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Bake sales are out, healthier school fundraisers are in

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WASHINGTON — When it comes to school fundraisers, bake sale tables loaded with sugary goodies are out. Fun runs, auctions and sales of healthier treats are in.

Government rules requiring many schools to hold more nutritious fundraisers, along with a trend toward healthier eating in schools, could mean trouble for the long-beloved bake sale. In response, schools are selling everything from fruit to kid-friendly shoelaces.

States can exempt themselves from the rules, so not every school is getting rid of sweet treats. But many schools say they have been successful in ditching the unhealthier models.

In Dallas, physical education teacher Sharon Foster says her school, James Bowie Elementary, stopped selling chocolate bars and started selling Y-Ties – elastic shoelaces that don’t have to be tied. Parent Susan Fox Pinkowitz said she helped her children’s elementary school, University Park Elementary in Denver, move from a candy-filled annual carnival to a fun run and carnival that offers apples and protein nut bars. She said the new fundraiser brings in as much as $12,000 annually, three or four times the amount raised by the old event.

Not everyone is on board. Missy Latham, a parent in Greenville, South Carolina, says bake sales are a profitable part of the “spirit week” celebrations in her district. “It’s kind of absurd that one week a year you couldn’t sell something like that without the government mandating that it’s OK,” Latham said.

The Agriculture Department rules, which kicked in last summer, require all foods sold on school campuses during the school day to meet certain nutrition standards. The rules include fundraisers, if states don’t exempt themselves. Fewer than half of states have used the exemptions, according to the National Association of State Boards of Education.

The new rules mean fewer brownies, pizza and doughnuts being sold in hallways to pay for school activities. The idea is to prevent frequent junk-food fundraisers that fill kids up and divert them – and their dollars – from healthier foods in the cafeteria and elsewhere in school.

Kristen Amundson, the association’s director, says the group has been asking state boards to give careful thought to whether they need exemptions. “Do you really want a bake sale every day, 180 days a year?” Amundson said. “Maybe, but probably not.”

Congress passed the school food standards in 2010, and they are part of a larger government effort championed by first lady Michelle Obama. Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack said when the bill was passed that he would allow the exemptions for fundraisers, leaving that issue up to the states. The rules say the exemptions should allow “infrequent” fundraisers, but USDA did not define infrequent.

In all, 22 states have created exemptions for fundraisers, according to the state education boards group. Last summer, Georgia decided that each school could have 30 fundraisers a year that don’t meet the nutrition standards, and that each of those fundraisers could last at least three days. Officials there said the federal rules were overreach.

In Oklahoma, a group of students from Edmond North High School brought cookies to a meeting with the state school board, where they told officials they make more than ,000 a year from food sales for their charity drives, according to junior Rachel Funderburk.

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The board listened and allowed 30 fundraisers per semester per school in the state.

Last week, Arizona Superintendent of Public Instruction Diane Douglas said the state would move to exempt fundraisers after she heard that a school couldn’t sell snow cones. “The thought that a federal bureaucrat knows better than parents what they can feed their own families is condescending and reprehensible,” Douglas said.

The federal rules don’t apply to food that is intended to be consumed at home or outside of school – so kids can still sell fundraiser mainstays like frozen pizza, frozen cookie dough and chocolate bars. USDA recently issued a guidance that clarified that sales of treats like Girl Scout Cookies are still allowed, but it encouraged delivering the foods late in the day, when parents can take them home.

In Klamath Falls, Oregon, elementary school principal Tony Swan says most parents are pleased that annual activity-a-thons have replaced chocolate bar sales.

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Kids had to lug heavy loads of chocolate around, and some kids even ate the product, costing precious dollars.

Companies that sell to schools are adjusting. Krispy Kreme spokeswoman Lafeea Watson says the company is testing sales of other items beyond doughnuts, including vouchers for local stores, coffee and collectibles with the company’s insignia.

California-based Bolthouse Farms is advertising its fruit and vegetable snack products by giving some schools money and recipes for healthier fundraisers – including apples made into turtle shapes and skewers of berries made to look like magic wands.

“This gives people a vision of what’s possible instead of just fighting these rules,” said Jeff Dunn, the company’s CEO.

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