Oregon is one of four states in the nation that doesn't provide any taxpayer dollars to fund the school lunch program. "We get $1.10 per day to spend on lunch for each student," said Gita Sweeney, assistant director of nutrition services at PPS, at a Brewhaha panel hosted last night by the Bus Project and the Mercury.
A few cents more could make a big difference in what kids eat: right now they have pizza for breakfast. Could the day be near when they're gnawing on produce and meat from a few miles away?

Also in attendance was State Representative Tina Kotek, who unsuccessfully tried to pass a "Farm to Schools" bill during last year's legislative session, which would have allocated a few cents per meal to pay for Oregon agricultural products in breakfasts and lunches. The bill is still gaining steam.
Kotek described its reception in Salem as a "gushing lovefest," but said that when it comes time to divert money from other projects, the votes are hard to find.
The truth is that locally produced food, prepared by hand in school kitchens, is expensive. "Labor-wise it costs more," said Sweeney. "It really does."
But, she continued, PPS is working to incorporate whatever local or healthy elements it can. "The one piece of equipment that we have in every school is an oven," she told the crowd. "We've been very creative with what we can make an oven. I make PowerPoint tutorials to show the cooks how to make roasted vegetables."
Gita Sweeney, by the way, has about the same job as this lady:
Thankfully, her attitude toward fruit and veg is more Pacific Northwest than West Virginia.
When fresh fruits and veggies aren't available, the school district works to source relatively local products that can be served year-round. Heather McPhearson, a representative of Truitt Brothers, Inc., explained how her company supplies canned pears from the Willamette Valley and vegan chili to PPS for use year-round. But Truitt Brothers is a big company, and the school food is a minuscule percentage of its output: a five-hour run at the factory produces all of PPS's chili for a year.
Meanwhile, some groups are working with kids to foster knowledge of where food comes from. Caitlin Blethen, the Youth Grow Manager at Growing Gardens, talked about how gardening programs get kids interested in the food they're about to eat. Hitting low-income kids with food smarts is a priority: Mel Rader of the advocacy group Upstream Public Health noted that many "kids eat better on school meals than they do at home."
Meals in schools are a complicated ballet of pricing, nutrition and federal accountability. There's another, more immediate aspect: timing. "Kids in schools have ten or 15 minutes to eat," said Kotek. "We need longer school days so kids can actually digest their food." One thing at a time, Tina. One thing at a time.
Getting the state legislature to move could be easier than you think. One of the audience members said that she'd heard that just ten phone calls can really impress a legislator. Apparently they're not so used to feedback from their constituents. Kotek confirmed that: "Ten calls or e-mails can really change the dialog." So: feel strongly about food in schools? Look up your legislators and give them a call.
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