It’s a sad day for Happy Meals in Santa Clara County - LA Times (link) wrote:County officials vote to ban toys and other promotions that restaurants offer with high-calorie children’s meals.
.... "This ordinance prevents restaurants from preying on children's' love of toys" to sell high-calorie, unhealthful food, said Supervisor Ken Yeager, who sponsored the measure. "This ordinance breaks the link between unhealthy food and prizes."
Voting against the measure was Supervisor Donald Gage, who said parents should be responsible for their children.
"If you can't control a 3-year-old child for a toy, God save you when they get to be teenagers," he said. Gage, who is overweight, said he was a living example of how obese children can become obese adults.
But he questioned the role of fast-food toys. "When I was growing up in Gilroy 65 years ago, there were no fast-food restaurants," Gage said.
...
I read the article. One has to wonder what went so terribly wrong with the CPS in that they have a "Social Justice High School".
Tom Colicchio wrote:I’m here before you as a father to 17 year-old Dante and 11 month-old Luka. My kids, like kids everywhere, are more than happy to slurp down junk food and empty calories – pizza, sodas, candy and deep-fried anything. But the fact that they would eat this whenever doesn’t give me permission to shrug my shoulders and say, ‘well, that’s what they want!’ It’s my job as a parent to make sure they have a variety of real, nutritious foods served to them at every meal so that they grow into robust, healthy kids capable of meeting their full potential in life. And yet, I hear people say, “we’d like to improve school lunch, but all the kids want to eat are pizzas and burgers. If we give them good food they won’t eat it” Come on, people! We’re the adults. It’s up to us to do better.
Tom Colicchio wrote:Without regular exposure to real food – made from whole ingredients in a variety of textures, shapes, and colors – these children never develop a preference for healthy food, and thus perpetuate the cycle of poor nutrition that can lead to a lifetime of costly and debilitating health problems like obesity and diabetes, not to mention their lost potential as active, healthy citizens.
From the Agriculture Committee, where the bill originated, here is a summary of its major provisions:
* Expanded After-School Meals for At-Risk Children Nationwide: For the vast majority of states, the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) at-risk after-school program only provides reimbursement for a snack. This section will allow communities in all 50 states to be reimbursed for a meal.
* Expanded Universal Meal Service: This new option will allow schools in high-poverty areas to offer free meals to all students without collecting paper applications, which will expand access to more children and reduce administrative burdens on schools.
* Increasing the Number of Eligible Low-Income Children with School Meals: Children whose families receive SNAP benefits are directly certified for free school meals. This provision will expand the direct certification process to include Medicaid in select districts in the U.S.
* Automatically Enrolling Foster Children for Free School Meals: This section will add foster children to the list of those that are automatically eligible for free meals, eliminating the need for foster children to demonstrate their income when applying for school meal benefits.
* Promoting the Availability and Locations of Summer Meal and Breakfast Sites: This provision will require school food authorities to coordinate with institutions operating the Summer Food Service Program to develop and distribute materials to families to inform them of the availability and location of summer meal sites and school breakfast sites.
* Piloting Innovative Methods to Provide Nutrition to Hungry, Low-Income Children: The bill provides mandatory funding to test pilot projects to improve methods of providing nutritious foods to hungry children, including during out-of-school times.
Mhays wrote:I will be posting this on the events board when we get nearer to the time, but a friend of mine who's been equally frustrated with school lunch is hosting a screening of the documentary Lunch Line, with a panel discussion following. Panel discussion should be interesting, as I'm on it, along with a number of other food and health activists in Evanston...and our district's superintendent.
I may bring nachos and waffles to throw, but I don't promise.
Time: Saturday, April 30 · 2:00pm - 5:00pm
Location: Evanston Public Library 1703 Orrington Avenue Evanston, IL
Lunch Line is a documentary film that reframes the school lunch debate through an examination of the program's surprising past, uncertain present, and possible future. This screening is being co-sponsored by the Center for Civic Engagement at Northwestern University and the Evanston Public Library.
To see the trailer for the film click here: http://lunchlinefilm.com/
For decades, the USDA has surveyed Americans about what they eat, and shared that information with researchers and policymakers. It would be helpful to have a better method, said Treviño, director of the Social and Health Research Center here.
“Everything is self-reported, and self-reported information is very inaccurate,” Treviño said. “People tell you what you want to hear. Parents aren't going to tell us the truth, that they're feeding the children high (levels of) sugars or fatty food.”
Thus the idea to use sophisticated cameras — two at the cash register, two more at the disposal window — to take before-and-after photos of trays, and develop equally sophisticated software to analyze the results.
Each set of cameras captures an overhead and side view, to better determine food volume. Trays also are weighed to help with the calculations.
d4v3 wrote:As a kid growing up in Boston, many years ago, there was a program called the Federal Bag Lunch Program (one of the more inspired aspects of Johnson's War on Poverty). As I recall, every student was eligible, regardless of income.
Does anybody else remember this short-lived federal initiative?
Any school in Illinois where at least 40 percent of students are needy will be able to serve free meals to all children, regardless of family income, starting this fall as part of a pilot program offered by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. . . . Designed to cut paperwork for school officials and streamline the process of obtaining free meals for needy families, the program is scheduled to be rolled out nationwide by the 2014-15 school year. At schools where the vast majority of students already receive free meals, the program would be nearly undetectable. But in schools where up to 60 percent of the students do not receive any public aid, it has the potential to bring about a culture shift.
Mhays wrote:This is an interesting strategy - essentially it would undercut the current system that depends on the full-price kids to make the finances work (a driver of the food choices: they are designed to appeal to the kids who pay full-price in order to be financially sustainable. Since parents don't typically make the choices at school, sugary, salty, fatty foods "hook" more full-price kids.)
Darren72 wrote:Mhays wrote:This is an interesting strategy - essentially it would undercut the current system that depends on the full-price kids to make the finances work (a driver of the food choices: they are designed to appeal to the kids who pay full-price in order to be financially sustainable. Since parents don't typically make the choices at school, sugary, salty, fatty foods "hook" more full-price kids.)
Emphasis is mine
There's no particular reason why a particular school's lunch system has to have a balanced budget/be financially sustainable. Are the art class or the math class financially sustainable?
Any school in Illinois where at least 40 percent of students are needy will be able to serve free meals to all children, regardless of family income, starting this fall as part of a pilot program offered by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. . . . Designed to cut paperwork for school officials and streamline the process of obtaining free meals for needy families, the program is scheduled to be rolled out nationwide by the 2014-15 school year. At schools where the vast majority of students already receive free meals, the program would be nearly undetectable. But in schools where up to 60 percent of the students do not receive any public aid, it has the potential to bring about a culture shift.