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Lawmakers, Schools Worry About Meal Costs For More Nutritious Lunches

MARY CLARE JALONICK   06/ 1/11 06:34 PM ET   AP

WASHINGTON — Eating healthy food isn't always cheap, and some conservatives in Congress are concerned that the Obama administration's effort to make school lunches more nutritious is a luxury the nation can't afford.

Many schools, especially the poorest ones, agree. They say new rules issued by the Agriculture Department in January will require them to buy pricier foods and more equipment at a time when federal and state budgets are tight and food costs are rising.

The new menus will cost an additional 14 cents a meal, according to the Agriculture Department. A spending bill approved Tuesday in the House Appropriations Committee estimates that the new lunch rules could cost schools an additional $7 billion over five years. Saying that "unrealistic demands" can lead to burdensome costs, the Republican bill directs USDA to rewrite the rules so they wouldn't force schools to spend additional money.

"I think what is unanswered is where will the resources come from," says Lucy Gettman of the National School Boards Association, which has said the bill puts too many unfunded mandates on schools.

Under the USDA rules, schools would have to cut sodium in subsidized meals for low-income children by more than half, use more whole grains and serve low-fat milk. They also would limit kids to only one cup of starchy vegetables a week, so schools couldn't offer french fries every day.

Potatoes are cheap and schools said that replacing them in the menus would increase costs. More expensive whole grains would be incrementally increased to the point that most grains in lunches are whole.

Schools also have expressed concern about requirements to serve more dark-green vegetables. According to Diane Pratt-Heavner of the School Nutrition Association, which represents school lunch workers, many schools have struggled to get kids to try spinach, collard greens and turnip greens and have had more luck with broccoli and lettuce. But some lettuce prices spiked earlier this year because of harsh winter weather.

Equipment is also a major cost, and the School Nutrition Association has expressed concern that additional coolers and freezers would be required to store the larger amount of fruits, vegetables and proteins required by the rules.

Some of these costs will be defrayed through a 6 cent-per-meal reimbursement included in a child nutrition bill signed by President Barack Obama earlier this year, along with a provision in that legislation requiring schools to increase the cost of paid meals to make up for some of the higher costs. But some schools say it won't be enough.

Sally Spero, food planning supervisor for the San Diego unified school district, said the changes to school breakfast programs – they call for more proteins and fruits and vegetables – will cost her district $4 million.

"We're being asked to serve a much bigger meal than my colleagues and I think that the kids can even eat," Spero said. "Nothing is more upsetting than to see that food go into the trash."

She said the changes could mean that school districts may have to skimp in different ways, like serving more canned fruits instead of fresh fruits, despite government efforts to promote the opposite.

"I just feel like there are a lot of unintended consequences," Spero said.

Advocates say that many schools are already following the new rules and that changes may be more expensive now but will defray health costs in the long term. The government spends billions of dollars a year on obesity-related diseases like diabetes. First lady Michelle Obama has made the healthier lunches a major part of her "Let's Move" campaign to combat the growing childhood obesity problem.

"People think because they aren't paying for it now they can save money, but we are paying for it now," said Margo Wootan, the director of nutrition policy at the advocacy group Center for Science in the Public Interest.

___

Associated Press writer Christine Armario in Miami contributed to this report.

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WASHINGTON — Eating healthy food isn't always cheap, and some conservatives in Congress are concerned that the Obama administration's effort to make school lunches more nutritious is a luxury th...
WASHINGTON — Eating healthy food isn't always cheap, and some conservatives in Congress are concerned that the Obama administration's effort to make school lunches more nutritious is a luxury th...
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11:59 AM on 06/07/2011
if food goes to the trash they really need to start implementing Composting on a national scale for school and their lunches. That compost can supplement a garden if they have the space for education and growing their own produce for the kitchen.

Its sad when people only focus on losses when in reality we want to stick to this paradigm and deny the reality that we can turn that "waste" into something useful. Such as soil to grow food we're whining about is too expensive so our children can be healthy. Use your noggin
05:50 AM on 06/07/2011
"Eating healthy food isn't always cheap...a luxury the nation can't afford."

Is this the type of concept Americans wants to promote as an example of American Exceptionalism?
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TSRVT
Cantankerous New England curmudgeon
03:24 PM on 06/06/2011
Penny wise and pound (no pun intended) foolish. I have been following Jamie Oliver as he undertakes the Sisyphean task of changing school lunch menus. The inertia of these administrators is astounding. They are poisoning these kids and want to keep on doing so. It's beyond sad, it's borderline criminal.
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askandtell
Proud Minnesotan; Inspired by Paul Wellstone
10:04 AM on 06/06/2011
This story is misleading; school lunches aren't provided free for most students; parents either pack a lunch or pay for their children's lunches. Districts have been subsidized by the junk food industry by adding chip and pop vending machines to the lunch room. I'm all for teaching healthy eating habits and I'd pay a few pennies more for lunches.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
El Chingaso
Fighting for mental superiority...
10:35 AM on 06/05/2011
Mind-Bender: "Its not what you make (monetarily), it's what you do with what you do make..."

I'd like to see the bank statements -- or some sort of financial records -- of the parents who claim they can't pay for their kids' breakfast
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Paul Houston
British and a London resident
07:29 AM on 06/04/2011
It seems to me that there is a bit of pushing the problem onto somebody else's books. If there is no improvement in children's nutrition and diet, there are long term problems such as type II diabetes, hypertension, heart disease and cancer, but then again the school districts do not have to pay the costs for the treatment. All to save fourteen cents per day.
12:06 AM on 06/04/2011
It appears as if the gov't getting involved is the problem (again). The people who are making and serving the meals actually at the school could figure out what foods the kids would eat as well as providing good nutrition.

You can lead a kid to broccoli, but you cannot make them eat.
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graywolf68
Is that true or did you hear it on Fox News?
01:12 AM on 06/04/2011
In the majority of schools across the nation, there is no "making" of school lunches anymore. Schools stopped hiring skilled cafeteria staff in favor of *servers*. That way nothing fresh would ever need to be maintained. Everything bought was precooked, processed garbage that only needed to be heated up and slopped on a plate, NO SKILL REQUIRED.
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Karl Wilder
02:40 PM on 06/03/2011
Would it be ridiculous to suggest that the parents who spawn these children pay the cost of feeding them decent food?

Seriously, how about we stop having children if we can't afford them?
03:10 PM on 06/03/2011
That's blasphemy on a lib website. Schools are now feeding centers - teaching kids from age 6 that the gov't will provide for you. Libs complain that : we aren't feeding the parents too, we aren't providing dinner, and that we're not feeding kids in the summer and days off school
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maninal2
Without knowledge action is useless
03:20 PM on 06/03/2011
You appear deraged. Do you need assistance?
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FiredUpRTG
Don't start no stuff; won't be no stuff…
03:55 PM on 06/03/2011
In NY, parents DO pay for lunch, and those who can't pay a reduced price or free. Do you want the poor kids to get hungry in school and misbehave out of hunger until they pass out?

Also, unfortunately, in many homes across the country, the school meal is more nutritious — and just more — than what they get at home.
04:05 PM on 06/03/2011
Then perhaps we should stop rewarding these people for having kids they can't or won't provide for.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GrandmaG
Tree hugging, veggie eating Democrat
02:27 PM on 06/03/2011
Oh so NOW thay complain about healthy food costing more. For years the old gripe has been why don't people eat healthier, spend those food stamps on healthier food insatead of hot dogs and mac n cheese? NOW they get it that healthier food COSTS MUCH MORE. YES IT DOES. I could have told them that YEARS ago. We can afford to give breaks and huge piles of cash to big buisness and oil but can't feed our children properly. Isn't that nice.
03:13 PM on 06/03/2011
You do realize there is a difference between food stamps and subsidized breakfast/lunch in school right?

What a parent can prepare at home for 2-3 kids is a lot different than what an industrial kitchen can prepare for 1000 kids - where likely most will be thrown away and leftovers can't be kept and the school employees have no say in if the kid eats it or not.

We're not giving big piles of cash to businesses and oil - that's liberal nonsense. Feeding children properly is the responsibility of the people that created them - PARENTS.
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maninal2
Without knowledge action is useless
03:25 PM on 06/03/2011
You need to turn off FOX and read. The agricultural subsidy is worth up to $30 billion, $5 billion of which is what you might call handouts, direct payments to farmers. The US government subsidises oil producers $53 billion in 2011 alone.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
GrandmaG
Tree hugging, veggie eating Democrat
09:54 AM on 06/06/2011
You Do know don't you that sadly there are parents in this world who are not responsible. Should little children pay for it? Should they not be given proper nutrition and a chance to succeed? Do you blame them for their parents' faults? Or that there are parent who may be trying their best and still cannot make ends meet, so you choose to let the children go without eating properly? I choose not to be that selfish. I may not be rich by any means but I sure do hope to see all children fed and have an opportunity for an education. This is one of the richest countries in the world and there should NOT be hungry children here. You who would cut programs to help out of your own personal greed are what holds this country back. Those very programs are the ones which can assist parents who don't know enough to be responsible and provide. They can be taught or can perform public service to help offset the expense. But to simply say sorry children, no food for you is unacceptable. And YES we do allow corporations and Oil companies cash that they don''t need and should not be given. Do your research. Oh and BTW-Liberal is NOT a dirty word.
02:14 PM on 06/03/2011
It's total horse manure to say it's going to cost that much more to provide children with a properly balanced lunch. What about schools starting a volunteer gardening project and teach kids how to plant and grow their own fruits and vegetables??? I personally think our schools don't teach our kids what they will really need to know in the world like proper nutrition, and how to budget their finances properly. So many kids graduate knowing all about the civil war but nothing about how to even balance a checkbook or boil water. These are the tools they will need in life. I think it's time to re-evaluate what children really NEED to be learning. As for school lunches, I think more parents need to get involved and perhaps do more packing from home and stop relying so heavily on the schools to cook for them. You are your childs best advocate and they will learn more from their parents behavior than from anyone else. In today's times... I can see why so many children are being home schooled.
03:14 PM on 06/03/2011
-What about schools starting a volunteer gardening project and teach kids how to plant and grow their own fruits and vegetables­??? -

Now imagine the gov't regulations involved in that. The new gov't employees needed for oversight and regulation. The liability for lawsuits!
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Studebaker Hawke
Stercus Accidit
07:28 PM on 06/05/2011
Actually, many schools do have garden programs. And in the summers, non-profits distribute sandwiches to low income children. It is all well and good to pontificate the parents should be responsible, but responsible or not, the children are the ones who suffer. Or, would you have them work for their meals? Before you open your mouth again, open your mind.
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maninal2
Without knowledge action is useless
01:20 PM on 06/03/2011
Sally Spero, food planning supervisor for the San Diego unified school district, said the changes to school breakfast programs – they call for more proteins and fruits and vegetables – will cost her district $4 million.

That's $.16 more per child per day. She should be fired for child abuse.
03:15 PM on 06/03/2011
How about the parents who created that kid should be jailed for child abuse?
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maninal2
Without knowledge action is useless
03:26 PM on 06/03/2011
Do you need help?
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maninal2
Without knowledge action is useless
01:13 PM on 06/03/2011
What do you expect when you allow school districts to formulate a business plan that classifies children as an expense. The business model is what's failing education.
03:15 PM on 06/03/2011
It's reality - schools have to operate within a budget. How about it's the parents of these kids that is what's failing. If you can't afford to feed them - don't breed them.
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maninal2
Without knowledge action is useless
03:27 PM on 06/03/2011
Did you read the article? It doesn't appear that way. Try reading it again slower this time.
12:55 PM on 06/03/2011
We sacrifice the health of our children to send billions in economic aid to Egypt.

GO AMERICA!!!!!!!!
03:16 PM on 06/03/2011
I didn't sacrifice the health or food of my children - then again - I only had the kids I could afford to take care of - if everyone did that this wouldn't be an issue.
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maninal2
Without knowledge action is useless
03:30 PM on 06/03/2011
Your anecdotes have no validity.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
deweydecimal
@DeweyMai on Twitter
12:21 PM on 06/03/2011
Penny-wise, pound-foolish.
03:17 PM on 06/03/2011
Nice rhetoric - but the administrators can't come up with money out of thin air.
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maninal2
Without knowledge action is useless
03:28 PM on 06/03/2011
They sure seem to hire more and more administrators out of thin air. Add to that the sweet heart deals between boards and the companies providing substandard food to children.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
deweydecimal
@DeweyMai on Twitter
07:31 PM on 06/03/2011
No they can't, cut the military budget, bring our boys home, wean America off oil and especially foreign oil altogether for its energy needs and stop the erosion of our tax base off of debunked laissez-faire economics.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Raven1970
Do not be a pre-checked box, opt out
11:33 AM on 06/03/2011
Problems, problems, problems...this is always the same story from the schools, where are we going to get the money? we can't do it...when are we going to start putting people in these positions that actually look for solutions? The real problem is our children suffer from malnutrition from the lack of a balanced diet and worse, they are being fed food that actually harms their health...that's the problem, the money to change that is an obstacle...find a way to get over, around it, whatever you have to. Don't be so afraid to make change for the better.