Schools may ban chocolate milk over added sugar
Chocolate milk has long been
seen as the spoonful of sugar that makes the medicine go down, but the nation's
childhood obesity epidemic has a growing number of people wondering whether
that's wise.
With schools under increasing
pressure to offer healthier food, the staple on children's cafeteria trays has
come under attack over the very ingredient that made it so popular — sugar.
Some school districts have
gone as far as prohibiting flavored milk, and Florida considered a statewide ban
in schools. Other districts have sought a middle ground by replacing flavored
milks containing high-fructose corn syrup with versions containing sugar, which
some see as a more natural sweetener.
Los Angeles Unified, the
nation's second-largest school district, is the latest district to tackle the
issue. Superintendent John Deasy recently announced he would push this summer to
remove chocolate and strawberry milk from school menus.
But nutritionists — and
parents — are split over whether bans make sense, especially when about 70
percent of milk consumed in schools is flavored, mostly chocolate, according to
the industry-backed Milk Processors Education Program.
Many, including the School
Nutrition Association, American Academy of Pediatrics, American Dietetic
Association, American Heart Association, and National Medical Association, argue
that the nutritional value of flavored low-fat or skim milk outweighs the harm
of added sugar. Milk contains nine essential nutrients including calcium,
vitamin D and protein.
A joint statement from those
groups points to studies that show kids who drink fat-free, flavored milk meet
more of their nutrient needs and are not heavier than non-milk drinkers.
"Chocolate milk has been
unfairly pegged as one of the causes of obesity," said Julie Buric, vice
president of marketing for the Milk Processors Education Program.
Others note the nation's child
obesity epidemic and say flavored milk simply needs to go.
Eight ounces of white milk
served in Los Angeles public schools contains 14 grams of natural sugar or
lactose; fat-free chocolate milk has an extra six grams of sugar for a total of
20 grams, while fat-free strawberry milk has a total of 27 grams — the same as
eight ounces of Coca-Cola.
"Chocolate milk is soda in
drag," said Ann Cooper, director of nutrition services for the Boulder Valley
School District in Louisville, Colo., which has banned flavored milk. "It works
as a treat in homes, but it doesn't belong in schools."
Flavored milk is also a target
of British TV chef Jamie Oliver, who has made revamping school food a signature
cause.
For a segment to be aired on
his "Food Revolution" TV show, he recently filled a school bus with white sand
to represent the amount of sugar Los Angeles Unified school children consume
weekly in flavored milk.
"If you have flavored milk,
that's candy," he told The Associated Press.
Oliver cheered Deasy's
proposal to remove flavored milk from schools during a recent joint appearance
on the "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" show.
If the school board adopts the
ban, Los Angeles Unified would join districts including Washington and Berkeley,
Calif.
But efforts by some other
districts turned sour after children drank less milk. Milk consumption drops by
35 percent when flavored milks are removed, according to the Milk Processors
Education Program.
Cabell County, W.Va., schools
brought chocolate milk back at the recommendation of state officials, and
Fairfax County, Va., did the same after its dairy provider came up with a
version sweetened with beet sugar rather than high-fructose corn syrup.
The Florida Board of Education
also backed away from its proposed ban on chocolate milk after the state
agricultural commissioner urged the board to look at all sugary food and
beverages served in schools.
The Los Angeles district has
worked with its dairy supplier on flavored versions using the sweetener Truvia
and chicory, district spokesman Robert Alaniz said.
Cooper and others argued
children will drink plain milk if that's what's offered.
"We've taught them to drink
chocolate milk, so we can unteach them that," Cooper said. "Our kids line up for
milk."
Boulder Valley hasn't been
barraged with complaints since removing chocolate milk two years ago, but it
hasn't tracked whether milk consumption has dropped, she said.
Parents line up on both sides
of the issue.
Deborah Bellholt, a South Los
Angeles mother, said none of her six children ranging from pre-school to high
school age will drink plain milk. "By allowing kids flavored milk, they still
get the calcium they need," she said. "If not, they'd bypass it."
But Mimi Bonetti, a suburban
Los Angeles mother with two elementary school-age children who drink plain milk,
said she gets angry that chocolate milk is portrayed as nutritious. Children can
get calcium and other nutrients from other foods, she said.
"If you offer them the choice
of chocolate or plain, of course they're going to choose chocolate," Bonetti
said. "When you're telling kids that drinking chocolate milk is a healthy
choice, it's sending the wrong message."
Ask kids, and most vote for
chocolate. Suburban Los Angeles seventh-grader Nacole Johnson said plain milk
tastes yucky. If there were no chocolate milk, "I wouldn't drink it," she said.
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