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Thursday, March 18, 2010

Parents and children defend homemade treats at City Hall rally | GothamSchools

Parents and children defend homemade treats at City Hall rally | GothamSchools

Parents and children defend homemade treats at City Hall rally


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Chloe Leon and her mother, Leigh Anne O'Connor, man the home-baked treats stand at the "bake-in."
“Viva el cupcake!”
That was a battle cry of parents and children protesting outside City Hall today against new rules that restrict what foods can be sold at school bake sales. The regulation, passed last month by the Panel for Educational Policy, limits bake sales to packaged foods that are pre-approved by the Department of Education.
Parents and students who oppose the new regulation say that it won’t accomplish the city’s goal of reducing childhood obesity and will instead cost parent and student groups dearly needed funds. ”It’s an ill-considered policy,” Public Advocate Bill de Blasio said today, over cries of “NYC DOE: Read our lips, no more chips” and “Hey hey, ho ho, junk food has got to go.”
At the center of the rally, which drew well over 100 parents and children, were two tables featuring homemade baked goods, including tofu empanadas and carrot muffins, and the packaged foods that the city requires.
Chloe Leon, a third-grader at the Earth School who was monitoring the “banned” sweets table, said she prefers baked goods made at home. “A lot of ingredients are more fresh and organic,” she said. “It just tastes better.”
Her mother, Leigh Anne O’Connor, said without the funds raised by bake sales, the Earth School is