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Dateline: August 19, 2004
State
eases restrictions on cafeteria food
By
Roger Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise
Connie
McKinney has good news for Clarendon Elementary students. They can still
eat French fries in the school cafeteria.
But
before a celebration gets out of hand, McKinney, who is the director of
the CISD cafeteria, notes that kids in Kindergarten through the fifth
grade can only have fries once a week and the servings must be limited to
three ounces.
“That’s
about five or six fries,” McKinney said.
Still,
that represents an easement in a string of changes handed down earlier
this year by Texas Agriculture Commissioner Susan Combs in her crusade
against what she has called a “childhood obesity epidemic.” Nutrition
policies, which took effect August 1, require schools to eliminate all
fried foods and to limit the portion sizes and fat and sugar contents of
other food items.
Originally,
school officials were told to get rid of their deep fryers by 2006 and
that all foods that once were fried must now be baked, including French
fries, corndogs, and burritos. But in a seminar last week McKinney was
informed that the cafeteria could keep its fryer until 2009.
“Too
many people complained about oven space,” McKinney said. “If you’re
serving pigs-in-blankets, baked beans, and French fries all on one day,
that would require a lot of oven space.”
McKinney
says the rules allow junior high students to have French fries in
three-ounce services three times a week and permits high school students
to have fries every day. Junior high kids also can still have iced tea;
but McKinney has to put less sugar in it, and she can only serve it in
eight ounce glasses instead of ten ounce glasses.
The
cafeteria also has to serve more fresh fruit and less canned fruit in
order to cut back on the amount of sugar being served.
CISD
officials worried earlier this year that the new regulations would spell
the death of the junior high and high school a la carte lines, but
McKinney says those are still safe for now.
“You’ve
got to get them [the kids] to eat something,” she said.
McKinney
has her own questions about the new guidelines which limits servings of
fries but still permits a lot of breads in school menus.
“I’ve
asked them about being able to serve ten breads [five for breakfast and
five for lunch] per week, and they said there were no plans to change
that,” McKinney said. “Ten breads a week. That’s a lot of
carbohydrates.”
Texas
schools are not in a position to ignore Combs’ mandates. If CISD
doesn’t comply, the school can lose up to $1.20 at breakfast and $2.19
at lunch in federal reimbursements for each meal lost to a competitive
food sale.
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