Adopted: MSBA/MASA
Model Policy 533
Orig.
2005
Revised: 2024 Rev.
2022
533 WELLNESS
I. PURPOSE
The purpose of this
policy is to set forth methods that promote student
wellness, prevent and reduce childhood obesity, and assure that school meals
and other food and beverages sold and otherwise made available on the school
campus during the school day are consistent with applicable minimum local,
state, and federal standards.
II. GENERAL STATEMENT OF POLICY
A. The
school board recognizes that nutrition promotion and education, physical activity,
and other school-based activities that promote student wellness are essential
components of the educational process and that good health fosters student
attendance and learning.
B. The
school environment should promote students’ health, well-being, and ability to
learn by encouraging healthy eating and physical activity.
C. The
school district encourages the involvement of parents, students,
representatives of the school food authority, teachers, school health
professionals, the school board, school administrators, and the general public
in the development, implementation, and periodic review and update of the school
district’s wellness policy.
D. Children
need access to healthy foods and opportunities to be physically active in order
to grow, learn, and thrive.
E. All
students in grades K-12 will have opportunities, support, and encouragement to
be physically active on a regular basis.
F. Qualified
food service personnel will provide students with access to a variety of
affordable, nutritious, and appealing foods that meet the health and nutrition
needs of students; try to accommodate the religious, ethnic, and cultural
diversity of the student body in meal planning; and will provide clean, safe,
and pleasant settings and adequate time for students to eat.
III. WELLNESS GOALS
A. Nutrition
Promotion and Education
1. The school district will encourage and
support healthy eating by students and engage in nutrition promotion that is:
a. offered as part of a comprehensive
program designed to provide students with the knowledge and skills necessary to
promote and protect their health;
b. part of health education classes, as
well as classroom instruction in subjects such as math, science, language arts,
social sciences, and elective subjects, where appropriate; and
c. enjoyable,
developmentally appropriate, culturally relevant, and includes participatory
activities, such as contests, promotions, taste testing, and field trips.
2. The school district will encourage all
students to make age appropriate, healthy selections of foods and beverages,
including those sold individually outside the reimbursable school meal
programs, such as through a la carte/snack lines, vending machines, fundraising
events, concession stands, and student stores.
B. Physical Activity
1. Students
need opportunities for physical activity and to fully embrace regular physical
activity as a personal behavior. Toward that end, health and physical education
will reinforce the knowledge and self-management skills needed to maintain a
healthy lifestyle and reduce sedentary activities, such as watching television;
2. Opportunities for physical activity
will be incorporated into other subject lessons, where appropriate; and
3. Classroom teachers will provide short
physical activity breaks between lessons or classes, as appropriate.
C. Communications with Parents
1. The
school district recognizes that parents and guardians have a primary role in
promoting their children’s health and well-being.
2. The school district will support
parents’ efforts to provide a healthy diet and daily physical activity for
their children.
3. The
school district encourages parents to pack healthy lunches and snacks and
refrain from including beverages and foods without nutritional value.
4. The
school district will provide information about physical education and other
school-based physical activity opportunities and will support parents’ efforts
to provide their children with opportunities to be physically active outside of
school.
IV. STANDARDS AND NUTRITION GUIDELINES
A. School
Meals
1. The
school district will provide healthy and safe school meal programs that comply
with all applicable federal, state, and local laws, rules, and regulations.
2. Food
service personnel will provide students with access to a variety of affordable,
nutritious, and appealing foods that meet the health and nutrition needs of
students.
3. Food
service personnel will try to accommodate the religious, ethnic, and cultural
diversity of the student body in meal planning.
4. Food
service personnel will provide clean, safe, and pleasant settings and adequate
time for students to eat.
5. Food
service personnel will take every measure to ensure that student access to
foods and beverages meets or exceeds all applicable federal, state, and local
laws, rules, and regulations and that reimbursable school meals meet USDA
nutrition standards.
6. Food
service personnel shall adhere to all applicable federal, state, and local food
safety and security guidelines.
7. The
school district will make every effort to eliminate any social stigma attached
to, and prevent the overt identification of, students who are eligible for free
and reduced-price school meals.
8. The
school district will provide students access to hand washing or hand sanitizing
before they eat meals or snacks.
9. The
school district will make every effort to provide students with sufficient time
to eat after sitting down for school meals and will schedule meal periods at
appropriate times during the school day.
10. The
school district will discourage tutoring, club, or organizational meetings or
activities during mealtimes unless students may eat during such activities.
B. School
Food Service Program/Personnel
1. The
school district shall designate an appropriate person to be responsible for the
school district’s food service program, whose duties shall include the creation
of nutrition guidelines and procedures for the selection of foods and beverages
made available on campus to ensure food and beverage choices are consistent
with current USDA guidelines.
2. As
part of the school district’s responsibility to operate a food service program,
the school district will provide continuing professional development for all
food service personnel in schools.
C. Competitive
Foods and Beverages
1. All
foods and beverages sold on school grounds to students, outside of reimbursable
meals, are considered “competitive foods.”
Competitive foods include items sold a la carte in the cafeteria, from
vending machines, school stores, and for in-school fundraisers.
2. All
competitive foods will meet the USDA Smart Snacks in School (Smart Snacks)
nutrition standards and any applicable state nutrition standards, at a
minimum. Smart Snacks aim to improve
student health and well-being, increase consumption of healthful foods during
the school day, and create an environment that reinforces the development of
healthy eating habits.
3. Before
and Aftercare (child care) programs must also comply with the school district’s
nutrition standards unless they are reimbursable under USDA school meals
program, in which case they must comply with all applicable USDA standards.
D. Other
Foods and Beverages Made Available to Students
1. Student
wellness will be a consideration for all foods offered, but not sold, to
students on the school campus, including those foods provided through:
a. Celebrations
and parties. The school district will
provide a list of healthy party ideas to parents and teachers, including
non-food celebration ideas.
b. Classroom
snacks brought by parents. The school
district will provide to parents a list of suggested foods and beverages that
meet Smart Snacks nutrition standards.
2. Rewards
and incentives. Schools will not use
foods or beverages as rewards for academic performance or good behavior (unless
this practice is allowed by a student’s individual education plan or behavior
intervention plan) and will not withhold food or beverages as punishment.
3. Fundraising. The school district will make available to
parents and teachers a list of suggested healthy fundraising ideas.
E. Food
and Beverage Marketing in Schools
1. School-based
marketing will be consistent with nutrition education and health promotion.
2. Schools
will restrict food and beverages marketing to the promotion of only those foods
and beverages that meet the Smart Snacks nutrition standards.
V. WELLNESS LEADERSHIP AND COMMUNITY INVOLVEMENT
A. Wellness
Coordinator
1. The
superintendent will designate a school district official to oversee the school
district’s wellness-related activities (Wellness Coordinator). The Wellness Coordinator will ensure that
each school implements the policy.
2. The
principal of each school, or a designated school official, will ensure
compliance within the school and will report to the Wellness Coordinator
regarding compliance matters upon request.
B. Public
Involvement
1. The
Wellness Coordinator will permit parents, students, representatives of the
school food authority, teachers of physical education, school health
professionals, the school board, school administrators, and the general public
to participate in the development, implementation, and periodic review and
update of the wellness policy.
2. The
Wellness Coordinator will hold meetings, from time to time, for the purpose of
discussing the development, implementation, and periodic review and update of
the wellness policy. All meeting dates
and times will be posted on the school district’s website and will be open to
the public.
VI. POLICY IMPLEMENTATION AND MONITORING
A. Implementation
and Publication
1. After
approval by the school board, the wellness policy will be implemented
throughout the school district.
2. The
school district will post its wellness policy on its website, to the extent it
maintains a website.
B. Annual
Reporting
The Wellness
Coordinator will annually inform the public about the content and implementation
of the wellness policy and make the policy and any updates to the policy
available to the public.
C. Triennial
Assessment
1. At
least once every three years, the school district will evaluate compliance with
the wellness policy to assess the implementation of the policy and create a
report that includes the following information:
a. the
extent to which schools under the jurisdiction of the school district are in
compliance with the wellness policy;
b. the
extent to which the school district’s wellness policy compares to model local
wellness policies; and
c. a
description of the progress made in attaining the goals of the school
district’s wellness policy.
2. The
Wellness Coordinator will be responsible for conducting the triennial
assessment.
3. The
triennial assessment report shall be posted on the school district’s website or
otherwise made available to the public.
D. Recordkeeping
The school district
will retain records to document compliance with the requirements of the wellness
policy. The records to be retained
include, but are not limited to:
1. The
school district’s written wellness policy.
2. Documentation
demonstrating compliance with community involvement requirements, including
requirements to make the local school wellness policy and triennial assessments
available to the public.
3. Documentation
of the triennial assessment of the local school wellness policy for each school
under the school district’s jurisdiction efforts to review and update the
wellness policy (including an indication of who is involved in the update and
methods the school district uses to make stakeholders aware of their ability to
participate on the Wellness Committee).
Legal References: Minn. Stat. § 121A.215 (Local School District Wellness
Policy; Website)
42
U.S.C. § 1751 et seq. (Healthy and Hunger-Free Kids Act)
42 U.S.C. §
1758b (Local School Wellness Policy)
42 U.S.C. §
1771 et seq. (Child Nutrition Act)
7 U.S.C. §
5341 (Establishment of Dietary Guidelines)
7 C.F.R. §
210.10 (School Lunch Program Regulations)
7 C.F.R. §
220.8 (School Breakfast Program Regulations)
Local Resources: Minnesota Department of Education, www.education.state.mn.us
Minnesota Department
of Health, www.health.state.mn.us
County
Health Departments
Action
for Healthy Kids Minnesota, www.actionforhealthykids.org
United
States Department of Agriculture, www.fns.usda.gov