Healthy nutrition factors into menus
Paul Clinton
As public school officials across the nation grapple with obesity
among children, local school leaders have also refocused their
efforts to serve healthy meals at lunchtime and weed out sugary foods
like soft drinks and candy.
For the second school year in a row, the Newport-Mesa Unified
School District is employing a chef, nutritionist and nurse to help
educate elementary through high school students about how to eat
healthier during the week.
“For a long time, we’ve been looking for ways to reduce childhood
obesity,” Nutrition Services Director Dick Greene said. “We’ve always
had a nutritional standard in place that we adhere to.”
District coffers received a $165,000 grant from the United States
Department of Agriculture last school year that went to hire the
nutritionist, nurse and chef, who also oversees food preparation in
the cafeteria. This year, the school received $250,000 from the
department.
The district also offers culinary classes at Newport Harbor High
School and is tackling the hot topic of reducing carbonated sodas in
district vending machines, Greene said.
Also, meals served in the school cafeterias must include one of at
least five different food categories -- fruits, vegetables, milk,
protein and grains.
On the first day of school, the district will serve a salad, two
mini cheeseburgers, fruit, milk and a fresh-baked cookie at its
elementary schools.
The district is also moving to remove sodas that have minimal
nutritional value, Greene said.
On Aug. 27, the Los Angeles Unified School District board banned
the sale of soft drinks during school hours at its 677 schools.
Newport-Mesa officials aren’t taking the hard-line approach, but
they are working on phasing out sodas by 2004, Greene said.
The district collects about $2,000 per month from Coca Cola
vending machines at the four high schools -- Corona del Mar, Costa
Mesa, Estancia and Newport Harbor. Half of those revenues are given
to student body groups to help pay for student activities.
School officials are have convinced Coca Cola to add more fruit
juices, bottled water and Gatorade to its vending machines instead of
soda. The company has also agreed to remove soda advertising from the
fronts of the vending machines and replace them with ads for water or
juice, Greene said.
Instead of banning sodas, district officials are leaving the
transition to the free market. Last year, students bought two bottles
of water for every soda from the vending machines, he said.
Private schools have also worried that sodas and candy can
negatively impact the learning process. Scientific studies have
debated the effect of sugar on children’s behavior.
The founders of Sage Hill High School, a nondenominational
independent school in Newport Coast, banned the sale of sodas when
the school opened in September 2000.
“I don’t think anybody would think loading a kid up on sugar is a
good thing,” school spokeswoman Suzanne McLaughlin said. “We are
concerned about a healthy mind, body and spirit.”
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