Tuesday, June 8, 2010

The Crux of the Matter

Cleveland.com reported that lawmakers in the Ohio State House voted 77 - 21 to approve legislation which pushes out candy machines and soda pop in favor of low-fat milk, fruit juices, water, and healthier food in Ohio's school lunch rooms by 2014. The bill furthermore requires Ohio schools to measure student's body mass index in Kindergarten, third, fifth, and ninth grades and calls for 30 minutes of physical activity a day. So far, so good.

Then the infighting started. Republicans say that government is interfering too much and taking responsibility away from parents. They admit that one third of students in Ohio is obese. It is therefore a difficult argument to make because one third of parents are contributing to the obesity problem. The Democrats argues that they know physical activity and nutrition will improve the health of youth but there are possible exceptions. Immediately the door opens for both parties to 'pull the teeth' from good legislation for their own political purposes.

The end result is that school districts can seek a waiver to drop the body mass index measurement. Who is going to add more work on an overburdened system? It is fair to assume that this initiative has already failed. Furthermore, school districts successfully lobbied to turn the 30 minutes of daily exercise into a pilot project for districts who want to participate. Guess what's going to happen amongst scheduling nightmares? It's not going to happen.

So the winners are the politicians who tackled a 'tough subject' and passed some legislation and the school districts which can opt out in the primary areas of assessment and activity.

The biggest losers? The students - again!
Michael Cordier

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