School Lunches: What Should Kids Eat?
School Lunches: What Should Kids Eat?
We all want the best for our kids. The problem comes in when our definition of “the best” differs from, and may even oppose, what someone else considers “best.” Centralization magnifies these challenges in a culturally and politically diverse country like the United States. This is especially clear when it comes to the school lunch program. While it's hard to resist taking advantage of the economies of scale that accrue from a top-down approach to providing school lunches for an estimated 30 million students every day, it's impossible to find a solution that's appropriate for everyone. How can we take care of the next generation in a way that's fiscally responsible and culturally relevant, while leveraging this opportunity to make the world a better place, too?Earlier this month, the state of New York led a coalition of several other states and advocacy groups in a lawsuit against the Trump administration. The suit alleges that the Administration's rollback of the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act of 2010 is illegal. These Obama-era guidelines mandated several changes that were intended to improve the nutritional quality of school lunches and breakfasts, such as reducing sodium, increasing whole grain, fruit, and vegetable content, limiting the use of saturated and trans fats, and making sure that if chocolate milk is available, it's fat-free only.In 2018, the USDA, under Sonny Perdue, changed the rules, doing away with the sodium restriction and reducing by half the amount of whole grains that districts were obliged to provide in school lunches, while allowing low-fat chocolate milk to be made available. Schools could request exemptions from the USDA in order to serve refined carbohydrates such as tortillas, grits, and breakfast biscuits; Purdue asserted that continually dealing with exemption requests from 20% of our nation's schools was “unsustainable” and that loosening the regulations would make it easier for everyone.
The original food pyramid from the USDA. Public domain image by the United States Department of Agriculture, courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.
Sources:
Trump Administration Sued Over Rollback of School Lunch Standards
Sanity Restored to School Lunches?
U.S. states sue Trump administration over school lunch rules
Healthy Hunger-Free Kids Act
What The Government Got Wrong About Nutrition -- And How It Can Fix It
The FDA's phony nutrition science: How Big Food and Agriculture trumps real science -- and why the government allows it
A record number of poor kids are eating breakfast — thanks to a program many conservatives hate
Why So Many Rich Kids Come to Enjoy the Taste of Healthier Foods
How Children Develop Unhealthy Food Preferences
In Long Fight Over School Chocolate Milk, Perhaps A Whole New Flavor
Waste not, want not
Revenge of the Lunch Lady
Sussex school staff accused of taking away students' lunches when account balances get low
About Dawn Allen
Dawn Allen is a freelance writer and editor who is passionate about sustainability, political economy, gardening, traditional craftwork, and simple living. She and her husband are currently renovating a rural homestead in southeastern Michigan.