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USDA Wants Potatoes Out Of School Lunches

By DAVID SHARP   09/26/11 04:13 AM ET   AP

Usda Potatoes
Baked potatoes are displayed in a dish during lunch at Gardiner High School in Gardiner, Maine. New guidelines proposed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture would eliminate potatoes altogether from school breakfasts and drastically reduce the amount of potatoes served in lunches.

PORTLAND, Maine -- Sen. Susan Collins, who hails from Maine's potato country and picked potatoes as a girl, is working to restore some respect for the humble spud, which is on the verge of being virtually banished from the nation's school lunch programs.

New guidelines from the U.S. Department of Agriculture would eliminate potatoes altogether from school breakfasts and drastically reduce the amount of potatoes served in lunches.

Collins, R-Maine, said the unassuming white potato has its place alongside more highfalutin vegetables in school cafeterias. She believes potatoes are healthy, as long as they're not fried.

"I certainly agree that french fries is not the healthiest choice, but a baked potato can be a good source of potassium for our children," said Collins, who has enlisted Democratic Sen. Mark Udall of Colorado, another potato-growing state, to help her fight the anti-spud movement.

Collins and Udall will attempt to strip funding to implement the new guidelines when the USDA appropriations bill goes to the Senate floor, sometime in the coming weeks or months. The House-approved USDA appropriations bill already prohibits funds from being used to further the proposed USDA guidelines.

The proposal announced by the USDA in January puts focus on fruits, vegetables and whole grains while limiting sodium, banning trans fats and reducing starches.

The guidelines would limit starchy vegetables – corn, peas and lima beans, in addition to potatoes – to two servings a week. That's about one cup.

Potato growers across the nation claimed the first major nutritional overhaul of students' meals in more than a decade unfairly singled out and stigmatized spuds, which already took their lumps along with pasta and bread and other carbo-loaded foods during the low-carb diet craze a few years ago.

Many scientists insist there are better alternatives.

Regardless whether it's baked, boiled or fried, a medium-sized potato packs up to 220 calories and is a food that has been associated with weight gain in the U.S., said Dr. David Heber, director of the UCLA Center For Human Nutrition and author of "What Color is Your Diet?"

And folks needn't feel sorry for potato-loving kids, he said.

"They're not going to stop eating potatoes. They'll be eating them at home, and they'll be eating them in restaurants. But I think the school cafeteria should be place where children learn about healthy nutrition, not a copy of a fast-food restaurant," Heber said.

The National Potato Council says the proposal would carry a large but unknown cost to farmers in lost sales, as well as a $6.8 billion cost for school districts that will have to line up more costly foods mandated under the guidelines.

And some questioned whether reducing potato consumption at school would yield big improvements in children's health.

Putting an increased emphasis on physical education – getting couch potatoes into the gymnasium or onto a sports field – would have a far greater impact on reducing childhood obesity, said Tim Hobbs, director of development for the Maine Potato Board.

"There's other ways to address childhood obesity. I don't know that limiting potatoes in the school lunch program is going to have the desired impact," Hobbs said.

Virtually all agree that the problem is the french fry, a ubiquitous item on school menus in many parts of the country, sometimes getting served every day.

Reducing the servings of potatoes and french fries is necessary to make room for more servings of healthier vegetables, which are being muscled off school menus, said Margo G. Wootan, director of nutrition policy at the Center for Science in the Public Interest.

But some argued getting rid of the french fry doesn't require getting rid of the potato.

Heidi Kessler, school nutrition manager for Let's Go, a program aimed at fighting childhood obesity at the Barbara Bush Children's Hospital at Maine Medical Center, supports the goals of the proposed school lunch nutrition guidelines. But she agreed with Collins that the USDA should have focused on the way potatoes are prepared, targeting french fries instead of all white potatoes.

"They're inexpensive, kids like them and they're easy to store," she said, "and they absolutely have nutrient value that can contribute to a healthy diet."

Many schools already are reducing potatoes.

In Portland, where 5,000 meals a day are served at 16 schools, potatoes are limited to once or twice a week, said Ron Adams, food service director for Portland schools.

"The potatoes and some of those other starchy vegetables are part of a balanced diet," Adams said. "It's about how often that those items are on the menu."

The new school lunch guidelines were required by the Healthy Hunger-Free Kids Act, which required the USDA to issue science-based guidelines based on recommendations of the Institute of Medicine.

If all goes according to plan, the new rules would take effect next summer. But first, the USDA must review more than 130,000 comments from supporters and opponents. All of those comments will be considered before the final rule is issued, said Kevin Concannon, USDA undersecretary for food, nutrition and consumer services.

Some see the writing on the wall.

The government already put the kibosh on potatoes in the USDA's program for low-income pregnant women and their children, known as WIC, barring federal dollars from being spent on potatoes.

Now the USDA is going after potatoes again.

Wootan said parents are on board.

"When parents tell their kids to eat their vegetables, they don't mean french fries. They don't mean hash browns, either. Potatoes have a role in the school lunch program, but they shouldn't on the menu every day. The USDA proposal is completely reasonable," she said.

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PORTLAND, Maine -- Sen. Susan Collins, who hails from Maine's potato country and picked potatoes as a girl, is working to restore some respect for the humble spud, which is on the verge of being virtu...
PORTLAND, Maine -- Sen. Susan Collins, who hails from Maine's potato country and picked potatoes as a girl, is working to restore some respect for the humble spud, which is on the verge of being virtu...
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NHGranite
Killer Koala escapes diner, eats shoots & leaves
12:29 AM on 11/21/2011
Schools even in Maine are ruining potatoes by frying them. Pizza is not a vegetable, and neither are fried roots.
08:56 PM on 10/05/2011
The point is, the USDA is attempting to ban and vilify a vegetable that is filling and satisfying, cheap, easy to store, easy to prepare, that has virtually no fat but has minerals, vitamins, protein and fiber. It's absurdly obvious that potatoes, like anything else, become fattening and unhealthy when doused in highly processed fat (oil) and/or disease causing dairy products.

Clearly the USDA has an interest in connecting the potato with these unhealthy products as if they are synonymous. Why? Perhaps because more and more people are moving toward whole foods-plant-starch-based diets.for health and are buying less meat and dairy- not only for the massive health benefits but because animal agriculture is completely unsustainable.

Don't forget, this is the same USDA that dumps the excess dairy and beef they purchase (the most unhealthy 'foods' on the face of the earth) into the school lunch program. Clearly, their campaigns have much more to do with ensuring corporate profit than 'the health of our children'.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Selgin
Destroying Murica with Tastefully Arranged Mopsink
07:23 PM on 09/28/2011
"The government already put the kibosh on potatoes in the USDA's program for low-income pregnant women and their children, known as WIC, barring federal dollars from being spent on potatoes."

In the real world (not Healthfadstan), potatoes are a perfect food for the poor. Inexpensive, calorie-dense, and have a long shelf life at room temperature. Compared to, say, leafy vegetables which are mostly water or fruit which are expensive and go bad quickly.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Fuddgate
Some assembly required
04:08 PM on 09/28/2011
You can have my potatoes when you pry them from my cold dead hands! Humans have been eating them for some 6000 years. Now the USDA says they are all bad. I think they are trying to micromanage something they don't entirely understand. Red Potatoes for the win!
i the ys
eternity takes no time at all
03:47 PM on 09/28/2011
Yes make pototoes illegal just like hemp. Who cares about facts, let's just outlaw them anyway.
Send people to jail for eating potatoes and tomatoes which are both in the deadly nightshade family.

There are too many ignorant people in areas of responsablity who shouldn't be there. We are daily witnessing the dumbing down of our once great nation. Welcome to the fall from grace.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Andrea Blackwell
Why watch the news? The truth's on Comedy Central!
06:53 PM on 10/19/2011
YOU KNOW? I was in school when Reagan turned ketchup into a vegetable. Just around the time he raided survivor benefits and told us orphans that WE did not need college to make it in the world. Some one shoulda told the world that. By the time I got my BS in telecom management, it was trumped by MCSE certs!
I have arthritis wrapped in a blanket of fibromyalgia and learned about nightshades recently. and JUST when I learned how to make a decent curry! sigh...but beware of the fool who weakens the body, instead of promoting good health. Tomatoes are on that list, but I seriously doubt the bobble-head doll knew anything about that because we would have been told. He was just trying to make cuts in school lunch budget. I think we lost corn or those rubber green beans while another school had a salad bar. I was class of '83.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Nic the wonder puppy
When life throws lemons, throw them back
12:14 PM on 09/28/2011
I'll take them
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ThisAlreadyHappened
Remember Whitman, Price, and Haddad!!!
03:48 AM on 09/28/2011
That potatoe bar in high school was a booming business. I can't imagine lunch without it.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mattsspats
i feel like i'm taking crazy pills!
11:49 AM on 09/28/2011
Nice Quale-ism! That was intentional, no?
i the ys
eternity takes no time at all
03:47 PM on 09/28/2011
POTATO
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ThisAlreadyHappened
Remember Whitman, Price, and Haddad!!!
08:23 PM on 09/28/2011
PotatNO it was not.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Stefan Sirucek
micro-bio is a serious condition.
11:06 PM on 09/27/2011
Potatoes are great! No need to fry or bake em. Just boil them up and add a bit of salt. This isn't rocket science.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Andrea Blackwell
Why watch the news? The truth's on Comedy Central!
07:02 PM on 10/19/2011
Google 'nightshades'. Here's and article about them...seems they've known about them for a VERY long time. http://noarthritis.com/nightshades.htm
When I was in high school, class of '83, Reagan turned ketchup into a vegetable in order to cut the school budget, while other schools had salad bars.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
BuckyJamesDio
This monkey's going to Heaven
10:53 PM on 09/27/2011
So that's what they mean by starch blockers. Gotcha.
02:13 PM on 09/27/2011
Potatoes are merely the latest scapegoat in a society where some people do not exercise enough to burn the calories they consume. It's a lot easier to blame one food than it is to overhaul a person's entire lifestyle.
02:09 PM on 09/27/2011
The dirty little secret is there is a GLOBAL shortage of potatoes. Google it...
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ThisAlreadyHappened
Remember Whitman, Price, and Haddad!!!
03:47 AM on 09/28/2011
There is a global shortage of everything. People are starving at levels never before witnessed.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DanoX
I'll be your snack-pack baby!
05:40 AM on 09/28/2011
Silly humans can't seem to stop having babies! Indeed they seem to think the more you have the better you are.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kaymettee
02:06 PM on 09/27/2011
I'm sick of this government trying to take over our lives. What gives them the right to tell us what our kids can or can't eat. If they spent the time running our country as they do giving us orders and banning what food we eat, etc, maybe we would end up with a better government instead of a bunch of stooges. Do they stay up all night dreaming these things up maybe hoping to get their name on a bill and therefore extending their name in government even if they no longr are in office. This is because of Obamas health care plan (another thing being forced on us) also unconstitutional but hey who cares!! That's the only reason to force this on us, because it will cost more for government health care. This is topped offf by his wife Michelle who for some reason thinks she has the right to control our diets She should shut up and take car of her own kids diets and also her own, look how much weight she put on since enjoying the good life. We're being destroyed by our own politicians making laws instead of enforcing the ones on the books. They seem to have a God complex. I'm so happy to be an Independent and intend to vote against all those taking away our constitutional rights. Now they want to take control of our health records. That's between us and our doctors NOT THE POLITICAL PARTY IN CONTROL.

stuff.
02:26 PM on 09/27/2011
You say "I'm sick of this government trying to take over our lives. What gives them the right to tell us what our kids can or can't eat [?]." But, really, it's for the good of the children. What's wrong with that? At home you can feed them whatever you want--pizza, tater tots, chicken McNuggets, soda pop, etc. . .
hell in a bucket
unable to dance I will crawl
01:32 AM on 09/28/2011
agreed. and everyone pays for their own food and healthcare.
08:37 PM on 10/05/2011
This is the same USDA that dumps the excess production of the dairy and beef industries (that manufacture the unhealthiest 'food' products on earth) into school lunches. The government cares about helping corporations make profits, not the health of children.
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10:18 PM on 09/27/2011
Send them to school with a sack lunch if you don't think what the school services. Freedom. It's a beautiful thing.
sole
Tinfoil - it's a medical condition
03:10 AM on 09/28/2011
Your logic falls along the same lines as this argument:

Why should there be a legal drinking age. If you don't want your kid doing it, just tell them no. Freedom, It's a beautiful thing.
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03:21 AM on 09/28/2011
*think what the school serves is right* jeez somedays I can't type
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kay Nicks
♫ Music is the vernacular of the human soul.
01:37 PM on 09/27/2011
The Govt really needs to simply mind their own business...
I despise do-gooder dictators with a passion...I doubt I'm alone..
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01:42 PM on 09/27/2011
Yeah we should let them eat chicken mcnuggets ....screw those kids
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kay Nicks
♫ Music is the vernacular of the human soul.
01:48 PM on 09/27/2011
Ya know, our parents took care of us growing up, without any help from big brother...
And I think we are just fine, no....?
02:23 PM on 09/27/2011
By "do-gooder dictators" you mean doctors and nutritionists?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kay Nicks
♫ Music is the vernacular of the human soul.
02:28 PM on 09/27/2011
It is stated. Government.
01:10 PM on 09/27/2011
Government is getting too involved in my life. I am an adult and can make my own decisions. In addition, I am the parent and I decide what my child does or does not eat, NOT the government. Government should be concentrating on getting us out of debt and creating jobs!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Beth Grierson
01:38 PM on 09/27/2011
Then can't you just decide not to have your child eat the government-provided lunch in the first place?
01:54 PM on 09/27/2011
Not entirely. There are schools that are now banning...yes banning at-home prepared lunches because the brought in lunches the school district felt were unhealthy. That is a big over-reach of the govt. You should always have that choice. Then they now have the cameras in the lunch room so you can monitor what your child eats. And even in my school district, if I chose, I can look at my childs lunch purchases. I believe the school that was banning sack lunches was in Chicago if I remember right. Scary stuff.
01:06 PM on 09/27/2011
It was pleasant of them to make the suggestion, but potatoes are not the problem. An occasional loaded baked potato is not even a major issue for people who aren't suffering from various health concerns. However, fried potatoes and even baked potatoes with all the trimmings aren't to be enjoyed every single day. And the major issue may not be what kids are eating at school, but perhaps what they are eating and doing--or not doing (i.e., playing outside)--is the bigger issue.