June 14, 2010 8:30 AM

Michelle Obama to Food Giants: Cut the Fat

(AP)  Michelle Obama is urging the nation's largest food companies to speed up efforts to make healthier foods and reduce marketing of unhealthy foods to children.

Obama asked the companies, gathered at a meeting of the Grocery Manufacturers Association on Tuesday, to "step it up" and put less fat, salt and sugar in foods.

"We need you not to just tweak around the edges but entirely rethink the products you are offering," she said.

The first lady has talked to schools and nutrition groups across the country in her effort to reduce childhood obesity. This is the first time she has confronted the food companies that make the snacks and junk food that stuff grocery aisles and school vending machines.

The Grocery Manufacturers Association - which counts Kraft Foods Inc., Coca Cola Co. and General Mills Inc. among its members - invited her to speak at its science forum this week and attendees gave her a standing ovation.

Welcoming the first lady and embracing her campaign for healthier kids, launched earlier this year, could have advantages. The industry is positioned to take some blows in the coming year, including a child nutrition bill about to move through Congress that could eliminate junk food in schools, digging into some companies' profits.

The Food and Drug Administration is also beginning to crack down on misleading labeling on food packages, saying some items labeled "healthy" are not, and the Senate last year mulled a tax on soda and other sweetened drinks to help pay for overhauling health care.

That tax did not make it into the health care bill, but it could be seen as an opening shot in a quietly growing effort to target food companies, especially as local, state and federal governments scrounge for revenue in a tight fiscal environment.

Obama said she would like to see less confusing food labels and portion sizes and increased marketing for healthy foods. She urged companies not just to find creative ways to market products as healthy but actually increase nutrients and reduce bad ingredients.

"While decreasing fat is good, don't replace with sugar," she urged. "This needs to be a serious industry wide commitment to provide healthier foods."

Obama's campaign is largely focused on school lunches and vending machines, along with making healthy food more available and encouraging children to exercise more.

Scott Faber, a lobbyist for the grocery association, said the industry is open to working with the government on finding ways to produce healthier foods.

"Consumers are demanding more and more healthy choices," he said. "Our industry will do our part by changing the way we make and market our foods, but government has a big role to play as well."

While introducing Michelle Obama Tuesday, Rick Wolford, chairman and CEO of Del Monte Foods Co. and chairman of the Grocery Manufacturers Association, said it is "a watershed moment in the fight against obesity."

"We are willing to do more and we are willing to go the extra mile," he said.

This approach is a far cry from the fights consumer groups had with food companies a decade ago, said Margo Wootan, director of nutrition policy at the Center for Science in the Public Interest.

"When I first started working on junk food in schools, it was a very contentious issue where we regularly did battle with junk and snack food companies," she said. "Now it's a whole new world, and many of them are supporting updating standards."

Wootan said she believes that embarrassment is in part fueling the companies' push, as more attention has been placed on foods' nutritional values or lack thereof. More uniform federal standards could also be helpful to food companies, she said, as some states and localities are creating their own standards for marketing and making foods.

"When you see the handwriting on the wall, it's time to get on the right side of the issue," Wootan said.

Consumer advocates say they are cautiously optimistic about the industry's involvement, but will wait to see how amenable they are to real change.

"They want to be riding that crest rather than fighting it," said Jeffrey Levi, executive director of the Trust for America's Health, a Washington-based public health research organization. "There is a long ways between saying the right things and doing the right thing."

© 2010 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Add a Comment See all 15 Comments
by stychokiller March 17, 2010 1:48 AM EDT
@Michelle Obama:
-- Get your Husband to "Cut the Fat" out of Govt spending and maybe, just maybe, you'll BOTH gain some credibility.
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by juminate March 17, 2010 1:39 AM EDT
I think we should focus on getting our kids outside playing and not inside on the couch with video games. That would help taking care of the weight problem. That and a combination of healthier foods would definately be a good start on this serious issue.
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by CBSisCommunist5 March 17, 2010 1:16 AM EDT
Give her a Nobel Prize NOW!!!!!
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by kansas1946 March 16, 2010 6:34 PM EDT
Obama asked the companies, gathered at a meeting of the Grocery Manufacturers Association on Tuesday, to "step it up" and put less fat, salt and sugar in foods.

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I agree on the salt and sugar, but the low-fat craze that started in the seventies has put more weight on people and made people more unhealthy than anything ever done as far as diet is concerned. Fat is essential for taste, satisfaction, and to keep your body from producing large amouts of cholesterol. Trans fat is death though and luckily is being reduced in foods. Most of the other fats monos and polys are essential and good for you and saturated is not nearly as bad for you as the fat Nazis would have you believe.
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by monumentalfigure March 16, 2010 6:21 PM EDT
I think there is one misunderstanding. And that is people think fat is directly conserved as bodily fat.

Sugar and other carbohydrates are easily converted into fat, actually more easily than fat from food itself, which is harder to be broken down in cells than carbohydrates. Try eating a few bananas per day and you will easily gain weight - they have plenty of short carbohydrates. But it will be also hard work in losing that weight, because it is stored as more complicated chemical structure (fat) than it was in banana...

So, anything with energy you eat in excess is bad and will make you fat. There are even studies which show that too little fat in diet may cause health problems and overweight.
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by run2jazz2 March 16, 2010 5:53 PM EDT
When I was a child many years ago my Grandmother and Mom made meals that were filling. None of this microwaveable nonsense, pull from your freezer stuff you see today. Meals were substance none of this Go-Gurt or Luncheable mess you see today.

My Mom would make a pot of beans, little bit of meat and some cornbread and that would be our meal for a few days. Cabbage and potatoes with a roast and we would eat off of it as well. Friday in our family was "Go for what you know" and you can have a hoagie or a cheesteak (Yes, I am from Philly) if you it could it was affordable.

Ask these kids today what they are eating and it is something quick because no one has time anymore.
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by Harden_Tar March 16, 2010 5:19 PM EDT
Ask the parents to control what their children eat? ARE YOU INSANE?! This is the era of big government. Let big daddy Washington absolve you of all your responsibilites. Just keep popping out little Democrats and we will feed, provide health care, and school them in revisionist history. Remember, Chris Columbus was a genocidal mass murderer. From cradle to grave the government is here to help you.
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by quapawsix March 16, 2010 4:30 PM EDT
It's hard to get kids to work out and eat the right things when their parents won't
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by barbaram99 March 16, 2010 4:29 PM EDT
Dear First Lady,
I would also like see less salt used. Ye asked them to cut the fat.. Cut the sugar and salt..Ye overlook that..Madam the schools need recess. Don't blame the the TV,PC. etc.. Blame greed and high prices. I have to mic my one meal aday. I mic pop corn that has no better and no salt. In my day they had better lunches at school. I have no children, Pop should not be in schools. I never had pop when I was a child ...It was not served..Cake only on a birthday.. Holidays we did. I have heard children in store tell their parents what the parent will buy.I realise that theere are sp deits or foods they can't eat for health reasons. Have ye seen the TV shows that talk abouts parents who children eat more than I. Their small ones are over weight. I am about 155 and I am 55. The children are so heavy they can't walk. The parents use food or junk to quiet them.
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by tomanyt March 16, 2010 3:45 PM EDT
In Bid to Reduce Childhood Obesity, First Lady Asks Nation's Largest Food Companies to Make Healthier Foods ... Why not just ask the parents to do a better job of feeding their fat kids????
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