Congressman Tim Huelskamp

No Hungry Kids Act

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No Hungry Kids Act

Congressman Tim Huelskamp of Kansas joined Congressman Steve King of Iowa to introduce "No Hungry Kids Act." They introduced the legislation in order to respond to new school lunch standards issued by the USDA that have curtailed calories. The legislation will repeal the USDA's rule that created the new standards, will prohibit the USDA's upper caloric limits, and will protect the rights of parents to send their children to school with the foods of their choice. Read more here .

UPDATE: Congressman Huelskamp and Congressman King re-introduced the “No Hungry Kids Act,” H.R. 1503.

Daily Caller: GOP congressmen continue to push back against new ‘healthy’ school meal plans

 

In The News

The Daily Caller: Congressman challenges USDA to follow own school lunch restrictions

The Hill: GOP lawmaker wants USDA to take 'nutrition nanny state challenge'

Kansas Ag Land: Huelskamp visits Sharon Springs

The Hill: Rep. Huelskamp praises student protest of USDA calorie rules

The Hill: GOP lawmaker: Obama school lunch rules like 'The Hunger Games'

The Daily Caller: Another round of hungry high school students offers video protest of new school lunch regs

USA Today: Childhood obesity declines in several states, cities

Daily Caller: Rep. Huelskamp: Snack programs not the solution to uproar over first lady’s lunch plan

Column with Congressman King in The Hill: 'Let's Move' law is flawed. 'No Hungry Kids Act' will fix it

ABC News: Snacks: The USDA's Solution To Student's Healthy Lunch Complaints

CBS: Video protests govt. calorie limits in school lunches

ABC News: Kids Claim New School Lunches Leave Stomachs Growling

US News: Kansas Kids Rebel, Call School Lunch Legislation Baloney

USA Today: Students push back on new school lunches

Wichita Eagle: School lunch calorie limits leave bitter taste with some students

Daily Caller: Nation’s children push back against Michelle Obama-backed school lunch regs

National Review’s The Corner: Students Protest School-Lunch Regulations

KWCH: Parody video questions national school lunch policy

Salina Journal: Students not happy about new meals at school

KSAL: Hunger Should Not Be On Obama's School Lunch Menu

 

Op-Eds

America’s Nutrition Nannies Invade School Cafeterias
By: Congressman Tim Huelskamp

Our Commander-in-Chief and Agriculture Secretary are apparently moonlighting as Nutrition Nannies.

From our farms to our businesses to our doctors' offices, one would think that the Obama Administration has run out of places to invade.

But, as school children and their parents learned as the kids headed back to the classrooms this fall, the Obama Administration has found one more place over which to exercise domination: the school cafeteria.

In the final weeks of 2010, as Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi prepared to pass the gavel to Republicans, House Democrats got a bill to President Obama's desk that empowered the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) to re-write completely school lunch standards.

With a title like "Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act," one would think such a law would have a goal of making sure kids have full stomachs.

But, as school administrators and cooks, students, and parents have informed me, the USDA's rules that resulted from this "Hunger-Free Act" are having the opposite effect.

Calorie limits are leaving our student-athletes under-nourished ahead of intense practices. Three hours of practice after a 750-850 calorie lunch with limited protein at noon?

An emphasis on what goes on the plate – rather than into the body – has only increased the amount of food that goes into the trash can.

And, now that kids are not getting the food they neither need nor want, many are going off-campus for even less healthy alternatives like fast food or convenience store fare, undermining altogether the whole purpose of the school lunch program.

The last Congress was wrong to pass this law that led to these new regulations. But, the current Congress can make it right by exercising our oversight function. Earlier this month, my colleague Steve King and I introduced the "No Hungry Kids Act" to repeal these school lunch guidelines.

In the same way that one-size-fits-all does not work for what we teach in our classrooms, this legislation recognizes that no single set of cafeteria standards should apply to every single school across the nation – let alone every single student. By lifting the calorie caps and by protecting the rights of parents to make decisions for their children, our bill will ensure that children get the food they need in order to stay alert in the classroom and healthy on the athletic fields.

If high school students are to be trusted to operate a car at the age of 16 or to choose a college or to vote at the age of 18, then they should at least be trusted to make the decision about what they eat at lunch.

The school lunch program was created in order to combat hunger. That should still be the goal of the program. But, when calories have been curtailed, less appealing food is on the plate, and students are filling the cafeteria trash cans rather than their stomachs, the goal of overcoming hunger and obesity is defeated. To learn more about the "No Hungry Kids Act" and to share your own family's experiences with the school lunch program, please visit http://www.facebook.com/nutritionnannies.

 

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