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News Release
Wednesday, August
18, 2004
CONTACT: Howard White: 202-686-2210 ext. 339; hwhite@pcrm.org
School Lunches
Still Failing to Make the Grade, Say Doctors
San Diego, Detroit, Fairfax, Va., Score High in 2004
School Lunch Report Card; Las Vegas "Most Improved"; Albuquerque, N.M.,
Public Schools Earn an “F”
WASHINGTON—With schools starting up all over the country,
kids have one more thing besides pop quizzes and exams to worry
about this fall: school lunches.
For the fourth year in a row, the Physicians Committee for Responsible
Medicine (PCRM) used its School
Lunch Report Card to analyze the nutritional quality of elementary
school lunches served in school districts participating in the USDA’s
National School Lunch Program. The NSLP serves more than 28 million
lunches a day at 100,000 schools and childcare institutions across
the country.
While there are bright spots—Fairfax County, Va., San Diego,
and Detroit scored respectable “Bs” and Las Vegas/Clark
County schools jumped from an “F” last year to a “C+”
this year—PCRM’s 2004 School Lunch Report Card finds
that many schools are struggling to make the grade when it comes
to serving healthy, low-fat lunches. Six of the 11 school districts
rated this year eked out “Cs.” Maryland’s Baltimore
County chalked up a “D.” Albuquerque, N.M., schools
failed outright with an “F.” Of 25 school districts
approached, only 11 provided complete information. The lesson?
“To make ends meet, too many school lunch programs depend
on commodity foods available through the NSLP,” says Jen Keller,
R.D., PCRM’s nutrition projects coordinator. “These
USDA surplus foods include too many high-fat, high-cholesterol meats,
dairy products and processed foods, and not enough produce and healthy
vegetarian entrées and side dishes. With one in five school
age children considered overweight, we’ve got to get a lot
more nutrient- and fiber-rich fruits, vegetables, beans, and whole
grains on school menus, and a lot less pizza, tater tots, and french
fries.”
Here are the results:
| District |
Location |
Score |
Grade |
Fairfax County Public School District |
Fairfax, VA |
84.7
|
B |
San Diego Unified School District |
San Diego, CA |
80.9 |
B- |
Detroit City School District |
Detroit, MI |
80.4 |
B- |
Austin Independent School District |
Austin, TX |
77.6 |
C+ |
Clark County School District |
Las Vegas, NV |
77.5 |
C+ |
New York City Public School District |
New York |
75.0 |
C |
Charlotte-Mecklenburg School District |
Charlotte, NC |
75.0 |
C |
Prince George’s County Public School District |
Upper Marlboro, MD |
71.7 |
C- |
Montgomery County Public School District |
Rockville, MD |
70.4 |
C- |
Baltimore County Public School District |
Baltimore County, MD |
65.6 |
D |
Albuquerque Public School District |
Albuquerque, NM |
59.8 |
F |
For an interview with a PCRM nutrition expert, contact Howard White
at 202-686-2210, ext. 339, or hwhite@pcrm.org.
Founded in 1985, the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine
is a nonprofit health organization that promotes preventive medicine,
especially good nutrition. PCRM also conducts clinical research
studies, opposes unethical human experimentation, and promotes alternatives
to animal research.
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