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    School lunches to have more veggies, whole grains

    ALEXANDRIA, Va. (AP) — The first major nutritional overhaul of school meals in more than 15 years means most offerings — including the always popular pizza — will come with less sodium, more whole grains and a wider selection of fruits and vegetables on the side.

    First lady Michelle Obama and Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack announced the new guidelines during a visit Wednesday with elementary students. Mrs. Obama, also joined by celebrity chef Rachael Ray, said youngsters will learn better if they don't have growling stomachs at school.

    "As parents, we try to prepare decent meals, limit how much junk food our kids eat, and ensure they have a reasonably balanced diet," Mrs. Obama said. "And when we're putting in all that effort the last thing we want is for our hard work to be undone each day in the school cafeteria."

    After the announcement, the three went through the line with students and ate turkey tacos with brown rice, black bean and corn salad and fruit — all Ray's recipes — with the children in the Parklawn Elementary lunchroom.

    Under the new rules, pizza won't disappear from lunch lines, but will be made with healthier ingredients. Entire meals will have calorie caps for the first time and most trans fats will be banned. Sodium will gradually decrease over a 10 year period. Milk will have to be low in fat and flavored milks will have to be nonfat.

    Despite the improvements, the new rules aren't as aggressive as the Obama administration had hoped. Congress last year blocked the Agriculture Department from making some of the desired changes, including limiting french fries and pizzas.

    A bill passed in November would require the department to allow tomato paste on pizzas to be counted as a vegetable, as it is now. The initial draft of the department's guidelines, released a year ago, would have prevented that. Congress also blocked the department from limiting servings of potatoes to two servings a week. The final rules have incorporated those directions from Congress.

    Among those who had sought the changes were potato growers and food companies that produce frozen pizzas for schools. Conservatives in Congress called the guidelines an overreach and said the government shouldn't tell children what to eat. School districts also objected to some of the requirements, saying they go too far and would cost too much.

    The guidelines apply to lunches subsidized by the federal government. A child nutrition bill signed by President Barack Obama in 2010 will help school districts pay for some of the increased costs. Some of the changes will take place as soon as this September; others will be phased in over time.

    While many schools are improving meals already, others still serve children meals high in fat, salt and calories. The guidelines are designed to combat childhood obesity and are based on 2009 recommendations by the Institute of Medicine, the health arm of the National Academy of Sciences.

    Vilsack said food companies are reformulating many of the foods they sell to schools in anticipation of the changes.

    "The food industry is already responding," he said. "This is a movement that has started, it's gaining momentum."

    Diane Pratt-Heavner of the School Nutrition Association, which represents school lunch workers, said that many schools won't count pizza as a vegetable even though they can. Students qualifying for subsidized meals must have a certain number of vegetables and other nutritious foods on their lunch trays.

    "Most schools are serving fruit or vegetables next to their pizza and some schools are even allowing unlimited servings of fruit or vegetables," Pratt-Heavner said.

    Celebrity chef Ray said she thinks too much has been made of the availability of pizza and French fries. The new rules will make kids' lunch plates much more nutrient dense, she said.

    "The overall picture is really good," she said. "This is a big deal."

    The subsidized meals that would fall under the guidelines are served as free and low-cost meals to low-income children and long have been subject to government nutrition standards. The 2010 law will extend, for the first time, nutrition standards to other foods sold in schools that aren't subsidized by the federal government. That includes "a la carte" foods on the lunch line and snacks in vending machines.

    Those standards, while expected to be similar, will be written separately and have not yet been proposed by the department.

    ___

    Online:

    USDA school lunch rules: http://www.fns.usda.gov/cnd/Governance/Legislation/nutritionstandards.htm

    ___

    Find Mary Clare Jalonick on Twitter at http://twitter.com/mcjalonick

     
    • Thomas  •  29 days ago
      I work in public schools.. you'd be amazed how much food is wasted.
    • OlLady  •  28 days ago
      Gee, I ate all those high fat meals and was skinny as a rail.....oh yeah, that's because I walked to school and we had PE.
    • green thumb  •  28 days ago
      whole wheat french fries?
    • Ann  •  Kansas City, Missouri  •  28 days ago
      The elementary school I attended was awesome! The cooks made most of the meals from scratch. For example, around Thanksgiving they served turkey & homemade noodles with real mashed potatoes and homemade rolls. Yum! Yeah, there was a slice of canned cranberry jelly on the tray, too but you bet we ate it all!
      Then... hours got cut and the cooks were no longer given time to prepare such delicious (and much more nutritious than processed food) meals. They improvised as much as possible in the following years, but soon the menus went standardized so all schools had to have the same menu on the same day. I found myself taking my lunch more in junior high and by high school I ate less than a dozen meals a month from the cafeteria. So sad... since I wasn't the only one following this trend, hours were cut even more in the kitchen and more cheap, processed, nasty tasting food made its way into the serving line.
      Give our cafeteria workers their hours back and let them make food like they used to! Let them make food the children will *gasp* actually eat!
      PS: Low fat doesn't mean a food is healthy. Look at the high sodium content of low fat food! Yuck! Whole milk, regular cheeses and whole grains, when combined in proper proportions with fresh fruits and veggies will always win in the end especially when you consider the lower grades still get recess where they burn off most of their lunch anyway!
    • Rae  •  Pittsburg, Kansas  •  24 days ago
      I think the government is going way to far! The kind of diet they want all the kids on are ones you usually see for some heart patient, or diabetic, no salt no fat no nothing plain, blan, and the kids won't eat it they are already starting to throw more and more away with the changes being made, heck I won't eat some, like a nice hot wheat roll it hard enough they switched it to whole wheat but then on top of that can't even have a little single serving butter for it that is ridiculous. If they want to talk about abesity, they need to look at the kids in middle school not getting PE unless they are signed up for it and no recess. I have seen kids looking just fine weight wise until they got to middleschool, It is not the food it is the lack of excercise and all these video games and computers, that is what is making the kids fat not a little single serving butter
    • anonymous  •  Washington, District of Columbia  •  29 days ago
      The school districts in Carlsbad California still serves crap, tater tots, sausage patties and the worst of processed foods. All done with wonderful farm land around and beautiful economical fruits and vegetables at local Farmer's Markets. Sad
    • hoeay  •  Lexington, Kentucky  •  29 days ago
      Why cant the schools go back to cooking the meals like they use to could be because food service bribs to our politicans bet polticans childern dont eat that slop
    • charles  •  New York, New York  •  28 days ago
      So heathy food eh. Most if not all school lunch is provided by corporarte entities that use GMO grown food. Healthy ? Monsanto anyone ? Have you ever seen what chicken nuggets are made with ? Google it and learn.
      GMo food is a good thing ? No one knows or is saying what it will do to us yet. What happened to bringing lunch from home ?
      As a kid many moons ago it was a treat to eat what Mom made for me. It brightened my day when that little something special was in my lunch bag. Reminded me of home. All cozy and warm. I never ate that crap they served.
      Obesity is an issue but a personal one. I would think that a lot more food is consumed at home that makes ya fat. What happened to parental control ? One reaps what they sow.
      Anyone with common sense knows what is fattening. So why does the Gov't have a part ? Well because the Health Care Bill says so. The Gov't will tell you what to eat, how to live or ya don't get covered. Wake up people if you have not already.
      Leave us alone. It is our right to eat what we want . PERIOD. BTW Google Chemical trails. Have a nice day.

      charles
    • kim a  •  Houston, Texas  •  29 days ago
      The whole debate is ridiculous.
      They hit school and we shove kim milk at them, non-fat, non-dairy chocolate milk, cardboard pizza,overcooked, mushy vegetables, stale bread, bologna made from chickens and juice with arsenic in it.
      They eat instant oatmeal and scrambled powdered eggs at breakfast, and processed, prepackaged food at lunch, with so many dyes, artificial flavorings, preservatives and chemicals added, it is hard to find actual food in there.
      The schools no longer cook and bake the food, they "prepare" food that is purchased or "instant" or convenient.
      You want vegetables? How about fresh vegetables with a little dip?
      How about fruit they will eat instead of canned?
      How about real potatos instead of instant or boxed dehydrated?
      How about just getting fresh, wholesome food, which gets rid of the chemicals and preservatives, salt and sugar and just use some common sense instead of rying to figure out how to turn ketchup into a vegetable and how to market skim milk as tasting great?
    • cg  •  28 days ago
      I work in a school kitchen folks, remember when the kitchens were large and had work tables. When they built the kitchen I work in 7 years ago, they tooled it for fast food and layed off staff. When I was hired their were 4. They layed another one off. We have a mixer that couldn't make enough bread in 3 runs for the crowd we feed (If we had actual tables to roll out the dough and work it). Those who bash lunch room folks should go volunteer in a kitchen first. we have an hour and a half to make lunch when breakfast is over. Let's see you whip up amazing treats in that time for 245 people. I love my job and kids and my food nutrition audit was great! We have 97% participation. We bust our butts for our kids and make less that 8 bucks an hour. We don't have vending machines. We do baked chicken legs and you know what the little darlings did..trashed it because they were grossed out by the leg bone!!! They don't get real chicken with bones at home! We did a survey and they little darlings wanted surf and turf...steak bites cooked to order....since when did we become golden corral. We give normal size meat portions...size of a deck of cards. They whined about skimpy portions.
    • stephen  •  Chicago, Illinois  •  24 days ago
      gov control from cradel to grave thats what the left want and the sheep keep going along
    • Doggoneit!  •  Atlanta, Georgia  •  24 days ago
      Look in the school trash cans. The kids throw away the fresh fruit that comes with the meals. It is such a waste.
    • KEH  •  29 days ago
      Hmm this is funny. This was alreaduy implemented in my states schools over 15 years ago. Did it all just go away all the sudden?
    • Boodica  •  29 days ago
      "...and would cost too much."

      Hidden in the article is the REAL reason tomato paste is counted as a vegetable and french fries are a staple item...costs too much to feed kids real, healthy food.
    • LARGE-CAR  •  Niagara Falls, New York  •  28 days ago
      Most of my grand kids bring thier lunch,except on pizza day..
    • BVAS1430  •  Houston, Texas  •  29 days ago
      Tobacco, alcohol and illegal drugs combined are still not the number one cause of death in America: Food is the number one killer.
    • Steve  •  Everett, Washington  •  28 days ago
      Isnt it the problem with the subsidized kids being overweight.... Get a clue, get out of the school lunch business. Have the parents pack their own lunches and start teaching students the 3 Rs in school.
    • the truth general  •  Phoenix, Arizona  •  28 days ago
      Are they still counting Ketchup as a vegetable! IDIOTS!
    • FredRick  •  24 days ago
      I did some math on what the kids/school district/fed govt is sepnding to feed the kids. You could take the kids to Boston Market every day for less money.
    • 45  •  28 days ago
      phasing out meat? pretty soon meat will be "fascist" or something similar.
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