California Bill: AB 2316
California Removes Artificial Dyes from School Meals
Topics
Bill Information
Summary
Bill Summary
Assembly Bill 2316, passed by California in September 2024, prohibits public schools from offering school meals and selling competitive foods containing certain artificial food dyes including red 40 and yellow 5, beginning December 31, 2027. The bill applies to kindergarten through grade 12 schools operated by school districts, county superintendents, and charter schools. Schools are permitted to sell foods containing these substances only as part of authorized fundraising events. The legislation establishes nutrition guidelines aligned with federal meal patterns while restricting the use of specified synthetic additives in foods provided to students during school hours.
Why It Matters to MAHA
MAHA strongly supports this bill because it advances health freedom and patient autonomy by removing artificial additives known to cause adverse reactions in vulnerable populations, particularly children. The legislation respects parental choice by ensuring students have access to cleaner, additive-free meal options at school without synthetic dyes linked to behavioral and health concerns. This aligns with MAHA's commitment to transparency in food quality and ingredient disclosure, empowering families to make informed decisions about what their children consume. By removing regulatory barriers that previously forced schools to accept meals containing these additives, the bill demonstrates how reducing corporate influence in nutrition standards protects public health. The measure reflects MAHA's core principle that patients and families should control health decisions without unnecessary exposure to substances many consider harmful.
Introduced
08/22/2024
In Committee
08/15/2024
Enacted
09/28/2024
Sponsors

Jesse Gabriel
Democratic Assemblymember (CA)
Luz Rivas
Coauthor

Avelino Valencia
Democratic Assemblymember (CA)
Waldron
Coauthor