Food Police Gone Amok in NY Schools

yizuman

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Bake sales are banned in NY city schools

10/05/2009
NEW YORK — There shall be no cupcakes. No chocolate cake and no carrot cake. According to New York City's latest regulations, not even zucchini bread makes the cut.

Trying to limit how much sugar and fat students put in their bellies at school, the Education Department has effectively banned most bake sales, the lucrative if not quite healthy fundraising tool for generations of teams and clubs.

The change is part of a new wellness policy that also limits what can be sold in vending machines and student-run stores, which use profits to help finance activities like pep rallies and proms. The elaborate rules were outlined in a three-page memo issued at the end of June, but in the new school year, principals and parents are just beginning to, well, digest them.

Parent groups and Parent-Teacher Associations are conspicuously given an exception: once a month they are allowed to sell as many dark fudge brownies and lemon bars as they please, so long as lunch has ended. And after 6 p.m. on weekdays, anything goes. But at that hour, most students are long gone, and as far as the Education Department is concerned, stuffing oneself with coconut macaroons and peanut butter cookies at that hour is one's prerogative.

Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg has made both public health and public education centerpieces of his tenure, and the changes in the schools' food are an outgrowth of his efforts to curb trans fats, salt and other unwanted food additives.

Roughly 40 percent of the city's elementary and middle school students are overweight or obese, according to the Education Department. The department also found a correlation between student health and performance on standardized tests, according to a survey it released in July.

The previous regulations limited sales to once a month and allowed them at any time during that day, but they were loosely enforced. Officials say they will do more to monitor the new regulations.

"We have an undeniable problem in the city, state and the country with obesity," said Eric Goldstein, the chief of the office of school support services. "During the school day, we have to focus on what is healthy for the mind and the body."

Unsurprisingly, the rationale is getting a cool reception among students. At Fiorello H. La Guardia High School on the Upper West Side, students are used to having bake sales several times a month. Now, Yardain Amron, a sophomore basketball player, laments that his team will not be able to raise money for a new scoreboard.

Another La Guardia student, Eli Salamon-Abrams, 14, said that when the soccer team held a bake sale in May, his blueberry muffins sold out in 15 minutes. He said of the ban: "I think it's kind of pointless. I mean, why can't we have bake sales?"

The new policy also requires that vending machines, which generate millions of dollars for school sports, be supplied with snacks such as reduced-fat Baked Doritos and low-sugar granola bars.

Principals are expected to enforce the new rules. "Noncompliance may result in adverse impact on the principal's compliance performance rating," the policy states.

With the changes, school administrators and teachers who oversee student clubs are laboring to come up with other easy ways to raise money, particularly at a time when school budgets are being cut.

John Sommers, the assistant principal of organization at La Guardia, said that all fundraisers using food were on hold for now.

He said teachers had encouraged students for years to be careful with what they sold. "There was never any cotton candy or something like that, and there weren't sales all the time," he said. "But they are definitely a way kids count on to get money."

A typical weekday sale, he said, could bring in about $500 in profit. "If they wanted to buy some uniforms or go on a trip, that was enough," he added.

Sommers said he was trying to figure out other ways for students to raise money, perhaps by selling T-shirts or key chains. (All of which are decidedly more expensive to produce than a box of brownies.)

Department officials are suggesting that teams use walk-a-thons and similar activities as a way of raising money and doing something active.

For all the changes, there is much the regulations do not address. For instance, there are no stipulations of what kind of treats students may bring to class, so birthday cupcakes appear to be safe. Snack bars of any kind are permitted at after-school sporting events, a prime time for cheese-laden nachos and fatty hot dogs.

Schools around the United States, including throughout California, have banned bake sales or put a limit on the sugar and fat content of the goodies. But New York's regulations are among the strictest in the country, said Howard Wechsler, the director of the division of adolescent and school health at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

"There are more schools that are making more changes in what is available for kids at school," said Dr. Wechsler, who has studied nutrition policies at schools nationwide. "Schools are supposed to be a place where we establish a model environment, and the last thing kids need is an extra source of pointless calories."

Source: Bake sales are banned in NY city schools - STLtoday.com

There goes the traditional fund raising ways of making money for school projects.

What's next? Ban breathing air because of air pollution? (It's NY after all)

Yiz
 
I bet half of the people behind this food ban are overweight themselves.
 
40% of the kids are overweight?....Wow!. I don't bake cakes or sweets very often. My boys are very active with sports and outdoor activities. Fruits are best....I'm always asking them what they had for lunch in school, and it's usually pizza, chicken nuggets and fries, chicken sandwiches, etc. And that's fattening.

Some kids, after sitting down all day in school, come home and sit down at night in front of the TV or play video games. And snack.....During the winter, it's worse. I've got my boys to doing push ups and sit ups every night before bed....So, I'm not entirely blaming the schools, it's the parents who need to fix better meals at home and make sure their kids get activity outside in the evenings. Mowing the lawn 1-2 times a week during the summer and raking leaves in the fall. Giving them jobs to do, and doing it well. Even walking to the store instead of riding in the car. Bike riding, skateboarding...anything to exercise.
 
The schools have cut back on physical education. Personally, I'd like more physical education at school. The kids need to get out of their seats and have a break from sedentary work.
 
adults overweight learning first hand? How about exemplifying their support by walking the walk by actually exercising and follow a healthy eating habit instead of hypocritically demand such a thing?
 
They shouldn't be going after bake sales...

They should be going after products that use fructose corn-syrup and all that other stuff that is in most of the junk food nowadays.
 
Kokonut, your lack of compassion astounds me.
 
40% of the kids are overweight?....Wow!. I don't bake cakes or sweets very often. My boys are very active with sports and outdoor activities. Fruits are best....I'm always asking them what they had for lunch in school, and it's usually pizza, chicken nuggets and fries, chicken sandwiches, etc. And that's fattening.

Some kids, after sitting down all day in school, come home and sit down at night in front of the TV or play video games. And snack.....During the winter, it's worse. I've got my boys to doing push ups and sit ups every night before bed....So, I'm not entirely blaming the schools, it's the parents who need to fix better meals at home and make sure their kids get activity outside in the evenings. Mowing the lawn 1-2 times a week during the summer and raking leaves in the fall. Giving them jobs to do, and doing it well. Even walking to the store instead of riding in the car. Bike riding, skateboarding...anything to exercise.

it is ok for your kids to eat fatty food as long as they are extremely active. It is also important to eat fatty food because of huge amount of energy they're burning. Lot of people eat fatty food and rot on sofa while playing game.
 
Eating habits start at home. And encourage kids to have an active lifestyle. It's about instilling certain healthy values hoping it'll hold up once they graduate. I agree that there is an over-abundance of the sugary stuff. There needs to be a balance.
 
Bake sales are banned in NY city schools

10/05/2009


Source: Bake sales are banned in NY city schools - STLtoday.com

There goes the traditional fund raising ways of making money for school projects.

What's next? Ban breathing air because of air pollution? (It's NY after all)

Yiz

GOOD! instead of promoting EAT EAT EAT, how about promoting MOVE MOVE MOVE?

I don't know what the article is talking about but t-shirt and keychains are NOT expensive to buy. When purchasing a box of tshirt locally, the store usually offer it at discounted price... about $2 per shirt in bulk and when selling it - the student can sell it for like $5-10+ per shirt.

As for keychain - there are plenty of moms & grandmas who can knit. They can easily make keychain made out of rope such as Monkey's Fist keychain. You can do many cool stuff with it. see pix below -

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these people need to stop bitching and put that time to coming up with new simple idea.
 
It is a fact that in America there is a good majority of folks that are overweight. I think it's a good thing for kids to eat healthy. It's not a matter of only having desert or goodies once and a while. For some that is the norm which to me is scary. I worry about their health later in life.
 
adults overweight learning first hand? How about exemplifying their support by walking the walk by actually exercising and follow a healthy eating habit instead of hypocritically demand such a thing?
Right but it's also about making sure there are healthy choices available. Sometimes that is not the case and you end up with the choice of the lesser of two evils. Kind of like we are faced with at election time in America but then I digress.
 
Just heard on the radio that more high schools and middle school are seeing a reversal trend of less soda and snack machines in the halls, which is good news.
 
Just heard on the radio that more high schools and middle school are seeing a reversal trend of less soda and snack machines in the halls, which is good news.

in Oregon?
 
Well, the Democrats are behind it, and Obama ochestrated it. It only starts with New York. Soon it will spread to the rest of out country because Obama want to indoctrinate our kids into accepting a healthy lifestyle. Just look at his health care proposal. He wants to force everyone to take care of their health. It is socialist, I tell you.

Okay, I'm finished now. Couldn't resist the sarcasm.:giggle:
 
Move, Move, Move is good advise...I just told my boys get off ur arse and go pick up some pecans before the squirrels eat them all....Get the kids moving and less snacking. My boys do eat donuts (which they love). But that's about it. No candy bars or gum with sugar in it. Sodas to a minimum, lots of water in the frig. They are not overweight, thank goodness. But have a very good appetite.
 
Well, the Democrats are behind it, and Obama ochestrated it. It only starts with New York. Soon it will spread to the rest of out country because Obama want to indoctrinate our kids into accepting a healthy lifestyle. Just look at his health care proposal. He wants to force everyone to take care of their health. It is socialist, I tell you.

Okay, I'm finished now. Couldn't resist the sarcasm.:giggle:

:hmm: I have been noticing the Obama family looks thin and healthy. And I believe Mrs. Obama did an interview with Parent's magazine about child nutrition. :shock:
 
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