Newsom Signs First-in-Nation Law to Ban Ultraprocessed Food in School Lunches
CA health officials will now decide which ingredients, additives, dyes and other forms of processing don鈥檛 belong in school meals and K-12 cafeterias.
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California is the first state in the country to , aiming to transform how children eat on campus by 2035.
In the cafeteria of Belvedere Middle School in the Los Angeles neighborhood of Boyle Heights, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a over the next 10 years. The requirements go above and beyond existing state and federal school nutrition standards for things like fat and calorie content in school meals.
California public schools serve nearly 1 billion meals to kids each year.
鈥淥ur first priority is to protect kids in California schools, but we also came to realize that there is huge market power here,鈥 said Assemblymember Jesse Gabriel, an Encino Democrat. 鈥淭his bill could have impacts far beyond the classroom and far beyond the borders of our state.鈥
The legislation builds on recent laws passed in California to and certain additives from all food sold in the state when they are associated with cancer, reproductive harm and behavioral problems in children. Dozens of other states have since replicated those laws.
The bipartisan measure also comes at a time when U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.鈥檚 鈥淢ake America Healthy Again鈥 movement has shone a spotlight on issues including chronic disease, childhood obesity and poor diet.
The term 鈥渦ltra-processed food鈥 appears more than three dozen times in the released in May. A subsequent report tasks the federal government with defining ultraprocessed food.
California鈥檚 new law beats them to the punch, outlining the first statutory definition of what makes a food ultraprocessed.
It identifies ingredients that characterize ultraprocessed foods, including artificial flavors and colors, thickeners and emulsifiers, non-nutritive sweeteners, and high levels of saturated fat, sodium or sugar. Often fast food, candy and premade meals include these ingredients.
Researchers say ultraprocessed foods tend to be high in calories and low in nutritional value. Studies have linked . Today, .
Ultraprocessed foods are also linked to , .
Studies have found to be particularly harmful, said Tasha Stoiber, a senior scientist at the Environmental Work Group, which sponsored the legislation. Kids are particularly susceptible to the effects of ultraprocessed foods, she said.
鈥淯ltraprocessed foods are also marketed heavily to kids with bright colors, artificial flavors, hyperpalatability,鈥 Stoiber said. 鈥淭he hallmarks of ultraprocessed foods are a way to sell and market more product.鈥
Gabriel said lawmakers and parents have become 鈥渕uch more aware of how what we feed our kids impacts their physical health, emotional health and overall well-being.鈥 That has helped generate strong bipartisan support for the law, which all but one Republican in the state Legislature supported.
A coalition of business interests representing farmers, grocers, and food and beverage manufacturers opposed it. They argued the definition of ultraprocessed food was still too broad and ran the risk of stigmatizing harmless processed foods like canned fruits and vegetables that include preservatives. Vegetarian meat substitutes also generally contain things like processed soy protein and binders that may run afoul of the definition.
Gabriel contends that the law bans not foods but rather harmful ingredients. The California Department of Public Health now must identify ultraprocessed ingredients that may be associated with poor health outcomes. Schools will no longer allow those ingredients in meals, and vendors could replace them with healthier options, Gabriel said.
Supported by the California Health Care Foundation (CHCF), which works to ensure that people have access to the care they need, when they need it, at a price they can afford. Visit to learn more.
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