Daily News Article - March 6, 2015
1. a) Who is Brad Kramer?
b) Why does Mr. Kramer oppose the federal standards for healthy school lunches which have been in effect since 2012?
c) What point does Mr. Kramer make about nutritious food?
2. a) What is the School Nutrition Association?
b) What do the members of the SNA want?
3. Why are members of the School Nutrition Association lobbying Congress at this time?
4. a) What is Kansas Senator Pat Roberts’ top priority as chairman of the Senate Agriculture Committee? What does the Agriculture Committee have to do with school lunches?
b) How does Sen. Roberts view the federally mandated food standards for schools?
c) From paragraph 9: Sen. Roberts said, “It’s not about government standards. It’s about taking the opportunity to make government programs work for the people and not the other way around.” Do you agree with this idea that the government works for us? Explain your answer.
5. How does the U.S. Department of Agriculture counter the opposition to the federal healthy school lunch regulations?
6. With whom do you agree? Explain your answer.
7. Paragraph 7 notes that the law mandates (requires) that students must take half-cup servings of fruit or vegetables as part of every meal. The U.S. Department of Agriculture says the new rules are working. The agency cites a new study that shows children are eating more healthfully at school and tossing out less food since the rules kicked in. The study found that 66 percent of students added fruit to their lunch trays last year, up from 54 percent in 2012. Students also ate 20 percent more vegetables and 13 percent more of their lunch entrees, according to the study.
a) If students are required by law to take fruit or vegetables with their meals, why is the number not 100%?
b) How should school officials ensure that students eat the fruit and vegetables - ensure that they don’t throw this food in the garbage? Could they tie it into grades? Could they require students who participate in sports or clubs to prove they eat the healthy food every day? Explain your answer.
8. Both Democrats and Republicans want children to be healthy. As in most issues of importance, the disagreement is over how to achieve the goal. Liberals support more government action; conservatives believe the people are best left to make their decisions on a local level. In his speech Wednesday, Sen. Roberts called for a civil policy debate, saying he wanted to bring all sides to the table. “Sometimes we’re preaching a little bit or moralizing a little bit and when people disagree it gets a little volatile,” Roberts said. “We don’t need that. We don’t need fear and rhetoric. We need solutions.”
What do you think? Should the federal government’s mandate be changed (lessen the requirements) as the School Nutrition Association wants? Is the mandate successfully changing students’ eating habits? Is the law in its current form necessary for the health of America’s young people?