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San Francisco County, CA | November 6, 2012 Election |
Improving Student NutritionBy Rachel P. NortonCandidate for Member, County Board of Education; County of San Francisco | |
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San Francisco deserves a school meal program equal to the city's reputation as a food mecca. It's time for the district to lead a major initiative on improving the quality and freshness of meals served to students.With the help of partners like the City's Department of Public Health, its Department of Children, Youth and their Families, and the SFUSD Food and Fitness Committee, SFUSD's Student Nutrition Services (SNS) has worked very hard in recent years to improve the quality and nutritional value of the food served to students. Meals served in SFUSD cafeterias already meet the higher nutritional standards required under the newly-reauthorized National School Lunch Program (according to a recent report, many California districts are not meeting these standards). Of course, there is a great deal more to be done. San Francisco is a food mecca, and many people deplore the fact that meals served to students are largely made by a food processor in Illinois, then sent frozen by truck to be reheated at school sites. If San Francisco had a central kitchen or some other cooking operation, meals would be fresher and quality would be better.
For years, SNS Director Ed Wilkins and other concerned stakeholders working on school food have tried to find funding for initiatives like more SNS staff, an expanded breakfast program, and more choices for lunch. Additional recommended improvements to the program include: However, in today's budget environment, implementing any of this is a tall order -- especially since the nutrition program already runs at a considerable deficit, projected at $2.2 million in 2012-13. There are possibilities for additional revenues -- either through grants, partnerships or even a ballot initiative, but to realize those possibilities, the district will need to demonstrate vision and leadership. Happily, based on the longtime advocacy for these projects by SNS staff and the Food and Fitness Committee, the interest from our new Superintendent, Richard Carranza, and the overall interest in improving school food that I see in the broader community, I think the time is ripe for the district to lead a major initiative on student nutrition. |
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