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Release No. 0433.04

Susan Acker (703) 305-2286
Ed Loyd (202) 720-4623

Secretary Veneman Announces the HealthierUS School Challenge
Kicks Off National School Lunch Week-Oct.10-16

PORTLAND, Ore., Oct. 7, 2004 - Agriculture Secretary Ann M. Veneman today launched the HealthierUS School Challenge to help encourage schools and parents to continue promoting healthy lifestyles for children.

During a kickoff event in Portland at William Walker Elementary School for National School Lunch Week Oct. 10-16, Veneman said the Challenge's goal is to help children develop lifelong healthy eating and physical activity habits.

"Across the country, schools, families and communities are working to fight childhood obesity. They are finding new and exciting ways to encourage healthy eating habits and physical activity," said Veneman. "The HealthierUS School Challenge provides an exciting new incentive for schools to take increasingly bold steps to address the problems of childhood overweight and obesity."

The School Challenge is an extension of President Bush's Healthier US initiative that encourages all Americans to eat a nutritious diet and become physically active each day. The HealthierUS School Challenge is designed to build upon USDA's Team Nutrition program, which provides schools with nutrition education materials for children and families; technical assistance materials for school food service directors, managers and staff; and materials to build school and community support for healthy eating and physical activity. In addition, the Challenge builds on USDA's push to improve the nutritional quality of school meals through the School Meals Initiative that sets nutrition requirements for federally-reimbursed school meals.

The HealthierUS School Challenge will recognize schools that achieve the goal of meeting voluntary nutrition and physical activity standards established by the USDA's Food and Nutrition Service at Gold and Silver levels of accomplishment.

"Developing lifelong healthy eating and physical activity habits is a priority for this Administration," said Veneman. "The HealthierUS School Challenge will motivate schools to work even harder and smarter with students, parents and the community to achieve a longer and better life for our children."

In order to be certified as part of the Healthier U.S. School Challenge, schools must enroll in Team Nutrition and then meet even higher standards than those required by the federal government. There are two levels of achievement.

To be certified as Silver, schools must:

For schools to go for the Gold, they must do all of the Silver level, plus:

Participation in Team Nutrition has been remarkable already. So far, more than 28,000 schools have signed on to be Team Nutrition schools, including William Walker Elementary. The Healthier U.S. School Challenge will give guidance and encouragement for those schools to do even more. Over the next two years, 100,000 schools participating in the National School Lunch Program will have the opportunity to accept the School Challenge. For this first year, elementary schools will be eligible. Next year, middle and high schools will be offered the opportunity to participate.

USDA provides many nutrition initiatives and education materials to help schools meet the Challenge including:

Fruits and Vegetable program:

Eat Smart. Play Hard.TM Campaign:

Team Nutrition Grants:

Team Nutrition Educational Materials

Further information about Team Nutrition and the HealthierUS School Challenge is available at http://www.fns.usda.gov/tn . Information about the President's HealthierUS Initiative can be found at http://www.whitehouse.gov .

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