WASHINGTON – From his powerful perch as chairman of the House Education and Workforce Committee, GOP Rep. John Kline is trying to slow down implementation of new rules requiring school breakfasts and lunches to have more fruits, veggies and whole grains and less simple starch and sodium.
The multiyear roll out of the new nutritional standards mandates that schools limit calories, restrict salt and give every student some vegetables or fruit — even if they don't ask for it. Next school year, there will be more rules on what schools can sell outside the federally reimbursable meal programs, too, including the snacks sold in vending machines and school stores.
Proponents of the new standards say they are trying to shift eating habits, that the days of students getting piles of french fries and pizza for lunch should be over, given climbing obesity and diabetes rates.
"Now that our nation is finally beginning to see a leveling off of obesity rates, it is not the time to go backwards and diminish the nutritional quality of school meals," said Kevin Concannon, an undersecretary at the U.S. Department of Agriculture, in a statement. "As a result of the updated standards, children are consuming more fruits and vegetables, whole grains, lean protein and low fat dairy."
Opponents, including Kline and the powerful food lobby that donates money to him, say the new rules are onerous and expensive for school districts and there is more food waste when students are required to take foods they would not otherwise choose.
The increasing infighting comes even as Minnesota has actually become one of the best states for implementation of the new rules so far. Some 93 percent of the state's schools are in compliance so far with the new standards, according to the USDA. Despite this, some of the state's largest food companies, including General Mills and Schwan's, are challenging the new standards through interest groups and campaign contributions on Capitol Hill.
"It's a very, very big overreach of the federal government," Kline said. "Being in compliance doesn't necessarily mean everything is going well."
Republicans have boosted efforts recently to halt the new standards in their tracks. House appropriators may insert language in next year's spending bill that would stop requirements for increased whole grains and a few other measures. This worries federal agriculture officials and nutritional proponents that the new rules — still squarely in the early and tough implementation stage — won't be able to take hold.