Archive

Posts Tagged ‘family’

Remarks by the First Lady at the School Nutrition Association Conference

March 1st, 2010 No comments

2:05 P.M. EST MRS. OBAMA:  Thank you.  (Applause.) Thanks so much, everyone.  Please, sit.  (Applause.)  Thank you.  It is such a pleasure to be here with all of you.  Thanks so much for that warm welcome. And I also want to thank Dora for that kind introduction and for your outstanding leadership of the School Nutrition Association.  And I want to thank all of you here today for the terrific work that you’re doing every day all across this country.  And I know that you always don’t get a lot of credit and recognition for what you do — and you deserve it.  You know, there are not a lot of newspaper headlines about how the meals you serve are the only food that many kids may get all day long.  People on TV don’t talk much about how kids who participate in the school meal program perform better in class and they miss fewer days of school.  And a lot of folks still don’t understand how the cafeteria is actually one of the most important classrooms in the entire school — (applause) — because what you all know is that our kids don’t stop learning at lunchtime.  Every day, with the food you serve, you’re teaching them these critical lessons about nutrition and healthy eating.  You’re shaping their habits and their preferences, and you’re affecting the choices that they’re going to make for the rest of their lives.  So now just multiply that by the 31 million kids in the school meal program, and it’s clear that all of you don’t just shape the future of individual students; you help to shape the future of this country.  And that’s been the case since the National School Lunch Program was first started by President Truman after World War II, back when one of the most common disqualifiers for military service was malnourishment, if you can believe that. And that’s why President Johnson later in 1966 expanded the program to include school breakfasts and meals at preschools because, as he put it, he said that "good nutrition is essential to good learning." So whether it’s national security, education or child hunger, for decades we’ve looked to you for help in achieving our most urgent national priorities.       And that’s really why I’m here today -– because once again today we’re going to need your help with a crisis that we face in our own time: and that’s the epidemic of childhood obesity in America today. And you all know the statistics –- how nearly one in three kids in this country is overweight or obese.  And you all see the impact on the kids that you work with.  You see firsthand kids who are struggling to keep up with their classmates, or worse yet they’re stuck on the sidelines because they can’t participate.  You see how kids are teased or bullied.  You see kids who physically don’t feel good, and they don’t feel good about themselves.  You see kids who are at higher risk of conditions like diabetes, and cancer, and heart disease -– conditions that cost billions of dollars a year to treat.  And by the way, today, one of the most common disqualifiers for military service is actually obesity. Now, those of you who’ve been in this business a while, you know that this wasn’t always the case.  Things weren’t always this way.  I know you may remember a time when kids in your schools led lives that kept most of them at a healthy weight.  They walked to and from school, they ran around during recess and gym class, and they played outside for hours after school.  Many could — kids ate home-cooked meals, and many had actually seen fruits and vegetables before you served them to them — (laughter) — so they didn’t look at them like foreign objects when they got them at school.  (Laughter.)  Fast food, soda and candy were special treats; they weren’t part of every meal.  And at lunchtime, in many schools, kids just had two choices: either what you served them, or what their mom or dad packed at home, whether they liked it or not.  But over the past few decades, we’ve seen these healthy habits falling away, replaced by habits of convenience and necessity.  You know, parents want to buy healthy food for their kids, but they’re sometimes tight on money and can’t afford it.  Or they’re tight on time because they’re juggling extra jobs, extra shifts, and they just can’t swing those home-cooked meals anymore.  Those walks to school have been replaced with buses or car rides.  And as you know, gym class and school sports have been cut in so many places, replaced by afternoons with the TV, video games, and the Internet.  And those two reasonably healthy choices at lunchtime, they’ve become dozens of choices –- some healthy and some not.  That occurs as schools struggle to get the revenue that they need.  From fast food, to vending machines packed with chips and candy, to a la carte lines, we tempt our kids with all kinds of unhealthy choices every day.  And it’s no surprise that they don’t always pick the healthy ones.  And by now, I think it’s clear that between the pressures of today’s economy and the breakneck pace of modern life, the well-being of our kids has too often gotten lost in the shuffle.  But we have to be honest:  Our kids didn’t do this to themselves.  You see, our kids don’t decide what to serve — or what is sold at lunch.  Our kids don’t decide whether there’s time for recess and gym.  They don’t decide whether they’ll learn about healthy eating or nutrition at school.  They don’t make these decisions.  We set those priorities.  We make those decisions.  And even if it doesn’t always feel like it, we are the ones in charge.  But that’s the good news — because if we make the decisions, then we can decide to solve this problem.  And that’s precisely what many of you are already doing right now in schools all across this country.  Anji Baumann, the Child Nutrition Director for Gooding, Idaho, she has local farmers grow fresh fruits and vegetables specifically for her school district.  And I hear her staff makes many foods from scratch –- including spaghetti and baked goods.  In fact, they even came up with a recipe that uses pureed beans as a substitute for some of the oil in chocolate cake –- and it was so tasty that none of the students even noticed.  In Binghamton, New York, I hear they held a health fair to celebrate when six of the city’s seven elementary schools reached Gold status in the Healthier US School Challenge.  Wonderful.  (Applause.)  And they celebrated with kids proudly displaying the school — their nutrition projects.  And the whole community got involved — the local hospital, Boys and Girls Clubs, the USDA office, and others — they all sponsored booths with information on healthy living.  And in Jackson, Mississippi, thanks to the encouragement of the Executive Director of Food Services, Mary Hill, the superintendent now requires elementary school teachers to eat meals with their students.  (Applause.)  And as you can imagine, with teachers sitting at the table -– both encouraging kids to eat fruits and vegetables, and eating them themselves –- fruit and vegetable consumption has gone up there.  And I’m going to be visiting Jackson on Wednesday, and I am looking forward — (applause) — I’m looking forward to seeing Mary and hearing more about what she’s doing.  And I’m hoping to come to your areas, too. Every day, in communities across this country, you all are proving that if we’re creative and resourceful, if we meet this challenge with determination and commitment, then we can take back control; and we can turn back the tide; and we can give our kids the lives that we know they deserve.  That’s why earlier this month we launched Let’s Move.  It’s a nationwide campaign to help our kids lead active, healthy lives right from the beginning.  And we’ve issued a call to action.  We are telling people, let’s get going, let’s move to help families and communities make healthier decisions — uh oh — (laughter) — not meaning to call you out or anything — (laughter) – but leave it to the press, they’re just — (laughter.)  We have to move to help parents make healthier choices for their kids.  And we have to move to get the community together — governors, mayors, doctors, nurses, everyone — to tackle this challenge once and for all.  And we have to move.  Let’s move to rally this country around a single, ambitious goal — and that is to solve the problem of childhood obesity in a generation so that kids born today reach adulthood at a healthy weight.  (Applause.)   And we’ve already created the first ever government-wide task force on childhood obesity.  It’s composed of Cabinet secretaries and senior administration officials.  And over the next 90 days, they’re working fast and furious.  They’re going to review every government program relating to child nutrition and fitness.  And they’ll develop a national action plan to not just maximize those resources, but make recommendations that the public and private sectors can take to move this ahead.  They’ll also lay out concrete benchmarks to measure our success and to hold us all accountable for meeting our goal.  But we are not going to wait for 90 days to get to work here.  We’ve already gotten started on a series of wonderful initiatives to achieve our goal.  The first:  Let’s move to offer parents the tools and information they need to make healthy choices for their kids.  You know, so many parents, they want to do the right thing, but they’re bombarded with all this conflicting information, and they don’t know who or what to believe or where to start.  So we’ve started a Web site –- letsmove.gov -– that’s going to provide helpful tips and step-by-step strategies for parents.  In addition, we’re working with our doctors, encouraging pediatricians and family doctors to screen kids for obesity and actually work with parents to write out a prescription for the steps they can take to address the problem.  We’re also working with the FDA and the food industry to make our food labels more customer-friendly so parents won’t have to spend hours squinting at words that they can’t pronounce to figure out whether the foods that they’re buying are healthy or not.  And that brings me to the second part of this initiative:  Let’s move to ensure that all our families actually have access to the foods — the healthy foods that they need in their own communities, because right now, 23.5 million Americans, including 6.5 million children, live in what we call food deserts, and these are areas without access to a supermarket.  And as a result, what happens in those communities is that families wind up buying their groceries at a local gas station or a convenience store, places that offer few, if any, healthy options.  So we’ve set an ambitious goal in this area: to eliminate food deserts in America within seven years.  (Applause.)  And to achieve this goal, we’ve created a Healthy Food Financing Initiative that’s going to invest $400 million a year –- and leverage hundreds of millions more from the private sector -– to bring grocery stores to underserved areas and to help places like convenience stores carry healthier food options.    But we know that healthy eating is only half the battle.  Experts recommend at least 60 minutes of daily activity.  But we all know that many kids don’t even come close to that.  So let’s move –- and I say that and mean that literally.  We have to move to find new ways for our kids to be physically active.  And that’s the third piece of this initiative.  Our work here includes expanding and modernizing the President’s Physical Fitness Challenge.  And we’ve recruited professional athletes from dozens of different sports leagues –- like the NFL, Major League Baseball, the WNBA, and many, many more –- and they’re going to work with us to encourage kids to get and stay active. But here’s the thing:  We can help kids eat better at home, and we can help them be more active both in and out of school, but the fact remains that kids who participate in school meal programs get roughly half of their calories each day at school.  So that means that all of you have as much influence on what our kids eat each day as their parents do.  And think about that for a minute.  This is an extraordinary responsibility.  But it’s also an opportunity.  And it’s why one of the single most important things we can do to fight childhood obesity is to make those meals at school as healthy and nutritious as possible. So let’s move to help all of you get healthier food into our school.  That’s the fourth and final part of the initiative. And we’re going to start by working to dramatically increase the number of schools that meet the Healthier US School challenge.  Those are schools that provide healthy meals, offer physical education and nutrition education, and ensure that children receive the free and reduced price meals that they’re eligible for.  These schools that meet the standard, they are the gold standard.  They’re the model of what we want for every school in America. Now, I know that it’s not going to be easy to meet this challenge, because I know the kind of constraints that all of you are under in this era of budget cuts when you’re constantly pushed to do more with less.  And I think that if the average person — if you asked the average person to do what you have to do every day, and that is to prepare a meal for hundreds of hungry kids with just $2.68 a child -– with only $1.00 to $1.25 of that money going to the food itself –- they would look at you like you were crazy.  (Laughter and applause.)  That’s sad, but that’s less than what many folks spend on a cup of coffee in the morning.  So we’re going to have to do everything we can to help you.  Right now, we’re hard at work updating and strengthening the Child Nutrition Act to give you more of the resources that you need to do your jobs.  And Secretary Vilsack, the Secretary of Agriculture, is taking the lead.  He’s doing a wonderful job.  And we’ve proposed a historic new investment of an additional $10 billion over the next 10 years.  And I’m pleased that just last week, 66 retired generals, admirals, and other senior military leaders -– including two former Chairmen of the Joint Chiefs of Staff -– sent a letter to Congress in support of these efforts.  And that’s amazing.  (Applause.)   Our goals here are very simple:  We want to get rid of the unnecessary paperwork that keeps so many eligible kids from participating in the school meal programs –- (applause) — and if we can do that, we can increase enrollment in the school breakfast program so that we can serve an additional 1 million kids in the first five years alone.  (Applause.) But we also want to improve the quality of food in our schools, increasing reimbursements so that you can add more fruits and vegetables and whole grains, and decrease sugar, fat and salt.  We also want to get healthier food into those vending machines too –- which, by the way, has actually meant increased revenues for schools in Kentucky and Maine and elsewhere. We also want to help you purchase the equipment that you need so that you can start phasing out those fryers and phasing in new ovens and salad bars and serving lines.  (Applause.)   And we want you all to have better training and professional development opportunities so that you know all of the latest research and the best techniques.  Now, all of this is going to help.  But while we can pass better legislation and invest more money, at the end of the day, when it comes to making a school a healthy school, you all know that you’re where the rubber meets the road, because you know better than anyone what our kids will eat and what they’ll throw away.  You know what it takes to make them finally –- if even only reluctantly -– try something new.  And the training and mentoring that you provide, the contracts you negotiate, the decisions that you make about what to serve –- that’s what really matters here.  That’s what really makes the difference.  So let me tell you I am just thrilled that you all have agreed to work with us to meet the goals of Let’s Move, because we’re going to need everything that you’ve got.  We’re going to need your best initiatives.  We’re going to need your ideas, both big and small, because in fact, as you know, it’s often the small things that make the difference here.  For example, switching from 2 percent to 1 percent milk, that could mean 20 fewer calories.  Switching from fruit served in heavy syrup to fruit served in light syrup or juice could mean another 13 calories.  Substituting low-fat or non-fat salad dressing could be nearly 50 more calories.  And little changes that cut 20 calories here, 30 calories there –- all of that can add up to the hundreds of calories a week for kids.  And over the course of a year, for some kids, that can mean the difference between being at a healthy weight or not.  But fighting childhood obesity isn’t just about the food you serve in your lunchrooms.  It’s about the leadership you show in your schools and in your communities.  It’s about your work as advocates and educators in your own right.  It could mean reaching out to parents -– posting school menus online, or providing family-sized recipes, so that they can try the foods you serve at home.  It could mean working with kids, having them do taste tests, or forming a student nutrition group to advise you on what to do for them.  It could mean working with teachers and giving them healthy eating tips that they can share with their students.  Or educating administrators about the value of programs like the Healthier US Schools program. And it always means, as you know, reaching out to the community at large –- partnering with local farmers and food suppliers to get better food and better deals; speaking to community groups like the PTA or the Chamber of Commerce about the work that you’re doing and what they can do to help you.  But let’s be clear:  This isn’t your responsibility alone.  We all have a role to play here, and the only way we’re going to solve this problem is by working together, because you all can give our kids the healthiest school meals imaginable, but if there’s no supermarket in their community and they’re eating unhealthy food at home, then they still won’t have a healthy diet.  And we can build all the shiny new supermarkets on every block in this country, but if parents don’t have the information they need, they’ll still struggle to make healthy choices for their kids.  And then if kids aren’t active, then no matter how well we feed them, they still won’t be leading healthy lives.  That’s why I’ve met with so many people over the course of the past few weeks — with mayors and governors — asking them to do their part to build healthier cities and states.  That’s why I’ve met with parents, asking them to do their part to make healthier choices for their families.  That’s why I’ll be meeting with the food manufacturers in the Grocery Manufacturers Association, calling on them to offer healthier options.  And that’s why we need more folks from the private sector to step up: from school food suppliers improving the quality of their food, to retailers understanding that what’s good for kids and families can actually be good business, too. And that’s why I’m here with all of you, because you all have a vitally important role to play in this effort.  See, I think President Truman put it best — I’ve said this before — nearly 65 years ago in a statement to the first national conference of state school lunch officials that read, and this is a quote, he said to them, "To you who carry out the program locally falls the crucial job of seeing to it that we build well for the future."  That we build well for the future.  And in the end, that’s what this is all about –- ensuring that we build well for the future.  Ensuring that our kids are ready to learn, that they’re ready to serve their country, that they’re ready to make healthy decisions for the rest of their lives.  It’s about ensuring that our kids have the energy and the endurance to succeed in school, to pursue the careers of their dream, and believe it or not, to keep up with their own kids, if they’re blessed, and to live to see their grandkids grow up, and if they’re lucky, maybe even their great grandkids too.  That’s why we’re doing this. So let’s act.  Let’s move.  And let’s do everything that we can to give our kids the future that we want for them and we know they deserve.  (Applause.)  So I thank you all for your work and for your continued success.  We are so very proud of you.  Thank you all.  Thanks so much.  (Applause.) END 2:29 P.M. EST

Original post: 
Remarks by the First Lady at the School Nutrition Association Conference

Remarks by The First Lady to the National Governors Association

February 20th, 2010 No comments

JW Marriott Washington, D.C. 11:09 A.M. EST MRS. OBAMA:  Thank you all so much.  Thank you.  It is a pleasure for me to be here with all of you today and to welcome you all to Washington. Thank you, Governor Douglas, for that very kind introduction.  And thanks to you and Governor Manchin for your leadership in Vermont as well as [West] Virginia, and as the Chair and the Vice Chair of the NGA. And I also want to recognize all the governors who are here today and to thank you for your outstanding leadership and the dedicated service that you provide to states all across this country.  We are grateful to you. Now, I would be remiss if I didn’t thank all the spouses who are here for all the things you have to put up with.  (Laughter.)  The long hours, absolutely.  (Applause.)  You all are making the same kind of sacrifices, putting up with long hours and late-night crises.  And all I can say is, been there, done that.  (Laughter.)  And I know how you feel, and we are just grateful to have you all.  And again, we’ll give them another round of applause.  (Applause.) Now, I know that the focus of this year’s meeting is the issue of health care.  And over the next few days, you’re going to be talking about spiraling costs that are straining your budgets and running up all of our deficits — costs like the nearly $150 billion a year that we spend on obesity-related conditions like diabetes, heart disease, and high blood pressure.  You’re going to talk about the staggering Medicaid burdens — and how premiums have risen three times faster than wages, often bankrupting families in your states, sinking businesses in states all across this country. But we all know that there’s another set of statistics that have to be a part of this discussion — like how nearly one in three of our children in this country is now overweight or obese.  Like how one in three kids today will eventually develop diabetes — and in the African American and Hispanic communities, the number is nearly half.  Because if we think our health care costs are high now, just wait until 10 years from now.  Think about the many billions we’re going to be spending then.  Think about how high those premiums are going to be when our kids are old enough to have families of their own and businesses of their own. So we all know that we can’t solve our health care problems unless we address our childhood obesity problem, too.  And that’s really why I’m here today:  to talk about the issue of childhood obesity that is so important to me and what our states and our nations can do to solve it. But we have to begin by understanding how we got here, what’s caused this crisis in the first place.  And I have my theories, but when you all think about it, this is a relatively new phenomenon.  This wasn’t something that we were dealing with when I was growing up.  Back when we were all growing up, most of us led lives that naturally kept us at a healthy weight.  We walked to school and we walked home, because we usually lived in communities where our schools were close.  All of us ran around all day at school, doing recess and gym because everybody had to do it.  And then when we got home, we’d be sent right back outside and told not to come back home until dinner was served.  (Laughter.)  You know your parents didn’t let you in the house. And back then we ate sensibly.  We had many more home-cooked meals.  That was the norm.  And much to our dismay at the time, there was always something green on the plate.  (Laughter.)  Fast food and dessert was a special treat.  You had it but you didn’t have it every day, and the portion sizes were reasonable.  In my family I remember a couple of pints of ice cream — this was a big treat — we’d get three pints of ice cream for a family of four and that would last us a week, because you wouldn’t eat a pint, you’d get a scoop, and that would be it.  You’d savor that a spoonful at a time. And these weren’t arbitrary rules that our parents just made up.  As we know now, it was a way of life they imposed to help keep us active and healthy.  They knew back then that kids couldn’t and shouldn’t sit still for hours.  They knew that kids needed to run around and play.  They knew that keeping us healthy wasn’t about saying no to everything, but it was about balance and moderation.  We all had our share of burgers and fries and ice cream growing up.  We just didn’t have it every day, and not at every meal. But somewhere along the line, we kind of lost that sense of perspective and moderation.  And we all want the very best for our kids just like our parents wanted for us.  But with the pressures of today’s economy, and the breakneck pace of modern life, many parents feel like the deck is stacked against them. They want to prepare healthy foods for their kids, but a lot of times they’re tight on money and they just can’t afford these meals.  Or oftentimes they’re tight on time because they’re juggling longer hours at work and many of them juggling multiple jobs.  So they just can’t swing coming home and making a home-cooked meal around the dinner table.  It’s hard. They want their kids to be active, but sometimes they live in communities where either it’s not practical to walk to school or, worse yet, it’s not safe.  Or they live in communities where gym classes and school sports are considered luxuries and not necessities — the first things to go in a budget crunch.  And those afternoons playing outside, they’ve been replaced by afternoons sitting inside in front of the TV or video games or the Internet.  And as a result, many parents feel like they’ve lost that sense of being in charge that their parents had. But we have to be honest with ourselves:  Our kids didn’t do this to themselves.  Our kids didn’t decide whether there’s time for recess or gym class, or our kids don’t decide what’s served to them in the school cafeteria.  Our kids don’t decide whether to build playgrounds and parks in their neighborhoods or whether to bring supermarkets and farmer’s markets to their communities.  We set those priorities.  We make those decisions.  And even if it doesn’t feel like we’re in charge, we are. But that’s the good news.  Because if we make these decisions here, then we can decide to solve this problem.  And that’s precisely what so many of you are doing right now in your states.  You’re experimenting and innovating.  Many of you are ignoring the naysayers and the old partisan divides, and focusing solely on what works. In Pennsylvania, for example, folks started a Fresh Food Financing Initiative to bring grocery stores to underserved areas.  And I got to visit one of those communities yesterday when I spent some time with Governor Rendell in Philadelphia.  In that community they started with $30 million, and then they leveraged that for an additional $190 million from the private and non-profit sectors.  And with that money they’ve funded 83 supermarket projects in 34 counties that are making profits, and they’re projected to create more than 5,000 jobs. In North Carolina, they’ve launched a full-scale effort to help kids eat healthier and to exercise more.  They’ve banned snack and soda vending machines from elementary schools.  They’ve given grants to cities and to counties for things like sidewalks and trails and community gardens.  And they’ve trained 41,000 teachers across the state on how to incorporate physical activity into the classroom. And Arkansas started on the issue of childhood obesity way back in 2003 — something former Governor Huckabee and I discussed yesterday when I appeared on his TV show.  They screened students’ BMIs, which was controversial.  They got healthier food into their schools and required regular physical education classes.  And as a result, that state was able to halt the rise of childhood obesity completely. What you all are doing is proof that if we are creative and committed enough, if we meet this challenge with the kind of energy and determination that it requires, then we can take back control and we can turn back the tide and we can give our kids the kind of lives they deserve. And that’s why last week we launched this wonderful initiative called "Let’s Move."  It’s a nationwide campaign to rally this country around a single ambitious goal, and that is to solve the problem of childhood obesity in a generation so that the kids born today will reach adulthood at a healthy weight. So we’ve issued a call to action.  We’ve said, let’s move.  Let’s move to help families and communities make healthier decisions for their kids.  And let’s move to bring together governors and mayors and doctors, nurses, our business leaders, non-profit community, our educators, our athletes, our parents to tackle this challenge once and for all.  Because it’s going to take every last one of us — particularly folks in the private sector, from the food industry offering healthier options to retailers who understand that what’s good for kids and families can actually be good for businesses, too. That’s why, over the next 90 days, the first ever government-wide task force, which includes members of our Cabinet, will develop a national action plan.  And they won’t just review every government program relating to child nutrition and physical activity and advise us on how to marshal those resources.  But they’re also going to develop benchmarks to measure our progress, and recommend actions that can be taken by the private and the non-profit sectors. But we cannot wait 90 days to get to work here.  So we’ve already gotten started on a series of initiatives to achieve our goal. There are four key pillars.  The first:  Let’s move to offer parents the tools and information they need and that many have been asking for to make healthier choices for their kids.  So many parents want to do the right thing, but they are bombarded by conflicting information, and they don’t know what to believe or where to start.  That’s why many of you have been running public education campaigns and creating healthy-living Web sites.  And California is leading the way, becoming the first state in the country to require restaurant chains of a certain size to post calorie information on menus and menu boards — just one part of an aggressive, anti-obesity strategy that’s making a difference across that state.  And the health care legislation in Congress follows their lead.  It includes a similar provision to help parents make informed decisions. Let’s Move is going to add to these efforts.  We’ve started with a Web site, called letsmove.gov, that’s going to have helpful tips and step-by-step strategies for parents.  We’re also working with pediatricians and family doctors to encourage them to screen kids for obesity early, and then actually write out a prescription for parents with action steps that they can take to address it so they don’t feel like they’re dealing with this problem alone. And we’ve been working with the FDA and the food industry to make our food labels more customer-friendly, so that people don’t spend hours squinting at words they can’t pronounce to know if the foods they’re buying are healthy.  In fact, the nation’s beverage companies, the largest, just announced that they’re going to be providing clearly visible information about calories on the front of their products and on their vending machines and soda fountains.  And this is a step in the right direction.  It’s an important step, but it’s still only one step.  And we have so many more ahead. We can’t forget, for example, that 31 million of our children participate in federal school meal programs.  So we don’t want to be in the position where we take one step forward with parents making good decisions, but then we take two steps back when lunch time rolls around at school and kids are faced with poor choices in the school cafeteria. So let’s move to get healthier food into our nation’s schools, and that’s the second part of this initiative.  There’s a reason why our governors are such passionate advocates for our school meal programs.  It’s because you all know the impact that these programs have.  You know that when kids get the nutrition they need, they perform better in the classroom and they miss fewer days of school.  So let’s multiply that by 31 million, and we are talking about a serious impact on education in this country. That’s why we’ve set a goal of doubling the number of schools in the HealthierUS School Challenge.  And we’ve already gotten several major food suppliers to commit to offering healthier school meals. We’re also updating and strengthening the Child Nutrition Act.  Secretary Vilsack is taking the lead on these efforts, and we plan to invest an additional $10 billion over 10 years to fund that legislation.  This will allow us to serve 1 million more kids in the first five years, and dramatically improve the quality of food in our schools — decreasing sugar, fat, and salt; and increasing fruits, vegetables, and whole grains. But our success here is up to you.  It’s up to you to get that — get the most out of these new investments.  And maybe that means demanding more from your suppliers in your state, or maybe renegotiating your contracts to include healthier options.  Maybe it means starting a farm-to-school program or insisting on healthier options in school vending machines, which, by the way, has actually meant increased revenues in schools in Kentucky and Maine and elsewhere. But while school meals provide critical nutrition for millions of kids, we also can’t forget that kids get plenty of their calories at home, right in their own neighborhoods.  And many of our kids live in what we call "food deserts," and these are areas without access to a grocery store.  Imagine that, living in a community without a grocery store.  So too many of those calories at home come from fast food or processed foods from the local gas station or convenience store. So that’s why the third component of "Let’s Move" is, let’s move to ensure that all our families have access to healthy, affordable food in their communities.  Right now there are food deserts in every single state in this country, so we’ve set an ambitious goal, and that is to eliminate every last one of those food deserts within seven years. And to achieve this, we’ve created the Healthy Food Financing Initiative that is modeled on what was so successful in Pennsylvania.  We’ll start with an initial investment of $400 million a year.  And we’ll use that to leverage hundreds of millions more from the private and non-profit sectors to bring grocery stores to underserved areas across the country. And once again, our success here is going to depend so much on what you do.  We need you to encourage communities to apply for these grants, and provide the right incentives — from helpful zoning laws, to remapped transit routes that help shoppers access stores, to job training to entice grocers with a well-prepared workforce. But we know that eating right is only part of the battle.  We all know that in our own lives.  We know that physical activity is critical, too — not just for better health but for better academic achievement.  Experts recommend that kids get at least 60 minutes of active play each day.  And we know that many of our kids aren’t anywhere close to that.  So let’s move — and I mean that literally.  We have to move to find new ways for our kids to be physically active both in and out of school. And I have to say that many of you have been very creative on this piece already.  Folks in West Virginia have taken the lead in bringing DDR — that’s Dance, Dance Revolution — it’s a new video game that gets kids up and moving.  Many other states use it as well.  And let me tell you, I can attest to Dance, Dance Revolution.  We got it at Camp David, and it will make you sweat.  (Laughter.)  And it is addictive in a very good way.  The President still can’t do it.  (Laughter.) Georgia is using a program called HOPSports, and they’re beaming in videos of famous athletes into gym classes so kids can learn skills and techniques from their heroes and their role models. And to build on these efforts, "Let’s Move" is going to work to modernize and expand the President’s Physical Fitness Challenge.  And we’ve already recruited professional athletes from dozens of different sports leagues.  They’re going to be involved to encourage our kids to get and stay active. So that’s just some of what we’re doing — just some of it.  That’s how we’re working to attack this problem from every single angle.  Because that’s the thing about this issue of childhood obesity — it has so many different causes.  There are so many different culprits, and it’s not enough to tackle any one of them alone, because we can give our kids the healthiest school meals imaginable, but if the rest of their calories come from the corner store or drive-through, then they still won’t get adequate nutrition.  And we can have shiny new supermarkets on every block in every community, but if parents don’t have the information they need, they’ll still struggle to make the right choices for their kids. So we need a comprehensive, coordinated approach to this problem.  But that doesn’t necessarily mean an expensive approach, because I know that many of you are stretched thinner than ever in these times, and don’t actually have money to spare.  But often it’s about doing more with what you already have.  If you’re already paving a new road, for example, why not add a sidewalk or a bike path, too?  Or if you’re already building a housing development, why not add a playground?  If you’ve got school gyms or playing fields empty after hours, why not find a way to open them up to the community at night or on the weekends? I also want to be clear that "comprehensive and coordinated" doesn’t mean centralized.  I’ve spoken to so many experts on this issue, and not a single one of them has said that the solution is for the federal government to tell people what to do.  That doesn’t work.  There is no one-size-fits-all answer to this problem.  Because what works in Rhode Island might not work in Arizona.  What’s perfect for Hawaii might not be right for Minnesota.  Different states, as you know, have different needs and different priorities and different resources. And you all know best what’s going to work for the people that you serve.  You know what’s working and you know what isn’t.  That’s why the NGA’s efforts to support this issue and to provide best practice is going to be so valuable.  It has already been.  That’s why I’ve reached out to so many of you to get your ideas and your input and to learn more about how we can help you.  And I want to hear from every single state, of every size, from every region.  I want to work with leaders from both parties, because the way I see this, there is nothing Democratic or Republican, there is nothing liberal or conservative about wanting our kids to lead active, healthy lives. There’s no place for politics when it comes to fighting childhood obesity.  And I know all of you agree; I know that.  You know that — (applause) — you know that because with a phone call or the stroke of a pen, you can determine whether a child can see a doctor or get a decent education or have a safe place to play, because you all are fighting the real battles every day on behalf of our kids, and you don’t have time for the fake battles.  You’re interested in what works, what makes a real difference in people’s lives, what will make things better for the next generation. It’s funny, because that’s what drove President Theodore Roosevelt to call the very first meeting of this organization a century ago to speak to America’s governors about conservation — about preserving America’s beauty and bounty not just for the current generation but for generations to come. Working for the next generation is what drives so many Americans to do what they do — to work that extra shift, to take that extra job, to go without themselves just so that their kids can have more than they did.  It’s what we’ve always done in this country.  I know my parents have done it for me.  They measured their success by the success of their children, by whether their children were happier and healthier and had a better shot at fulfilling their dreams than they did. That’s why so many of you got involved in politics in the first place — to leave something better for those who are going to come after you.  And in the end, that’s what "Let’s Move" is all about.  It is simple.  Let’s stop wringing our hands and talking about it and citing statistics.  Let’s act.  Let’s move.  Let’s give our kids the future they deserve. Look, I look forward to working with all of you in these efforts over the months and years ahead.  I’m going to need you.  I’m going to need you championing these causes, giving me feedback, giving me direction and guidance.  It will not work any other way.  And our kids can’t afford for us to get this wrong, and we know it. So thank you in advance for your help, and I look forward to seeing you all on the dance floor tomorrow night.  (Laughter.)  Thank you so much.  (Applause.) END 11:33 A.M. EST

The rest is here: 
Remarks by The First Lady to the National Governors Association

National Girls and Women in Sports Day

February 13th, 2010 No comments

The 24th Annual National Girls and Women in Sports Day was celebrated on February 3rd.  Ensuring that women and girls have equal opportunities to be strong and healthy is a priority for the Obama Administration.  National Girls and Women in Sports Day reminds us of the hard work that has and must continue to go into providing women equal opportunities to participate and excel in sports.  We also take this day to celebrate the accomplishments of all female athletes, from girls running their first races to the athletes participating in this year’s XXI Olympic Winter Games.  President Obama and Secretary Sebelius have stated their support for National Girls and Women in Sports Day. You can read the President’s statement here and  the Secretary’s statement here. Maude Baggetto is Staff Assistant in the Office of Public Engagement and the Council on Women and Girls

Go here to see the original:
National Girls and Women in Sports Day