By now, you may have read that the nation's largest beverage companies will stop selling to public schools by the end of the decade. Elementary and middle schools will only get water, unsweetened juice and low-fat milk, and high schools can also sell diet soda, diet/unsweetened tea, flavored water and low-calorie sports drinks. The stated reason for the agreement is the effort to combat childhood obesity. But will it work?
I don't really have a proverbial dog in this fight; I haven't bought a soda in school in years, except by accident (i.e. if I put my money in the machine for a water, but water was sold out and it wouldn't give me my change back); if I have a soft drink at all, it's usually a Dublin at home or a rare DP at lunch. This new policy might actually benefit me if it means that more machines will be turned on during the school day; in middle schools, as it stands now, I have to hope that one of the water/juice machines is there, or I can't even buy water out of a "mixed" machine before two o'clock in the afternoon.
But my question is, will simply cutting off access to the product actually keep kids from being overweight? This seems a lot like the mentality of blaming McDonald's for the same problem. Perhaps it might be even more beneficial to ensure that students have P.E. class or recess more often during the day (I've heard that funding shortfalls have cut this down to two or three days a week in some areas). It seems easy to make a sixteen-ounce scapegoat out of what comes out of a machine rather than putting the onus on parents and schools to ensure that kids are getting enough physical activity during the day.
And here's an interesting side topic: Let's assume the kids do switch from sodas to juice or water (I'm assuming that the diet sodas won't be so popular, because, well, eww...not to mention that a lot of people, myself included, can't process NutraSweet). Will the lack of caffeine and sugar suddenly cause them to fall asleep in class more often? I see the potential for a big Starbucks market here...
The neighbor has an unsightly weed problem: The owner of a house in Connecticut has agreed to remove the cannabis leaves painted on the side of the house after multiple complaints from neighbors. (Incidentally, he also got busted for growing the stuff in his house, which, coincidentally, is on High Street. Heh.)
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7 comments:
Heaven forbid the machines should be taken out altogether; then there would be no "athletics money from DP" or whomever the contract is with. But I think they really don't need to be there anyway. I agree with you that no machines don't make healthy students. It certainly wouldn't hurt for the cafeteria menus to have more than just grease on them and as you pointed out, PE classes. I'll not go into the cliched "when I was in school" but it was different and we were healthier! And gee, maybe good eating habits start at home???
Elementary school kids will be hyper with or without sugar in their systems.
In Liberty high school, they have them shut off until after school. Fat kids. And it's Pepsi.
i dunno, as someone that has given up soft drinks several times, i know for a fact that i feel about 10,000 X healthier whenever i'm not drinking soft drinks. As far as whether or not taking them out of schools entirely is the answer, i'm not sure, but it might be a good way to get some peoples attentions, soft drinks seriously are terrible for you.
Colin
By the way, a new Starbucks opened down the street from school. Just in time for the Senior's last 7 days of school.
6-8 cans, Gary?! Wow. I think I'd die if I drank that many sodas in a WEEK. I guess I'm one of the lucky ones who prefers water/tea/coffee over soda.
When did they start selling sodas in Elementary schools? That's crazy.
" In Liberty high school, they have them shut off until after school. Fat kids. And it's Pepsi."
Shawn--like many Texans, I was using the term "Coke" generically. You'll notice that when you're down here--"Coke" refers to any soft drink in the same way that "Kleenex" refers to any brand of facial tissue and "Thermos" refers to any vacuum bottle.
But I used to work at a place that served Pepsi, and we had to gently correct any customer who asked for a Coke.
Gary--congrats on the weight loss. 6-8 cans...whoa. I don't think I hit quite that many even in the pre-Starbucks days. And while the emergence of Dasani has made me a "water snob," it's far better for me to carry a bottle of that around all day than anything else, and I don't have to worry about blowing sugar through the horn either.
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