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Ban Alcohol Ads on State Property, Mass. Lawmaker Says
September 9, 2009

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News Summary

The Massachusetts legislature is considering a bill that would prohibit alcohol advertising on all state-owned property, including the transit system, the Boston Herald reported Sept. 6.

The measure introduced by Rep. Martin Walsh (D-Boston) was discussed this week during a hearing of the joint Committee on State Administration and Regulatory Oversight.

The Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority is one of the few public-transit systems in the country to allow alcohol advertising. The Marin Institute said that a ban would protect young students who use trains and buss to get to school.

COMMENTS ON THIS ARTICLE:

Posted by Been There on 10 Sep 09 04:17 PM EDT
Hear, Hear! Every state in the nation pays outrageous sums of money for the ills of drinking alcohol. Any fool can see the common sense of states refusing to advertise the drug that costs them so much money and tragedy. Let's hope it keeps.

Posted by Michael Scippa on 14 Sep 09 02:17 PM EDT
Massachusetts residents can take action to support Rep. Walsh here: action.marininstitue.org

Posted by two great arguments on 15 Sep 09 03:14 PM EDT
i love how the only arguments in favor of government censorship presented in this article are "come on, everyone else is doing it" and "Protecting the children." it would be nice if we could step into a forum a little more mature and thoughtful than peer pressure and fearmongering.

Posted by PositivePepe on 20 Sep 09 03:03 AM EDT
As far as I'm concerned advertisements and commercials for the toxic liquid should be banned altogether... its time to emulate the anti-smoking movement by standing up to big alcohol companies and providing state-assisted programs to help problem drinkers attain sobriety.

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