Child Nutrition and
WIC Reauthorization Act
June 24, 2004
The federal government
invests more than $16 billion annually in child nutrition programs under the
Child Nutrition Act, Richard B. Russell National School Lunch Act, and
related programs. On June 24, 2004, the House unanimously approved the
Child Nutrition and WIC Reauthorization Act, a House-Senate consensus forged
to strengthen these programs and improve their effectiveness for America’s
most vulnerable children.
With childhood
obesity reaching an epidemic proportion among America’s youth, it is clear
that Congress must act to increase the focus on comprehensive solutions that
incorporate healthy habits, nutritional education, and increased physical
activity with ongoing efforts to combat hunger and food insecurity.
The Child Nutrition and WIC Reauthorization Act strikes the appropriate
balance between encouraging healthy environments that will address the
childhood obesity epidemic while preserving local control for states,
communities, and schools.
The Child Nutrition and
WIC Reauthorization Act (S. 2507) is a bipartisan, bicameral consensus that
will strengthen nutritional service programs, promote healthy choices among
children, and address growing concerns that the federal school lunch program
does not do enough to ensure free and reduced-price lunch benefits go to
children who qualify. The bill includes major provisions of H.R. 3873, the
Child Nutrition Improvement & Integrity Act, legislation introduced by
Education Reform Subcommittee Chairman Mike Castle (R-DE) earlier this year
to strengthen and enhance federal child nutrition programs and services.
National School Lunch
and Breakfast Programs, After-School Snack Program, Summer Food Service
Program, and Child and Adult Care Food Program
Promoting Healthy
Diets, Nutrition Education, and Physical Activity While Preserving Local
Control of Schools
The Child Nutrition and WIC Reauthorization Act would:
-
Promote nutrition education and physical activity at the state and local
level to prevent childhood obesity, as originally proposed by Rep.
Castle in H.R. 2227, the Childhood Obesity Prevention Act;
-
Require local wellness policies designed and implemented at the local
level, and authorize the Department of Agriculture to provide technical
assistance, if requested by the school or school district, in
implementing healthy school environments.
The content of local
wellness policies would be decided by local parents, teachers,
administrators, school food service, school boards, and the public.
The Child Nutrition and WIC Reauthorization Act would not permit the
federal government to dictate to local school districts the content of
wellness policies to encourage nutrition and physical activity;
-
Continue current policy encouraging all children to consume cow’s milk,
yet give schools the option to offer a nutritionally equivalent
non-dairy substitute to children who cannot drink cow’s milk for medical
or other special dietary reasons;
-
Authorize
the continuation and expansion of the Fruit and Vegetable Pilot Program,
which provides free fresh and dried fruits and fresh vegetables, to 8
states and 3 Indian reservations;
-
Ensure food safety by maintaining and strengthening quality and safety
standards and improving meal quality; and
-
Strengthen partnerships between local farms, school gardens, and child
nutrition programs to ensure fresh, local produce can go from the farms
to schools, an initiative proposed by Reps. Fred Upton (R-MI) and Ron
Kind (D-WI).
Improving Access to
Child Nutrition Programs for Military Families & Other Eligible Children
The
Child Nutrition and WIC Reauthorization Act would:
-
Allow children whose parents are in the Armed Forces and living in
privatized military housing to continue receiving free- or reduced-price
meals at school if they meet eligibility requirements;
-
Permanently authorize for-profit child care centers to participate in
the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) if at least 25 percent of
the children meet the income eligibility criteria for free- or
reduced-price meals; and
-
Continue the authority for schools, churches, community organizations,
and private non-profit groups to operate Summer Food Service Program
sites, and continues operation of special pilot programs (Lugar pilots)
that reduce paperwork requirements and thereby increase the number of
low-income children who receive free meals and snacks during the summer
months.
Ensuring Integrity,
Efficiency, and Quality in the School Lunch Program
The
Child Nutrition and WIC Reauthorization Act would:
-
Help
parents by allowing them to submit a single application for multiple
children;
-
Reduce paperwork by allowing school lunch certifications to be valid for
one full year, preventing situations in which schools are forced to
repeatedly certify children within a single school year;
-
Improve accuracy and reduce costs for schools by allowing parents to
electronically file school lunch applications (through the use of an
e-signature) and automate the certification process;
-
Improve accountability by clarifying that school districts, not school
food personnel or school food authorities, are responsible for the
certification process;
-
Increase enrollment of eligible children by requiring direct
certification of school lunch eligibility (i.e. students who receive
food stamps are automatically eligible for program benefits);
-
Authorize a demonstration program in 5 states or parts of states to
evaluate the impact of expanding free school meal eligibility to
children in households with incomes at 185 percent of poverty or below
(i.e. eliminate the reduced-price meal category);
-
Help
to reduce the stigma among children receiving free and reduced-price
lunches by helping schools make technological improvements – such as
automated "meal card" systems that keep students' financial status
confidential – to increase the efficiency of program operations, as
proposed by Rep. Ric Keller (R-FL);
-
Provide incentives for school districts to reduce administrative error
in school lunch processing; and
-
Require training and more frequent administrative reviews and oversight
by federal and state authorities.
Special Supplemental
Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC)
Strengthening Program Integrity, Improving Nutrition, and Enhancing Infant
Formula Benefits
The Child
Nutrition and WIC Reauthorization Act would:
·
Authorize funds for the WIC
program, which includes grants to states, nutrition services and
administration funds, and a farmers' market nutrition program;
·
Ensure the supplemental foods
available through WIC are consistent with current nutrition science;
·
Require participating vendors
to purchase infant formula from a list of state-licensed wholesalers and
distributors approved to distribute infant formula;
·
Require vendors to be
notified of an initial violation in writing prior to documentation of
another violation, unless the state agency determines that notifying the
vendor would compromise an investigation;
·
Improve fairness and
integrity of the infant formula rebate process;
·
Limit the size of state
alliances developed for purposes of soliciting competitive bids for infant
formula to a maximum of 100,000 infants. Current alliances of greater size
may continue. States serving fewer than 5,000 infants, and tribal
organizations may request to join any alliance; and
·
Enact strong cost containment
measures to ensure that WIC food costs and voucher payments are consistent
with competitive retail prices for supplemental foods, ensuring efficient
use of taxpayer dollars and the ability to serve the greatest number of
eligible women, infants, and children. |