proposal to 
    establish uniform effective dates for all restaurants. These comments 
    maintained that there is no appropriate basis for differentiating among 
    restaurants based on size when establishing a date by which each must 
    comply with FDA's requirements. Thus, the comments stated, the agency 
    should enforce its labeling requirements for large and small 
    restaurants, at the same time. However, the comments contained numerous 
    and varied suggestions as to when the new effective dates should be.
        Having considered the comments, FDA concludes that, although there 
    are some areas where small restaurants may be at a disadvantage 
    compared to large restaurants, e.g., the cost of a one-time menu change 
    relative to more limited resources, in most respects, the distinction 
    between small restaurants and larger restaurants is not as great as the 
    agency had believed when it issued the January 6, 1993, final rules. 
    For example, not all restaurant firms with greater than 10 
    establishments are familiar with the new requirements or have 
    established nutrition support personnel. Further, in establishing the 
    requirements for restaurant labeling in the claims final rules, the 
    agency worked with restaurant industry representatives to make its 
    requirements feasible for both large and small restaurants. FDA advises 
    that the flexibility built into these requirements, e.g., the 
    ``reasonable basis'' criterion, provides a wide range of options for 
    how a restaurant may determine the nutrient content of its food, and 
    how it communicates this information to consumers. FDA finds that this 
    flexible approach will allow most restaurants, including small 
    restaurants, to choose options that fit their own needs and resources. 
    Thus, FDA finds nothing in the comments that would provide a basis for 
    differentiating among restaurants based on size when establishing a 
    date by which restaurants must comply with these requirements.
    2. Establishment of Effective Date for Menus
        FDA is removing the exemption for menus that it adopted 
    inappropriately. While, in light of overwhelming support from comments 
    and in the absence of any new information to the contrary, FDA has 
    concluded that the same date of applicability should apply to menus in 
    all restaurants, regardless of size, the agency wants to be sure that 
    the effect of its decision is not punitive for restaurants. FDA finds 
    that it has flexibility in setting the date by which menus must comply 
    with its requirements for claims. Thus, the agency is using that 
    discretion in setting the date by which menus must comply with the 
    rules on the use of claims. The issue that FDA has considered is what 
    effective date will provide all restaurants with a reasonable amount of 
    time to make any necessary changes in their menus while providing 
    consumers with useful information as quickly as possible.
        8. A few comments stated that restaurant menus should comply with 
    FDA's requirements by the same date as labeling on foods from other 
    sources, i.e., May 8, 1994. These comments stated that to delay the 
    effective date for compliance by restaurant menus beyond May 8, 1994, 
    would create an uneven playing field between restaurants and food 
    processors. The comments further argued that any extension for 
    restaurants beyond May 8, 1994, would violate the mandatory effective 
    dates provided by the 1990 amendments. Another comment also tied the 
    effective date for restaurant labeling with the date of applicability 
    for other foods, except that it suggested that restaurants should have 
    an additional 4 months after the May 8, 1994, deadline (i.e., until 
    September 8, 1994) to bring their menus into compliance.
        FDA does not agree that it must establish the same effective dates 
    for restaurant menus as for other food labeling. As stated above, FDA 
    must act in an equitable manner in removing the exemption for 
    restaurant menus. Although the agency continues to strive for 
    consistency within the framework of the 1990 amendments, this 
    rulemaking to amend certain provisions of the January 6, 1993, final 
    regulations cannot reasonably impose the same deadlines that the agency 
    imposed in the final regulations implementing the 1990 amendments that 
    it promulgated over 40 months ago. Further, the date of publication of 
    this final rule obviously makes an effective date of May 8, 1994, moot.
        9. One comment suggested that compliance with FDA's requirements 
    begin 1 year from the date of the last menu printing. In support of its 
    suggestion, the comment stated that many restaurants change their menus 
    yearly, and that it would be costly for restaurants to change menus in 
    midyear to comply with the new regulations. The comment did not, 
    however, provide data on the number of restaurants that will need to 
    make changes in their menus or on the number of restaurants that do not 
    normally change their menus more than once a year.
        FDA notes that restaurants vary widely in the frequency with which 
    they print new menus. Comments to the June 15, 1993, proposed rule, 
    stated that menus may be printed infrequently, annually, daily, or even 
    for each meal. Given the wide variance in practices within the 
    industry, the agency finds that establishing a compliance date that is 
    based on a date that is a given period of time from the last menu 
    printing would be impractical from an enforcement standpoint. It would 
    be extremely difficult to ensure compliance with an application date 
    that varies
    
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    from one establishment to another. In such a situation, compliance 
    checks would require not merely looking at the labeling but also 
    determining the date on which labels had last been revised.
        Further, establishing an application date that, as it is phased in, 
    affects only some establishments, is inconsistent with the 
    establishment of a single effective date for labels on foods from other 
    sources. As stated in the August 18, 1993, technical amendments (58 FR 
    44033 at 44035), the nutrition labeling requirements apply to food 
    labeled after May 8, 1994. The agency stated that the term ``labeled'' 
    means the date that the label is affixed to the food. FDA notes that 
    each time a menu is used in a restaurant to convey purchase information 
    about a food served in the restaurant, such use is analogous to 
    affixing a label to a packaged food. Thus, establishing a specific date 
    of applicability for restaurant menus, such that the date applies to 
    the date that any menu is used as labeling in any restaurant, would be 
    consistent with the treatment of labels on foods from other sources.
        Finally, confusion could result from a situation in which, for 
    example, two neighboring restaurants use identical claims on identical 
    menus, one restaurant that makes claims would use terms in a manner 
    that complies with FDA's requirements, while the restaurant that 
    printed its menus less than a year earlier would not. Moreover, a 
    restaurant that has not changed its menu in some time because of 
    limited resources could be forced to change its menu sooner than a 
    larger restaurant that had recently printed new menus. Such an outcome 
    would make no sense.
        FDA concludes that it is more appropriate to establish an effective 
    date for applying its requirements to menus based on a given amount of 
    time following the date on which this final rule publishes rather than 
    an arbitrary date, such as the date of the last menu change, that may 
    vary between restaurants. This approach will ensure that all 
    restaurants will have a specified amount of time to change menus to 
    comply with any applicable requirements, and that the amount of time 
    will be based on an accommodation of both consumer and industry needs, 
    rather than an arbitrary date that will vary between restaurants.
        10. A number of comments agreed with FDA's proposal that the 
    modified effective dates for restaurant menu labeling should allow 
    restaurants to achieve compliance within an amount of time similar to 
    the time that other food producers have had, and that the effective 
    dates should be uniform for all restaurants, regardless of size. These 
    comments stated that all restaurants should be required to comply with 
    health claims regulations 4 months after publication of a final rule 
    and with nutrient content claims regulations 1 year after publication, 
    as proposed. One comment stated that the date of applicability for 
    requirements for menus bearing nutrient content claims should be based 
    on the same amount of time that packaged foods had, i.e., 16 months 
    after publication of the January 6, 1993, final rules.
        Alternatively, several comments maintained that compliance with the 
    nutrient content claims regulations would be no more difficult than 
    compliance with the requirements for the use of health claims, and 
    that, consequently, restaurant menus should be required to comply with 
    both regulations at the same time. Comments were divided, however, as 
    to whether the single effective date for both nutrient content claims 
    and health claims should be 4 months or 12 months after the date of 
    publication of a final rule.
        FDA has carefully considered how much time should be given for 
    restaurant menus to be brought into compliance with the nutrient 
    content claim and health claim labeling requirements. FDA's 
    consideration has been guided by section 10 of the 1990 amendments. 
    That provision made the nutrient content claim and health claim 
    provisions effective 6 months after enactment but gave FDA the 
    authority to delay application of the nutrient content claim 
    requirements for up to 1 year if it found that compliance with those 
    requirements would cause undue economic hardship (section 10(a)) of the 
    1990 amendments). FDA took advantage of the latter provision. FDA notes 
    that a number of the factors that influenced the agency's decision to 
    delay the application of the nutrient content claims requirements in 
    the January 6, 1993, final rule do not have equal application with 
    respect to this rulemaking.
        One factor that influenced FDA's decision to delay the 
    applicability date was the amount of effort that would be necessary to 
    learn about how to come into compliance with the new rules (56 FR 60856 
    at 60862, November 27, 1991). The agency notes that, since publication 
    of the January 6, 1993, final rules, FDA and other organizations have 
    been active in disseminating information about the new food labeling 
    requirements. Because access to information about these requirements, 
    and the number of resources available to facilitate compliance with 
    these requirements, have grown, the effort required on the part of a 
    restaurateur who is not familiar with the requirements to obtain 
    information about them has been reduced compared to that which was 
    required for makers of other types of food. Moreover, the effort 
    required for compliance by restaurateurs is even further reduced by the 
    flexible provisions that FDA has established specifically for 
    restaurant situations, e.g., providing the ``reasonable basis'' 
    criterion for nutrient content determinations.
        A second factor that influenced FDA's decision was the amount of 
    time needed to come into compliance with the labeling requirements (56 
    FR 60856 at 60862). The type of labeling used in restaurants reduces 
    the amount of time, compared to other food sources, that is reasonably 
    necessary to achieve compliance. For example, for packaged foods that 
    bear nutrient content claims, manufacturers needed time to use up 
    preexisting labels to reduce the cost of complying with the new 
    requirements. Conversely, menu inventory is generally not affected by a 
    food purchase. Further, many restaurants use menus that may be revised, 
    printed, and copied in-house, thereby avoiding the queue at printers 
    that affected many food manufacturers. Therefore, providing time for 
    bringing menus into compliance will not have the same effects on the 
    costs of a restaurateur that it had on the costs of the manufacturer. 
    Consequently, FDA concludes that significant circumstances that 
    justified a1-year delay in the applicability of the nutrient content 
    claims provisions for packaged foods do not apply to restaurant foods.
        Moreover, in the June 15, 1993, proposed rule (58 FR 33055 at 
    33058), FDA cited an informal survey by the National Restaurant 
    Association indicating that up to 89 percent of all printed menus 
    include at least one claim. Based on information in the survey, FDA had 
    assumed that more restaurants were making nutrient content claims than 
    health claims, and that, consequently, a larger effort would be 
    required on the part of restaurants to ensure compliance with 
    requirements for nutrient content claims compared to health claims. The 
    agency tentatively concluded that a date of applicability of 4 months 
    after the publication of a final rule would be sufficient to ensure 
    compliance with the requirements for health claims.
        FDA continues to believe that few if any restaurant menus bear 
    express health claims, such as ``a diet low in sodium may contribute to 
    a reduced risk of high blood pressure, a disease associated with many 
    factors,'' on their
    
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    menus. However, a number of comments to the June 15, 1993, proposed 
    rule provided examples of menus that bear terms and symbols (e.g., 
    heart symbols and terms such as ``heart healthy'') in a manner that 
    makes them implied health claims under the act. Based on this 
    information, and on information gleaned by FDA from informal inquiries 
    from the industry (Ref. 1), FDA concludes that the number of 
    restaurants making health claims is greater than it had previously 
    assumed.
        Furthermore, because of the flexible provisions that FDA has 
    established for restaurant foods, it may be easier for a restaurant to 
    establish that a food qualifies to bear a nutrient content claim (e.g., 
    that a ``low fat'' food contains no more than 3 g of fat per reference 
    amount) than that it qualifies to bear a health claim (i.e., that, in 
    addition to the criterion for the nutrient in the claim, the food 
    contains less than the disqualifying levels for fat, saturated fat, 
    sodium, and cholesterol, and 10 percent or more of the Reference Daily 
    Intake or Daily Reference Value for vitamin A, vitamin C, iron, 
    calcium, protein, or fiber per reference amount prior to nutrient 
    addition). The agency concludes that the effort required on the part of 
    restaurants that want to make health claims in their menus (e.g., to 
    obtain, read, and understand FDA's regulations; to develop a 
    ``reasonable basis'' for making claims; to generate nutrition 
    information for consumers; and, in some cases, to modify a food or its 
    labeling) will be as great, if not greater, than that required of 
    restaurants making nutrient content claims.
        The agency notes that, in establishing a specific effective date, 
    its goal is to ensure that consumers have access to useful nutrition-
    related information as quickly as possible while providing 
    restaurateurs with sufficient time to make necessary changes. FDA does 
    not believe that all restaurant menus could be reasonably expected to 
    comply with the health claims requirements within the proposed 4-month 
    timeframe. While many restaurants have already begun actions to come 
    into compliance, especially larger restaurants that make claims on non-
    menu labeling, some restaurants that use only menus to convey purchase 
    information may not be familiar with the requirements or know how to 
    obtain the necessary information to determine whether their menus are 
    in compliance. FDA further notes that an effective date for its 
    requirements for restaurant menus that bear nutrient content claims of 
    4 months after the publication of this final rule, as suggested by some 
    comments, would provide restaurant foods significantly less time than 
    had been afforded foods from other sources. Thus, a compliance period 
    of 4 months after publication would place restaurants offering improved 
    foods and promoting these foods on their menus at a disadvantage 
    compared to other food manufacturers.
        Conversely, FDA concludes that it is not necessary for restaurant 
    menus to have the same amount of time that other food labeling 
    producers were given. Based in part on the amount of time that 
    information on the criteria that will be applied to menus has been 
    available (i.e., since January 6, 1993), and on the flexible rules it 
    has adopted for restaurants, FDA concludes that a compliance period of 
    12 or 16 months is longer than is necessary for menus, and that such a 
    time period would unduly delay consumer access to useful information.
        After considering the foregoing, FDA has decided to establish a 
    single date of applicability for both the nutrient content claim and 
    health claim requirements for menus and to establish that date as May 
    2, 1997. This date will provide restaurateurs with 9 months to bring 
    their menus into compliance. FDA has decided to provide 9 months based 
    on the following three factors: First, 6 months is the amount of time 
    that Congress provided for compliance with these provisions in the 
    absence of undue economic hardship (section 10 of the 1990 amendments). 
    Second, FDA finds that, based on the economic impact analysis in this 
    rulemaking, unlike for non-restaurant foods, economic hardship does not 
    exist. Consequently, the agency has no basis for providing an 
    additional year for compliance by restaurant menus. Third, in Pub. L. 
    103-261, Congress provided non-restaurant food manufacturers with an 
    additional 3 months to achieve compliance with the new labeling rules. 
    Consequently, FDA finds that establishing May 2, 1997 as the effective 
    date for the amendments that it is making to Secs. 101.10, 
    101.13(q)(5), and 101.14(d)(2)(vii)(B) and (d)(3), and, thus, as the 
    date that menus must be in compliance, is consistent with the treatment 
    of non-restaurant foods. FDA believes that establishing a single date 
    will benefit both consumers and industry. FDA notes that the different 
    effective dates for nutrient content claims and for health claims in 
    non-menu labeling in small restaurants and in larger restaurants have 
    created a great deal of confusion about what requirements are effective 
    at a given time. The agency concludes that establishing different dates 
    for the use of health claims and of nutrient content claims in menus 
    would only further compound this confusion. FDA finds that, in light of 
    the confusion expressed by comments and in informal communications with 
    the agency (Ref. 1), establishing a uniform date for all types of 
    claims on menus makes the most sense. The agency further finds that a 
    single effective date for menus will prevent the consumer confusion 
    that could result from a restaurant using a menu that bears some types 
    of claims that are consistent with the new requirements and other 
    claims that are not. In addition, a single effective date for all menu 
    claims will aid compliance by giving restaurants a single date by which 
    to make necessary changes, regardless of the kind of statement (e.g., 
    nutrient content claim, health claim, third party endorsement, or 
    dietary guidance) used to present nutrient information to consumers. 
    Thus, a single date will avoid the need to change menus twice within 
    the compliance period. The agency concludes that, for efficient 
    enforcement of the act, establishing a single effective date for both 
    nutrient content claims and health claims on menus is desirable and 
    appropriate.
        Moreover, given the amount of time that FDA's labeling rules have 
    been in place, an effective date of May 2, 1997, will provide ample 
    time for restaurants to bring their menus into compliance without 
    unduly delaying consumer access to useful nutrition-related 
    information. An effective date of May 2, 1997, will also provide time 
    for FDA and other regulatory officials to work with restaurants, 
    consumers, dietitians, health professional organizations, and other 
    interested parties to ensure that the agency's regulations are 
    adequately implemented with respect to restaurant menus.
        Thus, the deletion of the phrase ``(except for menus)'' that 
    exempted menus from nutrient content claim requirements in Secs. 101.10 
    and 101.13(q)(5) will be effective on May 2, 1997. Likewise, the 
    deletion of the phrase ``(except on menus)'' that exempted menus from 
    health claim requirements in Sec. 101.10 and the phrase ``(except if 
    the claim is made on a menu)'' in Sec. 101.14(d)(2)(vii)(B) will also 
    be effective on that date.
    
    III. Environmental Impact
    
        The agency has determined under 21 CFR 25.24(a)(11) 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.
    
    [[Page 40329]]
    
    IV. Analysis of Impacts
    
        FDA has examined the economic implications of the final rule as 
    required by Executive Order 12866 and the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 
    U.S.C. 601-612). Executive Order 12866 directs agencies to assess all 
    costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, when 
    regulation is necessary, to select the regulatory approach that 
    maximizes net benefits (including potential economic, environmental, 
    public health and safety effects; distributive impacts; and equity). If 
    a rule has a significant economic impact on a substantial number of 
    small entities, the Regulatory Flexibility Act requires agencies to 
    analyze regulatory options that would minimize the significant economic 
    impact of that rule on those small entities. FDA finds that this final 
    rule is a significant rule as defined by Executive Order 12866, and 
    finds under the Regulatory Flexibility Act, that the final rule will 
    not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small 
    entities.
    
    A. Background
    
        In the Federal Register of January 6, 1993 (58 FR 2927), FDA 
    published a final regulatory impact analysis (RIA) of the final rules 
    implementing the 1990 amendments (hereinafter referred to as the 
    January 6, 1993, RIA). In that document (58 FR 2927 at 2934), FDA 
    presented costs of compliance with the 1990 amendments for food service 
    establishments. Although the agency did not include menus in its 
    regulatory coverage of the nutrient content claims and health claims 
    final rules, it assumed that restaurants would alter their menus to 
    comply with the agency's definitions because of the possibility of 
    enforcement by the States. Consequently, FDA included the cost of 
    altering menus in its assessment.
        In the June 15, 1993, proposed rule, FDA proposed to remove the 
    provisions that exempt restaurant menus from the requirements for how 
    nutrient content claims and health claims are to be made. Because the 
    agency originally assumed that restaurants would alter their menus in 
    order to comply with the regulations so as to avoid State enforcement, 
    FDA assumed that the proposed action to include menus in the agency's 
    regulatory coverage would not result in any significant increase in 
    costs to food service establishments beyond that estimated in the 
    January 6, 1993, RIA.
    
    B. Costs of the Final Regulation
    
        The following estimates are based on both quantitative and 
    anecdotal information provided in the comments. However, FDA has 
    previously stated that it lacks in-depth data on a number of issues 
    related to the food service industry (56 FR 60537 at 60554, November 
    27, 1991). Therefore, while these estimates represent the best 
    information available to the agency, FDA acknowledges that there is 
    uncertainty in these estimates.
        In the January 6, 1993 (58 FR 2927 at 2934), RIA, FDA estimated 
    that 75 percent of restaurants, including all small restaurants, would 
    normally alter menus before the applicable compliance date for nutrient 
    content claims and health claims on non-menu labeling (based on a 16-
    month compliance period). The agency also assumed that, in revising 
    their menus, most restaurants would make changes to comply with the 
    regulations so as to avoid enforcement by the States. Consequently, FDA 
    estimated that only 14,500 commercial establishments would incur costs 
    attributable to the nutrient content claims and health claims final 
    rules. In the June 15, 1993, proposed rule, FDA repeated the 
    assumptions stated in the January 6, 1993, RIA, i.e., that most 
    restaurants would alter their menus in order to comply with the 
    regulations.
        FDA received very few comments regarding its economic analysis of 
    the June 15, 1993, proposed rule. However, a few comments indicated 
    that the agency's assumption that most restaurants would alter menus to 
    comply with the agency's requirements because of the possibility of 
    enforcement by the States was not correct. FDA has anecdotal 
    information indicating that at least some restaurants have not yet 
    altered menus to comply with the claims requirements and would, 
    therefore, bear some cost of the agency's action to remove the 
    exemption for menus. However, the comments did not provide information 
    regarding the proportion of the industry that has not yet altered its 
    menus.
        FDA notes that the costs of revising menus to comply with the new 
    requirements are one-time costs only. However, costs of ensuring that 
    claims are made on a reasonable basis and are in conformance with FDA 
    rules, and costs of maintaining that information and presenting it to 
    consumers on demand, are on-going costs, changing with new claims only 
    in the former case. FDA does not have information with which to 
    estimate these costs. However, those firms that would normally redesign 
    their menus within the compliance period will not incur costs 
    attributable to FDA's regulations. In the analysis of the proposed 
    rule, FDA estimated that 75 percent of all menus would normally be 
    revised during the compliance period ending in May 1994.
        FDA received comments regarding the frequency of menu changes. 
    Comments varied in their estimates of the frequency of menu redesign, 
    ranging from several times a day to once a year. FDA concludes that, 
    taken as a whole, these comments do not significantly alter its 
    original assumptions about the rates at which restaurants alter menus, 
    that is, that an average of 5 percent of all restaurants would normally 
    alter their menus in a month and, thus, 45 percent of all restaurants 
    would normally alter their menus during a 9-month compliance period.
        In previous analyses, FDA noted that, because it is requiring only 
    a reasonable basis to support claims in restaurant labeling, no 
    analytical testing is necessary. FDA has described a number of methods 
    by which a restaurant may determine the nutrient content of a food that 
    are less costly than chemical analyses. For example, a claim may be 
    based on nutrient data published in FDA's regulations for the voluntary 
    nutrition labeling of fresh fruits, vegetables, and fish. A claim may 
    also be based on nutrient data provided in USDA's Handbook 8, 
    information in a cookbook, or an analysis using a reliable database. 
    However, the cost of determining whether or not a reasonable basis 
    exists to support a claim is not zero. Estimates of the cost of these 
    sources range from $10 to $175 per claim (Ref. 2).
        FDA now assumes that approximately 50 percent of the industry has 
    already redesigned menus to comply with the nutrient content and health 
    claims regulations. This rulemaking provides 9 months for menus to come 
    into compliance with the claims requirements. FDA assumes that 
    approximately 45 percent of restaurants will normally alter their menus 
    during this compliance period; those restaurants can incorporate the 
    requirements of this regulation into their normally scheduled menu 
    revisions and, thus, will incur no regulatory costs associated with 
    menu changes.
        According to the National Restaurant Association, there are 
    approximately 262,000 commercial establishments and 36,000 institutions 
    with a combined total of approximately 460,000 printed menus. Based on 
    a review of menus entered in the National Restaurant Association's 
    annual menu contest, the association estimated that 89 percent of all 
    printed menus include at least one nutrient content or health claim. 
    Although FDA has not challenged this
    
    [[Page 40330]]
    
    number, it has no basis on which to determine whether this number 
    fairly represents the situation in restaurants. Nonetheless, FDA is 
    using the 89 percent survey result as an upper-bound estimate of the 
    likelihood of typical menus bearing claims. The association also 
    indicated that at least 18 percent of the printed menus that it 
    reviewed would require more complex changes, such as the revision of an 
    entire section or symbol program (e.g., programs using a heart logo).
        Based on the association's estimates and on the agency's revised 
    estimate of the number of menus that have already been changed to 
    comply with the nutrient content and health claims requirements, FDA 
    estimates that approximately 90,000 individual menus 
    [460,000 x (.89-.18) x (1-.45) x (1-.50)] would require simple changes 
    valued at $500 per menu, or $45 million. In addition, approximately 
    23,000 menus [406,000 x .18 x (1-.45) x (1-.50)] would require more 
    complex changes valued at $1,700 per menu, or $39 million. The cost of 
    establishing a reasonable basis to support a claim ranges between $10 
    and $175 per claim for each of the 113,000 menus, or a total cost of 
    between $1 and $20 million. FDA estimates that the total cost of 
    compliance for food service establishments would be between $85 million 
    and $104 million if none of the restaurants currently making claims on 
    menus have a reasonable basis to support their claims. However, because 
    significant time has elapsed since publication of the nutrient content 
    and health claims final rules, it is likely that at least one-third of 
    restaurants have a reasonable basis for believing that their foods meet 
    the nutrient requirements for the claims that they are making. 
    Therefore, the total costs of compliance are estimated to be between 
    $57 million and $69 million. However, if as many as 90 percent of 
    restaurants have a reasonable basis to support claims currently being 
    made, the regulations will result in costs of between $8.5 million and 
    $10 million.
    
    C. Benefits
    
        Requiring that health claims and nutrient content claims on menus 
    be consistent with FDA's definitions and with these types of claims 
    made on packaged foods will provide consumers with consistent, 
    reasonably based signals from restaurant menus with regard to health 
    claims and nutrient content claims that they can use to achieve dietary 
    goals. It is possible that information that is now on menus that 
    complies with FDA's requirements and that would aid consumers in 
    meeting dietary goals may be removed if a restaurateur believes that 
    the burden of proof to support a claim is too costly. However, FDA 
    believes that in many circumstances this will not be the case, because 
    the minimum amount of effort that a restaurant would have to go through 
    to validate a claim is not overly burdensome.
    
    D. Regulatory Flexibility
    
        FDA has examined the economic implications of the final rule as 
    required by the Regulatory Flexibility Act
    (5 U.S.C. 601-612).
        In this final rule FDA defines small commercial food service 
    establishments consistent with the Small Business Administration's 
    (SBA's) definitions (13 CFR part 121) as firms with $5 million or less 
    in total annual revenue. In addition, small institutional food service 
    establishments defined as those with less than $15 million in sales. 
    FDA estimates that approximately 66 percent of all of the firms 
    affected by this rule are small by SBA's definitions. Using that 
    figure, FDA estimates that there are approximately 173,000 commercial 
    food establishments and 24,000 institutional food establishments that 
    may be defined as small under these definitions. Using the same 
    assumptions as in the previous analysis, i.e., that 89 percent of all 
    printed menus contain at least one nutrient content or health claim, 
    then there are approximately 175,000 small establishments with 270,000 
    menus that contain claims. Using the same assumptions as above ((1) 50 
    percent have already revised their menus, (2) 55 percent of the 
    remaining establishments would not normally revise their menus within 
    the compliance period for this rule, and (3) 18 percent of these latter 
    establishments will have to make complex changes), approximately 9,700 
    small establishments will potentially have one-time costs of $1,700 to 
    make complex changes to each menu. In addition, approximately 38,000 
    small establishments will potentially have one-time costs of $500 to 
    make simple revisions to each menu.
        In addition, firms will have initial and recurring costs of 
    ensuring that health claims and nutrient content claims are supported 
    by a reasonable basis and are in conformance with FDA's definitions of 
    terms. For each claim, a firm must establish via books, databases, or 
    by some reasonable means that the claim falls within FDA's definition. 
    The supporting information must be kept as long as the claim appears on 
    the menu and must be presented to customers on demand. Thus, as menu 
    items and claims change, the cost of establishing a reasonable basis is 
    incurred.
        FDA has no data on how often firms change claims or how often 
    restaurant customers will ask to see the nutrition information for 
    foods that bear these claims. However, as stated earlier, cost 
    estimates of establishing a reasonable basis for a claim run between 
    $10 and $175 per claim. Assuming one future claim change or addition 
    per menu per year and an average of 1.5 menus per firm, costs to 
    determine a reasonable basis per firm will be between $15 and $260 per 
    year. As stated earlier, for existing claims, many firms already have 
    or would be likely to have established a reasonable basis for such 
    claims, and this analysis will continue to presume that at least one 
    third to as much as 90 percent of all firms would do so. Thus, average 
    total cost per small firm may range from as high as $2,135 to as low as 
    $765 in the first year for those who have menus with claims and between 
    $15 and $260 per firm for each subsequent year. Firms that neither have 
    claims nor would be expected to have them on their menus in the future 
    will not incur cost.
        It is important to note that this rule provides flexibility for 
    restaurateurs in how they determine the nutrient content of a food and 
    in how they communicate this information to consumers, as described 
    above in the preamble. That is, for enforcement purposes, restaurateurs 
    need only show that they have a reasonable basis for the claim and that 
    the method of preparation does not violate the basis for the claim. 
    Therefore, the costs of this regulation for small businesses have been 
    minimized. Accordingly, under the Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 
    605(b) the Secretary certifies that this final rule will not have a 
    significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
    
    E. Summary
    
        FDA has examined the impact of the final rule in accordance with 
    Executive Order 12866 and has determined that, while it is a 
    significant rule, it is not an economically significant rule. The rule 
    will result in total costs to restaurants of between $8.5 million and 
    $69 million, depending on the number of restaurants that can provide a 
    reasonable basis to support the claims currently in use.
        FDA has also examined the impact of the final rule on small 
    entities in accordance with the Regulatory Flexibility Act and has 
    determined that it will not result in a significant burden on a 
    substantial number of small entities.
    
    [[Page 40331]]
    
    V. Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        This final rule contains information collection requirements that 
    are subject to review by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) 
    under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501-3520). The 
    title, description, and respondent description of the collection of 
    information are shown below with an estimate of the annual 
    recordkeeping burden. Included in the estimate is the time for 
    reviewing instructions, gathering necessary information, maintaining 
    records of that information, and making that information available upon 
    request.
        Title: Food Labeling: Nutrient Content Claims and Health Claims; 
    Restaurant Foods.
        Description: This regulation removes the provisions that exempt 
    restaurant menus from the requirements for how nutrient content claims 
    and health claims are to be made and from therequirements for the 
    provision of nutrition information with respect to the nutrients that 
    are the basis of the claim, when claims are made. Once it becomes 
    effective, Secs. 101.13(q)(5) and 101.14(d)(2)(vii)(B) will require 
    that nutrient content claims and health claims appearing on menus 
    comply with FDA's regulations for nutrient content claims in 
    Sec. 101.13 and subpart D of part 101 of this chapter and for health 
    claims in Sec. 101.14 and subpart E of part 101. Restaurants using 
    nutrient content claims or health claims on menus will be required by 
    Sec. 101.10 to provide nutrition information for the food that bears 
    the claim. Information on the nutrient that is the basis of the claim 
    may serve as the functional equivalent of complete nutrition 
    information as described in Sec. 101.9.
        Because of the flexibility provided for restaurants in determining 
    the nutrient content of a food (they need only have a reasonable basis 
    that provides assurance that the food meets the requirements for the 
    claim) and in how this information may be communicated to consumers, a 
    wide range of options is available to restaurants in meeting the 
    information collection requirements imposed by this rule. For example, 
    a restaurant may choose to run a full nutrient profile analysis on a 
    group of items listed under a heading of ``low fat'' on its menu. 
    alternatively, it may chood to offer an item purchases from a 
    commercial manufacturer where the item is appropriately labeled by the 
    manufacturer as ``low fat.'' In such a case, the restaurant requirement 
    for the provision of nutrituin information with respect to the 
    nutrients that are the basis of the claim, when claims are made. Once 
    it becomes effective, Sec. Sec. 101.13(q)(5) and 101.14(d)(2)(vii)(B) 
    will require that nutrient content claims and health claims appearing 
    on menus comply with FDA's regulations for nutrient content claims in 
    Sec. 101.13 and subpart D of part 101 of this chapter and for health 
    claims in Sec. 101.14 and subpart E of part 101. Restaurants using 
    nutrient content claims or health claims on menus will be required by 
    Sec. 101.10 to provide nutrition information for the food that bears 
    the claim. Information on the nutrient that is the basis of the claim 
    may serve as the functional equivalent of complete nutrition 
    information as described in Sec. 101.9.
        Because of the flexibility provided for restaurants in determining 
    the nutrient content of a food (they need only have a reasonable basis 
    that provides assurance that the food meets the requirements for the 
    claim) and in how this information may be communicated to consumers, a 
    wide range of options is available to restaurants in meeting the 
    information collection requirements imposed by this rule. For example, 
    a restaurant may choose to run a full nutrient profile analysis on a 
    group of items listed under a heading of ``low fat'' on its menu. 
    Alternatively, it may choose to offer an item purchased from a 
    commercial manufacturer where the item is appropriately labeled by the 
    manufacturer as ``low fat.'' In such a case, the restaurant would not 
    have to collect any additional information. All a restaurant must do to 
    satisfy the nutrition information requirement in Sec. 101.10 is provide 
    information to demonstrate that the food meets the requirements for any 
    nutrient content claim or health claim being made about the food. The 
    agency expects that restaurants will choose the least burdensome option 
    that complies with Sec. 101.10. Thus, FDA concludes that the 
    information collection requirements in this final rule will create a 
    minimal burden for restaurants.
        Description of Respondents: Businesses or other for profit 
    organizations.
    
                                          Estimated Annual Recordkeeping Burden                                     
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                  Annual        Total                               
                      21 CFR                       No. of      frequency of     annual      Hours per    Total hours
                                               recordkeepers  recordkeeping    records    recordkeeping             
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Secs.  101.10, 101.13(q)(5), and 101.14                                                                         
     (d)(2)(vii)(B) and (d)(3)...............       265,000        1.5           397,500        1            397,500
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Note: There are no operation and maintenance costs or capital costs associated with this information collection.
    
        Although the June 15, 1993, proposed rule provided a 60-day comment 
    period, and this final rule incorporates the comments received, FDA is 
    providing an additional opportunity for public comment under the 
    Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, which applies to this final rule but 
    which was enacted after the expiration of the comment period for the 
    June 15, 1993, proposal. FDA invites comments on: (1) Whether the 
    proposed collection of information is necessary for the proper 
    performance of the functions of the agency, including whether the 
    information will have practical utility; (2) the accuracy of the 
    agency's estimate of the burden of the proposed collection of 
    information; (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 those who are to respond, including 
    through the use of automated collection techniques or other forms of 
    information technology, when appropriate. Individuals and organizations 
    may submit comments on the information collection requirements by 
    October 1, 1996. Comments should be directed to the Dockets Management 
    Branch (address above).
        At the close of the 60-day comment period, FDA will review the 
    comments received, make revisions as necessary to the information 
    collection requirements, and submit the requirements to OMB for review 
    and approval. FDA will publish a notice in the Federal Register when 
    the information collection requirements are submitted to OMB, and an 
    opportunity for public comment to OMB will be provided at that time. 
    Additional time will be allotted for public comment to OMB. Prior to 
    the effective date of this final rule, FDA will publish a notice in the 
    Federal Register of OMB's decision to approve, modify, or
    
    [[Page 40332]]
    
    disapprove the information collection requirements. 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.
    
    VI. References
    
        The following references have been placed on display in the Dockets 
    Management Branch (HFA-305), Food and Drug Administration, 12420 
    Parklawn Dr., rm. 1-23, Rockville, MD 20857, and may be seen by 
    interested persons between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m., Monday through Friday.
    
        1. Smith, M.A., communications regarding labeling of restaurant 
    foods that bear a claim or other nutrition information, memorandum 
    to file, November 9, 1994.
        2. Bush, L.M., communication regarding the cost of establishing 
    a reasonable basis for a claim, memorandum of telephone 
    conversation, September 14, 1994.
    
    List of Subjects in 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 part 
    101 is amended as follows:
    
    PART 101--FOOD LABELING
    
        1. The authority citation for 21 CFR part 101 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: Secs. 4, 5, 6 of the Fair Packaging and Labeling Act 
    (15 U.S.C. 1453, 1454, 1455); secs. 201, 301, 402, 403, 409, 701 of 
    the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 U.S.C. 321, 331, 342, 
    343, 348, 371).
    
        2. Section 101.10 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 101.10  Nutrition labeling of restaurant foods.
    
        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. Nutrient levels may be determined by nutrient data bases, 
    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.
        3. Section 101.13 is amended by revising the introductory text of 
    paragraph (q)(5) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 101.13  Nutrient content claims--general principles.
    
    * * * * *
        (q) * * *
        (5) A nutrient content claim used on food that 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 shall comply with the requirements of this section and 
    the appropriate definition in subpart D of this part, except that:
    * * * * *
        4. Section 101.14 is amended by revising paragraphs (d)(2)(vii)(B) 
    and (d)(3), introductory text, and adding paragraph (d)(3)(i) to read 
    as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 101.14  Health claims; general requirements.
    
    * * * * *
        (d) * * *
        (2) * * *
        (vii) * * *
        (B) Where the food that bears the claim is sold in a restaurant or 
    in other establishments in which food that is ready for immediate human 
    consumption is sold, the food can meet the requirements of paragraphs 
    (d)(2)(vi) or (d)(2)(vii) of this section if the firm that sells the 
    food has a reasonable basis on which to believe that the food that 
    bears the claim meets the requirements of paragraphs (d)(2)(vi) or 
    (d)(2)(vii) of this section and provides that basis upon request.
    * * * * *
        (3) Nutrition labeling shall be provided in the label or labeling 
    of any food for which a health claim is made in accordance with 
    Sec. 101.9; for restaurant foods, in accordance with Sec. 101.10; or 
    for dietary supplements of vitamins or minerals, in accordance with 
    Sec. 101.36. The requirements of this paragraph are effective as of May 
    8, 1993, except:
        (i) For menus, for which the requirements of paragraph (d)(3) of 
    this section will be effective May 2, 1997.
    * * * * *
        Dated: July 25, 1996.
    David A. Kessler,
    Commissioner of Food and Drugs.
    
    Donna E. Shalala,
    Secretary of Health and Human Services.
    [FR Doc. 96-19645 Filed 7-30-96; 12:21 pm]
    BILLING CODE 4160-01-U
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
5/2/1997
Published:
08/02/1996
Department:
Health and Human Services Department
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
96-19645
Dates:
This regulation is effective May 2, 1997. Written comments on the information collection requirements should be submitted by October 1, 1996.
Pages:
40320-40332 (13 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Docket No. 93N-0153
RINs:
0910-AA19: Food Labeling Review
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/0910-AA19/food-labeling-review
PDF File:
96-19645.pdf
CFR: (8)
21 CFR 101.13(l)
21 CFR 101.13(q)(5)
21 CFR 101.9
21 CFR 101.10
21 CFR 101.13
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