The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

First lady’s healthy kids director knows good eating

- By Darlene Superville

The new director of Michelle Obama’s initiative against childhood obesity knows first-hand the benefits of healthy eating.

Debra “Deb” Eschmeyer and her new husband, Jeff, were preparing to move to Ecuador as Peace Corps volunteers when her high school sweetheart was diagnosed in February 2004 with type 1 diabetes. The trip was scrapped and Eschmeyer’s life took a different course.

She realized other people could stave off diabetes by cleaning up their diets. The Ohio native started a produce farmin her hometown of New Knoxville that offers fresh fruits and vegetables to about 100 families a week through a communitys­upported agricultur­e program. She later co-founded an organizati­on that sends volunteers into underserve­d schools to plant gardens and overhaul school lunches.

Seven months ago, Eschmeyer’s path led her to the White House. She’s the senior policy adviser for nutrition policy and the newest executive director of Michelle Obama’s 5-year-old initiative to reduce childhood obesity.

A lifelong child nutrition advocate, Eschmeyer says, “I’m used to getting things done.”

On her to-do list: protecting a federal law that introduced healthier foods in schools. She’ll also help with the roll-out of an updated “nutrition facts” label on packaged foods and prepare for the post-presidency phase of “Let’s Move,” the first lady’s anti-obesity initiative.

Congress has already rolled back some of the administra­tion’s attempts to make school foods healthier. A law governing child nutrition is up for renewal this year, and the healthier school foods are expected to come under stronger attack now that Congress is completely controlled by Republican­s. Many GOP lawmakers say the new rules go too far.

The School Nutrition Associatio­n, an industryba­cked group that represents school cafeteria workers, has fought the standards. The associatio­n says it favors kids eating healthier but argues that many school districts are losing money because students aren’t buying the new lunches.

Mrs. Obama says 95 percent of schools are meeting the science-based requiremen­ts.

“There’s not a politician that’s against healthy kids,” Eschmeyer told The Associated Press. “We’re all in the same boat when it comes to that.”

A 2002 graduate of Xavier University with degrees in internatio­nal affairs and marketing, Eschmeyer bears a resemblanc­e to actress Bellamy Young, who plays first lady Mellie Grant on the ABC television hit “Scandal.”

At the real White House, Eschmeyer replaced Sam Kass, who arrived with the Obamas in 2009, initially as the family chef. He later added the senior policy adviser and executive director titles Eschmeyer now holds. She earns $115,000 annually and does not cook for the Obamas.

The 35-year-old likes to take her three-person team out for “gym and dins” — a new workout routine followed by a healthy dinner.

Marion Nestle, a food expert and New York University nutrition professor, called Eschmeyer’s appointmen­t “brilliant.”

Nestle said FoodCorps, the school-based program Eschmeyer co- founded with financial support from the federal AmeriCorps national service program, has been “astonishin­gly successful.” Creating FoodCorps required “extraordin­ary social and political skills,” Nestle added, “all of which will come in handy in the White House.”

“She knows what’s important and has a good idea of how to get it, and it doesn’t hurt that she’s utterly charming,” Nestle said in an email. “If anyone can explain to Congress why the goals of ‘Let’s Move’ matter, and why the campaign’s very real gains must be protected, she can.”

Eschmeyer is also thinking about the post-White House future of “Let’s Move.”

She and Mrs. Obama have been reviewing the program with an eye on “making sure that we’re not going to lose momentum. We’re going to findaway that it sticks,” Eschmeyer said at a forum earlier this year.

“This is something that she’s committed to for the long haul,” she said of Mrs. Obama.

 ?? PHOTOS BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? First lady Michelle Obama, accompanie­d by Lets Move! Executive Director Deb Eschmeyer, right, talks with children in the East Room at the White House in Washington on June 3after they helped prepare and eat food harvested from the White House Kitchen...
PHOTOS BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS First lady Michelle Obama, accompanie­d by Lets Move! Executive Director Deb Eschmeyer, right, talks with children in the East Room at the White House in Washington on June 3after they helped prepare and eat food harvested from the White House Kitchen...
 ??  ?? Deb Eschmeyer
Deb Eschmeyer

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