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    More fruits, veggies in U.S. school lunch rules

    WASHINGTON/LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - U.S. schoolchildren, accustomed to a steady diet of pizza and french fries, will find more fruits, vegetables and whole grains on their cafeteria trays under new government school lunch rules announced on Wednesday.

    The new U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) rules aim to boost the nutritional quality of the federally subsidized meals consumed by roughly 32 million U.S. schoolchildren daily.

    The rules represent the first major revision of school meal standards in more than 15 years and are intended to combat the nation's childhood obesity crisis. Nearly one in three children in America is overweight or obese.

    The overhaul comes just months after U.S. lawmakers acted to maintain pizza's status as a vegetable and killed proposed limits on weekly servings of starchy foods like potatoes.

    In addition to doubling produce servings, the new guidelines call for fat-free and low-fat milk only, child-appropriate portion sizes and reductions in sodium, saturated fat and trans fats.

    The changes were adopted under the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act (HHFKA), which was championed by first lady Michelle Obama and signed into law by President Barack Obama in 2010.

    The new standards will be largely phased in, starting in the 2012-13 school year. They are expected to cost roughly $3.2 billion to implement over the first five years.

    HHFKA authorized more funding to schools to help cover the extra costs associated with the menu changes.

    The USDA gives school districts money for student lunches and breakfasts through its $18 billion school meals program.

    The majority of children participating in the program are eligible for free or reduced-price meals. The USDA said 63 percent of lunches and 89 percent of breakfasts served are free or at a reduced cost.

    FRIES WITH THAT?

    Lawmakers altered the school lunch guidelines in November, when they barred the USDA from limiting the weekly servings of french fries and ensured that pizza continued to be counted as a vegetable portion because of its tomato paste.

    Trade groups representing frozen-pizza sellers like ConAgra Foods Inc and Schwan Food Co, as well as french fry distributors McCain Foods Ltd and J.R. Simplot Co, were instrumental in blocking rule changes affecting those items.

    Those actions caused a public uproar but won cheers from critics of the HHFKA rules, who cited the new regulations as an example of overreach by federal bureaucrats meddling in the food decisions of families.

    "What we are announcing today are science-based rules and regulations that are going to substantially improve the meal qualities across the United States for children," USDA Undersecretary for Food, Nutrition and Consumer Services Kevin Concannon said on a conference call.

    Margo Wootan, nutrition policy director for the nonprofit Center for Science in the Public Interest, said the new standards were a big improvement, despite food industry lobbying and the congressional revamp.

    "Despite industry lobbying and congressional meddling, the new school meal standards are one of the most important advances in nutrition in decades," she said.

    The Environmental Working Group said the adjustments could also curb healthcare costs since they may help reduce medical bills related to diabetes and other obesity-related chronic diseases.

    "A healthier population will save billions of dollars in future healthcare costs," said Dawn Undurraga, EWG's staff nutritionist.

    As an example of a new meal, the USDA said an elementary school lunch might consist of whole-wheat spaghetti with meat sauce and a whole-wheat roll, a vegetable mix of green beans, broccoli and cauliflower, plus sliced kiwi, low-fat milk, low-fat ranch dip and soft margarine.

    That lunch would replace a meal of a hot dog on a bun with ketchup, canned pears, raw celery and carrots with ranch dressing, and low-fat chocolate milk.

    Some school districts already have moved in the direction of the new rules. Results have been mixed.

    Julia Bauscher, director of school nutrition services for Jefferson County Public Schools in Louisville, Kentucky, said her district already is serving whole-grain breads and greens like spinach, kale and romaine lettuce.

    The district built acceptance by adding things gradually, working with student advisers and handing out samples of new menu items.

    Bauscher acknowledged that children complained when the district started serving fewer potatoes to the 100,000 students in the meals program.

    "They didn't like that so much, but they have learned to pick up something different," she said, noting that the potato-serving reductions are not required under the new rules but have been recommended by heath experts.

    Some schools have had a tougher go.

    Los Angeles Unified School District, one of the nation's largest, is revising its healthier lunch menus after initially missing the mark with students.

    As part of the new standards, USDA also will increase the number of inspections of school menus. New guidelines for other food sold in schools, including items sold in vending machines and school stores, are due later this year.

    (Reporting By Ian Simpson in Washington and Lisa Baertlein in Los Angeles; Editing by Steve Gorman, Paul Thomasch and Steve Orlofsky)

    What do you think?

    Would you go back to school?

    No more pencils, no more books Definitely!
    37%

    478 people have answered this question.

    63%
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    • michael p  •  Atlanta, Georgia  •  28 days ago
      How about PE first thing in the morning....burns calories and calms their #$%$ down.
    • Denise  •  Portage, Michigan  •  28 days ago
      Hey, I've got a great idea! In all congressional and government cafeterias serve the exact same things they expect kids to choke down in school lunch. Same guidelines, etc. Includes the White House. No more chefs, just school lunch helpers. All candidates for office would have to eat school lunches while on the campaign trail. Put the food service up for bid to the lowest bidder. Plastic sporks, foam clamshells for plates etc. Think of the savings.
    • AmericanMade  •  28 days ago
      When I was in high school we had GYM as a period EVERYDAY...now they have it one year once a week as a Freshman and that is it?!? Exercise is the problem more than the food because cafeteria food has NEVER been good. Also, the FDA are these the same idiots that classed out Ketchup as a Vegetable?? Yepper, they did it folks!
    • Jimmy J  •  Elmhurst, Illinois  •  28 days ago
      You want kids to eat healthier? It's called a brown bag from home.
    • DitheringAlong  •  Albuquerque, New Mexico  •  28 days ago
      It might be helpful to reinstitute mandatory gym class.....I'm just saying.
    • Gary  •  Midland, Texas  •  28 days ago
      ok guys, im 48 when i went to school the lunches were not what they call healthy today.
      I remember very few overweight kids ,if they were they were predisposed due to genetics.
      The one thing we did have was recess and P.T.
      We ran off the extra energy and payed attention during class.
      Today they are more worried about passing a gov. test that says they are ok to go to the next grade.
      Childrens free time is now spent playing on thier cell phones and being stagnant.
      It is not what they eat in schools, it is what they are not doing that makes them over weight!
      Reintroduce the actual activity time and reduce the time where there are physically idle and it reduces the problem.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  New York, New York  •  28 days ago
      Let's have fatback, chitterlings, hog's jowls, blackeyed peas, and barbeque spare ribs in a light bread sandwich.
    • Otto Pilot  •  Spring Branch, Texas  •  28 days ago
      Guideline Number One - It must be edible.
    • Ludwig J  •  Houston, Texas  •  28 days ago
      The problem with childhood obesity isn't the lunch they get at school, its all the junk they eat at home while they play on their game consoles.
    • Donn  •  Harrisburg, Pennsylvania  •  28 days ago
      You know whats great. Healthy lunches in schools that ban physical education and spotrs. God I love our gonvernment they really know whats best.
    • sammyp  •  28 days ago
      I'm a former teacher and I saw countless lunch-room meals thrown away because the kids would not eat it. If it's healthy, but tastes like crap they toss it and eat junk when they get home. If the USDA is worried about hungry kids then give them food they will eat and time to play during the school day.
    • Balrog  •  28 days ago
      In the 1970s and 1980s kids ate burgers, fries, and milkshakes in school with an obesity rate of 5%.

      It's not the food, stupid! It's the lack of excercise kids get thanks to liberal policies prohibiting dodgeball, hide-n-seek, and other beneficial activities all in the name of "disenfranchising" kids.
    • Joe  •  28 days ago
      The kids will skip lunch and mom and dad will take them to McDonalds for a nice super sized meal since they didn't eat at school.
    • Take Republic Back  •  Phoenix, Arizona  •  28 days ago
      Our children should be able to eat the same food Michelle Obama and her kids eat.
    • Lee  •  28 days ago
      Someone tell me how it is that guidelines cost 3.2 billion dollars. Also, why don't they just look at the L.A. school system of healthy lunches. The food gets thrown away uneaten and their is a black market for junk food.
    • Tony M  •  28 days ago
      I defy any kid to try to get obese on a school lunch, even 10 years ago. Go into any store or public place with a counter or a vending machine, and there lies your problem. In my mind this is another 3.2 billion dollars thrown away.
    • meredith  •  Cape Girardeau, Missouri  •  28 days ago
      It starts at home when these kids are babies. Feeding them veggies & fruit from the time they are able to eat food. Making them excersize also. I have 3 kids and they love anything that's put in front of them. We also have you don't get a choice, eat what's served or do without. We have all the electronics at my house too, but kids only get an hour a day. There are alot of parents who just don't want to say no to the junk. I do all the shopping and guess what, when I do buy junk they don't realize its there. Have a good day everyone!
    • Carol  •  Dallas, Texas  •  28 days ago
      Remember everything that government gets involved with turns out well and doesn't cost anything extra.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  Clarksdale, Mississippi  •  28 days ago
      Why are we giving our kids margarine? It's synthetic and it's literally one molecule away from being plastic.
    • dingo dango  •  28 days ago
      Gosh...only $3,500,000,000? And this is going to do what, exactly? Make kids skinny? When is the stupid gub'ment going to learn that it isn't what the kids eat at school that is making them fat?
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