''New regulations promote healthier snack foods in schools''
Jessica Donze Black speaks with Online Athens about the USDA's decision to set nutrition standards on school snack foods and beverages.
More infoThe Kids’ Safe and Healthful Food Project (KSHF) is excited that more than 200,000 people all over the country submitted comments to the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) encouraging strong nutrition requirements for all foods sold in schools, including snacks and beverages. Following is a summary of those KSHF submitted to USDA on the proposed rule.
For the first time in more than 30 years, USDA is updating nutrition standards for snack foods and beverages sold in schools. This proposed rule complements USDA’s standards for school meals, which took effect this school year.
Childhood obesity rates have more than tripled in the past three decades. Despite recent improvements to nutrition standards for school meals, the snack foods and beverages available to students are still largely less-healthy items like sugary drinks, salty snacks, and candy. It is time that ALL foods sold and served in schools are healthy for kids. This is a common-sense approach that strengthens the investment parents and taxpayers have made in our children and our schools.
Parents Want National Snack Standards
A 2012 poll found that 80 percent of parents support setting national standards for snack and a la carte foods and beverages. They are concerned about children’s health and want to make sure we are setting kids up for success.
These proposed guidelines have the potential to make a major difference. They would ensure that when kids make choices about snacks and drinks, the options they choose from are healthy ones – whether sold as a la carte items in the cafeteria, in vending machines, or in school stores. These items are a big part of what our young people eat — roughly 40 percent of students buy a snack at school every day.
Even if students eat a healthy lunch, research shows they often still consume excess calories from a la carte items the cafeteria might serve, such as french fries or ice cream. Sometimes kids skip a healthy meal entirely in favor of less-healthy snacks.
Strengthening the Smart School Snack Proposal
We commend USDA for proposing strong standards that will promote students’ consumption of healthy foods, such as fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and non-fat and low-fat dairy products, as well as limit calories, fat, sugar, and sodium in snack foods and beverages. These standards support what parents want and they support the recently updated standards for school meals.
There are certain areas of the rule that we recommend USDA consider strengthening, such as:
- 100 calories in elementary schools (grades K-5)
- 140 calories in middle schools (grades 6-8)
- 180 calories in high schools (grades 9-12)
Food companies are already making snacks that would fit these standards.
We agree with the rationale to offer some flexibility in beverage choices in high schools, but are concerned that sugary drinks are far less healthy than other options. To ensure the healthiest options are available, we recommend setting a limit for calories per container that is as low as possible.
Areas of Support
Jessica Donze Black speaks with Online Athens about the USDA's decision to set nutrition standards on school snack foods and beverages.
More infoWhile it might take time before we can evaluate the impact of the new standards, which won’t take effect until September 2014, we can look at what we already know to assess them in comparison to the current status quo. The first hint of the new regulation’s potential comes from the Pew Charitable Trusts Kids’ Safe and Healthful Foods Project, showing that children and teens gained less weight over three years if they lived in a state with strong policies on school snacks than if they lived in a state without such standards.
More infoThe Pew Charitable Trusts applauds Sen. Barbara Mikulski (D-MD) for her efforts to strengthen food safety protections under the FDA Food Safety Modernization Act, and provide grant funding to help school cafeterias across the nation upgrade their equipment to serve healthy, appealing meals to millions of school children. Funding for both programs was included in a larger bill approved by the Senate Appropriations Committee on Thursday.
More infoJessica Donze Black, director of the Kids' Safe and Healthful Foods project, discusses the USDA's decision to finalize interim rules for snack foods and beverages sold in schools.
More infoThe Obama administration on Thursday released long-awaited nutrition standards for foods that schoolchildren can buy outside the cafeteria, changes that are intended to combat climbing childhood obesity rates.
More infoThe U.S. Department of Agriculture has set new nutrition standards for food sold as snacks in schools, giving fruit and vegetable shippers opportunities for vending machines and snack bars. After considering nearly 250,000 comments, the agency on June 27 published the regulation, called “Smart Snacks in Schools,” also known as the “competitive snacks” rule, for junk food that competes with healthier lunch menus.
More info"Minnesota schools are adjusting after the USDA issued new guidelines on the amount of fat and calories contained in snacks made available in lunchrooms. The guidelines are related to the school lunch changes that went into effect last year that cut calories, fat and sodium on kids’ plates. They’ll now include snacks, sides, and everything else in school."
More info"Children consume as many as half their daily calories in school, where they spend more time than any location except their homes, according to the Pew Charitable Trusts, which underwrites food safety programs. Studies show snacks add 112 calories to the average elementary-school student’s daily diet, and those who live in states with strong snack policies gain less weight over three years than those without regulations."
More infoJessica Donze Black, director of the Kids’ Safe and Healthful Foods Project, speaks to the Washington Post about the USDA's decision to finalize interim rules for snack foods and beverages sold in schools.
More infoEducation Week interviews Jessica Donze Black, director of the Kids' Safe and Healthful Foods Project about the USDA's decision to finalize interim rules on snack foods and beverages sold in schools.
More infoAlthough some states and districts have created standards for what can be sold as snacks and beverages in schools, the USDA hasn’t updated national guidelines in over 30 years. An infographic recently released by the Kids’ Safe and Healthful Foods Project summarizes research that supports the need for national nutrition standards for snack foods and beverages sold in schools.
More info''While some students look down on food served in school cafeterias, Zoe Deakyne, a sixth-grader at Long Beach Island Elementary School, enjoys getting her lunch there.''
More info"New items such as curried chicken with raisins and apples and broccoli alfredo are part of the City School District’s effort to upgrade its school meal offerings, focusing on foods that are fresh, local and healthy, rather than the old school method of quick and easy."
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