(1) Consistent with the essential academic learning
requirements for health and fitness, including nutrition, the
Washington state school directors association, with the
assistance of the office of the superintendent of public
instruction, the department of health, and the Washington
alliance for health, physical education, recreation and dance,
shall convene an advisory committee to develop a model policy
regarding access to nutritious foods, opportunities for
developmentally appropriate exercise, and accurate information
related to these topics. The policy shall address the
nutritional content of foods and beverages, including fluoridated
bottled water, sold or provided throughout the school day or sold
in competition with the federal school breakfast and lunch
program and the availability and quality of health, nutrition,
and physical education and fitness curriculum. The model policy
should include the development of a physical education and
fitness curriculum for students. For middle school students,
physical education and fitness curriculum means a daily period of
physical activity, a minimum of twenty minutes of which is
aerobic activity in the student's target heart rate zone, which
includes instruction and practice in basic movement and fine
motor skills, progressive physical fitness, athletic
conditioning, and nutrition and wellness instruction through
age-appropriate activities.
(2) The school directors association shall submit the model
policy and recommendations on the related issues, along with a
recommendation for local adoption, to the governor and the
legislature and shall post the model policy on its web site by
January 1, 2005.
(3) Each district's board of directors shall establish its
own policy by August 1, 2005.
[2004 c 138 § 2.]
NOTES:
Findings -- 2004 c 138: "(1) The legislature finds:
(a) Childhood obesity has reached epidemic levels in
Washington and throughout the nation. Nearly one in five
Washington adolescents in grades nine through twelve were
recently found to be either overweight or at risk of being
overweight;
(b) Overweight and obese children are at higher risk for
developing severe long-term health problems, including but not
limited to Type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, high blood
pressure, and certain cancers;
(c) Overweight youth also are often affected by
discrimination, psychological stress, and low self-esteem;
(d) Obesity and subsequent diseases are largely preventable
through diet and regular physical activity;
(e) A child who has eaten a well-balanced meal and is
healthy is more likely to be prepared to learn in the classroom;
(f) Encouraging adolescents to adopt healthy lifelong eating
habits can increase their productivity and reduce their risk of
dying prematurely;
(g) Frequent eating of carbohydrate-rich foods or drinking
sweet liquids throughout the day increases a child's risk for
dental decay, the most common chronic childhood disease;
(h) Schools are a logical place to address the issue of
obesity in children and adolescents; and
( i) Increased emphasis on physical activity at all grade
levels is essential to enhancing the well-being of Washington's
youth.
(2) While the United States department of agriculture
regulates the nutritional content of meals sold in schools under
its school breakfast and lunch program, limited standards are in
place to regulate "competitive foods," which may be high in added
sugars, sodium, and saturated fat content. However, the United
States department of agriculture does call for states and local
entities to add restrictions on competitive foods, as necessary."
[2004 c 138 § 1.]