A battle over bringing whole milk back to cafeterias highlights the real food problem facing Americaโs next generation.
Lawmakers are pushing to bring whole milk back to school cafeterias after it was banned in 2012. Itโs a battle years in the making, but milk may be the wrong fight.
Children face a deeper problem: a school food system shaped less by health than by cost, convenience, and supply chains. While Congress argues over fat percentages, cafeterias remain dominated by processed, prepackaged meals that meet regulations but fail to meet nutritional ideals.
Meanwhile, kids are having their taste buds educated by cheap, easy processed foods that are hard to resist, even as rates of chronic diseases once reserved for the elderly balloon among children.
The milk debate might be overblown, but it reveals the fault lines in a nutritional battleground that may finally be making some progress in the right direction.
And thatโs important.
Nearly one in five American children is obese. More than 40 percent live with at least one chronic illness. An estimated 20 million could be diagnosed with a mental health disorder. The health of our children and our nationโs future is in crisis.
When Milk Policy Reveals a Bigger Problem
The โWhole Milk for Healthy Kids Act,โ led by Sens. Roger Marshall of Kansas and John Fetterman of Pennsylvania, would allow schools to serve whole and reduced-fat milkโboth flavored and unflavoredโfor the first time since federal nutrition rules banned them in 2012.
โWhole milk is one of the most nutritious drinks known to mankind,โ Marshall, a physician and former dairy farmer, told The Epoch Times.
On paper, the change may seem marginal. Whole milk contains about 3.25 percent milk fat, compared to the zero to 1 percent in current school-approved options. But under federal meal standards, that margin has been enough to keep it off lunch trays.
The original restrictions were rooted in decades-old dietary guidance focused on lowering saturated fat. Though slightly relaxed in 2017 to allow some flavored 1 percent milk, the core ban on whole and 2 percent milk stayed in place.
The ban reflected a larger dietary fissure that saw food makers limit fat while increasing added sugars. While fat reduction goals were reached, Americans and their children became fatter. This dynamic played out viscerally in Americaโs schools.
Byย Sheramy Tsai