New Standards Will Improve the Health and Wellbeing of 32 Million Kids Nationwide
FAIRFAX, Va., Jan. 25. 2012 – First Lady
Michelle Obama and Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack today unveiled new standards for school meals
that will result in healthier meals for kids across the nation. The new meal
requirements will raise standards for the first time in more than fifteen years
and improve the health and nutrition of nearly 32 million kids that participate
in school meal programs every school day. The healthier meal requirements are a
key component of the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act, which was championed by the
First Lady as part of her Let's Move! campaign and signed into law by
President Obama.
"As parents, we try to prepare decent
meals, limit how much junk food our kids eat, and ensure they have a reasonably
balanced diet," said First Lady Michelle Obama. "And when we're
putting in all that effort the last thing we want is for our hard work to be
undone each day in the school cafeteria. When we send our kids to school, we
expect that they won't be eating the kind of fatty, salty, sugary foods that we
try to keep them from eating at home. We want the food they get at school to be
the same kind of food we would serve at our own kitchen tables."
"Improving the quality of the school meals
is a critical step in building a healthy future for our kids," said
Vilsack. "When it comes to our children, we must do everything possible to
provide them the nutrition they need to be healthy, active and ready to face
the future – today we take an important step towards that goal."
The final standards make the same kinds of
practical changes that many parents are already encouraging at home, including:
- Ensuring students are offered both fruits and vegetables every day of the week;
- Substantially increasing offerings of whole grain-rich foods;
- Offering only fat-free or low-fat milk varieties;
- Limiting calories based on the age of children being served to ensure proper portion size; and
- Increasing the focus on reducing the amounts of saturated fat, trans fats and sodium.
A sample lunch menu with a before and after
comparison is available to view and download in PDF and JPG formats.
USDA built the new rule around recommendations
from a panel of experts convened by the Institute of Medicine —a gold standard
for evidence-based health analysis. The standards were also updated with key
changes from the 2010 Dietary Guidelines for Americans – the Federal
government's benchmark for nutrition – and aimed to foster the kind of healthy
changes at school that many parents are already trying to encourage at home,
such as making sure that kids are offered both fruits and vegetables each day,
more whole grains, and portion sizes and calorie counts designed to maintain a
healthy weight.
USDA received an unprecedented 132,000 public
comments on its proposed standards (available on the web at www.regulations.gov) – and made
modifications to the proposed rule where appropriate. USDA Under Secretary
Kevin Concannon said: "We know that robust public input is essential to
developing successful standards and the final standards took a number of
suggestions from stakeholders, school food service professions and parents to
make important operational changes while maintaining nutritional
integrity."
The new standards are expected to cost $3.2
billion over the next five years -- less than half of the estimated cost of the
proposed rule and are just one of five major components of the Healthy Hunger
Free Kids Act, now implemented or under development, that will work together to
reform school nutrition. In addition to the updated meal standards,
unprecedented improvements to come include:
- The ability to take nutrition standards beyond the lunchline for the first time ever, foods and beverages sold in vending machines and other venues on school campuses will also contribute to a healthy diet;
- Increased funding for schools – an additional 6 cents a meal is the first real increase in 30 years – tied to strong performance in serving improved meals;
- Common-sense pricing standards for schools to ensure that revenues from non-Federal sources keep pace with the Federal commitment to healthy school meals and properly align with costs; and
- Training and technical assistance to help schools achieve and monitor compliance.
The final nutrition standards released today
also provide more time for schools to implement key changes, which will be
largely phased in over a three-year period, starting in School Year 2012-2013.
For example, schools will be permitted to focus on changes in the lunches in
the first year, with most changes in breakfast phased in during future years.
USDA's Food and Nutrition Service
administers 15 nutrition assistance programs including the National School
Lunch and School Breakfast programs, the Summer Food Service Program, and
Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, and the Special Supplemental
Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC). Together these
programs make up the federal nutrition safety net.
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