
Ban of harmful school lunch ingredients urged by MAHA supporters with new law proposal
House Bill 2164, titled the Arizona Healthy Schools Act, was introduced by Representative Leo Biasiucci and inspired by RFK Jr.'s Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) movement.
The bill would ban any food that contains potassium bromate, propylparaben, titanium dioxide, brominated vegetable oil, yellow dyes 5 and 6, blue dyes 1 and 2, green dye 3, and red dyes 3 and 40.
"The legislature finds that ultra-processed, industrially manufactured, nutrient-depleted food with synthetic additives is undernourishing minors at public schools and contributing to childhood obesity," the bill reads.
Adding, "Any taxpayer-funded meal or snack program offered to minors at public schools in this state should be nutritious and made primarily of whole, minimally processed plant or animal products."
On Tuesday, a "Cut the Chemicals" press conference was held at the Arizona Department of Education (AZDE) hosted by Superintendent of Public Instruction Tom Horne.
At the presser, Rep. Biasiucci, along with wellness advocates and supporters of the bill, gathered to share the importance of advancing the bill in Arizona.
Biasiucci told Fox News Digital that the idea for the bill was sparked while in Italy visiting his family last summer.
"[I] realized that even after eating pizza, pasta, bread, cheese and ice cream almost daily, I still felt great. I started to then look at the ingredients in the foods and noticed they didn't have all the dyes and chemicals we had in our foods," said Biasiucci.
He added, "Sometimes, these foods even came from companies that provide the same product in both the United States and in Europe. It was at that moment I knew I had to do something."
Biasiucci said the "Make America Healthy Again" movement has absolutely impacted his legislative agenda, and that the support of this bill has been incredible.
Calley Means, an advocate for healthcare reform, focusing on the intersection of food, policy and chronic disease, said these food colorings are crude oil.
"They are unambiguously connected to mass behavioral and neurological issues for kids. These are not allowed in any other developed country in the world…we have a food industry that's addicting kids and rigging lives," said Means.
Means added, "from the food industry standpoint, the largest fast food restaurant in America is school lunches."
From 2017 to March 2020, 22.2% of adolescents 12–19 were diagnosed with obesity, according to the CDC.
And from 2015 to 2018, 28.2% of teens were diagnosed with prediabetes, according to JAMA Pediatrics.
Diana Diaz-Harrison, Arizona Autism Charter Schools executive director and an autism mom, saiit is sad for her to see what is currently served as school lunches.
"I honestly don't feel good about feeding the kids that lunch and that breakfast every single day because it is honestly something that I myself would not eat, nor would I give my child," said Diaz-Harrison.
Actor and comedian Rob Schneider was also in attendance at the press conference.
For more Health articles, visit www.foxnews.com/health
"We can get the farmer's market and get the chefs to help, and we want to encourage the schools and the parents [to] get involved. It can be a community thing where it leaves the schools, and then it becomes part of the parents, becomes part of the lifestyle," said Schneider.
Schneider added, "I got two kids here in Arizona, and I love this state. And the passion here today was fantastic."
HB 2164 will head to the floor of the Arizona House of Representatives for a full House vote.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
6 hours ago
- Yahoo
RFK Jr's MAHA tour branded 'performative'
Robert F Kennedy, Jr's (RFK Jr) statewide tour promoting his Make America Healthy Again (MAHA) agenda has been called 'performative' by a US health consultancy. Since taking an axe to the health agencies nested under the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) in April, RFK Jr has toured states, including Colorado and Idaho, to promote his MAHA agenda. According to the White House's MAHA report, a key tenet of the initiative is to assist President Trump in addressing what the US health secretary has called the 'childhood chronic disease crisis', and includes vague aims to deliver more nutrient-dense food to the US population. Wellness Equity Alliance CEO Dr Tyler B Evans told Medical Device Network: "What we're witnessing with RFK Jr's roadshow is not leadership, it's theatre. 'The health secretary is cloaking vague rhetoric under the MAHA banner and selling it as reform, but the movement lacks policy substance and remains disconnected from the realities of public health. At best, it's a distraction. At worst, it's a dangerous misdirection that erodes trust in the institutions we need the most.' In April, RFK Jr delivered a speech at the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA), coinciding with the announcement of 10,000 planned job cuts across health agencies, including the FDA and the National Institutes of Health (NIH). The 40-minute speech included a range of baseless claims on various topics, according to a transcript of the speech seen by Politico. During his speech, RFK Jr stated that 'this whole generation is damaged' and claimed that rising rates of chronic disease, allergies and other illnesses were attributable to 'some environmental toxin'. How effective leadership at the HHS should look Evans emphasised that leadership at the HHS should be grounded in science, transparency, and accountability. 'It requires listening to public health professionals, not sidelining them, and to prioritise data over disinformation,' Evans said. 'I've worked on pandemic responses, from Ebola in West Africa to HIV/AIDS in South Africa to Covid-19 in NYC. What I've learned is simple: when health leadership is weak or politicised, people die unnecessarily. RFK Jr's decision to dismantle the department's capacity, especially during ongoing public health crises, is not reform. It is sabotage.' RFK Jr's MAHA tour has continued through July following the passage of Trump's 'One Big Beautiful Bill Act', which the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimates will leave 11.8 million people without health insurance by 2034. In a post to X following the bill's success in the Senate, Democratic senator Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez called the outcome 'an absolute and utter betrayal of working families'. To best serve the US's health, Evans said RFK Jr should focus on rebuilding trust with those most harmed by systemic neglect and called the current outcomes under the health secretary's leadership 'deeply troubling'. Evans concluded: 'Rebuilding trust requires investing in public health infrastructure, supporting workforce development, and addressing social determinants like housing, education, and food security. A national tour is not a substitute for that kind of real work.' "RFK Jr's MAHA tour branded 'performative'" was originally created and published by Medical Device Network, a GlobalData owned brand. The information on this site has been included in good faith for general informational purposes only. It is not intended to amount to advice on which you should rely, and we give no representation, warranty or guarantee, whether express or implied as to its accuracy or completeness. You must obtain professional or specialist advice before taking, or refraining from, any action on the basis of the content on our site. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data


The Hill
9 hours ago
- The Hill
Experts, school leaders excited about Presidential Fitness Test but urge reforms
Health experts and school leaders are thrilled with President Trump's revival of the Presidential Fitness Test, but they are hoping for substantial revisions to program, which was first deployed nearly 60 years ago. Advocates say the test, which hasn't been used since 2012, will need a makeover to shift its focus away from competition and more toward sustaining healthy lifestyles for youth. The move comes amid Trump's increased interest in the sports world during his second term and is propelled by the 'Make America Healthy Again' movement led by the Department of Health and Human Services. Trump appointed professional athletes to the President's Council on Sports, Fitness, and Nutrition, which will be guiding and working on standards for the revived test. Experts are urging the council to ensure the goals of the test are updated as well. Kayce Solari Williams, past president of the American School Health Association and a professor at Purdue University, hopes the council will go from the old standard to really considering 'overall health and performance' and linking expectations to certain age groups. Williams stressed she has to see 'what the format' and 'requirements' will be as we 'know more about taking better care of the body and doing some prevention, along with strengthening and increasing endurance and flexibility' than we did in the past. The prior test had five core activities: a 1-mile run; pullups or pushups; situps; a shuttle run; and the sit-and-reach. It was originally created to compare with Europeans students in physical strength, and the top 15 percent of U.S. students who completed the test would get a presidential award. The physical exam was ended during the Obama administration over concerns it focused more on competition than healthy lifestyles. 'The good news is that we are going to be looking, I hope, at curriculum to enhance how much activity is happening at schools. As for the testing itself, I mean, it's just a number … I'm hoping that a team or expert is really going to look at: How do we help improve baseline data?' said Laura Richardson, a kinesiology professor at the University of Michigan. 'My hope is that the Presidential Fitness testing is going to evolve, maybe rewards to them, where it's going to incentivize students individually and not based on groups,' Richardson added. The test was previously taken by middle and high schoolers across the country, but only 10 to 17-year-olds were eligible for the presidential award. School leaders are ecstatic over the change, pointing to concerns about sedentary lifestyles among their students. Tori Snitker, principal of Rolla Junior High School in Missouri, said her district has worked to create more room for physical activity for all students, including those with disabilities. 'I am seeing students have a more sedentary lifestyle due to technology,' Snitker said. 'We have to focus on the physical health of our students.' Other principals are so concerned about this phenomenon they suggested school fitness standards tied to a national goal or even military service. 'I'm hoping for some standards that are maybe even aligned with what military service is required because I think as a country, we need to be able to be prepared, and our young people need to be able to have a standard of fitness,' said Pierre Orbe, principal of DeWitt Clinton High School in New York, adding there is a difference between students who are medically unable to do certain tasks versus those who are 'not fulfilling their current potential.' Orbe believes some national standard is needed because physical education teachers feel 'hamstrung' by an 'enabling society' where there are more notes 'to say that my child can't do things' than can. Concerns about reliance on technology among students have mounted as many states and districts have started to ban cell phones in schools. Steven Kelder, an epidemiologist at the University of Texas, Houston, and co-director of Coordinated Approach to Child Health, stressed that just one test will not help the situation, unlike a 'combination of programs' that focus on physical fitness for a variety of individuals, not just those good at particular sports. According to 2024 data from the Centers for Control and Disease Prevention (CDC), one in five U.S. children are affected by obesity. 'There is an obesity crisis in America. It's not getting a whole lot better, and now, over time last 25 years, it's resulting in a diabetes crisis amongst kids. And I think that partly was the result of video games and what I call indoor electronic entertainment,' Kelder said. Schools and states also worry about students' mental health with the increased use of technology, though the Trump administration recently cut $1 billion to mental health programs for schools due to concerns the money was going to diversity, equity and inclusion programs. Leaders also stress the need for federal resources, especially if the presidential council creates awards and inventive structures for students in the revived test. 'We would love to see some resources to come our way to help with the motivation, with the rewards,' said Dennis Willingham, superintendent at the Walker County Board of Education in Alabama. 'We do have creative people who work with our children.' 'We're thankful for that, and we know that they provide rewards and motivation on their own, but to have resources to come from the national level and to make this a big deal for everyone nationwide, it makes it even bigger and even more appealing to our children,' he added.


Politico
2 days ago
- Politico
Trump's top brass turnover hits HHS
With help from Robert King Driving the Day YOU'RE FIRED! Since taking office, President Donald Trump has brusquely removed a number of top officials from their positions across departments who didn't align politically with his administration. That upheaval has included a string of high-profile firings across the nation's health agencies. The pattern of dismissals highlights the growing tension between science and politics as Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. implements his Make America Healthy Again agenda and reshapes federal policy on disease prevention, food and vaccines. Most recently, the FDA's top vaccine regulator, Vinay Prasad, was given the boot after just three months on the job. The president ordered his removal this week, overriding Kennedy and FDA Commissioner Marty Makary, who opposed the move. Background: Earlier this month, close Trump ally Laura Loomer began attacking Prasad, writing on her website that he was a 'progressive leftist saboteur undermining President Trump's FDA.' Other conservative voices, like former Sen. Rick Santorum (R-Pa.) and The Wall Street Journal editorial board, piled onto the criticism of Prasad and his approach to rare disease therapies under the FDA's purview — a concern that Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) raised with the White House on Monday, a day before Prasad was fired. Prasad's predecessor, Dr. Peter Marks, was also unceremoniously pushed out of the position four months ago, after leading the FDA's vaccine division for more than eight years. In March, Marks abruptly resigned from his post as the FDA's top vaccine regulator under pressure from Kennedy after his team concluded they needed a fresh start as part of a broader HHS reorganization. The ouster came as Marks had grown increasingly concerned by Kennedy's attitude toward vaccines and was particularly at odds with the secretary over his tepid response to the Texas measles outbreak. 'If Peter Marks does not want to get behind restoring science to its golden standard and promoting radical transparency, then he has no place at FDA under the strong leadership of Secretary Kennedy,' an HHS spokesperson told POLITICO in a statement at the time. Zooming out: And there's also been upheaval among Trump's nominees for top positions at HHS. The White House abruptly scrapped former Florida Rep. David Weldon's nomination to lead the CDC in March, just hours before his confirmation hearing, after determining he didn't have the support to win confirmation on the Senate floor. Some Senate Republicans had expressed concerns about Weldon's fringe views on vaccines. Trump also withdrew his first nominee for surgeon general, Dr. Janette Nesheiwat, in May, a day before her scheduled Senate confirmation hearing. The decision came after reports that Nesheiwat, an urgent care doctor and former Fox News contributor, obfuscated facts about her medical education. At the time, Loomer seized on the controversy and encouraged Trump to pick someone else. Hours after pulling Nesheiwat's nomination, Trump tapped wellness influencer Casey Means to serve as surgeon general. Means, the sister of top Kennedy adviser Calley Means, is still awaiting confirmation. WELCOME TO FRIDAY PULSE. President Donald Trump gave drugmakers an ultimatum yesterday: Lower your prices or face unknown consequences. Send your tips, scoops and feedback to khooper@ and sgardner@ and follow along @kelhoops and @sophie_gardnerj. MORNING MONEY: CAPITAL RISK — POLITICO's flagship financial newsletter has a new Friday edition built for the economic era we're living in: one shaped by political volatility, disruption and a wave of policy decisions with sector-wide consequences. Each week, Morning Money: Capital Risk brings sharp reporting and analysis on how political risk is moving markets and how investors are adapting. Want to know how health care regulation, tariffs, or court rulings could ripple through the economy? Start here. Eye on Insurers STRONG EARNINGS FOR TWO KEY PLAYERS — Major health insurers Aetna and Cigna both reported strong financial results for the second quarter of 2025 on Thursday, despite the rising medical cost trends plaguing other major insurers this year. At CVS Health's Aetna, which shook up its leadership last year after it struggled to control costs with more members seeking medical care, has seen continual improvements in cost savings throughout 2025, executives said during an earnings call Thursday. Making improvements at Aetna 'has been a top priority' the company executed by enhancing its operations through technology and reducing 'friction for our members and health care professionals,' said David Joyner, CEO of CVS Health. He pointed to changes Aetna made to its prior approval requirements — bundling prior authorizations for certain services like maternity care. 'We're starting to see the results of these efforts, delivering better experiences while also allowing us to better navigate this elevated utilization environment,' he said. At Cigna, executives reaffirmed their 2025 guidance on Thursday. Its pharmacy business, Evernorth Health Services, drove a spike in revenue in the second quarter, even as its insurance segment's revenue declined. Cigna's cost trends were elevated in the second quarter but still in line with its expectations, said Cigna President and COO Brian Evanko during an earnings call. Key context: Other key players in the health insurance space, including Centene, Molina Healthcare and UnitedHealth Group, have slashed their yearly guidance over the past few months, citing rising medical costs across Medicaid, Obamacare and Medicare Advantage. At the Agencies CMS FINALIZES HOSPITAL PAY BUMP — The Trump administration finalized on Thursday a $5 billion increase in payments to hospitals for inpatient care, Robert reports. The pay bump from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services takes effect in the next federal fiscal year that begins in October. It also includes a $2 billion bump in payments to hospitals with a high amount of charity care. Vaccines COVID VACCINE CONFUSION — Most Americans don't expect to get a Covid-19 vaccine this fall, according to a KFF Tracking Poll on Health Information and Trust published today. Nearly 60 percent of adults said they likely wouldn't get the shot, while 40 percent said they would 'definitely' or 'probably' get it — mostly older adults (55 percent) and Democrats (70 percent). Among Republicans, 59 percent said they would 'definitely not' get the vaccine. Most adults who plan to get the shot said they're concerned about the vaccine's availability and whether their insurance will cover it. Why it matters: The findings come after Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a longtime vaccine skeptic, announced in May that the government would no longer recommend Covid vaccines for healthy pregnant people and children. The move has sparked pushback from public health experts and doctors — including some who sued Kennedy — arguing the move violated longstanding norms governing U.S. immunization policy. The agency ultimately didn't pull the recommendation from the CDC vaccine panel's childhood schedule and instead downgraded it to 'shared decisionmaking' — a differentiation that doctor groups say has made it harder for providers to counsel patients and for practices to assess insurance coverage. Kennedy and other top HHS officials have said there isn't sufficient data to show that healthy children and healthy pregnant women benefited from Covid vaccination. In June, Kennedy fired all 17 members of the CDC's independent vaccine panel and replaced them with several vaccine skeptics. The panel recommends vaccines that insurers are then largely obligated to cover with no cost-sharing under the Affordable Care Act. More findings: About half of parents with children under 18 said they don't know whether federal agencies recommend healthy children get the Covid vaccine this fall, according to the KFF poll. About 20 percent of adults said Kennedy's vaccine policy changes are making people safer, while 36 percent said they're making people less safe. The remainder said they don't know enough to say (31 percent) or that Kennedy's changes won't make a difference (13 percent). The national poll was conducted from July 8 to 14 online and by telephone among 1,283 U.S. adults. In the States KRATOM WARS — Federal health officials' push to schedule a controversial herbal supplement as a controlled substance has revived efforts among California lawmakers to regulate the product, called kratom, POLITICO's Rachel Bluth reports. Earlier this week, HHS took initial steps toward classifying a derivative of kratom, 7-hydroxymitragynine, as a controlled substance after seeing a rise in overdoses and emergency-room visits linked to products containing 7-OH. The designation would place restrictions on the substance's production, distribution and possession. Washington's efforts to assert control have spurred California Assemblymember Jasmeet Bains to revisit her earlier attempt to regulate kratom in the state, which stalled partly because of competing messaging lawmakers received from makers of products that use leaves of the kratom plant and those using newer, more potent derivatives. Key context: The faction of the industry making natural leaf-based products, which previously had been the target of suspicion from drug enforcement and public health officials, is seizing on the opportunity to make the case that natural leaf products should be legitimized through regulations and 7-OH cordoned off as a separate, more dangerous product. Proponents of the products say they can be a substitute for opioid pain relievers. The 7-OH manufacturers, meanwhile, dispute claims that their products are opioids or resemble heroin. They see themselves as offering newer, better products that entice customers and leave legacy brands behind. WHAT WE'RE READING POLITICO's Carmen Paun reports on the Senate Appropriations Committee's approval of a 2026 funding bill for HHS. The Associated Press' Mike Stobbe reports on the fall in U.S. childhood vaccination rates last year as the share of children with exemptions rose to an all-time high. BioPharma Dive's Delilah Alvarado reports on Moderna laying off 10 percent of its workforce as part of an effort to cut expenses amid slowing vaccine sales.