Supporting Good, Clean, and Fair Food

The Slow Food USA Blog

Fixing School Lunch in America

Posted on Fri, February 26, 2010 by Jerusha Klemperer
2 Comments | Categories: Books, Farms and Farming, Food Justice, Labeling, Policy, School Food, Take Action,

Print Icon Print this Page Email Icon Send to a Friend
Bookmark and Share

by intern Christine Binder

Last month, I attended a meeting of parents at a Brooklyn public school. Janet Poppendieck, the author of Free for All: Fixing School Lunch in America, led a discussion about the state of school lunches, describing to us the changes in the National School Lunch Program over the years, and explaining the various forces that continue to shape what students eat. Afterward, we discussed the potential of the upcoming Child Nutrition Reauthorization – which only happens every five years – to improve school lunches.

In researching for Free For All, Dr. Poppendieck, a professor of sociology at Hunter College, visited school cafeterias and kitchens all over the country, and even spent time working in one. Along the way, she met many people striving to improve school food in their own communities, whom she describes in the “Local Heroes” chapter of the book. It is heartening to hear their stories of success, but I can’t help but agree with her when she says, “It shouldn’t be so hard. One should not have to be a superhero, a magician, or a saint to get healthy, tasty food into the school cafeteria, or to make school food truly accessible to children.”

Currently, there are many obstacles for those working to improve school food. It is very difficult to serve delicious, healthful meals to children with a food budget of less than a dollar per meal. Many schools need to sell junk food in vending machines and snack bars in order to break even. Procuring local food is not always possible, due to bureaucratic and logistical barriers. Poppendieck points out, however, that the National School Lunch Program is ultimately the responsibility of Congress, and that only Congress can “step up to the plate to enact changes in federal law that make local improvements much easier to achieve.”

Towards the end of the meeting, Dr. Poppendieck asked a profound question: “How old will your children be in five years?” Everyone in the room sat in thoughtful silence, imagining the state of school food and the well-being of their children five years from now. When you think about it that way, it’s very clear; America’s children cannot wait any longer for healthy school food. Tell Congress to prioritize school lunches. To quote Free for All one final time, “It’s time to see what we can do if we put children first.”

To contact your legislator, click here!

 


Member Comments

From GreenFoodGal on Fri, February 26, 2010

Funny, after years of advocating for better school food,I came to the same conclusion as Dr. Poppendieck. Little to no change will take place at the district level unless it’s legislated and I’m not talking unfunded mandate here. If First Lady Michelle Obama and Food Revolutionary Jamie Oliver can link their respective initiatives at the national level with the thousands of Local Heroes still working on improving school lunch, we’ll have a good chance of changing things. It would still take years. So now we’re putting in edible school gardens so the kids can learn what real food is, how to grow it and how great it tastes.

From FoodFitnessFreshAir on Sat, February 27, 2010

Congress does need to prioritize school lunches!  But the author is so right, it doesn’t take a magician to create healthy school lunches.  It will take a little more effort, considering healthy food doesn’t come in the form of frozen chicken nuggets, but it’s possible.  Listen to all those supehero stories that show it’s possible!



Post Your Comment

Commenting is not available in this weblog entry.

Monthly Archives

Category Archives

Find Slow Food in your State