Source: San Jose Mercury News (CA) Contact: http://www.sjmercury.com/ Pubdate: Sat, 10 Oct 1998 Author: Edwin Garcia Mercury News Staff Writer LATINOS PROTEST LIQUOR INDUSTRY Health workers say alcohol abuse widespread A statewide coalition of health advocates who contend that Latino neighborhoods are being unfairly saturated by the promotion and availability of alcohol lashed out against the beer, wine and liquor industries at a symposium Friday in San Jose. The disproportionate amount of alcohol-beverage advertising in those neighborhoods -- coalition members said, citing several studies -- is leading to disproportionate cases of alcohol abuse. Members of the coalition also pledged to work with grass-roots organizations to encourage local, state and national politicians to develop and enforce polices they say could reduce the share of alcohol-related problems among Latinos. ``We need to keep up the pressure,'' Jeannette Noltenius, executive director of the Washington DC-based Latino Council on Alcohol and Tobacco, told a gathering of about 150 people at a San Jose State University auditorium in her keynote address. ``California -- you are 30 percent of the nation -- you have more power than you think,'' she said. The first-annual Alcohol Policy Symposium, sponsored by the newly formed Latino Leadership United for Healthy Communities, brought together an assortment of participants from throughout California. Alcohol industry officials could not immediately be reached for comment late Friday. It is not uncommon for beer companies to emphasize their positive contributions to the Latino community. Some companies, for example, award scholarships to Latino students. A number of studies by university researchers and non-profit groups were presented at the daylong symposium. Among the local and statewide findings: Five times more advertisements for alcoholic beverages were visible in certain Latino communities than in nearby areas where most of the population was white. Nearly a quarter of Latino men were frequent, heavy drinkers in 1992, compared with 15 percent of African-American men and 12 percent of white men. A study in Los Angeles found that cirrhosis of the liver accounted for 52 percent of all deaths of Mexican men, more than twice as high as white men. Homicides and violent crimes were reported to be the fifth leading cause of death among Latinos, while they ranked 15th among whites. Some studies chided alcoholic-beverage companies for advertising and selling in some Latino neighborhoods frequented by children. ``Our communities are contaminated with alcohol outlets, and we do see it as a form of environmental racism,'' said Maria Luisa Alaniz, a San Jose State associate professor of social science and study director of the Prevention Research Center in Berkeley. ``Children that live in predominantly white communities don't have to deal with this going from school to home,'' said Alaniz, who helped organize the symposium. Maricela Morales of Ventura County encouraged participants to take a stand against alcohol-company sponsorships at local events, such as parades. A group she worked with in Santa Paula, she said, persuaded the city council to develop a policy that banned parade floats that depicted alcohol. Among the symposium's participants were local activists who in the past have asked the San Jose City Council to ban alcohol and alcohol sponsorships from Cinco de Mayo and Fiestas Patrias, two downtown celebrations that attract tens of thousands of Latinos. The events are sponsored by the San Jose chapter of the American GI Forum, which says it uses the alcohol-related money to award scholarships. The symposium's steering committee made several recommendations after hearing the presentations. Among the recommendations: develop Latino Leadership United for Healthy Communities into a strong, statewide organization and hold annual symposiums in each of the next four years. It was also recommended that the coalition seek funding to conduct more studies. In addition, the coalition will train organizations to make changes in their communities. ``The result of all this,'' said Joel Obeso, a psychology doctoral student and counselor at Alum Rock Counseling Center in San Jose, ``is that Latinos will be more conscious of the opportunities that we have to better our community and our society in general.'' - --- Checked-by: Pat Dolan