How Healthy are Your Kids' Meals at the San Angelo ISD?

 

In the United States today, childhood obesity remains a serious problem, and according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, about 17 percent of children, aged 2-19 years, are obese. This number equals to approximately 12.7 million children and adolescents who have suffered from obesity for the past decade.

Additionally,16.4 percent of children, 2-5 years old, are overweight while 14.9 percent in the same group fall under the obese category. As for adolescent children aged 6-19, this group is 15.6 percent overweight and 15.7 percent obese, noted the CDC. This age group also ranks the 5th highest in the U.S.

Because of these numbers, most U.S. public schools, including those in San Angelo and Tom Green County, are adopting healthy practices in their meal programs to meet federal school standards and to help in the fight against the epidemic plaguing U.S. children.

Getting the A+ Grade

When it comes to school meals, the San Angelo Independent School District not only gets a stamp of “certified healthy” on its menu, but it also meets and exceeds the standards set forth by federal regulations.

“About two years ago, we started making some big changes in our menus,” said Jamie Highsmith, public information officer for SAISD. “We’re ahead of the game.”

This change included eliminating fried foods, going to whole grains, and offering fresh fruit, which of course meets the guidelines outlined in the Nutrition Standards in the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs.

Because these meals “are an important source of nutrition as students consume almost half of their daily calories at schools,” federal regulations require students have access to more servings of fresh fruits and vegetables, whole grains and reduced-sodium foods.

Although adhering to the initiatives and dealing with the continual federal standard changes almost annually for the past four years have been complex and expensive, Child Nutrition Director Kim Carter with SAISD, said the district received a perfect score during the last audit, which happens every three years for compliance.

“We were ecstatic,” Carter said. “We work very hard to try and comply all of the time--but just to receive a perfect audit--that was phenomenal for my staff because they work so hard and try so hard for the kids that we serve.”

Doing What’s Best for the Students

Carter, who has been in the field of nutrition for 29 years and with SAISD for 21, added that she and her staff will always do what’s in the best interest of the students.

“From a nutrition standpoint, following a balanced diet and getting the appropriate nutrients can have an impact on how an individual is going to perform academically,” Carter stated. Good nutrition also determines how students perform physically, she added.

To help with performance, Carter and her staff have no problem providing students with healthy choices. Even the district’s “A La Carte” has strict guidelines with what it can offer. Thus, when Carter’s staff offers pizza to the masses, it’s not the pizza students will find at Pizza Hut or Domino's. Instead, it’s whole-grain with low-fat cheese. 

“I can’t say the choices are appealing to everyone,” Carter admitted. However, for those students who don’t like the healthy option, they elect to bring food from home or do something else. In most cases though, students are happy with the change, the Director said.

Between 2000 and 2014, the percentage of schools, including SAISD, implementing five of the nine nutrition services practices examined has increased significantly said the CDC. Officials with the CDC believe that “schools play a critical role in demonstrating and reinforcing healthy eating behaviors, and that the promoted eating habits are “particularly important because children’s eating patterns carry into adulthood.”

Overcoming the Frustration of Ever-Changing Regulations

Despite schools having implemented many changes in their menus to help with the fight against obesity, more improvement is necessary stated the CDC; therefore, new guidelines by the Federal Government to reduce sodium levels even further have many districts scrambling to find ways how to do so, which makes the process of planning a school meal both complex and frustrating at times, Carter said.

“I think that it’s important that we offer healthy meals to children; however, I think there needs to be a nutritional compromise in the regulations,” Carter suggested.

Although she confirmed that SAISD has noticed some compromise by the government, Carter said more dialogue has to take place because some school districts need some flexibility in their meal planning.

“For instance, one of the requirements right now is the all grains that we offer have to be at least 50 percent whole-grain. That’s pretty high,” Carter said. Despite this, there's an acceptability within most students’ taste palates at this level because that’s what the national dietary standards are.

“I think, however, FDA standards are pushing even beyond that. I don’t think students’ taste palates are adapted to everything being 100 percent whole grain,” Carter claimed. Especially, in cases with pasta and tortillas, the director feels that standard goes a bit overboard.

She said, “It makes it pretty challenging. I think in our district though we try to prepare our children. We started gradually phasing in some things so they could start learning the new taste. Regardless, requiring everything to be whole grain is a little excessive.”

Not only is the increase excessive, but the constant changes in the menu also get costly. Carter complained that no extra funds have been added to the coffers for school meals even though eating healthier costs more money. 

These challenges may be why many school districts outside of SAISD are sticking to the minimum standards in their meal planning.

Superintendent Walter Holik Jr with Wall Independent School District said his district chooses simply to follow the guidelines, which he views as getting stricter every year.

“For us, it’s more a regulatory thing. If you get federal dollars, you have to follow federal guidelines,” Holik noted.

Carter said she doesn’t blame Wall ISD for doing so.

“I’ve been in this business a long time,” she stated. “It’s an extremely complicated process to meet all of the requirements the feds require. It’s also a very complicated structure, and resources and expenses remain an issue.”

Changing More Than Students Can Chew

The greatest issue Carter and area schools face this current school year is the reduction in sodium levels they can offer.

“That is going to be a challenge for everyone because we were already at a very low level, and that’s another one of those compromises where I’m hoping they'll say, ‘Okay, we’ve gone far enough,’” Carter said.

If there is no room for compromise, Carter added that it will take extra time in putting combinations of items together to meet the sodium intake, and nutrition directors across Tom Green County will have to evaluate and look at new products. Although manufacturers are also doing what they have to in order to comply with new regulations, nutrition staff members will have to improvise ways to meet the standard. Not to mention, if federal regulations continue to change at this rate, nutrition directors will have more to worry about than meeting federal regulations.

On that note, Carter said, “[Adopting a healthier nutrition program] is not going to do any good if we’re feeding trash cans.”  

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Sigman, Mon, 09/07/2015 - 21:13

Perhaps all of you should take a trip to one of SAISD's Cafeteria's and try some of this "fine cuisine." This is by far some of the worst looking and worst tasting food I have ever encountered! It looks nothing like the photos shown above. More often than not, students throw this "fine cuisine" into the trash containers. If you don't believe me, go try some!!

solution. My sons used to like their school lunches at Wall, but now they rarely if ever eat them and bring their own. My sons are skinny as rails, and the portions Moochelle has dictated from her unelected throne in the White House would have them looking like Ethiopian refugees. That of course assumes they ate them at all. With the reduction in sodium and ingredients dictated by her highness the food is inedible. They are also very active in sports, and in this heat need the sodium she has arbitrarily eliminated from their diet. If it isn't sufficient for my barely 100 lb youngest son, what do the 250 lb offensive linemen do? The only good thing to come out of it is I have no concerns they will ever vote for a Democrat after being given this multi-year object lesson in one size fits all "progressive" government. They find it even more distasteful then the new school lunches.

My children love the food that is served in their school. If your child is packing his or her own lunch then there is really no need to complain about what others eat. "Moochelle." Totally juvenile at best.

Not all kids have the same metabolism, athletes need more calories (and sodium) to keep from getting cramps and dropping too much weight.
I took my 16yo son for his school physical and was told he was in the bottom 5 percentile for weight and needed to eat more, just as the school cut back on portion sizes.
My kids came home the second day of school complaining of "Michelle's rules". I have a feeling that my daughter is voting republican next year when she turns 18, and the boys will follow when they get old enough.

You spoiled people complain about everything. This is America, where you are free to make your own choices, and here are your options:

If you or your child isn't happy with what's being offered, then don't pay for it. Pack your kids' lunch.

If you're too poor to afford to pack your child's lunch and are given a meal plan, the only time your child's mouth should be open is when his free or reduced meal is being consumed. Beggars can't be choosers, and I'd rather them try harder to offer healthier options than stuff greasy fried food down kids' gullets. Any of these "disgusting" meals your child is being offered and subsequently throwing in the trashcan at lunch would make a child in Africa weep with joy. My mother would have worn a hole in the seat of my pants with a leather belt if I threw perfectly good food away because I didn't like the way it tasted.

If your precious child is in an athletic program that necessitates an increased caloric intake, then your special child is a special case and you should take special care to pack their special lunch, and you should have no complaints about the food that your special children don't eat.

This is the public school system, not a luxurious private or charter school. These people are working for you to ensure your children have healthy options, and all you want to do is complain or turn it into a political fiasco, blaming "Moochelle." Well "Moochelle" isn't your mom. She isn't your child's mom. You don't have to do what she tells you. She isn't chaining your children to the walls and force feeding them Soylent Green through tubes. Be an adult. Pack their lunch. If that's too costly for you then get food stamps or be grateful.

School lunches are a luxury that didn't exist a hundred years ago. What you should be more concerned about is what your child is being taught, but I guess in a culture of 'gimme-gimme's the only thing you're concerned about is teaching them to have a voracious sense of self entitlement.

Good Job.

"Progressive" is shorthand for "do as I say, not as I do." If you don't understand what this is really about, then don't comment. How ironic that you mention luxurious private school which is exactly where the Obama children go, and for some reason are fed actual food that American children normally consume while the children of the unwashed masses are served what their "betters" dictate they shall eat.

http://poorrichardsnews.com/post/101260514403/what-do-michelle-obamas-kids-eat-at-their-posh

really aren't that big and the food really does need some seasoning. for those people saying pack a lunch, you must not realize that there aren't lockers for the kids to store their lunches in so the lunches get squished.

I actually spoke with someone from the paper 2years ago in regards to this issue. I was called to the school because my daughter is over weight. Anyway.. she brought home some pancakes in a package from breakfast and I still have them 3years later.. they have not changed color.. they are still soft.. and smell great!! Just like maple syrup.. hmmm how healthy could this be? Sort of reminds me of the internet discover and a certain "clown" and the food kids love from that place.

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