There's a new push to put whole milk back in school meals. Here's what you should know
- Vermont introduced a bill to eliminate artificial food dyes in school meals, focusing on health and safety.
- The bill, S.26, aims to prohibit selling any food or drinks containing artificial dyes, due to research linking them to negative effects in children, including hyperactivity.
- Senator Ginny Lyons modeled the bill after California's law, which also addresses sugary and fatty foods.
- The USDA is reviewing dietary guidelines as whole milk's return to schools gains bipartisan support.
77 Articles
77 Articles


Lawmakers Push To Bring Whole Milk Back to School Meals
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There’s a new push to put whole milk back in school meals. Here’s what you should know
By JONEL ALECCIA More than a dozen years after higher-fat milk was stripped from school meals to slow obesity in American kids and boost their health, momentum is growing to put it back. Federal lawmakers have revived bills that would allow whole and 2% milk to be served again in schools, in addition to the skim and low-fat milk mandated since 2012. A U.S. Senate committee hosted a hearing Tuesday on a bill that has bipartisan support. “Kids nee…
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