Why a Twenty-Something Should Care About School Lunch | Civil Eats

Why a Twenty-Something Should Care About School Lunch

For many twenty-somethings like myself, issues like school lunch can be murky and distant. I’m not eating school lunch; nor do I have children who are eating school lunch (nor will I in the foreseeable future). When I think of school lunch, I mostly envision a Wonder Years-style cafeteria line, complete with mystery meat (or is it called Salisbury steak?) and a scoop of mashed potatoes. Not so bad, not so good, but unchanging and unchangeable. Right? Wrong.

School lunch isn’t unchanging and it isn’t unchangeable. It is changing: it is largely getting worse – looking more and more like fast food, with fewer and fewer nutrients for the kids, and more and more fat and calories. This information alone – that kids were eating pizza and chicken nuggets and baloney and cheese sandwiches – was surprising to me, making my Wonder Years visions look like home-cooked meals.

But what was truly shocking to me was just how possible it is to change school lunch for the better, just how changeable school lunch (and breakfast) is. For years now, since I realized just how bad school lunch really is, I have been wondering about legislation. There must be some way to change things, I thought, if only there was some way…But I figured that was just the way it is; that’s just what school lunch had to be, that it was a meal put in place by a government action a billion years ago that would take an act of divine intervention to ever get back on the Hill.

And then, this year, I discovered the Child Nutrition Act. For one thing, I had no idea there was one all-encompassing bill that covered not only school lunch, but also school breakfast. And for two, and perhaps more importantly, I had no idea that this all-encompassing wonder bill came up for reauthorization in Congress every five years.

I think a lot of people out there are like me: we know that school lunch is abominable and shameful, but it seems like such a large, vague problem that it just isn’t even approachable. Starting from scratch to fix a problem as widespread and systemic as school lunch is intimidating, but that’s the thing – we don’t have to start from scratch. A discussion of school lunch is actually built in to legislation every five years, and the next reauthorization coming up this September. And that means that we actually have a chance to make a change this year – or if you really think about it, to make a change this year, and then five years from now, and then five years from then.

I care about school lunch because five years from now (or five years from then), I may be sending my kids to school, and I want to be confident they’re getting a lunch that is both tasty and nutritious. I care because my taxes will be paying for the health care costs of diabetes (which one in three children born after the year 2000 will have). I care because better school lunch can help stimulate local economies, by giving workers skills and investing in local farms. I care because school lunch is a holistic problem, with wide-ranging implications; and I care because school lunch is also a specific issue, and because on that most specific level it the food we are feeding children is shameful.

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Want to be part of a country that feeds its children right? Sign the Time for Lunch petitionorganize an Eat-In, and be aware that school lunch affects everyone in America, whether or not you or your child is eating it.

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Claire Stanford is an MFA student at the University of Minnesota and a blogger at Food Junta. Read more >

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  1. keepin it real
    Great article, Claire! Supersize Me has a great segment on this:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f3gXXtlA2sg
  2. Baltimore City has a great local farm initiative to get fresh produce into our schools: http://www.citypaper.com/news/story.asp?id=18167
  3. Thanks for bringing this important bill to folks' attention, Claire!

    Anyone who is serious about child nutrition, or reaching the President's goal of ending child hunger by 2015, needs to be involved in this debate.

    You can see what we here in Texas are calling for here.
  4. Great article! Great cause!

    And ... there are even more reasons to care.
    I care about school lunches because these kids are going to be the consumers of tomorrow. The majority. I want them to get used to eating good food now so that they make good, healthy, sustainable choices later... so that MY marketplace is filled with the sort of food I want to eat 20 years from now!
  5. ...because all children deserve a chance at a quality education.
  6. As a kid, I never ate my lunch properly and my mom used to be worried about this. I was kinda introvert and careless about my health. Now as a 25 year old I realize the basics of health and nutrition should have been implanted into my young mind . I would have been more fit, pro-active and overall healthier than I am now!

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