Bowing to a public relations effort gone awry, General Mills on Tuesday said it plans to drop the "Smart Choices" label from its products after the Food and Drug Administration and others said the label misled consumers.
Designed largely by food companies and rolled out this summer, the label was billed as a simple way for consumers to find healthy foods in supermarket aisles.
Yet when the label began appearing on Froot Loops and high-fat mayonnaise, consumer groups cried foul.
General Mills planned to place the label on up to 67 items, including Chocolate Lucky Charms, but so far had only placed it on Cheerios, Green Giant vegetables and Fiber One Bars, a spokeswoman said Tuesday.
The program's demise is a major embarrassment for the food companies that created it, with several announcing last week that they would discontinue its use.
When it started, the Smart Choices label drew major food companies like Tyson Foods, ConAgra Foods, PepsiCo, Kraft, Unilever and General Mills, a group that pledged some $1.5 million to the program, according to Forbes. The label, some two years in the making, was supposed to help consumers who struggle to understand the more detailed nutrition labels found on the sides of most packaged foods. Numerous studies have shown that many consumers don't understand or don't have time to read the labels.
Paid for by industry
Controversy surrounded the program even before it was completed this summer. A prominent member of its board, Michael Jacobson of the Center for Science in the Public Interest, resigned over what he saw as undue influence from the food companies.