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Can Michelle Obama Make the Math Work for Better School Food?

by: euclidarms

Wed Feb 17, 2010 at 02:07:00 AM PST


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By Ed Bruske
aka The Slow Cook

Launching her anti-obesity campaign--Let's Move--last week, first lady Michelle Obama vowed to add 1 million kids to the 31 million already being served daily by federal reimbersible meal programs while cutting back on the foods kids like most--refined grains, potatoes, sugar, salt--and adding things kids like least--vegetables and whole grains. Meanwhile, President Barack Obama offered to split $1 billion per year over the next 10 years between schools and other meal programs, an amount school food advocates say isn't enough to add even an apple to kids' cafeteria trays.

Sound like a winning strategy?

Impressively, Michelle Obama has rounded up a bevy of national interest groups and corporations to attempt yet another transformation of school meals. A program that started as a convenient way to dispose of farm surpluses during the Great Depression and turned into an anti-poverty weapon in the 1960s would now become, with the Obama imprint, a teachable moment in the country's battle against swelling waistlines. But success could hinge on whether the government antes up to pay for it, and whether kids will actually eat it. Skeptics are yet to be convinced.

"Michelle Obama is leading a grassroots effort to try and bring the country along. But I don't think the USDA or the White House have the 'clout' or the political will to make the hard changes," said Ann Cooper, nutritionist for schools in Boulder, Colorado, and a leading advocate for improved school food. She said "true change" would require at least another "$1 a day" per child in federal reimbursements. The federal government currently pays $2.68 for each fully-reimbursable school lunch.

Much of the Let's Move agenda turns on nutrition standards recommended last October by the Institute of Medicine at the behest of the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The IOM found that kids are eating too much pizza, french fries and candied cereals. But it warned that  replacing Tater Tots with fresh broccoli is bound to raise the cost of school meals considerably, including the addition of kitchen equipment and skilled staff to prepare attractive, palatable meals.

Specifically, the panel making the recommendations called for adding five servings of fruit each week in the subsidized breakfast program as well as seven or more servings of whole grains. The panel recommends adding two to four servings of fruit at lunch (six to eight servings  for high schoolers), and two to four additional servings (four to six servings for high schoolers) of vegetables, especially dark green and orange varieties, and legumes.

"A change in the meal requirements could have a major effect on the cost of food to school food authorities (SFAs) if there are large changes in the types and amounts of foods required by the standards for menu planning," the IOM panel reported. The panel said it could not predict exactly how much food costs might increase. But the IOM estimated that if students actually select the increased offerings of fruits, vegetables and whole grain products when they are in the meal line--which is, after all, the point of improving the standards--the cost of breakfast would likely rise 23 percent, lunch by 9 percent.

Replacing refined-grain products with whole grain foods, for instance, would result in increased costs of between 3 and 20 percent. But the cost could be higher as there are few whole grain products readily available for school meal programs. They would need to be developed. The IOM recommendations are potentially years from being implimented by the USDA.

Cooper, who previously teamed with Alice Waters to introduce school meals with freshly cooked, local ingredients in Berkeley, Calif., said that while the average cost of food in a school lunch runs around $1, she spends about $1.20 in Boulder, and the budget in Berkeley is around $1.30.

Raising the cost of school food by improving quality is just half the picture, however. The other half of school food budgets is taken up by labor, and Michelle Obama's action plan runs exactly counter to the trend of the last several decades. To cope with tight budgets, schools and their contracted food providers have moved away from skilled kitchen workers and replaced them with "warmer-uppers" who don't work enough hours to qualify for benefits and whose primary qualification consists of being able to re-heat highly processed, precooked meal items shipped from industrial food factories. Introducing more vegetables and other whole ingredients to school menus and making them palatable, the IOM warns, would certainly require more qualified chefs--as well as improved kitchen equipment to work with.

"One possible approach to offering school meals that meet the recommended standards for menu planning is to introduce more on-site food preparation," the IOM states. "This approach requires greater managerial skill, often requires susbstantial one-time investment in equipment, and most often would require more skilled labor and/or training..."

The IOM panel cited an analysis of data from 350 Minnesota schools suggesting that "healthier" meals required higher labor costs, but lower expenditures for processed foods. "The authors call for funds to be made available for labor training and kitchen upgrades." But if these kinds of improvements are made on the front end, and lower food costs offset higher labor costs as a result, an increase in federal reimbursement rates might be unnecessary, according to this analysis. Many schools do not have kitchens at all, but could fit within a different model in which meals are prepared fresh in central kitchens, then distributed.

"It's really hard work," said Cooper of the kinds of changes envisioned in the IOM recommendations. "You need to change the menus, change your procurement system, train the entire staff, get more equipment, find more money, do fundraisers, train the staff some more, market to parents, market to teachers, market to kids, retest recipes. work with unions, figure out the budget...It goes on and on. I've often said it's the hardest thing I've ever done."

Where would the money for kitchen upgrades come from? The IOM report suggests there might be some in the "Know Your Farmer, Know Your Food" (PDF) program instituted last year by USDA Deputy Secretary Kathleen Merrigan. Merrigan has said that nearly $1 billion in federal grant funds used in the past for building rural fire stations, hospitals and community centers could be allocated to food-related projects, such as building storage facilities for locally grown produce, food markets and school kitchens. But schools would need to apply for the money.

The IOM panel also warns that implimenting the standards it proposes could attract more children to the federal school meal program--or drive them away. Kids norotoriously don't like vegetables when they are overcooked and slapped on cafeteria trays.  As I found while observing the kitchen operations at my daughter's elementary school recently, kids will refuse the standard vegetable offerings when given a choice, and the IOM acknowledges that while new standards might result in more vegetables being served in school cafeterias, that doesn't mean kids will actually eat them. A 1996 nationwide survey of school cafeteria managers found that 42 percent of cooked vegetables--along with 30 percent of raw vegetables and salads--ended up in the trash.

Kids also don't like whole grains much. Nevertheless, Michelle Obama said several national school food suppliers--Sodexho, Chartwells, Aramark-- have "voluntarily committed" to meet the Institute of Medicine's recommendations within five years to decrease the amount of sugar, fat and salt in school meals, and increase the whole grans and double the amount of produce they serve within 10 years--a rather long time frame, as far as advocates such as Ann Cooper are concerned.

In fact, the Obama plan proposes a model of school wellness that incorporates fresh, local produce, school gardens and nutrition education at a time when most school administrators seem incapable of focusing on anything but reading and math scores.  "Let's Move" sets worthy goals for school food, but whether those are achievable within the confines of the Obama budget proposal is anybody's guess

euclidarms :: Can Michelle Obama Make the Math Work for Better School Food?
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one million kids (4.00 / 1)
Michelle Obama actually said that one million additional students would be served in the first five years. I found this construction opaque. Did she mean 1 million per year, or an average of 200,000 per year?

Ed, do you have information that clarifies this question?


calorie caps (4.00 / 2)
The IOM recommended standards would set calorie caps as well as minimums

Ed Bruske aka The Slow Cook

[ Parent ]
cost of whole grains (4.00 / 1)
I agree that, in the short term, cost of whole-grain products would increase because of the availability bottleneck. Longer term, getting field rice (for example) ready for sale would be cheaper for brown rice than for white rice. Furthermore, although I pay the same price for dry brown Basmati as I would for dry white Basmati, I get 35% more cooked brown rice by volume, so the whole grain "goes further", with the additional benefit that a cup of cooked brown rice has fewer calories than a cup of cooked white rice.

Speaking of calories, it seems to me that a problem with the whole school nutrition system is that schools face minimun calorie requirements, with no calorie caps. Is that an appropriate response to an obesity epidemic? Shouldn't we be more concerned about calorie limits? Can such a modification of the rules be implemented? Thoughtful implementation of this change might help with the cost bind.


going further (4.00 / 1)
In the case of flour, a pound of white flour will give me the same amount of baked or cooked product as a pound or whole wheat, but how much of the starting material is "lost" when whole wheat is milled into white flour?

Similar situation for rice - a pound of field rice will give the seller more salable product if the product is brown rice rather than white rice.

I don't see how whole grain products should be more costly in the long term. If capitalism produces that result, capitalism is an ass.


[ Parent ]
Making math work... (0.00 / 0)
You know, one day it would be nice if somebody also came along and asked if "the math worked" on so-called 'national defense' expenditures since the end of WWII.  I highly doubt that Guatemalan troops would be manning checkpoints along SE Hawthorne in Portland, or that Bloc Quebecois anthems would currently be sung prior to New York Rangers hockey games, if we didn't spend $X-Quadrillion on same over the past 50 or 60 years...

Again, I'm gonna say I know exactly where the money should come from.  Who in government will actually stand up and say the same thing, though?

Hmmm, one of my own US Senators, Jeff Merkley from Oregon, seems to "get it" on almost all issues, much more so than the rest of The Gang in DC.  It says tons though, that I don't ever think in a million years that even he'd make the same case.

American politics, ain't it grand!

Coming soon to a Philadelphia near you!


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