In this case, normal sugar (sucrose, fructose and glucose covalently bound) is used instead of HFCS (essentially, fructose and glucose mixed, but not bound) as sweetener. The nutritional and health impact of that should not be changed much. Essentially, for us as consumer it doesn't matter -- they're both equally unhealthy.
The problem is that HFCS is used to 'cheapify' other food processes and ends up in processed products that are not sweet at all. I tried to find articles that explain 'traditional' food processes and how they are changed by introduction of HFCS, and couldn't. Anybody have some references?
One such process I think I read about a few years back was the 'simulation' of Maillard-processed goods (baked bread, fried potatoes, waffles etc.) by addition of HFCS and food coloring, which was a whole lot cheaper and simpler than the real process by reducing the amount of heating, number of heating/cooling cycles etc. The end result was a product that tastes and looks awfully similar than the real thing, but is chemically a great deal simpler, and presents a whole different metabolic problem to the human body.