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Fruit and Vegetable Opportunities at the Arizona Department of Education. Jessica Creed-Capsel Director of Food Distribution, DOD Fresh Produce, Farm to School, and School Gardens (602) 542-8781 or Jessica.Creed-Capsel@azed.gov. Objective.
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Fruit and Vegetable Opportunities at the Arizona Department of Education
Jessica Creed-Capsel Director of Food Distribution, DOD Fresh Produce, Farm to School, and School Gardens (602) 542-8781 or Jessica.Creed-Capsel@azed.gov
Objective To educate you on the programs available through the ADE that can help bring fruits and vegetables into Arizona schools.
Welcome! • USDA Foods • DOD Fresh Produce • FFVP • Farm to School
USDA Foods • Participants of the National School Lunch/Breakfast Programs • Makes up 15-25% of school lunch • Protein, whole grains, fruits and vegetables (fresh, canned, and frozen, dried) – 180 different items
USDA Foods Fruits and Vegetables • Over $326 million in 2010 • Canned fruit – always extra light sucrose; unsweetened applesauce • Canned vegetables – 140mg of sodium or less • Fresh options available • New items for 2011-12 ** Dried fruit mix, figs, fresh apples
USDA Foods • Schools purchase these foods using USDA entitlement dollars, not out-of-pocket dollars • Program is customer driven • Arizona received $26 million in USDA Foods entitlement for school year 2011-12 • 25% Fruits and Vegetables • 22% Beef • 11% Chicken • 22% Cheese
USDA Foods in Arizona Arizona’s USDA Foods for school year 2011-12 • Vegetables: carrots, sweet potatoes, white potatoes, peas, corn, tomatoes/tomato sauce, black-eyed peas, salsa • Beans: green, turtle, pinto, kidney, garbanzo, refried • Fruits: apples, oranges, cherries, blueberries, strawberries, apricots, peaches, pears, fruit mix, figs, raisins
Arizona Nutrition Network & USDA Foods • Promote the use of USDA Foods in the schools you work with • Provide nutrition education around the types of fruits and vegetables the school receives via USDA Foods • Encourage schools to choose the healthiest USDA Foods
Department of Defense Fresh Produce Program Overview • 1993 – piloted in eight states ($3.2 million) • Partnership between DOD Troop Support & USDA • Farm Security and Rural Investment Act of 2002 sets aside $50 million/year to support the program in all participating states including US territories
DOD Program Overview • USDA Entitlement Dollars • Used to purchase fresh fruits and vegetables • Supplement where USDA Foods cannot provide fresh • All American grown produce • Purchase through a single distributor • Stern Produce • - Sign a long term contract with the DOD Troop Support to provide service to schools and military bases • - Responsible for procurement, storage and distribution using commercial industry practices
DOD Fresh in Arizona Arizona – • 2010-11 received $1.35 million (32 schools) • End of year balance was $0.25 • 2011-12 received $2.5 million (50+ schools) Entitlements range from $700 - $250,000
Benefits of DOD Fresh Produce • Offer fresh fruits and vegetables for school lunches/breakfast • Receive weekly deliveries of only the amounts ordered • Door-to-Door delivery direct to warehouse, kitchen, or school sites • Schools purchase these foods using USDA entitlement dollars, not out-of-pocket dollars • Local produce options
How to get on the program • Participate in the National School Lunch Program • Participate in the USDA Foods Program • Contact ADE’s Food Distribution team • Open enrollment • No minimum Free/Reduced % • Must have available entitlement • Must spend your money!
Arizona Nutrition Network & DOD Fresh Produce Program • Promote the DOD Fresh to schools • Encourage schools to participate and to maximize their DOD entitlement dollars • Encourage variety in their DOD purchases
Background of FFVP • Pilot Program began in 2002 -2003 school year • 4 states and 1 ITO • 2004 National School Lunch Act • 4 additional states and 2 ITO’s • 2006 Appropriations Act • 6 additional states
Background of FFVP (cont.) • Farm Bill became law on May 22, 2008 • Amended NSLA by adding Section 19, Fresh Fruit and Vegetable Program • National program in 50 states • $49.9 million for the 2008-2009 school year
Program Goals • Goals of FFVP • Create healthier school environments by providing healthier food choices • Expand the variety of fruits and vegetables children experience • Increase children’s fruit and vegetable consumption • Make a difference in children’s diet to impact their present and future health
Funding • 2011-2012 school year, Arizona was awarded $3,162,258 • USDA requires states to allocate $50-$75 per student, per school • Arizona allocated $52.67 per student • Reimbursement program • Use it or lose it
Program Regulations • What can be served? • Fresh fruits • Fresh vegetables • Encourage children to enjoy produce in their natural state
Program Regulations (cont.) • What can be served in limited amounts? • Vegetable dips (low-fat or fat free, yogurt based) • Cooked fresh vegetables (not canned, frozen or dried) that are part of a nutrition education lesson can be offered once a week
Program Regulations (cont.) • What cannot be served? • Processed or preserved fruits and vegetables (canned, frozen, dried or vacuum packed) • Dip for fruit • Fruit leather • Jellied fruit • Purchased freshly squeezed fruit or vegetable juice • Smoothies • Trail mix and nuts • Cottage cheese • Fruit and veggie pizzas
Program Regulations (cont.) • Who can have fruits and vegetables? • Students who normally attend your school (PreK - 8) • Head Start children • Split session kindergarten classes • School staff and parents if they are consuming with the students demonstrating behavior
Program Regulations (cont.) • Who cannot have fruits and vegetables? • Community members • Parents if students are not involved • School staff eating the produce alone
Program Regulations (cont.) • When can you serve? • Only during the school day but not during meal times
Program Regulations (cont.) • Where can you serve? • Classrooms • Cafeteria (not during meal times) • Playground/Recess • Offices • Hallways • Kiosks/Carts • Free vending machines • As part of nutrition education activities
Nutrition Education • Not required, but recommended • Nutrition Education materials are not reimbursable • ADE has partnered with Arizona Nutrition Network for materials
Arizona Farm to School • New venture for Arizona • Creating partnerships with agricultural agencies (AZ Dept of Ag, Farm Bureau, Cooperative Ext, Arizona farmers) • Partnering with DOD vendor, Stern, to offer local produce to DOD participants
DOD Fresh Produce Program vs Fresh Fruit and Vegetable Program