The Morning Call

Trump administra­tion works to weaken school nutrition standards

- By Alfred Lubrano

In their last days in office, Trump administra­tion officials are trying to reduce nutrition requiremen­ts for school meals, seeking to undo changes initiated by the Obama administra­tion a decade ago.

The U.S. Department of Agricultur­e says it wants to allow school districts to be more “flexible” with rules that previously stipulated 100% whole grains, reductions in sodium levels and a switch to fat-free flavored milk.

The Trump administra­tion would halve whole-grain requiremen­ts to 50%, do away with sodium-reduction targets and reintroduc­e 1% chocolate milk.

The administra­tion’s stance, which critics say would make school meals less healthy, is seen as yet another slap at President Barack Obama, as well as at former first lady Michelle Obama, who championed nutrition standards and helped inspire the bipartisan Healthy Hunger-Free Kids Act of 2010, whose 10-year anniversar­y is next week. Over the last four years, President Donald Trump has made no secret of wanting to reverse his predecesso­r’s accomplish­ments.

Anti-hunger advocates say the rule change will disproport­ionately affect low-income children who depend on school meals for balanced nutrition.

“It’s yet another example of the Trump administra­tion ignoring science,” said Kathy Fisher, policy director of the nonprofit Greater Philadelph­ia Coalition Against Hunger, which helps connect people in need to food programs. “Medical profession­als and nutritioni­sts helped create these rules years ago because they’re best for kids.”

The School District of Philadelph­ia says it will not be following the proposed Trump administra­tion flexibilit­ies, but will instead adhere to the Obama-era guidelines.

“Children are used to them, and it is our intention not to change back,” said Wayne Grasela, senior vice president at the district.

Amy Virus, manager, administra­tive and supportive services for the district, agreed. What the Trump administra­tion is doing, she said, “essentiall­y will not have an impact” on Philadelph­ia’s public schools.

The USDA says food rules for school meals should change because data shows that 25% of nutrients are currently being “wasted.” Children don’t like the healthier options, the USDA says, and many simply aren’t eating what’s being served, according to a spokespers­on: “If they are not eating, children are not benefiting, and we don’t want to let that happen on our watch.”

Fisher disagreed, saying that research shows that kids have grown accustomed to more healthful foods. She also pointed out that Trump has attempted to undercut kids’ nutrition before by recommendi­ng slashing food stamp benefits (now known as SNAP, for Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance) three times, which ran counter to the will of members of both parties in Congress. Children, the elderly and disabled people receive the most SNAP benefits.

The run at school meals is another example of the Trump administra­tion’s numerous last-minute efforts to change U.S. policy.

The White House sent the USDA a proposal three days after the presidenti­al election that would allow poultry plants the right to increase their work-line speeds. During the Obama administra­tion, officials had rejected a similar request from poultry producers on the grounds that a faster process would endanger workers.

The administra­tion is also working to cap the visas of foreign students and restrict scientific research by the Environmen­tal Protection Agency. Just on Monday, administra­tion officials rejected tougher standards on soot, the nation’s most widespread deadly air pollutant.

“Trump hates anything that was Obama but also loves anything that’s corporate,” said Marion Nestle, professor emerita of nutrition, food studies and public health at New York University.

Nestle suggested that by cutting school-meal standards, the Trump administra­tion is aiding companies that supply food, since healthy food is more costly.

USDAoffici­als disagree, saying the administra­tion is balancing the needs of various groups to offer what’s best for American students.

“USDA is committed to working with states, school nutrition profession­als, private industry, and other stakeholde­rs to develop a forward-thinking strategy that ensures school nutrition standards are both healthful and practical,” the spokespers­on said.

“[The agency] will continue to listen to our stakeholde­rs and provide … technical assistance where needed to ensure their … success in running these critical nutrition assistance programs.”

In 2017, his first year in office, Trump tried to change the Obama-era grain, sodium and milk stipulatio­ns, but was later rebuffed by a federal judge who, ruling on a technicali­ty, said the administra­tion had not altered the guidelines in the proper manner.

But recently, the administra­tion has made another go of it. This is in spite of an overwhelmi­ng set of comments [more than 90%] by experts and others nationwide saying it was the wrong thing to do.

The administra­tion is racing to make changes before the inaugurati­on of President-elect Joe Biden. To get its rule promulgate­d, the administra­tion must hold yet another comment period that will last until Christmast­ime. Then it must be written and ready to go before Inaugurati­on Day on Jan. 20.

“They’re running up against the clock,” according to a statement from the Heritage Foundation, a conservati­ve think tank. “They need to finish under deadline, but also make sure they cross their t’s and dot their i’s, so they can survive any legal challenges.”

Although a new president will be in charge soon, that doesn’t mean potential Trump administra­tion changes can be easily reversed.

Unlike an executive order that a new president could rescind simply by signing his name, completed regulation­s such as Trump’s desired school-meal nutrition alteration­s are much more difficult to overturn. It would take a court decision or another painstakin­g rule-making effort, experts said.

“The likely outcome will be that Biden wouldn’t be able to change Trump’s potential new rule for the rest of this school year and into the next school year,” said Geri Henchy, director of nutrition policy for the Washington, D.C., Food Research & Action Center, the largest anti-hunger lobby in the United States. “In the long run, Trump will fail, but in the short term, he may succeed.”

Ultimately, given the outcome of the election, advocates are left wondering why any of this is happening at all.

“Now would be a better time to worry about the COVID-19 crisis and the fact that people who’ve lost their jobs don’t have enough to eat,” said Fisher of the Greater Philadelph­ia Coalition. “This is a waste of people’s time.

“Just don’t do it.”

 ?? ILANAPANIC­H-LINSMAN/THE NEWYORKTIM­ES ?? Students pick up lunches at Guerrero Thompson Elementary School in Austin, Texas, on Nov. 4, 2019. The Trump administra­tion plans to roll back school nutrition standards championed by Michelle Obama.
ILANAPANIC­H-LINSMAN/THE NEWYORKTIM­ES Students pick up lunches at Guerrero Thompson Elementary School in Austin, Texas, on Nov. 4, 2019. The Trump administra­tion plans to roll back school nutrition standards championed by Michelle Obama.

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