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Release No. 0218.10
Contact:
USDA Office of Communications
(202) 720-4623
Cordelia Fox (415) 705-1350
Printable version
USDA Visits Nevada to Highlight
Efforts to Improve School Meals and Health of Nation's Children
LAS VEGAS, April 28, 2010 - USDA Food and Nutrition Service's Deputy
Administrator for Special Nutrition Programs Audrey Rowe today highlighted the
Obama Administration's priorities for improving school meals and the health of
children across the nation. Rowe was in Las Vegas speaking to local and state
nutrition officials and observed an after-school meals program at Reynaldo
Martinez Elementary School and a School Breakfast Program at Hollingsworth
Elementary School. She emphasized the importance of renewing the Child Nutrition
Act and advocated for a strong reauthorization bill to reduce hunger and improve
the health and nutrition of our nation's children.
"It is critical that we provide safe, nutritious, and well-balanced meals in
schools as a first step towards reducing both childhood hunger and obesity in
this country," said Rowe. "We are committed to rapid passage of a strong
reauthorization bill which will enhance our child nutrition programs. If we act
now, we can provide our schools with the tools and resources needed to improve
our children's nutrition and help them develop healthier eating habits for years
to come."
Strengthening the Child Nutrition Act is the legislative centerpiece of First
Lady Michelle Obama's Let's Move! campaign to end childhood obesity within a
generation. The campaign has four primary tenets: helping parents make healthy
family choices; serving healthier food in schools; improving access to healthy,
affordable food; and increasing physical activity of kids. Already, the
administration has announced its plans to improve school meals, a financing
initiative to reduce food deserts, new research tools that detail local food
environments and health outcomes, including grocery store access and disease and
obesity prevalence, in addition to a broad range of public/private partnerships
to solve America's childhood obesity epidemic. Learn more by visiting
www.LetsMove.gov.
Every five years, Congress considers improvements to the Child Nutrition Act.
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 National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs,
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 and fat free dairy products to be
served in our school cafeterias and an additional one million students to be
served the healthy diets in school.
Today, Rowe outlined the Obama Administration's priorities for
reauthorization of the Child Nutrition Act which 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.
USDA's Food and Nutrition Service (FNS) oversees the administration of 15
nutrition assistance programs, including the child nutrition programs, that
touch the lives of one in four Americans over the course of a year. These
programs work in concert to form a national safety net against hunger. Visit
www.fns.usda.gov for information about FNS
and nutrition assistance program.
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Last modified:
11/27/2012
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