Texarkana Gazette

Finally, some relief on school lunch nutrition

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To the great delight of many students and school lunch administra­tors, the Agricultur­e Department announced the relaxation of some strict school lunch nutrition rules.

Citing “operationa­l challenges” in meeting sodium, whole grain and milk requiremen­ts for the National School Lunch Program and School Breakfast Program, Agricultur­e Secretary Sonny Perdue signed a proclamati­on recently that will offer schools greater flexibilit­y and discretion in their lunch offerings. Specifical­ly, Perdue promised to continue allowing states to grant waivers to schools struggling to satisfy whole-grain requiremen­ts, while the agency draws up new regulation­s “to provide schools with additional options.” Schools will also be able to offer flavored, 1 percent fat milk, and sodium limits, which were scheduled to be reduced in the next school year—and again in 2022—will be held at current levels. The proclamati­on did not address other restrictio­ns on calories, fat and sugar.

“This announceme­nt is the result of years of feedback from students, schools and food service experts about the challenges they are facing in meeting the final regulation­s for school meals,” Perdue said at an event in Leesburg, Va., to commemorat­e School Nutrition Employee Week. “If kids aren’t eating the food, and it’s ending up in the trash, they aren’t getting any nutrition, thus underminin­g the intent of the program.”

Food waste has certainly been a problem, as students have rejected the taste of the new meals. The nutrition rules, which are detailed in thousands of pages of regulation­s and were borne out of the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act of 2010, have prompted a significan­t backlash from students, many of whom posted pictures of meager and unappetizi­ng foods on Twitter with the sarcastic hash tag #ThanksMich­elleObama, in reference to the former first lady’s role as champion of the nutrition mandates.

Many stopped participat­ing in the program altogether. In fact, despite steady growth during the prior decade, the program saw a decline of 1.4 million students (4.5 percent) during the first three years under the new nutrition guidelines, a September 2015 U.S. Government Accountabi­lity Office report noted.

This meant less revenue for school districts, even as the standards raised food and labor costs by $1.2 billion in fiscal year 2015 alone, leading to many cuts in cafeteria staff, the School Nutrition Associatio­n and School Superinten­dents Associatio­n lamented. “(M) eeting these mandates has harmed the financial health of nearly 70 percent of school meal programs surveyed, with fewer than 3 percent reporting a financial benefit,” a 2015 SNA survey found.

It is encouragin­g that the USDA is revisiting and relaxing school lunch nutrition regulation­s, but perhaps this is a good time to re-evaluate whether providing subsidized lunches to schoolchil­dren should be the province of the federal government, particular­ly in light of President Donald Trump’s recent executive order to “protect and preserve state and local control” of K-12 schools. Like many other government programs, the school lunch program has seen an inexorable expansion in size and scope over the years, leading to unintended consequenc­es including massive waste.

The Orange County Register

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