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Potatoes In Schools: Senate Supports Unlimited Spuds, Votes To Block Starchy Limit

By MARY CLARE JALONICK   10/18/11 08:38 PM ET  AP

WASHINGTON -- The Senate threw its support behind the potato Tuesday, voting to block an Obama administration proposal to limit the vegetable on school lunch lines.

Agriculture Department rules proposed earlier this year aimed to reduce the amount of french fries in schools, limiting lunchrooms to two servings a week of potatoes and other starchy vegetables. That angered the potato industry, some school districts and members of Congress from potato-growing states, who say USDA should focus on the preparation instead and that potatoes can be a good source of fiber and potassium.

Following a bipartisan agreement on the issue, the Senate by voice vote accepted an amendment by Republican Sen. Susan Collins that would block the USDA from putting any limits on serving potatoes or other vegetables in school lunches.

Collins, who is from Maine, a potato-growing state, says the vegetables are a cheaper and nutritious way to feed children when school budgets are strapped. She said after the vote that it was a "victory for common sense" and hoped the strong bipartisan vote would send a message to the USDA.

"This proposed rule would have imposed significant and needless costs on our nation's school districts at a time when they can least afford it," she said.

Amended was a spending bill that includes dollars for the Agriculture Department. The House passed a similar bill earlier this year including language that would ask the department to rewrite its school lunch rules entirely. Republicans have singled out the potato proposal in criticizing the rules, saying the government shouldn't be dictating what kids eat.

Advocates and government officials say children get enough potatoes already and should have more diversity in their diets

"USDA's proposal was about helping kids to eat a very wide variety of vegetables and I think that point has been lost in all this," said Margo Wootan, director of nutrition policy at the advocacy group Center for Science in the Public Interest, which pushed for the standards. "Other vegetables have a hard time competing with potatoes."

Since the proposed guidelines apply to federally subsidized meals, schools are generally fine with broad federal guidelines on nutrition – how many servings a week children are allowed of grains or vegetables, for example. But some schools have balked at the attempt to tell them exactly what foods they can't serve.

And many critics said the proposal ignores schools that have long since taken the "fry" out of french fry. Though they may be fried as part of initial processing, many schools are now preparing them with little grease and no crispiness, serving them to kids as a healthier option.

The way the amendment is worded – blocking the department from limiting potatoes – would still give USDA flexibility to regulate the preparation of the potatoes when it issues the final version of the school lunch rule.

""This amendment seeks to ensure flexibility for schools to provide nutritious and affordable school meals," said Democratic Sen. Mark Udall of Colorado, another potato-growing state. Udall co-sponsored the amendment with Collins.

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02:56 AM on 10/29/2011
It is the protein not the starch that is making and keeping us fat. I didn't believe it either until my daughter started running marathons and the weight starting dropping off. When I decided I was going to limit my protein intake and I made starch and grain my focal point my weight was slow coming off but I manage to lose a whopping 65lbs I decided to see if I could put it back and even with all the food I consume I have gone back to my grains and starches with fresh veggies and fruits which I feel much better.
02:49 AM on 10/29/2011
This is a true and honest statement. Eating starch with vegetables doesn't put on the weight for me it is when I eat starch with proteins where I have most of my weight issues. So I say not to limit potatoes just reacquaint them with other non protein foods for a delicious alternative to the fattening meat and potato version.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
elblanc0
Whatever good things we build end up building us.
04:42 PM on 10/24/2011
Wow...even in the UK potatoes aren't allowed to count toward the five portions of fruit and vegetables recommended for school children daily, according to the UK's National Health Service.

Nice one, potato lobby. Thanks for buying politicians to keep our kids unhealthy.
04:38 PM on 10/21/2011
"While the potatoes may be fried as part of initial processing..."
Right. That's the problem. Initial processing. Processing of any kind. Saying that something's not fried just because it was fried waaaay back in the factory before it was cryovacked, deep-frozen, and shipped to warehouses for further shipping to schools -- and then NOT fried when it was taken out of its hibernation and "prepared" for the kids' trays -- is sort of like saying that a frog was never a tadpole just because you never SAW that frog as a tadpole.
Heaven forbid our children eat fresh vegetables. Heaven forbid they eat salad. Heaven forbid we give them a taste for anything that's not starchy, bland, and smacks of fast foodism. But we're so far removed from the ability to actually cook anything fresh in our schools that we are reduced to this ridiculous debate over whether or not a non-fried fried potato is a good thing to serve to kids more than FORTY PERCENT OF THE TIME. Really? How many of us would think it's okay to serve potatoes -- never mind processed pseudo-spuds -- more than forty percent of the time at home?
01:41 PM on 10/21/2011
Score another one for big agribusiness! "Screw nutrition for kids, we need to make more money!" Of course local school districts can choose to serve more nutritious meals, but that costs money and there happens to be a severe shortage of that stuff lately.

If the Obama administration really cared about this, they would be pushing to change the farm subsidy structure to make higher nutritional value foods more cost-effective for schools to purchase. As long as we continually subsidize starch (corn, potatoes, etc.) we'll have a disproportionate amount of those foods in the supply chain. This will never happen because the subsidies have become as sacred to agricultural states as social security and medicare are to senior citizens. Free markets baby!
12:47 PM on 10/21/2011
I love potatoes baked in their skins. When prepared this way they are nutritious in moderation. However, when they are prepared as French fries their glycemic index is raised and they become loaded with oxidized trans-fats. In this form, they are more toxin than food.

Considering the fact that the typical American diet is already overloaded with fried potatoes this kind of government intervention appears to be driven more by special interests than nutritional concerns.
02:07 PM on 10/20/2011
Obesity is not caused by a specific food, it's caused by the failure to balance caloric consumption with exercise.

Children should have plenty of recess and PE time at school and they should be playing outdoors at home. Potatoes are completely appropriate as part of a balanced diet AND active lifestyle.
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09:56 PM on 10/20/2011
Oh stop making sense. No one seems to appreciate that.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Charlotte Bonnie
Agnostic. Free thinker. Debater. Independent. Gay.
07:32 PM on 10/23/2011
Obesity is directly related to insulin which you get bathed in when you eat potatoes. There are some benefits of potatoes but still they shouldn't be eaten often.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Gary St Lawrence
11th Commandment: Thou Shalt Not Get Away With It
11:37 AM on 10/20/2011
Yes, potatoes *CAN* be a good source of fiber and potassium.

But potatoes *ARE* one of the leading sources of carbohydrates and starch which has been proven to DIRECTLY LEAD TO OBESITY.

Why isn't the celery lobby or the carrot-growers union given the "respect" by Congress that the potato money-backers get?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
broui
No d#%& cat. No d#%& cradle.
09:37 AM on 10/20/2011
I teach for a living.

The disgusting fare (fries included) offered to my students - most of whom are on free and reduced lunch and thus rely on the government for two meals a day for NUTRITION - is gravely disappointing.

I can state catagorically that is detrimental to their academic achievement, their behavior, their sense of well-being, and their overall health (though that one should be obvious).

Poor America.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
El Chingaso
Fighting for mental superiority...
05:18 AM on 10/20/2011
The U.S. government is out of its mind. Bought & paid for Congress, baby.
04:56 AM on 10/20/2011
Good thing. Kids should be fatter.
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MSROADKILL612
german sausages are wurst
03:41 AM on 10/20/2011
I dont think the potato lobby care about the sale to schools, they want to condition them to have a taste for fried potato for life.

Pizza sure sounds a bad message to send their tummies.

The big chance the US has to teach good diet to those not so lucky at home & they blow it by serving junk food - the opposite.
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MSROADKILL612
german sausages are wurst
03:30 AM on 10/20/2011
Here in oz - no such thing as a school kitchen - NSW any way (as in sydney etc) - most bring lunch - they have a tuck shop run by parents - obesity is rare in middle class areas anyway - not so in the poor areas - so it seems its the home environment mainly.

seems a big expense to run a kitchen for 1 meal a day - better spent on educating than running an underutilised eatery.

eating what my body tells me it needs seems right to me.

u can eat what you like but u gotta pay your dues in the form of exercise.

dont know, but it seems USA has the wrong focus on sport - its the all about watching the single a team rather than all participating - 1 gridiron team is all a school can afford to equip. Its about school & individual glory, rather than a taste of fitness for a better life.
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DenverBigDaddy
Conservative does not equal Tea Party....
08:43 AM on 10/20/2011
Agreed......I spent a year in school just outside of Newcastle, and I couldn't agree more!!
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MSROADKILL612
german sausages are wurst
09:26 AM on 10/20/2011
Whew - wasnt sure if was talking through my hat & being rude - denvercassilus - lovely country

was mostly parroting my dads dogma re US school sport - but he got some things pretty right.

u didnt exactly say what i was right about so i presumed
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MSROADKILL612
german sausages are wurst
09:27 AM on 10/20/2011
something v weird happened to my post - big gaps in what i wrote
09:43 PM on 10/19/2011
Potatos under increased threat of human consumption

A just-released report by the New England Potato Alliance shows the life expectancy of Potatoes continues to lessen as the consumption by Humans continues to grow. The study, "Potato Nation Under Siege," confirms what many tuber organizations have been fearing was more than ten years.

"This is a very serious situation," said Spud-in-Chief Yukon Gold. "Across the board, no matter the variety of Potato, we are continuing to be 'harvested,' as Humans call it, in record numbers. I myself have lost family members, who are suddenly yanked out of our midst in the prime of their lives."

--the whimsical story continues at Thinking Out Loud, http://marperl.blogspot.com/2011/06/potatoes-under-increased-risk-of-human.html
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
I Think
09:33 PM on 10/19/2011
Sounds like the politicians were bought once again.
We have government by special interests.