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Annie s pledges to purge a class of chemicals from its mac and cheese - Minneapolis / St Paul Business Journal
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Annie s pledges to purge a class of chemicals from its mac and cheese
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By Jerri-Lynn Scofield, who has worked as a securities lawyer and a derivatives trader. She is currently writing a book about textile artisans.
Company strategy stands in contrast to that of Kraft, which has yet to match the pledge, and instead has focused on rosy-tinged marketing gimmicks, as I wrote last week in Valentine’s Day Food Security Special: Hold the Pink Kraft Dinner, Serve Up Comfort Food. The eponymous Annie’s was started by a real person but is now owned by General Mills.
Fear not, patient readers, my decision to write two posts a week apart on boxed macaroni and cheese doesn’t portend any intention to launch a new Naked Capitalism mac and cheese beat.
Annieâs Pledges to Purge a Class of Chemicals From Its Mac and Cheese
The move comes nearly four years after a study showed that chemicals believed to cause health problems in children and reproductive issues in adults were found in mass-market macaroni and cheese packets.
Annie’s is working with suppliers to make sure its macaroni and cheese does not contain traces of chemicals called ortho-phthalates. Taco Bell has pledged to remove phthalates from its packaging by 2025.Credit.Steve Karnowski/Associated Press
Feb. 19, 2021
Nearly four years after traces of chemicals believed to cause health problems in children and reproductive issues in adults were found in mass-market macaroni and cheese packets, Annieâs Homegrown has begun working with its suppliers to eliminate the offending material from their food processing equipment.
Parents and environmental advocates say the guidance falls short of needed mandatory regulations. Author: Vivien Leigh (NEWS CENTER Maine) Published: 3:43 PM CST December 8, 2020 Updated: 3:43 PM CST December 8, 2020
PORTSMOUTH, N.H. Last month, federal regulators took a first step toward stemming the flow of so called forever chemicals .
The EPA will require facilities in a handful of states not including Maine to monitor wastewater for PFAS.
But parents and activists say the long-awaited policy falls short of needed mandatory regulations.
After Andrea Amico s family drank water laced with PFAS chemicals at the Pease Trade Port, she fought for a federal health study. Two of her children, including her daughter Sophia, now nine-years-old, were exposed at daycare.
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