Monday, May 5, 2014

Schools seek changes to healthier lunch rules | 89.3 KPCC

Schools seek changes to healthier lunch rules | 89.3 KPCC:



Schools seek changes to healthier lunch rules

Richard Hartog

Cafeteria worker Sophia Villareal sets up apples and carrots for students before the lunch period at Brockton Avenue Elementary School in Los Angeles. Starting next school year, pasta and other grain products in schools will have to be whole-grain rich, or more than half whole grain. Credit: Richard Hartog for California Watch
Becky Domokos-Bays of Alexandria City Public Schools has served her students whole-grain pasta 20 times. Each time, she said, they rejected it.
Starting next school year, pasta and other grain products in schools will have to be whole-grain rich, or more than half whole grain. That includes rolls, biscuits, pizza crust, tortillas and even grits.
The requirement is part of a government effort to make school lunches and breakfasts healthier. Championed by first lady Michelle Obama, the new standards have been phased in over the last two school years, with more changes coming in 2014.
Some schools say the changes have been expensive and difficult to put in place, and school officials are asking Congress and the Agriculture Department to roll back some of the requirements. Their main concerns: finding enough whole grain-rich foods that kids like, lowering sodium levels and keeping fruits and vegetables from ending up in the trash.
In interviews, school nutrition directors across the country mostly agreed that healthy changes were needed in school lunches — long famous for daily servings of greasy fries and pizza. Kids have adapted easily to many of the changes, are getting more variety in the lunch line and are eating healthier. According to USDA, more than 90 percent of schools are meeting the standards.
But Domokos-Bays and other school nutrition directors say they would like to see some revisions. They say the standards were put in place too quickly as kids get used to new tastes and school lunch vendors rush to reformulate Schools seek changes to healthier lunch rules | 89.3 KPCC: