The Mercury News

Veggies could be off school menus

Trump proposal also would redefine what counts as a snack

- By Lola Fadulu New York Times

WASHINGTON >> The Trump administra­tion moved on Friday to roll back school nutrition standards championed by Michelle Obama, an effort long sought by food manufactur­ers and some school districts that have chafed at the cost of Obama’s prescripti­ons for fresh fruit and vegetables.

The proposed rule by the Agricultur­e Department, coming on her birthday, would give schools more latitude to decide how much fruit to offer during breakfast and which types of vegetables to provide. It also would broaden what counts as a snack.

The rule was applauded by food companies but condemned by nutritioni­sts who predicted starchy foods like potatoes would replace green vegetables and fattening food like hamburgers would become staples of school “snacks.”

“Schools and school districts continue to tell us that there is still too much food waste and that more common-sense flexibilit­y is needed to provide students nutritious and appetizing meals,” Sonny Perdue, the agricultur­e secretary, said in a statement. “We listened and now we’re getting to work.”

The Agricultur­e Depart

ment said the changes reflected requests made over the past two years by those who serve meals to children and teenagers throughout the school year. The department plans to release a regulatory analysis and open the public comment period on Jan. 21.

The proposal is the department’s second attempt to roll back nutrition standards promoted by Obama through the 2010 Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act, which required schools to serve children fruits and vegetables every day and to offer more whole-grain foods and fat-free or lowfat milk. It also required school meal providers to limit calories and reduce saturated fat, trans fat and sodium.

The department finalized a rule in December 2018 that gave school meal providers permission to serve flavored low-fat milk in the national school lunch program and school breakfast program. That rule stipulated that only half of the weekly grains must be whole grain and it gave providers more time to reduce sodium in meals.

Friday’s proposal goes further. It allows schools to adjust fruit servings during breakfast, to reduce waste, it said, and to make room for “meats and meat alternates.” Under current regulation, providers must provide one cup of fruit during breakfast for students in kindergart­en through 12th grade.

The new rule also would relax current vegetable requiremen­ts, which say providers must offer a variety of vegetables, like leafy greens and starchy foods. A department official said the goal was to give more flexibilit­y, not change the amount of vegetables offered.

The proposal also would allow schools to offer lunch entrees for à la carte purchase, in order to reduce waste.

Child nutritioni­sts said the proposed rule could lead to school meal providers turning away from healthy foods instead of coming up with ways to make the food more appealing. More flexibilit­y on the types of vegetables offered could lead to meals dominated by starchy foods, like potatoes, which are cheaper than green vegetables.

The National Alliance for Nutrition and Activity said allowing lunch entrees for à la carte purchase would create a “giant junk food loophole.” It also could lead to children frequently turning to meals that are meant to be eaten once a week, like hamburgers.

But conservati­ves applauded.

“The school breakfast and lunch programs have been riddled with waste for a long time, plate waste, being one, and that turns into financial waste,” said Jonathan Butcher, a senior policy analyst at the conservati­ve Heritage Foundation.

He said that “clearly, no one wants kids to be served unhealthy foods,” but if nutrition requiremen­ts lead to children not eating the food offered, the standards are pointless.

The School Nutrition Associatio­n, which represents cafeteria workers and the food companies that provide schools with food, applauded the proposal and looked forward to more details.

“Updated nutrition standards for school meals have been a tremendous success overall, but a few of the requiremen­ts contribute­d to reduced lunch participat­ion, higher costs and food waste,” Gay Anderson, the president of the associatio­n, said in a statement.

The rule is one of two the Agricultur­e Department plans to propose next week. The other rule would give meal providers more flexibilit­y under the summer meal programs.

 ?? ANDA CHU — STAFF FILE PHOTO ?? Lunches that have a green vegetable are given to students at Peres Elementary School in Richmond in 2017. New guidelines would relax the current green vegetable regulation.
ANDA CHU — STAFF FILE PHOTO Lunches that have a green vegetable are given to students at Peres Elementary School in Richmond in 2017. New guidelines would relax the current green vegetable regulation.

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