Ledger-Enquirer

New guidelines put less sugar, salt on menu for school meals

- BY LINDA QIU NYT News Service

School meals will soon contain less salt and sugar, but can still include chocolate milk, under new nutrition guidelines released by the Biden administra­tion.

The Agricultur­e Department announced Wednesday that it had finalized the regulation it had first proposed in February 2023, having weakened several provisions after feedback from food companies, school nutrition profession­als and over 136,000 public comments.

“All of this is designed to ensure that students have quality meals and that we meet parents’ expectatio­n that their children are receiving healthy and nutritious meals at school,” Tom Vilsack, the agricultur­e secretary, said in a call with reporters Tuesday.

The new guidelines seek to better align school meals with federal dietary standards and build on a 2010 law that aimed to make cafeteria breakfasts and lunches healthier. That law, championed by Michelle Obama when she was the first lady, became embroiled in political debate almost immediatel­y.

The Trump administra­tion tried repeatedly to roll back nutrition standards, and the Biden administra­tion relaxed certain provisions to provide more flexibilit­y during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

About 28.6 million students received or purchased lunch through the national school lunch program in the 2023 fiscal year, and the school lunch and breakfast programs cost the federal government about $21 billion.

When the Agricultur­e Department proposed updates to the standards last year, school nutrition profession­als called the guidelines unrealisti­c to enforce, and dairy groups expressed concerns over what they called a push to limit milk. The final rule reflects some of those concerns.

Under the rule, which will go into effect July 1, schools will need to limit the amount of added sugars in cereals and yogurts they serve beginning in the 2025-26 academic year and gradually step up reductions in other foods.

Added sugars currently provide about 17% of calories in school breakfasts and 11% in school lunches on average, according to a May 2022 government report. Federal dietary guidelines recommend that no more than 10% of daily calories come from added sugars.

Jamie B. Bussel of the Robert Wood Johnson

Foundation, a health-focused nonprofit group, said the new limit represente­d a “significan­t step toward reducing kids’ risk of chronic illnesses like Type 2 diabetes and heart disease.”

The Sugar Associatio­n, a trade group, said it supported limiting added sugars in a weekly menu but called applying limits to individual products like flavored dairy products “arbitrary.” The group also warned that the new standards might lead to increased use of artificial sweeteners, which is not addressed but could have its own health ramificati­ons.

Schools will need to reduce sodium in lunches by 15% from current levels and in breakfasts by 10% by the 2027-28 academic year. This was scaled back from a proposed reduction of 30% by the 2029-30 school year. Vilsack said the Agricultur­e Department was unable to more meaningful­ly cut salt because it was essentiall­y handcuffed by a policy rider in a spending package Congress approved in March limiting sodium reduction in school meals.

Current standards limit sodium for students in grades K-5 to 1,650 milligrams for breakfast and lunch combined, and the policy rider essentiall­y capped the level at 1,420 milligrams. Federal dietary guidelines recommend no more than 1,500 milligrams of sodium daily for children ages 4 through 8.

Dairy, too, was spared from further reductions. Students can still glug chocolate, strawberry and other flavored milks under the final rule, provided that the beverages meet the limit on added sugars.

The final rule also retains the current standard requiring that 80% of cereals and legumes offered be whole grains. The department had considered requiring all grains to be whole, with one exception a week for a refined grain product.

The School Nutrition Associatio­n, which represents cafeteria workers and directors across the country, expressed appreciati­on that the finalized rule reflected its feedback. But the announceme­nt was met with mixed reaction from the food industry and health advocates.

The Internatio­nal Dairy Foods Associatio­n praised the decision to preserve flavored milk but said the Agricultur­e Department had “missed an opportunit­y” to restore whole and 2% milk to school meals.

Nancy Brown, chief executive of the American Heart Associatio­n, said her group was pleased by the caps on added sugars but disappoint­ed that the rule did not require 100% whole grains and more significan­t sodium reductions.

 ?? AUDRA MELTON NYT ?? The Agricultur­e Department has finalized a new rule to bring school meals more in line with federal dietary standards.
AUDRA MELTON NYT The Agricultur­e Department has finalized a new rule to bring school meals more in line with federal dietary standards.

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