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Rachel Lincoln Sarnoff

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School Lunches Get Healthier, But Pizza Is Still a Vegetable

Posted: 01/31/2012 5:36 pm

Last week Michelle Obama, Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack and Rachael Ray announced new nutrition standards for school lunches, the first major change in school meals in over 15 years.

The program allots an additional six cents per school lunch -- the first real increase in 30 years. The new standards call for more whole grains and produce, as well as less sodium and fat, and are the first to be enacted as part of the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act of 2010, part of Michelle Obama's Let's Move! Campaign, which was signed into law last year by President Obama. It will affect the nearly 32 million kids who participate in subsidized school lunch programs each day -- many of whom get half their daily calories from these meals.

What's different? Milk goes low- or no-fat, portion sizes shrink to limit calories, and fresh fruits and vegetables are offered every day, among other recommendations echoed in the Eat Healthy section of our 5 Easy Steps.

What's not? Potatoes are unlimited -- although now the majority will be baked, rather than fried -- and tomato sauce still makes pizza a vegetable. "It was a bit unfortunate that some groups had powerful friends in Congress and basically tried... create some confusion with these standards," Vilsack said in a virtual press conference that I attended. "Our response was to set up minimum requirements. You have to have a minimum level of dark green vegetables, you've got to have a minimum level of red or orange or yellow vegetables."

"OK, so Congress left pizza a vegetable," Ray said. "But we are changing the game today. That [lunch] tray is going to have leafy greens and colorful fruit on it. If one of the other vegetables happens to be pizza or French fries in some schools that day, it doesn't negate the fact that on the tray there... will include vegetables and fruits." (For more specifics, check out WebMD's excellent breakdown of the new standards.)

Regarding organics, Secretary Vilsack said they encourage organics but will leave the decision about integrating to the individual school districts. But he responded to my question about genetically engineered foods by saying they would leave this up to "consumer choice."

I didn't get a chance to ask him how we can have a choice, given the fact that GEs are not required to be identified on labels -- yet are now in 80% of processed foods.

Or to ask if he was aware that 93% of Americans now say they want GE foods to be labeled. (Are you one of them? Sign the Just Label It petition today!)

Sigh. I guess we have to start somewhere. And these new standards are definitely better for our kids.

Hopefully that pizza will have a whole-wheat crust.


P.S. Congratulations from all of us at Healthy Child Healthy World to Mr. Wells' 4th grade class at the Park School in Brookline, Massachusetts for changing Universal Pictures' mind about eliminating green content from The Lorax movie. As our founder Nancy Chuda wrote last week, when the kids saw the trailer, they realized that the environmental themes -- which, as any parent who's read this story at bedtime knows, are the bedrock of the story -- were largely missing. To restore the original meaning to the film, Mr. Wells' class put together a video and petitioned Universal to add more environmental messaging to their website. And this week, after more than 57,000 people signed their petition, the Universal webpage was updated to reflect the students' requests. Dr. Seuss once wrote, "Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot, Nothing is going to get better. It's not." We're inspired by these kids, who cared enough to make it better. A lot.

 
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
FiredUpRTG
Don't start no stuff; won't be no stuff…
09:48 AM on 02/02/2012
Pizza is not a vegetable, but it can be a vehicle for delivering vegetables. It is not necessary to smother it in cheese (although those who hate milk might appreciate whatever calcium can come from cheese). Pile on a flavorful medley of chopped veggies — no salt, no garlic powder!
06:45 PM on 02/01/2012
Looks like another positive effect is that scaling back on the meat might lower the risk of premature puberty: http://nutritionfacts.org/videos/protein-puberty/
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plantbasedpunk
live from the PHX
03:50 PM on 02/01/2012
It's about time! Our school lunch program is so poor, it's amazing that in a country where parents are so overprotective of their children we'd allow the government to essentially poison our kids for years and years. Give my kid diabetes? No problem. Drop the "s" word? I will crucify you!
01:52 PM on 02/01/2012
Everyone is calling pizza a vegetable. Wow! it is the tomato sauce on the pizza that can be counted towards the vegetable requirement for the day. There is no ability to think critically in this country anymore. Just spout sound bites to support your political agenda. I work in a school lunch program, we count pizza as a main dish item and have the other full servings of vegetables and fruit on the side. I do not know of any schools that actually count the sauce as a veg.
01:06 PM on 02/01/2012
I never would have tried beets if they hadn't been presented to me over and over again at school. That little bite the teacher urged me to take turned me into a lifelong fan. Same thing with broccoli and cabbage, vegetables my parents never made until I started pleading with them.

Pizza is NOT a vegetable, people! It never has been and never will be.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ennis438
06:07 AM on 02/01/2012
What do you expect from Republicants? Their fat cat bankrollers ' kids do not benefit from school lunch programs, so why should they care what is in the lunches. Most are poor people who would never vote for the trash they preach, so the well being of these people mean nothing to these losers. Hence, we have french fries called vegetables.
09:26 PM on 01/31/2012
This is not right. Obama should not to this. he is hurting everybody. if he is aiming at fat people he is wrong. this is affecting all of the children in the public school system. if fat people want to be fat they will be. if they cant help it, well they cant. put it is not right to hurt everybody. i go to school at TZHS in new york and i myself am not fat i get a deli sandwich every day and it is on whole wheat bread it is very annoying. also when i get a hamburger the buns are wheat and the fries portion is small. now how do you expect me (us) to grow with smaller portions? i always hear people complain that it is not right my friend once said "what, this (food) is getting worse everyday". This has become a big problem and i hope you repeal this so us the kids in AMERICA can enjoy our FOOD.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ennis438
06:09 AM on 02/01/2012
I blame the Republicants more than Obama. Obama can do nothing as long as these GOP gangsters block everything he proposes.
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plantbasedpunk
live from the PHX
03:41 PM on 02/01/2012
It's not just obesity that is a concern, it is the rising level of heart disease, diabetes and cancer in this country. And not just adults, but kids. There should be no reason why a 7 year old should develop diabetes.

Yes, you have a choice. And if you're in High School I'm sure you're old enough to decide what to eat. But younger children don't understand good nutrition like an adult. If they have to choose between a sugar loaded chocolate milk and a greasy pizza or a green salad and a lightly sweetened ice tea they're going to go with the greasy pizza every time.

And if you teach kids good eating habits at a young age they'll stick with it well into adulthood.