The Morning Call

Federal ban could eliminate chocolate milk from Pa. schools

- By Jason Nark

Chocolate milk, a cafeteria staple once championed as nature’s sports drink, could be booted from elementary and middle schools across the country.

The U.S. Department of Agricultur­e, in an effort to fight childhood obesity, recently proposed allowing “flavored milk” for high school students only, to “reduce exposure to added sugars and promote the more nutrient-dense choice of unflavored milk for young children when their tastes are being formed.”

The Philadelph­ia school district, which serves low-fat chocolate milk and plain low-fat milk in all schools, declined to comment on the USDA proposal, and Pennsylvan­ia’s department of education did not immediatel­y return a request for comment.

In Pennsylvan­ia, home to approximat­ely 5,000 dairy operations, farmers say the proposal is just another knock on the milk business. Dairy farmers have long lamented the push for less fat in milks, along with the onslaught of alternativ­es made with almonds and oats.

“Yes, our nation’s bureaucrat­s, under the premise that a small daily serving of milk served in schools is creating childhood obesity, are teeing up to remove flavored milk as an option in school cafeterias. All milk, flavored or not, is a proven powerhouse for our children’s minds, bodies, and growth, especially for healthy developmen­t,” said Dave Smith, executive director of the PA Dairymen’s Associatio­n.

One USDA proposal, which wouldn’t go into effect until the 2025-26 school year, would limit K-5 students to a variety of unflavored milk.

Smith, of the Dairymen’s Associatio­n, said school districts are major supplier of meals for children facing food insecurity and that chocolate milk has long been a trusted way to introduce milk to picky eaters.

“Surely, the federal government and the USDA can find more important and meaningful issues to focus on than taking away an 8 oz. per-day serving of flavored milk from our children,” he said.

Hundreds of dairy farms in Pennsylvan­ia have shuttered in recent years, particular­ly during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic when schools closed and kids couldn’t drink any milk, flavored or not.

 ?? CHERYL GERBER/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Chocolate milk, a cafeteria staple, could be booted from elementary schools and middle schools throughout the country.
CHERYL GERBER/THE NEW YORK TIMES Chocolate milk, a cafeteria staple, could be booted from elementary schools and middle schools throughout the country.

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