13 More Thoughts on the School Food Fight
Just before the exhibition doors opened to thousands of school food workers, the School Nutrition Association held a brief press conference with CEO Patricia Montague, outgoing president Leah Schmidt and a group of school foodservice directors and other leaders on the floor of the Boston Convention Center.
The first question, and one of only two, from the media in attendance, came from a reporter from Politico, an outlet that in any other year would be completely out of place at a school foodservice show. But this isn’t any other year. SNA is embroiled in a very public and sometimes contentious debate with the USDA and First Lady Michelle Obama over increasing regulations mandated by the Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act. Its legislative efforts to maintain the 50% whole grain rich and Target 1 sodium levels, drop the requirement to serve a fruit or vegetable with every meal and allow items sold on the meal line to also be sold a la carte have kept the debate going, but also led to increased and sometimes negative attention from mainstream media. (More on those four positions from SNA.)
New SNA President Julia Bauscher, left, gets the gavel from Leah Schmidt.
The task now falls to Julia Bauscher, the 67th president of SNA and the director of school and community nutrition services for Jefferson County Public Schools in Louisville. Although Bauscher admits she’s good friends with her counterpart on the other side of the dispute, Dr. Janey Thornton—the deputy under secretary of the USDA and a former SNA president—she says the efforts Montague and Schmidt began this year will continue.