Biden administration seeks to toughen school nutrition standards
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[February 04, 2023]
By Leah Douglas
(Reuters) -School meals for millions of children in the United States
would include less sugar, more whole grains, and lower sodium under new
standards proposed by the Biden administration on Friday.
Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said the updated standards, to be
rolled out over the next several years, were essential to tackling
health concerns like childhood obesity.
"This is a national security imperative. It’s a healthcare imperative
for our children. It’s an equity issue. It’s an educational achievement
issue. And it’s an economic competitiveness issue," he said in a
livestreamed event announcing the standards.
Under the proposed standards, by fall 2024, 80% of the grains provided
by schools would need to be whole grain. By fall 2025, there would be
limits for high-sugar products like cereals and yogurts, added sugar in
flavored milks, and sodium. Future years would see additional limits on
added sugar and sodium.
Some school nutrition directors worry the stricter guidelines will force
schools to scale back menus, inadvertently pushing students to less
healthy food choices.
"Most districts allow students to leave campus. They’ll be hitting the
convenience stores, the fast-food restaurants," said Michael Gasper,
nutrition services supervisor for the School District of Holmen,
Wisconsin. "Nutrition is only nutrition if they eat it."
School meal programs continue to struggle with inflated food prices and
labor shortages, making new regulations difficult to implement, Gasper
added.
The debate over school nutrition has spanned several administrations.
The Obama administration hiked standards, requiring schools to serve
fruits and vegetables daily and offer more whole grains. Under the Trump
administration, some of those requirements were rolled back.
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U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Tom
Vilsack speaks during a video conference with farmers, ranchers and
meat processors held by U.S. President Joe Biden from an auditorium
on the White House campus in Washington, U.S. January 3, 2022.
REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
The Food Research & Action Center, a
leading nutrition and hunger group, cheered Friday's announcement.
"These proposed evidence-based standards will make for a healthier
school day," said FRAC President Luis Guardia in a statement.
Dairy industry advocates pushed back on the potential limits to
flavored milk in schools.
"While we are pleased that this proposed rule continues to make
dairy central to child nutrition, we are concerned with USDA’s
ongoing efforts to propose limitations to milk and dairy in school
meals," said Michael Dykes, chief executive of the International
Dairy Foods Association.
About 30 million students eat school lunches and 15 million eat
school breakfasts each year, according to Department of Agriculture
data.
The Biden administration committed to updating school meal nutrition
standards as part of its strategy laid out at a conference on hunger
last year.
The USDA will collect comments on the proposed rule.
(Reporting by Leah Douglas; additional reporting by Christopher
Walljasper; editing by Frances Kerry and Jonathan Oatis)
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