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News Revealing the scheme


to employees at Chobani’s headquarters in New Berlin, New York, Ulukaya said: “Without every single one of you, this could not have been done. “We used to [just] work


together, now we are partners.” “You know it’s been my


dream,” Ulukaya added, when asked about his motivation for giving his staff a share in their company – a sentiment he shared on Twitter. “I would like to give back


to them and say ‘you and this community and this country have been so great to us, and I would like to return that favour back to you,’” he told NBC News.


FORMER GOSFORTH POST OFFICE TO REOPEN AS THE NAKED DELI HEALTHY FOOD OUTLET


l Health food specialist The Naked Deli is set to transform the former Post Office in Gosforth into a huge deli cafe and whole foods shop as part of


expansion plans. Kirstie Kimmins first launched The Naked Deli in Heaton’s Chillingham Road almost two years ago, with a mission to promote organic and non


processed foods. Since then, the firm’s


wholesome juices, super food salads and sandwiches and raw vegan cakes have tempted in customers from across the city, many driving from miles around to snap up their freshly-made foods. Last year the business


expanded through a link- up with Fenwick, one of the region’s best-known department stores, when it secured a deal to stock its range of food and drinks in the revamped Food Hall, a move which created three new jobs taking the workforce to 19. Now the workforce will


more than double with the creation of 20 new jobs, after taking on the empty post office unit in Gosforth Shopping Centre in a plan that involves an investment of more than £160,000.


online outlets, the industry regulator said. Current limits on using celebrities and characters to sell food to children could be relaxed for healthier foods. About one in five children in the England is classed as obese by the end of primary school, according to the Health and Social Care Information Centre. The self-regulatory body,


CAP, which sets rules for UK advertising, said the new rules could make a “meaningful contribution to tackling this important health issue”.


BAN ON ADVERTISING UNHEALTHY FOOD TO CHILDREN CONSIDERED l A complete ban on advertising unhealthy foods to children is being considered as a way to reduce childhood obesity. The plan to restrict the


promotion of foods high in fat, salt and sugar to under 16s is being consulted on by the Committee of Advertising Practice. It would see the existing ban on TV ads extended to all media, including


6 The Delicatessen Magazine


‘Modest effect’ Currently, food and drink deemed unhealthy can be advertised to children in non-broadcast media, unlike television where strict regulation prohibits it through content and scheduling restrictions. Ofcom research suggests that 96% of 12 to 15-year- olds spent more time online than watching TV last year. The advertising industry needed to make sure its regulations reflected changing media habits among young people, CAP said. Evidence showed


advertising had a “modest” effect on children’s food preferences, it said. However, factors such


as parental influence, opportunities for physical exercise and education playing a greater role in solutions to childhood obesity, it argued.


‘Too many gaps’


Chairman James Best said: “Advertising is just one small factor in a very complex


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