Almost 5 years in the making, the child nutrition bill called Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act came to pass in the House of Representatives and is heading to the President who will sign it immediately. It will require that the USDA updates the national standards to get soda and junk food out of school vending machines, a la carte, and school stores.
The child nutrition bill also includes important provisions to increase funding and technical support to improve the nutritional quality of school meals, strengthen local school wellness policies, make it easier for qualified children to receive free school meals, extend after-school meals to more at-risk children, and provide funding for farm-to-school programs.
Opponents criticized it as government's interference with freedom of choice and control over the complete food chain. It is tough to argue against hungry students but some of my fondest memories are the pies and toffees I obtained from the school store with hard-earned pocket money. P & J sandwiches only went so far on the taste buds scale!
Obscure in this marvelous piece of legislation is a report from the Chronicle in Sacramento that the California Appeals Court ruled that parents can take their children's public school to court to force educators to provide the minimum amount of physical education required by law! California's education code requires elementary schools to offer 200 minutes of PE every 10 days and 400 minutes in middle or high schools - not including lunch or recess. A small study found that more than half the schools failed to provide the required minutes of PE. Oops!
Finally the court gave teeth to 'feel-good' legislation. Combine this with recent legislation from Texas that discarded the 'opt-out' clauses for participation in PE, I dare say that momentum is building to the day that PE takes it's rightful place in the core curriculum.
Michael Cordier
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