Posts Tagged ‘tuscaloosa’

Join the childhood nutrition discussion

Thursday, February 10th, 2011

Michelle Obama celebrated the first anniversary of Let’s Move! yesterday on the Today Show.

Let’s Move! is a national campaign that promotes healthy, active lifestyles for American kids. After her Today Show appearance, Mrs. Obama spoke at a church in Alpharetta, Georgia, recalling some of the past year’s successes while challenging attendees to continue working for childhood nutrition.

“As far as we’ve come, when nearly one in three kids in this country is still overweight or obese, then we’ve still got a long way to go,” she said.

One of Let’s Move’s biggest successes of the past year was the newly signed Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act (PDF) that has promised a $4.5 billion increase in funding for the National School Lunch Program and other child nutrition programs over the next 10 years.

This newly signed act also gives the USDA the authority to set nutritional standards for all foods regularly sold in schools. Standards include:

  • Calorie limits in school meals
  • Reducing sodium by more than half
  • Banning most trans fats
  • Increased servings of fruits and vegetables
  • Requiring all milk to be low fat or nonfat
  • Requiring all flavored milks to be nonfat
  • Eventually requiring all grains to be whole grains

These changes will have a major impact on Alabama students, since more than half are currently enrolled in the Free or Reduced Lunch Program, and nearly one in four live below the federal poverty line. School breakfasts and lunches are the primary source of nutrition for many of these kids. The new guidelines mean they will have access to more nutritious, wholesome foods.

We hope you will join the conversation about improving the school lunch program – and that’s why we’re screening Lunch Line this Sunday, February 13 at 3 p.m. at the Bama Theater in Tuscaloosa. Lunch Line is a fun, informative documentary about the history, opportunities and challenges of the school lunch program.

The screening will be followed by a Taste $2.72 reception featuring food from local favorites including Mug Shots, Surin, Roly Poly, Newk’s, Don Rafa’s Mexican Grill, Mellow Mushroom, and more. Tuscaloosa lunchrooms are reimbursed $2.72 for each lunch served, and we want to give you an idea of how far that can go.

Advance tickets are available here, or you can purchase tickets using cash or check at the door. Tickets are $5 for students and $15 for adults. Kids 5 and under are free.

We hope to see you on Sunday!

posted by T.C. McLemore

Ordinary people do extraordinary things.

Friday, August 27th, 2010

Last Thursday, August 19, many members of APP’s staff and I attended the Fourth Annual Bailey Thomson Awards Luncheon in Tuscaloosa.

The event convened folks from around the state who are passionate about reforming the antiquated Alabama Constitution of 1901, which is not only the longest constitution of any democracy in the world, but also has set up a tax structure and political environment which makes it difficult for the poor to emerge from poverty.

It was great to hear our friends and colleagues including David Mathews, Kate Nielsen, Ed Gentle, Lenora Pate, Hill Carmichael, Audrey Salgado, Melanie Jeffcoat, and APP board member Mark Berte talk about their passion for rewriting our state constitution.

But what inspired me most was the group of people by whom I was sitting.  By luck, I sat at the table belonging to the late Bailey Thomson’s wife Kristi. Bailey started the modern Alabama Constitutional Reform Movement in 2000, and the day’s lunch was in his honor.

Bailey Thomson, founder of Alabama Citizens for Constitutional Reform, died in 2006.

Unlike many people in the room, the Thomsons weren’t discussing legislative strategy to call for a constitutional convention, or talking about the gubernatorial race, or reflecting on the greatness of the man that they knew as a husband, father, and uncle.

They were working through the logistics of taking the kids to multiple open houses for school, what the weekend was looking like, and the fact that they were so excited to host an exchange student from Kenya over the next year. They were ordinary people, with ordinary issues – as was Bailey Thomson. He also happened to have an extraordinary talent to write, to reveal, and to advocate for Constitutional Reform.

I think what we need to move the Constitutional Reform movement forward in Alabama is more people like I believe Mr. Thomson was—an ordinary person with extraordinary talents to contribute.

We all have talents, and using them together is the only way we will discover what’s possible in Alabama. Whether the issue is reforming the 1901 Constitution, increasing food security, or improving educational attainment, the only people who will ultimately change these systems are normal Alabama citizens using their talents for the greater good.

  • Connect to the Alabama constitutional reform movement at constitutionalreform.org
  • Learn more about Bailey Thomson’s writings and teachings here
  • Tell us about ordinary people doing extraordinary things in Alabama

Posted by Will Thomas