Analysis, commentHigher standards need more money(25 May 2006 00:00)At last, the Government's new nutritional standards for school meals have been released. On first viewing, they seem to ring all the right bells: high-quality meat should replace low-quality meat products; fizzy drinks and chocolate are banned and deep-fried products limited; and fruit and vegetable intake must rise. Article continues below
Second, what's meant by high- and low-quality meat anyway? While we don't expect our children to lunch on Wagyu beef and Gloucester Old Spot pork, where exactly does the boundary lie? Ambiguity in the small print of the standards threatens to render them meaningless. Finally, May is a little late to be establishing targets due to come into effect in September this year. Contracts with suppliers will have been negotiated, signed and sealed, making it all but impossible for school authorities to reconsider their supply-chain needs. Is it churlish to criticise a government that's investing hundreds of millions of pounds into supporting the wellbeing of future generations? Maybe - but unless he's prepared to stump up the full amount needed to impact real change, education secretary Alan Johnson may find school caterers mimicking that most famous of school diners, and asking: "Please, Sir, I want some more." Mark Lewis Source: Caterer & Hotelkeeper |
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