Senate Concurrent Resolution No. 12–Senators Wiener, Cegavske, Mathews, Titus, Rawson, Care, Neal, Nolan and Washington
Senate Concurrent RESOLUTION—Encouraging school administrators, teachers and other educational personnel involved in prekindergarten through 12th grade to promote nutrition and physical fitness in schools.
Whereas, Between 1986 and 1998, obesity among children in
the United States doubled, and results of a survey completed in the
year 2000 by the National Center for Health Statistics of the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention revealed that 15 percent of
children between the ages of 6 and 11 years are overweight; and
Whereas, In 1990, not one state had a rate of obesity in
adolescents as high as 15 percent, but today in more than one half of
the states, the rate of obesity in adolescents is 15 percent to 19
percent; and
Whereas, Obesity in children and adolescents is directly
related to an increased risk of developing heart disease,
hypertension, excess fat or lipids in the blood, musculoskeletal
disorders, breathing problems and asthma, early sexual maturation
and type 2 diabetes, which was previously quite rare in children; and
Whereas, Obesity in children and adolescents is also linked
with emotional distress and psychosocial issues such as
discrimination, low self-esteem, poor body image, depression,
anxiety and obsessive compulsive disorder, and researchers have
found that obese adolescents are more likely to engage in risky
behaviors such as smoking and drinking alcohol; and
Whereas, Statistics indicate that obese children and
adolescents tend to remain obese during adulthood; and
Whereas, These dramatic statistics, devastating trends and
problems relating to obesity are the consequence of two principal
factors, lack of physical activity and poor nutrition; and
Whereas, Changes in our society and lifestyle have resulted in
limiting physical activity in children and adolescents, for example,
fewer children and adolescents walking or bicycling to school or
other activities because of increased safety concerns or busy
schedules, an upsurge in sedentary recreation such as television,
videotapes and DVDs, video games, computers and other electronic
media, and lack of money for parks and recreational facilities in
communities; and
Whereas, Another cause of lack of physical activity is that
many schools are experiencing reductions of time allocated to
mandatory physical education classes and time dedicated to recess
and organized physical activities; and
Whereas, This lack of physical activity in earlier years causes
less alertness and decreased productivity in the classroom, can
inhibit healthy social and emotional development, and increases the
likelihood of continued lack of physical activity as an adult; and
Whereas, Studies have shown that appropriate levels of
physical activity are advantageous in that they improve muscular
strength and endurance, flexibility and cardiovascular endurance,
reduce anxiety and stress, and can play a role in increasing feelings
of self-esteem, self-worth and self-efficacy; and
Whereas, Research also indicates that pupils who participate in
interscholastic sports are less likely to abuse tobacco and controlled
substances; and
Whereas, Modern conveniences, such as fast food, the
microwave and the easy availability of “junk foods,” and the fast
pace of everyday life have fostered higher caloric, less nutritional
food intake and given incentive to practices such as skipping
breakfast, a practice engaged in by 25 percent of high school pupils
and 7 percent to 12 percent of all children between 6 and 18 years of
age; and
Whereas, Although schools serve nutritional breakfasts and
lunches and provide programs that teach proper nutrition, food that
has minimal nutritional value is also made accessible because of
open-campus policies, vending machines, school stores and snack
bars, thus sending a message that good nutrition is merely an
academic exercise; and
Whereas, One especially harmful practice in some schools is
the high consumption of sodas, which can lead to obesity and
cavities and put children and adolescents at higher risk of bone
fractures and osteoporosis when substituted for drinks containing
calcium; and
Whereas, Poor nutrition negatively affects the behavioral and
cognitive development of young children and is associated with
increased educational failure because of an adverse effect on the
ability to learn as well as on motivation and attentiveness; and
Whereas, Proper nutrition plays a very important role in
learning because it significantly affects cognitive development,
influences the ability to learn, and increases motivation and
attentiveness; and
Whereas, Many pupils will make wise choices when offered
nutritious food at school, as was shown by a Minnesota study in
which prices were lowered and variety was added to salad bars with
the result that three times as many fruits and vegetables were sold;
and
Whereas, The habits relating to nutrition and physical activity
that children develop during their formative years become lifelong
habits; and
Whereas, Education is a guiding force that shapes the future of
the youth of this nation, and because children and adolescents spend
a significant amount of time at school, that environment constitutes
one of the most effective means that the general public possesses to
confront the problems of lack of physical activity and poor nutrition;
Resolved by the Senate of the State of Nevada, the
Assembly Concurring, That school administrators, teachers and
other educational personnel who nurture pupils in prekindergarten
through 12th grade are hereby encouraged to make every possible
effort to promote proper nutrition and physical fitness in the school
environment and to foster good decision-making skills and serve as
role models in both areas; and be it further
Resolved, That to promote health in school-aged children,
school districts implement ideas from and build upon existing
models for physical fitness and nutrition, such as the “VERB
Campaign” of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the
“10,000 Steps to Better Health” program from Colorado, the Action
Planning Guide created by the Healthy Schools Summit, the
“Shaping Health as Partners in Education” (SHAPE) program
developed in California and the guidelines of the President’s
Council on Physical Fitness and Sports; and be it further
Resolved, That schools develop positive policies to ensure
proper nutrition and appropriate levels of physical activity during
the school day and that pupils be encouraged to set goals for
themselves toward healthy eating and increased physical activity;
and be it further
Resolved, That since physical activity is one of the nation’s
top 10 leading indicators of health, persons involved in education
make efforts to increase the amount of physical activity of all pupils
by expanding quality programs of physical education during each
school day, promoting health education and enhancing after-school
programs for youth sports and recreation; and be it further
Resolved, That schools incorporate education relating to
nutrition into the core curriculum, making proper nutrition a part of
the classroom and the cafeteria; and be it further
Resolved, That schools develop high standards for all food and
drinks that are competitive with meals provided by the schools,
carefully evaluate the hours during which such foods are sold, and
consider improving the quality of foods that are available for
purchase in vending machines, school stores and snack bars by
replacing the foods of minimal nutritional value and providing foods
from the five major food groups; and be it further
Resolved, That all educational personnel consider programs
and strategies to involve families and communities in encouraging
pupils to achieve good nutrition and physical fitness so that years
from now our society will not have to look back in retrospect and
lament what we should have done to correct these problems; and be
it further
Resolved, That the Secretary of the Senate prepare copies of
this resolution for transmission by the Legislature to each school
superintendent in Nevada, the principal of each school in Nevada,
each school nurse in Nevada, the director or manager of food or
nutritional services in each school district, supervisors of before-
and after-school programs, the recreational director of each county
and city that has a recreational department, the Nevada Parent
Teacher Association (PTA), the Nevada Association for Health,
Physical Education, Recreation, and Dance, and Boys and Girls
Clubs of America throughout Nevada.
20~~~~~03