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Posted: Sun 5:41, 10 Nov 2013 Post subject: conducted March 8-9 |
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Gallup: Most U.S. adults favor healthier school meals
PRINCETON, N.J., March 17 () -- Two-thirds of U.S adults say they favor a law limiting food sold in public schools to meet standards for high nutritional value,[url=http://www.huh456.com/]christian louboutin sale[/url], a survey indicates. A Gallup poll, conducted March 8-9, found three-quarters of parents with children currently enrolled in public school and nearly two-thirds of non-public school parents said -- if given the opportunity -- they would vote for food meals be of high nutritional value. Fifty-seven percent said they favored such laws when the question specifies that the nutritional standards would also apply to food sold in vending machines, snack bars and at bake sales.Public-school parents were less likely than non-public school parents to favor the policy when it specifically mentions the outlets for so-called "competitive foods" -- vending machines, snack bars, and bake sales. However, Americans broadly rejected banning home-packed food. Eighty-one percent of Americans,[url=http://www.godsdrama.com/]cheap true religion[/url], including 79 percent of parents and 82 percent of non-parents, said they would vote against a law prohibiting students from bringing packed lunches or snacks to school. The survey of 1,016 U.S. adults has a margin of error of 4 percentage points. |
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