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On 22 April 2019, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio announced the city's Green New Deal, an audacious plan to attack global warming on all fronts. While this package of investments and new legislation covered several approaches to reduce emissions by nearly 30 percent by the year 2030, a number of outlets focused their headlines on one specific fast-food item: hot dogs. An article published on iHeartRadio's platform, for instance, was misleadingly entitled NYC To Ban Hot Dogs and Processed Meats To Improve Climate. As this article and others like it circulated on social media, many viewers apparently stopped reading after the headline and came away with the belief that hot dogs had been banned city-wide: One Twitter user wrote: NYC Mayor - you just made enemies of a lot of NYC vendors who sell great hot dogs, the citizens & visitors who love them! Repeat: You will make NYC a ghost town by 2030 if you continue this ridiculous green deal! New Yorkers, speak up! Hot dogs are not being banned in New York City. Headlines such as NYC To Ban Hot Dogs and Processed Meats To Improve Climate are misleading for two reasons. First, hot dogs are not being banned throughout the city. The city government plans to reduce the purchase of processed meats consumed at city-run facilities, such as hospitals, public schools, and correctional facilities, but this policy will have no effect on vendors, restaurants, grocery stores, or any other privately owned businesses that sell hot dogs, or on their customers who eat them. Second, the city's plan to reduce the consumption of hot dogs is only partly based on an effort to improve climate. NYC's Green New Deal policies are part of the city's OneNYC 2050: Building a Strong and Fair City strategy. While these policies address climate-change issues, they also deal with community well-being and the general health of the city's population. The section of OneNYC 2050 dealing with processed meats can actually be found in the Healthy Living portion of this strategy. More specifically, the section dealing with processed meats explains that reducing the consumption of hot dogs will lower the risk of heart disease and cancer. Here's the relevant section of OneNYC 2050 (emphasis ours): So New York City plans to reduce the consumption of processed meats at city-run facilities such as hospitals, public schools, and correctional facilities. But this plan will not ban hot dogs in the city. Restaurants, hot dog stands, grocery stores, and other privately owned businesses will still be able to sell hot dogs in the city.
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