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Release No. 0101.10
Contact: USDA Office of Communications
(202) 720-46231
Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack
Visits California, Discusses Obama Administration Efforts To Improve School
Meals
LOS ANGELES, March 4, 2010 - Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack today visited
California to discuss the Obama Administration's priorities for the
reauthorization of the Child Nutrition Act. Vilsack visited with students and
educators at the William R. Anton Elementary School and Early Education Center
followed by a forum with community leaders at the East Los Angeles Community
Center where he emphasized the importance of passing strong reauthorization
legislation. Vilsack highlighted the Administration's goals of reducing hunger,
promoting access, and improving the overall health and nutrition of children
throughout the country. Joining Secretary Vilsack were stakeholders and public
leaders including former Congressman Esteban Torres.
"We are presented with a unique opportunity to improve the health of our
children and reduce hunger in this country and we can take a step towards
accomplishing those goals with the reauthorization of the Child Nutrition Act,
said Vilsack. "The federal government cannot solve our hunger and obesity crises
alone, and we need parents, educators, nutrition experts, and community leaders
to be engaged in improving school meals and the health and nutrition of our
children. Here at the Early Education and Community Centers we are reaching out
directly to those that are on the front line of providing healthier meals,
nutrition education and enabling more physical activity."
The Obama Administration has proposed a historic investment of an additional
$10 billion over ten years starting in 2011 that will allow for the improvement
of the quality of the School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs, increase the
number of kids participating, and ensure schools have the resources they need to
make program changes, including training for school food service workers,
upgraded kitchen equipment, and additional funding for meal reimbursements for
schools that are enhancing nutrition and quality. Additionally, this investment
will allow additional fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and low-fat dairy
products to be served in our school cafeterias and an additional one million
students to be served the healthy diets in school.
Already, the administration has taken steps to improve school meals, financed
an initiative to reduce food deserts, developed new research tools that detail
local food environments and health outcomes, including grocery store access and
disease and obesity prevalence, and engaged a broad range of public/private
partnerships to solve America's childhood obesity epidemic.
USDA is also collaborating with First Lady Michelle Obama's Let's Move!
initiative to emphasize the link between nutrition and physical activity. In
addressing the School Nutrition Association this week, Secretary Tom Vilsack
issued a call to action to parents, community leaders, schools and elected
officials to improve the nutrition and physical activity habits of our children
by working together to double the number of HealthierUS Schools across the
country. The HealthierUS School Challenge recognizes schools that do an
exceptional job promoting meal participation, meal quality, nutrition education,
and physical activity.
By passing a strong reauthorization of the Child Nutrition Act, the
Administration hopes to reduce hunger, promote access, and improve the overall
health and nutrition of children throughout the country. Specific priorities in
this area include:
- Improve nutrition standards. Establishing improved nutrition standards
for school meals based on the Dietary Guidelines for Americans and taking
additional steps to ensure compliance with these standards;
- Increase access to meal programs. Providing tools to increase
participation in the school nutrition programs, streamline applications, and
eliminate gap periods;
- Increase education about healthy eating. Providing parents and students
better information about school nutrition and meal quality;
- * Establish standards for competitive foods sold in schools. Creating
national baseline standards for all foods sold in elementary, middle, and
high schools to ensure they contribute effectively to a healthy diet;
- Serve more healthy food. Promoting increased consumption of whole
grains, fruits and vegetables, and low- and fat-free dairy products and
providing additional financial support in the form of reimbursement rate
increases for schools that enhance nutrition and quality;
- Increase physical activity. Strengthening school wellness policy
implementation and promoting physical activity in schools;
- Train people who prepare school meals. Ensuring that child nutrition
professionals have the skills to serve top-quality meals that are both
healthful and appealing to their student customers;
- Provide schools with better equipment. Helping schools with financial
assistance to purchase equipment needed to produce healthy, attractive
meals.
- Enhance food safety. Expanding the current requirements of the food
safety program to all facilities where food is stored, prepared and served.
More information about USDA's efforts to improve child nutrition can be found
at
www.usda.gov. Additional information on First Lady Michelle Obama's Let's
Move! campaign is at
www.LetsMove.gov.
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Last modified:
11/27/2012
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