Abdul Rashid Abdulai, a medical student at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine and a CUNY School of Public Health student, asked Community Board 11 to support a City Council bill he cited as "11 77 20 25" to extend sodium and added-sugar warning labels beyond chain restaurants to all establishments.
"Without clear menu labels, people can easily consume meals with 2,300 milligrams or more of sodium in a single dish," Abdulai said, and he cited research he described as linking high sodium intake to nearly 3,000 deaths per year in New York City. He asked the board to endorse the bill so that "all New Yorkers, regardless of where they eat, will have the information they need to protect their health and their families."
Nicole Agnew from Councilmember Arso Feliz’s office told the board that the council member recently introduced a related intro (reported at the meeting as intro 14 65) to require chain restaurants to add a red-and-white warning label on foods exceeding 1,800 milligrams of sodium. Agnew offered the council office’s assistance and announced a Thanksgiving giveaway and other constituent events.
Board members discussed logistics of supporting legislation and were reminded that community boards generally advise and can forward opinions to elected officials; no formal endorsement vote on the labeling bill was recorded at the meeting.
Next steps: Staff from the council office provided contact information for constituent follow-up. Community Board 11 indicated interest in having public‑health presenters return for committee-level discussion and said it would circulate any materials provided by the speaker.