Snack Tax: Navajo Lawmakers OK Price Hike on Junk Food
WINDOW ROCK, Ariz. — The Navajo Nation Council approved a tax on junk food
sold on the country's largest reservation, tribal officials announced Friday.
Lawmakers voted 10-4 to impose a 2 percent sales tax on items such as cookies,
chips and sodas. If signed into law by President Ben Shelly, the "Healthy
Dine Nation Act of 2014" would remain in effect until 2020.
The Tribal Council previously failed to pass the legislation in April and
Shelly vetoed the measure earlier this year. In the past, Shelly said he
supports the proposal's intent but questioned how the higher tax on snacks high
in fat, sugar and salt would be enacted and regulated. Supporters say the tax
is another tool in their fight for the health of the people.
American Indians and Alaska Natives as a whole have the highest
age-adjusted prevalence of diabetes among U.S. racial and ethnic groups,
according to the American Diabetes Association. The proposed tax wouldn't add
significantly to the price of junk food, but buying food on the reservation
presents obstacles that don't exist in most of urban America. The reservation
is a sprawling 27,000 square miles with few grocery stores and a population
with an unemployment rate of around 50 percent.
Question
1)Do you like snacks and
junk food? How often do you eat?
3)Do you think is this idea
good? Why?
4)If you were government,
how do you control health of your country people?
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