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Release No. 0285.10
Contact:
Office of Communications (202) 720-4623
Regional Public Affairs Director David Von Behren
303-844-0312 (office) 303-547-8842 (cell)
Printable version
USDA Visits Montana to Highlight Efforts to Improve School Meals and Health of Nation’s Children
LOLO, Mont., May 25, 2010 - USDA's Food and Nutrition Service Administrator Julie Paradis
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 Lolo
Elementary School in Lolo. Paradis met with about 35 Montana school administrators, food
service directors, community leaders, and others involved in school nutrition and discussed
current successful school meals programs in the state. Paradis 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.
"The people I met today are truly committed to working together to serve the
freshest, most
nutritious foods to students and make sure they have ample opportunities for
physical activity,"
Paradis said. "Ideas expressed during our conversation today are at the heart of
our commitment
to pass a strong reauthorization bill which will enhance our child nutrition
programs."
Congress is currently considering legislation to bolster the Child Nutrition
Act, which authorizes the National
School Lunch, School
Breakfast, and Summer Food
Service Programs. These programs serve nearly 32 million children each
school day and work in concert to form a national safety net against hunger.
Improving the Child Nutrition Act is the legislative centerpiece of First Lady
Michelle Obama's Let's Move! campaign and highlighted in the White House
report
Solving the Problem of Childhood Obesity Within a Generation released
Tuesday, May 11. 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:
- USDA will work with Congress to pass a child nutrition reauthorization bill
that improves food in schools;
- USDA will update the
Dietary Guidelines for
Americans and Food Pyramid to
provide parents and caregivers with helpful information about nutrition;
- 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.
By passing strong reauthorization legislation, with the full $1 billion
annual increase requested in President Obama's budget, the Administration hopes
to reduce hunger, promote access, and improve the overall health and nutrition
of children throughout the country. To learn more about the First Lady's
Let's Move! campaign, visit
www.LetsMove.gov.
Today, Paradis outlined USDA's priorities for 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;
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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;
-
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;
-
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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