 |
2003 School Lunch Report Card
A Report by the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, August 2003 |
|
introduction
| the criteria | the report
card
The Report Card
| District |
Location |
Score |
Grade |
| Group 1: Class Act |
Detroit City School District |
Detroit, Mich. |
94% |
A |
| Group 2: Solid Achievers |
Miami-Dade County School District
|
Miami, Fla. |
89% |
B+ |
Gwinnett County Public School District |
Lawrenceville, Ga. |
88% |
B+ |
Charlotte-Mecklenburg School District |
Charlotte, N.C. |
87% |
B+ |
Fairfax County Public School District |
Fairfax, Va. |
86% |
B |
Pinellas County School District |
Largo, Fla. |
Broward County School District |
Fort Lauderdale, Fla. |
85% |
B |
Hillsborough County School District |
Tampa, Fla. |
New York City Public School District |
New York, N.Y. |
81% |
B- |
Philadelphia City School District |
Philadelphia, Pa. |
80% |
B- |
| Group 3: Passable
Performers |
Montgomery County Public School District |
Rockville, Md. |
78% |
C+ |
Prince George's County Public School
District |
Upper Marlboro, Md. |
Dallas Independent School District |
Dallas, Texas |
77% |
C+ |
Palm Beach County School District |
Riviera Beach, Fla. |
76% |
C |
Los Angeles Unified School District |
Los Angeles, Calif. |
71% |
C- |
San Diego City Unified School District |
San Diego, Calif. |
70% |
C- |
| Group 4: Failing Programs |
Clark County School District |
Las Vegas, Nevada |
59% |
F |
District of Columbia Public Schools |
Washington, D.C. |
46% |
F |
Detroit City School District (Detroit, Mich.):
94%
The Detroit City School District is the 12th largest district in
the United States, with 265 schools enrolling 166,675 students.
Fifteen days of elementary school lunches from the fall 2003 menu
were analyzed.
Detroit won the most improved nutrition award this year as it jumped
from a failing grade of 57 percent in 2002 to an “A”
grade of 94 percent this year. The Detroit schools’ fall 2003
menu reflects a number of healthy changes, including a daily offering
of such nutrient-rich, low-fat vegetable side dishes as sweet potatoes,
green leafy vegetables, and black-eyed peas, as well as a daily
choice of such fruit as spiced apples, fresh oranges, and fresh
pears.
In addition, Detroit lunchrooms dish up a meatless entrée
to kids daily and a dairy-free garden burger three times per week.
Students can also always find peanut butter and jelly sandwiches,
and calcium-fortified juices are available so that students who
are unable to tolerate dairy products or choose not to consume them
can have a beverage rich in calcium. Whole grains now appear throughout
the Detroit menu.
The Detroit Schools Office of Food Services is working to implement
additional meatless entrées as they become available from
suppliers. The district will receive a perfect score in future reports
if it is able to make a featured vegan entrée item available
on a daily basis.
The frequency of each of the following on 15 sample lunch menu
days:
Low-Fat Vegetable Side Dish: |
15 |
|
Whole or Dried Fruit: |
15 |
|
Featured Meatless Entrée: |
15 |
|
Featured Vegan Entrée: |
9 |
|
Vegan Entrée Option: |
15 |
|
|
+20 |
for meeting NSLP nutrition guidelines |
|
+5 |
for offering non-dairy, calcium-fortified beverage. |
| |
94 / 100 points |
Miami-Dade County
School District (Miami, Fla.): 89%
The Miami-Dade County School District is the fifth largest district
in the United States, with 363 schools enrolling 375,836 students.
Fifteen days of elementary school lunches from the April 2003 menu
were analyzed.
Miami-Dade made huge improvements in the nutritional quality of
its elementary lunch menus this year, jumping from 71 percent last
year to 89 percent this year. This increase is a result of offering
daily options of low-fat vegetable side-dishes such as sliced tomato
salads and mixed vegetable salads with light dressing, as well as
plantains and a variety of fresh fruits. Meatless entrées
are featured on a near daily basis, including cheese lasagna, toasted
cheese sandwiches, and yogurt and fruit entrées. Vegan entrées
appear about two times per week on the menu and include baked potatoes
with broccoli and cheeseless vegetarian chili. Vegan salads and
peanut butter sandwiches are available at every meal.
Miami-Dade will offer calcium-fortified juices in the upcoming
school year and is currently looking into offering calcium-fortified
soymilk. Also worthy of mention are Miami-Dade’s “Eat
Your Colors Every Day” pilot program and its elementary gardening
programs, which both encourage young kids to appreciate healthy
fruits and vegetables.
The frequency of each of the following on 15 sample lunch menu
days:
Low-Fat Vegetable Side Dish: |
15 |
|
Whole or Dried Fruit: |
15 |
|
Featured Meatless Entrée: |
14 |
|
Featured Vegan Entrée: |
5 |
|
Vegan Entrée Option: |
15 |
|
|
+20 |
for meeting NSLP nutrition guidelines |
|
+5 |
for offering non-dairy, calcium-fortified beverage. |
| |
89 / 100 points |
Gwinnett County
Public School District (Lawrenceville, Ga.): 88%
The Gwinnett County Public School District is the 23rd largest
district in the United States, with 86 schools enrolling 116,339
students. Fifteen days of elementary school lunches from the August
2003 menu were analyzed.
The Gwinnett menu features such healthy side dishes as okra, fresh
vegetables with dip, a vegetable medley, and fresh or chilled fruit
daily. The vegetarian entrées featured in the elementary
schools are quite extensive and include such selections as cheese
ravioli, a veggie sub, a veggie sandwich, and a bean and cheese
burrito. Vegan entrée items are available on a weekly basis
and include choices like a baked potato bar, spaghetti with marinara
sauce, and a bean burrito. A cholesterol-free veggie burger would
be an excellent and simple entrée for Gwinnett to include
in its elementary menu cycle to help improve its grade.
Gwinnett offers additional vegan menu options, including a peanut
butter and jelly sandwich and a veggie sandwich and veggie chef
salad without cheese upon request. Calcium-fortified juices are
available for those who don’t choose milk at Gwinnett, and
calcium-fortified soymilk is provided upon request.
In the upcoming school year, Nutrition Education Leaders will appear
in each school to implement nutrition bulletin boards, classroom
nutrition lessons, and take the kids on kitchen tours with cooking
lessons to help them appreciate good nutrition as a vital part of
health.
The frequency of each of the following on 15 sample lunch menu
days:
Low-Fat Vegetable Side Dish: |
15 |
|
Whole or Dried Fruit: |
15 |
|
Featured Meatless Entrée: |
15 |
|
Featured Vegan Entrée: |
3 |
|
Vegan Entrée Option: |
15 |
|
|
+20 |
for meeting NSLP nutrition guidelines |
|
+5 |
for offering non-dairy, calcium-fortified beverage. |
| |
88 / 100 points |
Charlotte-Mecklenburg
School District (Charlotte, N.C.): 87%
The Charlotte-Mecklenburg School District is the 25th largest district
in the United States, with 137 schools enrolling 106,312 students.
Fifteen days of elementary school lunches from the April 2003 menu
were analyzed.
Charlotte-Mecklenburg features such healthy vegetable side dishes
as calcium-rich turnip greens, squash and onions, cabbage, and spinach,
and such healthy fruits as cantaloupe, apples, and pears on a regular
basis. Vegetarian entrée items like a vegetarian hoagie,
nachos, and a toasted cheese sandwich are available daily, with
such vegan selections as black-eyed peas with Italian bread and
nachos with refried beans appearing approximately once a week on
the menu. A vegan peanut butter sandwich with sunflower seeds option
is available daily. The orange juice at the Charlotte-Mecklenburg
elementary schools is fortified with calcium and is available as
a replacement for milk.
This district will be moving to a nutrient-based menu plan next
year, which will make it easier to serve vegetarian and vegan entrée
items. The district is currently testing a vegan beans and rice
dish that has gone over well with the kids.
The frequency of each of the following on 15 sample lunch menu
days:
Low-Fat Vegetable Side Dish: |
15 |
|
Whole or Dried Fruit: |
15 |
|
Featured Meatless Entrée: |
15 |
|
Featured Vegan Entrée: |
2 |
|
Vegan Entrée Option: |
15 |
|
|
+20 |
for meeting NSLP nutrition guidelines |
|
+5 |
for offering non-dairy, calcium-fortified beverage. |
| |
87 / 100 points |
Fairfax County
Public School District (Fairfax, Va.): 86%
The Fairfax County Public School District is the 14th largest district
in the United States, with 198 schools enrolling 160,584 students.
Fifteen days of elementary school lunches from the September 2003
menu were analyzed.
Fairfax elementary menus have a number of healthy fruit and vegetable
offerings every day, including unique selections such as jicama
and carrots with dip, watermelon, and apricots. The menu features
meatless entrée items every day and includes such items as
cheese lasagna and macaroni and cheese with a wheat roll.
There are two vegetarian entrée options available daily—yogurt
and a pretzel and a grilled cheese sandwich. The daily vegan option
is a peanut butter and jelly sandwich, and one of the fifteen analyzed
days includes a veggie burger on a bun with or without cheese.
Including more vegan entrée items on a regular basis would
help Fairfax reach a perfect score. Entrée items such as
cheeseless vegetarian chili, bean and brown rice burritos, and garden
salads with beans or soynuts are all vegan items that kids love.
These dishes are also low in fat, free of cholesterol, and rich
in health-promoting fiber.
Fairfax was the first school district in the United States to start
serving calcium-fortified juices and has been doing so for the past
three years. In addition, Fairfax County has won a number of national
awards for innovative and educational nutrition programs that help
children adopt healthy eating habits.
The frequency of each of the following on 15 sample lunch menu
days:
Low-Fat Vegetable Side Dish: |
15 |
|
Whole or Dried Fruit: |
15 |
|
Featured Meatless Entrée: |
15 |
|
Featured Vegan Entrée: |
1 |
|
Vegan Entrée Option: |
15 |
|
|
+20 |
for meeting NSLP nutrition guidelines |
|
+5 |
for offering non-dairy, calcium-fortified beverage. |
| |
86 / 100 points |
Pinellas County
School District (Largo, Fla.): 86%
Pinellas County School District is the 22nd largest district in
the United States, with 169 schools enrolling 114,583 students.
Fifteen days of elementary school lunches from the September 2003
menu were analyzed.
Pinellas received full credit for offering nutritious vegetable
and fruit side dishes, vegetarian entrées, and a vegan entrée
option on a daily basis. Examples of these include sweet potatoes,
fresh veggies with dip, steamed broccoli, assorted fresh fruit,
vegetable pizza, veggie chili, and baked ziti with cheese, as well
as a peanut butter and jelly sandwich daily. Only one of the days
analyzed includes a featured vegan entrée (meatless, dairy-free,
and cholesterol-free)—specifically, a bean burrito.
However, to improve the healthy entrée options in the district,
the dietitian in charge of Pinellas County’s menus is currently
looking into an inexpensive vegan burger. The district dietitian
is also working to educate elementary school kids about nutrition
in classroom presentations about the benefits of healthy eating.
The frequency of each of the following on 15 sample lunch menu
days:
Low-Fat Vegetable Side Dish: |
15 |
|
Whole or Dried Fruit: |
15 |
|
Featured Meatless Entrée: |
15 |
|
Featured Vegan Entrée: |
1 |
|
Vegan Entrée Option: |
15 |
|
|
+20 |
for meeting NSLP nutrition guidelines |
|
+5 |
for offering non-dairy, calcium-fortified beverage. |
| |
86 / 100 points |
Broward County
School District (Fort Lauderdale, Fla.): 85%
The Broward County School District is the sixth largest district
in the United States, with 244 schools enrolling 266,055 students.
Fifteen days of elementary school lunches from the July 2003 menu
were analyzed.
Broward County received the same score this year as it did last
year for its elementary lunch offerings. The elementary children
still have daily access to a fresh salad bar as both a vegetable
side dish option and a vegetarian and vegan entrée option.
Fresh fruit and calcium-fortified juices are available daily, and
such featured vegetarian entrée items as grilled cheese sandwiches
and macaroni and cheese appear on a regular basis. There are currently
no featured vegan entrée items.
Broward County could greatly improve its score by offering veggie
burgers without cheese, bean and rice dishes, and cheeseless bean
burritos on a daily basis. On the nutrition education front, Broward
participates in soymilk acceptability studies and the
5 A Day fruit and vegetable pilot program.
The frequency of each of the following on 15 sample lunch menu
days:
Low-Fat Vegetable Side Dish: |
15 |
|
Whole or Dried Fruit: |
15 |
|
Featured Meatless Entrée: |
15 |
|
Featured Vegan Entrée: |
0 |
|
Vegan Entrée Option: |
15 |
|
|
+20 |
for meeting NSLP nutrition guidelines |
|
+5 |
for offering non-dairy, calcium-fortified beverage. |
| |
85/ 100 points |
Hillsborough
County School District (Tampa, Fla.): 85%
The Hillsborough County School District is the 11th largest district
in the United States, with 219 schools enrolling 169,789 students.
Fifteen days of elementary school lunches from the August 2003 menu
were analyzed.
Fresh fruits, low-fat vegetables, and meatless entrées are
served on a daily basis, including honeydew, watermelon, steamed
broccoli, and Italian blend vegetables. The menu does not currently
feature any meatless, dairy-free, and egg-free entrées. However,
peanut butter, soynuts, beans, pecans, and walnuts are all available
daily as vegan protein sources. Juices fortified with calcium are
available with lunches.
Hillsborough has a number of healthy nutrition programs to encourage
kids to select nutrient-dense foods. For example, a new fruit or
vegetable is featured every month, and samples are offered to kids
standing in the lunch line in hopes that they will choose the healthy
new food.
The frequency of each of the following on 15 sample lunch menu
days:
Low-Fat Vegetable Side Dish: |
15 |
|
Whole or Dried Fruit: |
15 |
|
Featured Meatless Entrée: |
15 |
|
Featured Vegan Entrée: |
0 |
|
Vegan Entrée Option: |
15 |
|
|
+20 |
for meeting NSLP nutrition guidelines |
|
+5 |
for offering non-dairy, calcium-fortified beverage. |
| |
85/ 100 points |
New York City
Public School District (New York, N.Y.): 81%
The New York City Public School District is the largest district
in the United States, with 1,164 schools enrolling 1,049,831 students.
Fifteen days of Southern Brooklyn/Staten Island elementary school
lunches from the June 2003 menu were analyzed.
New York jumped up to 81 percent this year from 70 percent last
year by including a daily vegetarian entrée item and a daily
nutritious low-fat vegetable side dish. Fresh and dried fruits and
unique vegetable side dishes are still part of the New York elementary
menu, which includes items such as romaine salads with cherry tomatoes,
seasoned spinach, fiesta blend vegetables, and fresh fruit medleys.
Meatless entrées continue to appear about twice per week
and include favorites such as stuffed shells and French bread pizza.
A vegan entrée item is featured once every three weeks. Examples
include a veggie burger on a wheat bun.
New York could increase its score 14 percentage points by offering
a daily meatless and dairy-free entrée, such as kid-tested-and-approved
bean and rice burritos, hummus sandwiches, and pasta with roasted
vegetables. Citing the high incidence of childhood obesity, the
New York City School District recently announced it would eliminate
soda, hard candy, doughnuts, and other junk food from vending machines
and take strong steps to reduce the portion size and fat content
of lunches served in all the district’s schools.
The frequency of each of the following on 15 sample lunch menu
days:
Low-Fat Vegetable Side Dish: |
15 |
|
Whole or Dried Fruit: |
15 |
|
Featured Meatless Entrée: |
15 |
|
Featured Vegan Entrée: |
1 |
|
Vegan Entrée Option: |
15 |
|
|
+20 |
for meeting NSLP nutrition guidelines |
|
+0 |
for offering non-dairy, calcium-fortified beverage. |
| |
81/ 100 points |
Philadelphia
City School District (Philadelphia, Pa.): 80%
The Philadelphia City School District is the ninth largest district
in the United States, with 263 schools enrolling 197,083 students.
Fifteen days of elementary school lunches from the October 2002
menu were analyzed.
Philadelphia’s elementary schools offer unique low-fat veggie
side dishes, such as stewed tomatoes, tossed green salads with low-cal
dressing, vegetarian baked beans, and steamed corn. Assorted fresh
fruit, meatless entrées, and vegan entrée options
of peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, soy pockets, and soy tacos
are offered daily, with cheese ravioli, grilled cheese sandwiches,
and baked macaroni and cheese as examples of a few of the vegetarian
main dishes.
The only area where Philadelphia menus lost points was in the category
of featured vegan entrées. Philadelphia could improve its
score by featuring its soy tacos and soy pocket sandwiches, as well
as by trying items such as soy hot dogs, vegetarian bean and rice
dishes, veggie chili, and cheeseless lasagna.
Philadelphia’s interactive nutrition education programs are
worth bragging about. Inventive programs in the elementary schools
include the “Dragon Detective Agency,” in which kids
try to solve the mysteries of good nutrition with healthy drinks,
vegetables, snacks, and fruits. The schools also offer assembly
programs emphasizing physical activity and healthy eating, classroom
and after school nutrition education programs, and partnerships
with local gardening programs that allow children to grow, taste,
and sell nutritious vegetables and fruits at an after-school market
stand.
The frequency of each of the following on 15 sample lunch menu
days:
Low-Fat Vegetable Side Dish: |
15 |
|
Whole or Dried Fruit: |
15 |
|
Featured Meatless Entrée: |
15 |
|
Featured Vegan Entrée: |
0 |
|
Vegan Entrée Option: |
15 |
|
|
+20 |
for meeting NSLP nutrition guidelines |
|
+0 |
for offering non-dairy, calcium-fortified beverage. |
| |
80/ 100 points |
Montgomery
County Public School District (Rockville, Md.): 78%
Montgomery County Public School District is the 18th largest district
in the United States, with 193 schools enrolling 136,895 students.
Fifteen days of elementary school lunches from the June 2003 menu
were analyzed.
Nutrient-rich, low-fat vegetable sides are available about four
times per week and whole or dried fruit appear nearly every day
on the menu, with selections including mixed vegetables, baby carrots
with dip, tossed salads, raisins, and pineapple. Meatless entrées
appear on the menu three times per week, and meatless, dairy-free
entrées appear approximately once per week. The vegan entrées
available are bean burritos and spaghetti with marinara sauce. Peanut
butter and jelly sandwiches are available as a vegan option every
day. Breakfast items can always be reserved for vegetarian or vegan
children, and calcium-fortified juice is available for children
who do not consume dairy milk.
Adding more vegan entrées, such as veggie burgers and garden
salads with beans and soynuts, to the cycle menu would greatly improve
Montgomery County’s nutrition grade.
The frequency of each of the following on 15 sample lunch menu
days:
Low-Fat Vegetable Side Dish: |
11 |
|
Whole or Dried Fruit: |
14 |
|
Featured Meatless Entrée: |
9 |
|
Featured Vegan Entrée: |
4 |
|
Vegan Entrée Option: |
15 |
|
|
+20 |
for meeting NSLP nutrition guidelines |
|
+0 |
for offering non-dairy, calcium-fortified beverage. |
| |
78/ 100 points |
Prince George’s
County Public School District (Upper Marlboro, Md.): 78%
The Prince George’s County Public School District is the
19th largest district in the United States, with 196 schools enrolling
135,039 students. Fifteen days of elementary school lunches from
the March 2003 menu were analyzed.
Calcium-rich kale and sweet potatoes are two of the regular low-fat
veggie side dishes available at county elementary schools. Seasonal
fresh fruit and hot or cold vegetarian main dishes, such as cold
salad platters, are available daily. Adding such daily vegan entrées
as veggie hot dogs, veggie chili, and bean and brown rice burritos
to the menu, as well as offering calcium-fortified juices, would
increase Prince George’s County’s grade from a C+ to
an A+.
The frequency of each of the following on 15 sample lunch menu
days:
Low-Fat Vegetable Side Dish: |
13 |
|
Whole or Dried Fruit: |
15 |
|
Featured Meatless Entrée: |
15 |
|
Featured Vegan Entrée: |
0 |
|
Vegan Entrée Option: |
15 |
|
|
+20 |
for meeting NSLP nutrition guidelines |
|
+0 |
for offering non-dairy, calcium-fortified beverage. |
| |
78/ 100 points |
Dallas Independent
School District (Dallas, Texas): 77%
The Dallas Independent School District is the 13th largest district
in the United States, with 226 schools enrolling 163,562 students.
Fifteen days of elementary school lunches from the August–September
2003 menu were analyzed.
Dallas scored 12 points higher this year than last. Low-fat vegetable
side dishes and fruits are on the menu approximately four times
per week, including such choices as Popeye (spinach) salad, orange
wedges, and mandarin fruit salad. Dallas could raise its score eight
percentage points by increasing the frequency of such low-fat, nutrient-dense
veggie side dishes as tossed salads, cucumbers with light salad
dressing, and collard greens and adding a daily option of whole
fruit on the menu.
Although Dallas has a hot or cold vegetarian entrée on the
menu each day, a daily offering of low-fat vegan main dishes like
vegetarian burgers, soy hot dogs on whole wheat buns, and bean,
rice, and vegetable stews would significantly increase the nutrient
density and health value of the overall menu. On a positive nutrition
education note, Dallas elementary schools participate in a Farm-to-School
program that introduces kids to fruits and vegetables from local
farms and teaches them to appreciate these nutrient-rich foods.
The frequency of each of the following on 15 sample lunch menu
days:
Low-Fat Vegetable Side Dish: |
11 |
|
Whole or Dried Fruit: |
11 |
|
Featured Meatless Entrée: |
15 |
|
Featured Vegan Entrée: |
0 |
|
Vegan Entrée Option: |
15 |
|
|
+20 |
for meeting NSLP nutrition guidelines |
|
+0 |
for offering non-dairy, calcium-fortified beverage. |
| |
77/ 100 points |
Palm Beach
County School District (Riviera Beach, Fla.): 76%
The Palm Beach County School District is the 15th largest district
in the United States, with 193 schools enrolling 160,223 students.
Fifteen days of elementary school lunches from the September 2003
menu were analyzed.
The Palm Beach elementary menu includes calcium-rich collard greens
and other healthy vegetables, as well as calcium-fortified juice
and fresh fruit daily. A featured meatless entrée of cheese
pizza is offered twice a week, and children can create a vegetarian
meal with a garden salad and other side dishes every day. No vegan
entrées are featured on the menu, but balanced vegan meals
can be created with beans and rice side dishes, garden salads, peanut
butter sandwiches, and other vegetable and fruits.
Palm Beach is looking into offering more vegan entrée options.
Veggie burgers, spaghetti with marinara sauce, hummus sandwich plates,
and entrée-size bean and rice dishes are all excellent ways
to improve the nutritional quality of school menus. In addition,
Palm Beach is participating in the “Eat Your Colors Every
Day” fruit and vegetable pilot program, which has been successful
in convincing kids to eat healthy green leafy vegetables, beans,
and other fruits and vegetables.
The frequency of each of the following on 15 sample lunch menu
days:
Low-Fat Vegetable Side Dish: |
15 |
|
Whole or Dried Fruit: |
15 |
|
Featured Meatless Entrée: |
6 |
|
Featured Vegan Entrée: |
0 |
|
Vegan Entrée Option: |
15 |
|
|
+20 |
for meeting NSLP nutrition guidelines |
|
+5 |
for offering non-dairy, calcium-fortified beverage. |
| |
76/ 100 points |
Los Angeles
Unified School District (Los Angeles, Calif.): 71%
Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) is the second largest
district in the United States, with 663 schools enrolling 735,058
students. Fifteen days of elementary school lunches from the July/August
2003 satellite menu were analyzed.
One-third of LAUSD’s elementary schools have satellite kitchens
where food preparation is limited, and the other two-thirds have
“prep” kitchens where more entrées can be prepared
and more menu options are available. Nutrient-rich, low-fat vegetable
sides are available only twice a week in elementary schools with
satellite kitchens but are available daily in prep kitchen schools
due to the presence of fruit and vegetable bars.
Whole or dried fruit appears daily in all elementary schools, including
such selections as fresh nectarines, melon, and orange wedges. Meatless
entrées appear on the menu only once or twice a week in schools
with satellite kitchens and three or four times in prep kitchen
schools. These include such items as a bean-and-cheese burrito and
a cheese and bread bar. Prep kitchen schools also have a vegan chili
featured on the menu once every three weeks. A peanut butter and
jelly sandwich is available daily as a vegan entrée option
in all schools. Calcium-fortified, non-dairy beverages are not available
at this time.
Adding more meatless and vegan entrées, such as vegetarian
burgers, spaghetti with marinara sauce and soy protein, and bean
and brown rice dishes, would greatly improve L.A.’s menu grade
and the nutritional quality of the menus. Sixty schools within the
L.A. district already have full salad bars where vegan and vegetarian
entrées can be created—when L.A. incorporates these
into every school, the district’s grade will increase tremendously.
Los Angeles has also initiated a number of cutting-edge nutrition
education programs. LA was the first district to ban soda sales
in elementary schools in response to the obesity epidemic. Los Angeles’
school gardening, harvest of the month, Farm-to-School, and “Chefs
in the Classroom” programs have been incredibly popular and
successful in getting children to appreciate and enjoy a variety
of fresh fruits and vegetables.
In the “Chefs in the Classroom” program, for example,
professional chefs team up with teachers and students to explore
ethnic cuisines, new vocabulary, and healthy tastes. Sample menus
prepared in this program include Chinese steamed buns and stir-fry
vegetables, Italian gnocchi with homemade tomato sauce, Belgian
vegetable stew, carrot and veggie stuffed ravioli, and low-fat potato
latkes.
The frequency of each of the following on 15 sample lunch menu
days:
Low-Fat Vegetable Side Dish: |
11 |
|
Whole or Dried Fruit: |
15 |
|
Featured Meatless Entrée: |
9 |
|
Featured Vegan Entrée: |
1 |
|
Vegan Entrée Option: |
15 |
|
|
+20 |
for meeting NSLP nutrition guidelines |
|
+0 |
for offering non-dairy, calcium-fortified beverage. |
| |
71/ 100 points |
San Diego City
Unified School District (San Diego, Calif.): 70%
The San Diego City Unified School District is the 17th largest
district in the United States, with 182 schools enrolling 141,599
students. Fifteen days of elementary school lunches from the Summer
2003 and Kids Choice Café menus were analyzed.
San Diego elementary schools are currently undergoing a number
of healthy changes, including the addition of salad bars in every
school. Fifty of the 130 elementary schools have salad bars that
offer daily helpings of healthy vegetables, fruits, nuts, and side
dishes. By May of 2004, every elementary school in San Diego will
have a salad bar, and the district’s grade will increase significantly.
According to the food service director, kids love building huge
plates of healthy salads and “chowing down” on them.
In the schools where there aren’t yet salad bars, mixed green
salads and other healthy low-fat vegetable side dishes are available.
Juicy kiwi and other seasonal fruits are available every day in
the San Diego elementary schools. Meatless entrées are on
the menu daily in schools that have more than one entrée
item, and vegetarian meals can be created with side dishes and items
from the salad bars when they are present. Vegan menu items are
not featured at present, but a soy burger is offered in the secondary
schools. Vegan menu options are only available in schools with salad
bars where lunches can be created using veggies, pasta salad, sunflower
seeds, fruit, and low-fat dressing. Peanut butter is no longer served
due to peanut allergies.
Entrée options that are easy to prepare, free of meat and
dairy products, and loved by children include spaghetti with marinara
sauce, nachos with beans, salsa, and guacamole, soy hot dogs, and
burritos loaded with vegetables and pinto beans. Adding these entrée
items to the elementary menus will greatly improve San Diego’s
grade.
The district offers many nutrition education programs, including
gardening programs in elementary schools, partnerships with local
organic farms, nutrition essay writing contests, salad bar promotion,
and education by people dressed in vegetable costumes.
The frequency of each of the following on 15 sample lunch menu
days:
Low-Fat Vegetable Side Dish: |
15 |
|
Whole or Dried Fruit: |
15 |
|
Featured Meatless Entrée: |
12 |
|
Featured Vegan Entrée: |
0 |
|
Vegan Entrée Option: |
8 |
|
|
+20 |
for meeting NSLP nutrition guidelines |
|
+0 |
for offering non-dairy, calcium-fortified beverage. |
| |
70/ 100 points |
Clark County School
District (Las Vegas, Nevada): 59%
The Clark County School District is the seventh largest district
in the United States, with 275 schools enrolling 245,659 students.
Eight days of elementary school lunches from the July 2003 Satellite
School menu and seven days of lunches from the kitchen and dish-up
menus were analyzed.
The elementary school lunch selections in Clark County are not
near where they need to be to teach kids healthy eating habits and
promote long-term health. However, the district is currently making
efforts to improve menus and offer more vegetarian and vegan entrée
items. Low-fat vegetable side dishes are offered daily and include
vegetarian beans and a healthy tossed green salad. Fruits are on
the menu nearly every day.
Due to limited kitchen facilities, Clark County presently has a
vegetarian main dish on the menu just one to two times per week.
The district does not have a featured vegan entrée or a vegan
option. Citing severe peanut allergies in the Las Vegas elementary
schools, the food service director pulled all peanut butter out
of the schools.
Easy vegan foods that would increase the healthy options in the
Clark County elementary schools include hummus sandwiches, veggie
chili, bean and rice burritos, soy hot dogs, and veggie burgers.
Calcium-fortified juices and other non-dairy, calcium-rich beverages
are available upon request, but are only offered without request
when the district’s juice vendor has them available for order.
Despite the lack of healthy options in the lunchroom, the district
does offer a number of educational programs. These include “Calcium
Isn’t Just Milk,” a program in partnership with a local
extension service that teaches kids about non-dairy sources of calcium,
such as beans and dark green leafy vegetables. Clark County is also
doing a number of fruit and vegetable acceptability studies with
the University of Nevada, Las Vegas comparing sliced to whole fruit
consumption.
The frequency of each of the following on 15 sample lunch menu
days:
Low-Fat Vegetable Side Dish: |
15 |
|
Whole or Dried Fruit: |
14 |
|
Featured Meatless Entrée: |
5 |
|
Featured Vegan Entrée: |
0 |
|
Vegan Entrée Option: |
0 |
|
|
+20 |
for meeting NSLP nutrition guidelines |
|
+5 |
for offering non-dairy, calcium-fortified beverage. |
| |
59/ 100 points |
District of Columbia
Public Schools (Washington, D.C.): 46%
The District of Columbia Public Schools is the 48th largest district
in the United States, with 165 schools enrolling 68,449 students.
Fifteen days of elementary school lunches from the June 2003 menu
were analyzed.
The D.C. elementary schools provide low-fat vegetable side dishes
on two out of every three days and fresh fruit nearly every day.
Vegetarian children are out of luck in the D.C. schools, since meatless
entrées are offered just once per week, with no vegetarian
or vegan option available on other days. On those days, vegetarian
children have to pick the meat and/or cheese off the regular lunch
main dish to get a vegetarian meal.
With the rate of childhood obesity on the rise in D.C., public
schools need to teach healthy eating habits by making meatless and
vegan options available. Children love veggie burgers, spaghetti
with marinara sauce, veggie hot dogs, and all sorts of protein-rich
beans. In view of the high percentage of Hispanic and African American
children in the District of Columbia, schools should consider providing
a non-dairy source of calcium for these typically lactose-intolerant
kids.
The frequency of each of the following on 15 sample lunch menu
days:
Low-Fat Vegetable Side Dish: |
10 |
|
Whole or Dried Fruit: |
13 |
|
Featured Meatless Entrée: |
3 |
|
Featured Vegan Entrée: |
0 |
|
Vegan Entrée Option: |
0 |
|
|
+20 |
for meeting NSLP nutrition guidelines |
|
+5 |
for offering non-dairy, calcium-fortified beverage. |
| |
46/ 100 points |
|
 |