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FNS Release No. 0002.11
Contact: Aaron Wiley
(404) 562-1811
USDA Official Joins Georgia
Students for Breakfast as Kids Head Back to School
Food and Nutrition Service Administrator Audrey Rowe Highlights Key
Reforms in the Healthy Hunger Free Kids Act to Improve School Meal
Quality
ATLANTA, August 16, 2011—USDA Food
and Nutrition Service Administrator Audrey Rowe today highlighted Obama
administration efforts to improve school nutrition and foster healthy
lifestyle choices by America’s school-age children during a visit to
Sherwood Acres Elementary Magnet School in Albany, Ga.
Rowe said key reforms enacted
through the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act of 2010 will improve the
nutritional quality of school meals and strengthen the school
environment for the nation’s schoolchildren. Rowe also lauded USDA’s
HealthierUS School Challenge, which is designed to improve school
nutrition and expand opportunities for physical activity.
“By providing America’s children
with the healthiest foods possible while at school,” she said, “we can
reinforce the healthy lifestyles that many parents are already teaching
their children at home, which will put them in a position to thrive,
grow and ultimately reach their full potential.”
As children head back to school
this fall USDA will work with schools on improving the nutritional
quality of food sold to children through six major components supported
by the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act:
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Updated nutrition
standards for school meals based on expert recommendations from the
Institute of Medicine. USDA is reviewing over 132,000
comments from schools, States, parents and others on a proposed rule
in order to complete a final rule.
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Science-based standards
for all foods sold in school. These first ever national
standards will ensure that foods and beverages sold in vending
machines and other venues on school campuses contribute to a healthy
diet.
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Increased funding for
schools. The Act made the first real increase in school
meal payments in 30 years – tied to strong performance in serving
improved meals. The criteria to earn the increase will be ready
when updated standards go into effect.
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Common-sense standards
for revenue provided to school food authorities from non-Federal
sources, to ensure that these revenues keep pace with the
Federal commitment to healthy school meals and properly align with
costs.
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Training and technical
assistance to help schools achieve and monitor compliance.
We are planning new training strategies to accompany the new
nutrition standards.
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Healthy offerings
through the USDA Foods program. USDA Foods are a critical
part of the National School Lunch Program, constituting
approximately 15-20% of the school lunch plate. Guided by the
Dietary Guidelines for Americans, USDA has made sweeping changes in
the nutritional quality of these foods to further reduce fat,
sodium, and added sugars. The Act requires the Department to
purchase a wide variety of USDA Foods that support healthy meals and
develop model specifications for foods purchased and served in the
National School Lunch Program.
These school food improvements
will be supported by other changes in the school environment, such as
physical activity and nutrition education reforms, and strengthened
local school wellness policies. The Act expands the scope of these
policies and increases transparency and local participation. HHKFA
provisions in effect this year to increase access to critical nutrition
programs includes:
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Promoting School
Breakfast Programs. Research has shown that starting the
day with a nutritious breakfast helps students stay alert and
perform better in school.
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Expanding At-Risk
Afterschool Meals to all states participating in the
Child and Adult
Care Food Program
Administrator Rowe also recognized
hundreds of schools that have already made great progress toward
achieving school meals reforms – and can serve as models for others
seeking to make improvements. She announced that we reached our goal
with more than 1,250 schools receiving HealthierUS School Challenge
honors for expanding nutrition and physical activity opportunities. Last
year, the First Lady and USDA challenged the nation’s communities to
double the number of HUSSC schools within a year – reaching 1,250
schools by the end of June 2011. HUSSC is a key component of First Lady
Michelle Obama’s
Let's Move! initiative to end
childhood obesity within a generation. USDA also took the opportunity to
launch the
Healthy Access Locator, a
web-based resource that geographically pinpoints HUSSC award-winning
schools and features built-in data on diet-related diseases.
USDA’s Food and Nutrition Service
oversees 15 nutrition assistance programs that touch the lives of one in
four Americans over the course of a year. The programs work together to
form a national safety net against hunger. The
National School Lunch and
School
Breakfast Programs provide nutritionally balanced, free and
low-cost meals to nearly 32 million school children each school day.
SNAP, formerly known as the Food Stamp Program, puts healthy food in
reach for more than 44 million Americans each month, half of whom are
children.
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