
Sale
of Junk Food at School Banned
L.A. Unified campuses will be required
to
offer more healthful treats for students.
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-junk29oct29,1,2398330.story?coll=la
October 29,
2003
By Cara MiaDiMassa, Times Staff Writer
The Los Angeles
Unified School District decided Tuesday to secede from Candyland.
Its 713 campuses
next year will be kicking out Twix, Snickers and M&Ms in favor of
more healthful treats, such as nuts, baked chips, fruit snacks and pretzels.
In hopes
of slimming down its many chubby students, the Los Angeles Board of
Education voted unanimously to ban fried chips, candy and other junk
foods from school vending machines and student stores and to put strict
limits on the amount of fat, sugar and sodium in any snacks sold during
the school day.
Most of the
changes are to go into effect July 1, 2004, joining a previously approved
ban on soft drinks that starts in January.
"We
have a chance to make a difference in the health of our kids,"
said board member Marlene Canter, who was the driving force behind the
proposal. "The provisions of this motion move us in that direction
in a big-time way.
"As
the second biggest school district in the nation, our actions today
will resonate," she said.
The junk-food
ban does not affect regular cafeteria menus, which are governed by separate
federal nutritional guidelines. But the plan urges the district to increase
the variety and accessibility of fresh fruits and vegetables. It also
directs administrators to figure out how to end contracts with brand-name
fast-food vendors that sell pizza and burgers on some campuses.
The school
board also voted unanimously Tuesday night to adopt a new one-year pilot
policy that relaxes a former ban on students' use of cell phones, pagers
and other electronic devices on Los Angeles Unified campuses. The new
trial rules permit students to use them during lunch and nutrition breaks
but also gives campus administrators the power to revoke those privileges
if the phones prove disruptive.
The cell
phone change was adopted with little discussion, unlike the nutrition
measure. Some teachers and coaches expressed concerns that the junk-food
ban would prevent candy sales that fund many extracurricular activities.
But Canter and other advocates said that the sale of more healthful
foods could prove as lucrative, and a lot less fattening.
According
to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than
15% of American children between the ages of 6 and 19 are considered
obese, up from 6% two decades ago. In addition, doctors are seeing more
children with ailments that were once considered "adult" problems
often linked to obesity: high blood pressure, clogged arteries and type-2
diabetes. Those risks, the CDC reported, are especially high for Latino
children, who make up the majority of Los Angeles district students.
None of that
seemed to matter to Stephanie Vasquez, a senior at Franklin High School
who expressed relief that the ban would go into effect after she graduated.
"I think
that's very stupid," she said in an interview from home. "You
go to school all lazy and tired and you need something to wake you up.
You do need some sugar. It's like taking the teachers' coffee away.
If you want us to get good grades, we need to be psyched up for class
. We want a soda here or there, or a bag of chips."
In 2001,
Gov. Gray Davis signed legislation that would give California elementary
schools 10 cents per meal if they limited the sale of junk food and
soda. But so far, the law's $60 million price tag has not been funded.
Earlier this
month, Davis signed another bill that prohibits all public elementary,
middle and junior high schools in the state from selling sodas on campus,
starting next July.
Texas has
banned junk food in its elementary and middle schools; New York City
has banned junk food from all school vending machines. Other states
and districts are considering similar limitations.
Gail Woodward-Lopez,
associate director of the Center for Weight and Health at UC Berkeley,
said that, in part because of its diverse population, Los Angeles has
been a "wonderful role model" in seeking better diets for
its students. Asked about the junk-food ban, Woodward-Lopez said, "If
Los Angeles can do it, any school district can do it.
"It's
not that the schools are better or worse than any other institution,
but kids spend a large portion of their day at school," she said.
"The school should be a model for providing healthy foods, making
those foods tasty and affordable. I think it's a no-brainer."
Tuesday's
motion was approved by six of the seven board members. Mike Lansing
had left the meeting during the time of the vote without a public explanation;
later, according to an aide, he declined to comment.
The
plan also requires that each school meal include at least one vegetarian
option. It directs Los Angeles schools Supt. Roy Romer to provide salad
bars in all district high schools within two years and all elementary
schools within six years.
In
addition, the resolution says the district should work toward eliminating,
within three years, all contracts with brand-name fast-food companies.
Arely Herrera,
whose 9-year-old son attends Hoover Elementary, said she had been surprised
when he brought home a menu of the foods served at the school cafeteria.
Lunches for a week in September were a burrito, hamburger, corn dog,
nachos supreme and pepperoni pizza from Pizza Loca.
"I wait
once a month to give him pepperoni pizza," Herrera said. "But
he gets that every Friday at school! They give him food he doesn't like,
and he comes home from school starving. How are kids able to get good
grades if they don't have healthy foods?"
Herrera has
been an active participant in the Healthy Schools Coalition, a group
of teachers, parents, students and activists who pushed for changes
in the foods served at school.
Rosa Villar,
15, a 10th-grader at Downtown Magnet High School, is also a member of
that coalition. Since elementary school, Rosa, who plays junior varsity
basketball, has waited until she gets home to eat a nutritious lunch.
By just looking at the cafeteria food, "you can tell it's unhealthy,"
she said. "I think that should change."
Supporters
of Canter's plan include state Supt. of Public Instruction Jack O'Connell
and Los Angeles County Supervisor Zev Yaroslavsky, as well as such community
groups as the Center for Food and Justice, Community Alliance with Family
Farmers, the Los Angeles Food Justice Network, Public Citizen and the
Verde Coalition.
Its detractors
were mostly people who worried about how to compensate for the money
raised by candy sales for field trips, bands, school dances and some
athletic programs.
Birmingham
High School athletic director Rick Prizant said that the limitations
could mean the loss of "tens of thousands of dollars" that
the school would be unable to make up.
But district
officials pointed to two high schools Venice and Monroe
where restrictions on the kinds of foods sold in vending machines and
student stores have been in effect for at least six months. Those schools
saw a dip initially, but now show only a negligible difference between
money raised from healthful snacks and that from junk foods, they said.
Lisa Jones,
a Monroe High School administrator who runs the healthful food program
there, said students had been consulted when the student store was restocked
with Rice Krispies Treats, spicy nuts and sunflower seeds. "We
have brought them along every step of the way," she said. "We
buy stuff in the store based on what they say to us."
The school
board's other action Tuesday, modifying its policy on cell phone use,
will allow students to keep the phones in lockers, purses or pockets
during the year's trial run. But students will be prohibited from using
them on campus during school hours, except lunchtime and nutrition breaks.
The district
had to review its former, widely ignored ban on the devices after the
state last year rescinded a 15-year-old prohibition against "electronic
signaling devices" at California schools and allowed districts
to set their own rules. The state change was a response to parents who
wanted to be able to reach their children during emergencies.
Romer said
he had allowed the use of cell phones during lunch and nutrition breaks
after principals told him that they couldn't enforce a ban during those
periods.
Click
here to log on to nojunkfood.org., the site of the organization
responsible for getting this resolution to the floor of the LAUSD school
board.
Click
here for more information on ACR16.
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