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Release No. 0257.10
Contact:
USDA Office of Communications (202) 720-4623
Anjali Budhiraja, Regional Office (720) 273-9168
Printable version
USDA Visits Colorado To Highlight Efforts To Improve School Meals and
Health of Nation's Children
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo., May 12, 2010 - USDA Deputy
Under Secretary for Food, Nutrition, and Consumer Services Janey Thornton today
discussed the Obama Administration's priorities for improving school meals and
the health of children across the nation with participants at a Healthy Schools
Roundtable at Christa McAuliffe Elementary School in Colorado Springs. Thornton
met with about 30 Colorado school food service directors, community leaders, and
others involved in school nutrition. The group discussed current successful
programs in the state and Thornton 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.
"Improving the nutrition and health of our Nation's
children are critical first steps towards reducing both childhood hunger and
obesity in this country," Thornton said. "Today's productive conversation
reinforces our commitment to rapid passage of a strong reauthorization bill
which will enhance our child nutrition programs."
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. As part of this effort, President
Barack Obama established the Task Force on Childhood Obesity to develop and
implement an interagency plan that details a coordinated strategy, identifies
key benchmarks, and outlines an action plan to solve the problem of childhood
obesity within a generation.
This week, First Lady Michelle Obama joined members of
the Childhood Obesity Task Force to unveil the Task Force action plan: Solving
the Problem of Childhood Obesity Within a Generation. In response to this plan,
USDA will be moving to implement the recommendations in the report that require
federal action. In the coming year alone:
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USDA will work with Congress to pass a child
nutrition reauthorization bill that improves food in schools;
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USDA will update the Dietary Guidelines for
Americans and Food Pyramid to provide parents and caregivers with helpful
information about nutrition,
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USDA, Treasury, and HHS will work with Congress to
bring grocery stores and other healthy food retailers to underserved areas
by supporting more than $400 million in investments in a Healthy Food
Financing Initiative;
Every five years, Congress considers improvements to
the Child Nutrition Act, which authorizes USDA's child nutrition programs
including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs. 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, Thornton outlined USDA's priorities for the
Child Nutrition Act which include:
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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;
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Increase access to meal programs. Providing tools
to increase participation in the school nutrition programs, streamline
applications, and eliminate gap periods;
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Increase education about healthy eating. Providing
parents and students better information about school nutrition and meal
quality;
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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;
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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;
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Increase physical activity. Strengthening school
wellness policy implementation and promoting physical activity in schools;
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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;
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Provide schools with better equipment. Helping
schools with financial assistance to purchase equipment needed to produce
healthy, attractive meals.
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Enhance food safety. Expanding the current
requirements of the food safety program to all facilities where food is
stored, prepared and served.
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Strengthen the link between local farmers and
school cafeterias. Supporting farm-to-school and school-to-farm programs
will increase the amount of produce available to cafeterias and help to
support local farmers by establishing regular, institutional buyers.
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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