On mesh conveyor belt

On mesh conveyor belt a June broadcast of the Inside School Food podcast, Jacqlyn Schneider, policy director for the Senate Agriculture Committee under Senator Stabenow, noted that there will likely be a fair amount of bipartisan agreement on many aspects of the CNR as it relates to school food, such as a proposed expansion of the Farm to School program, improving access to summer meals, and providing more funding for equipment and training. But it’s the proposed weakening of school food standards that will most challenge legislators in finding common ground.

In lobbying Congress, the SNA has couched its goals as merely seeking “flexibility” for school districts, a term which sounds innocuous. But if the organization succeeds in pushing through its mesh conveyor belt, it likely will be quite difficult to re-institute the higher nutritional standards set by the HHFKA, at least in the near term.

Meanwhile, almost 31 million children participate in the National School Lunch Program and, of those, almost 21 million live close enough to the poverty line to qualify for free or reduced-price meals. Similarly, 11 million children receive free or reduced-price breakfast each day. For many of these children, school meals are a sorely needed source of nutrition and may be mesh conveyor belt only balanced meals they eat during the week.

So while the 2015 CNR is guaranteed to be a complex mix of partisan politics, conflicting economic considerations, and some degree of compromise, from a purely science-based perspective, one thing is clear: A win for the SNA would be a loss for our nation’s most vulnerable mesh conveyor belt.

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