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PUBLIC
CITIZEN
YOUTH EDUCATION ALLIANCE
NEWS RELEASE
May 20, 2004
For Immediate Release:
Contact: Monique Mikhail, PC (202) 454-5174
Ann Caton, YEA (202) 498 7075
D.C.
School Board Bans Irradiated Food from School Lunch Program
Students and
Consumer Groups Praise Decision
WASHINGTON, D.C.
- School officials' decision on Wednesday night to ban irradiated food from
its school lunches is a welcome move that will help safeguard students from
the unknown effects of consuming irradiated food, according to Public Citizen
and the Youth Education Alliance. In an 8-1 vote, the District of Columbia Board
of Education followed a new trend nationwide by passing a resolution that forbids
the 167-school system from purchasing irradiated food for any of its meal programs
for five years. Although the school system doesn't currently serve irradiated
food, it can; the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) last year approved the
use of irradiated ground beef in the National School Lunch Program. The program
provides free or reduced-price school lunches to 27 million children annually;
60 percent of the D.C. schools system's 65,000-plus students qualify for the
federally subsidized meal program. Banning irradiated food from school cafeterias
is one way to safeguard students who would otherwise have no way to protect
themselves from eating meat that has been treated with the controversial irradiation
technology. Federal law states that while irradiated meat must be labeled in
grocery stores, it does not have to be labeled when served in school cafeterias,
restaurants or hospitals.
The school board's move came after students and Public Citizen urged the board
to ban irradiated food. The students also called on the board to improve the
quality, safety and wholesomeness of food served in D.C. schools.
A recent WJLA (Channel 7) report revealed that 143 of 155 District schools needed
"immediate action" to clean up their cafeterias. Contributing to the
filthy state of the cafeterias were rodent feces, spiders and dead insects,
along with insulation materials that had fallen into the food preparation area
because of aging building conditions. Further, improper temperatures used during
processing and storage had caused food to spoil, the news program found. Irradiation
would not help prevent food contamination for any of these problems. It also
cannot prevent cross-contamination once packages are opened and cannot kill
the abnormal protein that causes mad cow disease. "Instead of spending
more money on irradiated meat - which will not solve the most common contamination
problems in D.C.'s cafeterias - we can now focus on bringing fresher and healthier
ingredients to improve students' lunches," said Monique Mikhail, organizer
for Public Citizen's Safe Lunch Campaign. "We applaud the D.C. School Board
for protecting students from an unnecessary and potentially harmful food product."
Irradiation exposes food to a dose of ionizing radiation to kill bacteria; however,
research has shown that it also produces chemicals that are known or suspected
carcinogens. Recent research has shown that one class of these chemicals, cyclobutanones,
promotes cancer development as well as causes genetic damage to human cells.
The USDA decision to approve irradiated meat for the school lunch program was
controversial because the federal agency sided with industry over parental concerns.
Of the thousands of comments the government has received, 93 percent have been
in opposition to the proposal to include irradiated meat in children's lunches.
To date, no school district has purchased irradiated meat through the USDA for
the 2004-2005 school year.
"We're happy
that the school board banned irradiated meat because we didn't want students
to be worried about what was on their lunch trays," said Mayonna Bangura,
youth organizer for the Youth Education Alliance and a 10th grade student at
Calvin Coolidge Senior High School. "It's a first step in the right direction
towards healthy, safe and better-tasting lunches."
The full text of the resolution can be viewed at the following link
http://www.citizen.org/documents/DCban.pdf
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-Public Citizen's Critical Mass Energy and Environment Program
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