[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 175 (Wednesday, November 16, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H7629-H7630]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
BAKED GOODS, PIZZA, AND SODA
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Oregon (Mr. Blumenauer) for 5 minutes.
Mr. BLUMENAUER. Last December, an item caught my eye in the Harper's
Index: the rank of baked goods, pizza, and soda as sources of calories
for American children--drum roll, please--number one, number two,
number three. That's how our children get most of their calories; first
from baked goods, then from pizza, then from soda. No wonder we have a
national epidemic of obesity for our children with lifetime health care
consequences, starting with diabetes and then heart disease. It's why
the military is concerned that only one in four young people qualify
for military service, with obesity being a major factor in that
disqualification.
I salute First Lady Michelle Obama in her efforts to spotlight
healthy eating, to help families give their children more nutritious
choices. But we should start with what we are feeding the 31.6 million
children in our schools. The administration has taken some small but
important steps with the Federal partnership of this largest food
program in the country to refine what the standards are for delivering
this important service to our children.
Well, the battle has taken a new turn, where Congress is poised to
intervene to make sure that pizza continues to count as a vegetable and
that we protect more French fries on the tray. Overturning this simple,
commonsense adjustment for rules--which food nutrition experts and
child advocates strongly support--is going to be buried in the
Agriculture appropriations bill coming forward. The people who defend
inflicting this on our children site issues of cost, waste, and
nutrition. Well, you don't need calorie-laden pizza crust to deliver
nutrients, and waste is not a product of giving people healthy choices.
I invite anybody to come with me, visit Abernethy School in Portland,
Oregon, where parents, students, and faculty have combined to have an
innovative food program where kids grow food themselves. They prepare
it. They study it. They're healthier and happier. Come to the
University of Portland, where Bon Appetit, an innovative food service
supplier by providing more choices and healthier choices, has cut food
waste 70 percent.
But the cost argument is the most bogus. We're talking arguably about
perhaps as much as 14 cents a meal, less than $1.4 billion for a year.
That is less than Congress has decided that it will pay Brazilian
cotton farmers because we don't have the gumption to
[[Page H7630]]
end illegal cotton subsidies to American farmers. We could produce $25
billion to $30 billion in savings from direct payments, usually to
large agribusiness interests; or, if we stop the obscene process of
giving more to crop insurance agents than to farmers, reform crop
insurance, we could yield another $8 billion to $12 billion. This is
entirely within our capacity. If the House goes along with this
travesty, shame on us.
The need to protect our children's health has never been clearer. The
costs have never been more manageable. Indeed, this will more than pay
for itself in savings for lifetime costs of health care. It will damage
people's health and shorten lives. The ``ketchup as vegetable'' debacle
of the Reagan era will look tame and sane by comparison. I strongly
urge the House to reject this ill-advised initiative.
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