State imposes new school limits on popular snack

The start of a new school term in one state has been marked by a surprising change in the lunchbox landscape.

South Australia’s Department of Education has issued new guidelines that discouraged the inclusion of a beloved Australian snack, fairy bread, in children's lunch boxes or school canteens.



Fairy bread, a simple yet delightful combination of white bread, butter, and hundreds and thousands (also known as sprinkles), has long been a staple at children's parties and a favourite lunchbox inclusion.

However, the new 'Right Bite' guidelines introduced by the South Australian Department of Education categorised fairy bread as a 'Red Two' food item—a category that includes food that should never be sold or supplied in schools.


SDC 2.jpg
Fairy bread was categorised under 'Red Two' of the 'Right Bite' guidelines in South Australia. Image source: Shutterstock.


The 'Right Bite' guidelines divided food into four categories.

'Green' food items are the healthiest options, while 'Amber' food should be chosen carefully.

The 'Red' category is split into two: 'Red One', which can be served twice per term at school events, and 'Red Two', which should never be sold or supplied.



Food under the 'Red One' category includes butter, pies, sausage rolls, pasties, schnitzels, sausages, biscuits, chips, jam, and honey.

Food under the 'Red Two' category includes deep-fried meats, deep-fried chips or hash browns, coated muesli bars, ice creams with confectionery, soft drinks, and hundreds and thousands, such as fairy bread.

According to the newly released guidelines, the standards do not apply to preschools and children’s centres and food brought from home for personal consumption.

You can learn more about the 'Right Bite' initiative in the video below:


Video source: Youtube/Department for Education, South Australia.

This move follows a similar initiative by Western Australia’s Department of Health and Department of Education, which reconfigured its 'traffic lights' system for classifying food and drink in schools.

The system moved ham and other processed red meat from an earlier 'Amber' label to 'Red', limiting its sale in canteens.



The new guidelines have caused some confusion among canteen workers, many of whom are volunteers and parents themselves.

'They are a little confused, I think would be fair to say,' Megan Sauzier, the Chief of the WA School Canteen Association said.

'They need things that are easy to prepare, and when that (a ham-and-cheese sandwich) is served alongside a broad range of other healthy “Green” items, like fruits and vegetables and meals and pasta, then ham as an “Amber”, we see as being acceptable.'

Ms Sauzier expressed her pride over her state’s policy which promoted healthy eating in schools, but was also concerned that the new 'selected red' category could potentially lead to a regression in children's health.

Some items in the 'selected red' category included pastries, pies, and sausage rolls.

The reclassification of some food from 'Amber' to 'Red' was reportedly designed to align schools with Australian Dietary Guidelines, the Australian Curriculum, and a federal government health council guide to reduce children's exposure to unhealthy food and drink.
Key Takeaways
  • South Australia's Department of Education has introduced new 'Right Bite' guidelines which categorised school food into a colour-coded system, influencing what children can bring in their lunch boxes and purchase at school canteens.
  • Under these guidelines, fairy bread has been categorised as a 'Red Two' food item, which means it should never be sold or supplied in schools.
  • The guidelines have sparked concern and confusion among parents and canteen volunteers, who are finding some of the restrictions challenging due to the need for easy-to-prepare options.
  • The move to categorise certain foods as 'Red' is part of a broader effort to align with the Australian Dietary Guidelines and promote healthier eating habits in schools.
Members, what are your thoughts on the new guidelines? Let us know in the comments below.
 
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Communism here we are! Have people totally loss any commonsense in food that they have to have them coded for consumption. Totally sympathetic to the canteen staff and parents that volunteer. Fairy bread so what, it is a good and fun treat. The world used to have natural commonsense concerning many things including how to eat and the important of a proper meal it was passed down from generation to generation. Why don’t we put limitations on how much confectionery is sold in the shops especially all the rubbish they have nowadays, go back to our old lollies, simple and not too many.🤗
 
I worked in the SA Education system for over 20 years, I have never seen the canteens at any of the schools I worked in serve Fairy Bread, many children buy sandwiches or small meals that the canteen managers/volunteers make for them. If you cut out what has been mentioned then you may as well not have a canteen for students and staff to be able to purchase food. I very rarely saw Fairy bread brought in by students in their lunch boxes either. I am all for healthy eating but sometimes I think people in authority need to step out of their offices and live in the real world.
 
They need to get a life. I was a problem child to feed lunch at school & to be told by someone who is not my parent what I could & could not eat would have made this worse. I was a healthy child with hardly ever a day off school for sickness & my adult life has been the same. Leave the school lunches alone & let the canteen ladies sell what the kids will eat.
 
They need to get a life. I was a problem child to feed lunch at school & to be told by someone who is not my parent what I could & could not eat would have made this worse. I was a healthy child with hardly ever a day off school for sickness & my adult life has been the same. Leave the school lunches alone & let the canteen ladies sell what the kids will eat.
If my kids were in school today NO=ONE would like me. I wonder what they'd do with sweetbreads (bulls nuts), tripe (lining of sheep's stomach), rabbit, dripping sandwiches, We ate them all and, at times, when our cupboard was bare and we had no money my kids would have gone hungry without dripping sandwiches. These knowall idiots should be told exactly where to go with no way back. We also had milo sandwiches and chocolate sprinkles. Even now my breakfast is often toasted ham, tomato and cheese sandwich. Don't lecture me on cereals...they go through me within 5 minutes and keep going for around 2 hours.
 
I am so fed up with the "I am right brigade" As if a person eats Fairy Bread every meal every day. Start banning chips, twisties, soft drinks all junk food from stores. Have them put behind locked doors/drawers like cigarettes. After all obesity is a major health issue throughout the western world. Lets go the whole hog. If we are going to do it - do it properly. Gosh even icecream is dangerous. Coffee, tea alcohol - get rid of the lot. Whilst we are at it ban movies, parties family get togethers - after all this is where all these death inducing meals take place!!!
 
I have 4 kids and made their lunches almost everyday. Never did I put in fairy bread. Peanut paste (until it was banned), Nutella (banned too), vegemite, ham or chicken sandwiches. Muesli bars, fruit and water.
Pies, sausage rolls, schnitzel on the weekend after footy. Icecream after dinner.
They are all healthy strong adults now with good teeth.
Butt out do-gooders.
 
Thank goodness my son left school a long time ago as I’m sure I’d have been in trouble over his lunches. He was such a terrible eater when small, refused to eat heaps of stuff. Even when we first introduced him to solid food it was a battle, he loved that ghastly baby rice stuff but as for my freshly prepared vegetables it was no way, he wouldn’t open his mouth. Even my mum tried, so he thrived on Heinz baby food. I used to feed him what he would eat but he was always healthy and still has strong teeth. Now he eats whatever and says to me how do you know you don’t like it if you won’t try it? (He was trying to feed me sushi 🤢) So leave mums alone, we do usually know our children best and it’s more important that they eat something!
 
Here we go, Do as I say not as I do. What a lot of crap. Sprinkles once or twice a week are no big deal, the same with processed meat. If the kids eat their food good on them because some kids are going without lunch at school. Fairy bread is cheaper than a sandwich with meat and other stuff on it.
 
Thank goodness my son left school a long time ago as I’m sure I’d have been in trouble over his lunches. He was such a terrible eater when small, refused to eat heaps of stuff. Even when we first introduced him to solid food it was a battle, he loved that ghastly baby rice stuff but as for my freshly prepared vegetables it was no way, he wouldn’t open his mouth. Even my mum tried, so he thrived on Heinz baby food. I used to feed him what he would eat but he was always healthy and still has strong teeth. Now he eats whatever and says to me how do you know you don’t like it if you won’t try it? (He was trying to feed me sushi 🤢) So leave mums alone, we do usually know our children best and it’s more important that they eat something!
I love your honest posts. You say it how it is!
 
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Crap. What next? Now we are being told what we are allowed to eat, and drink. It's NOT THEIR BUSINESS what OUR kids can and cannot eat. Be telling us how often we can go to the toilet next. Is this what woke is all about?
No, nothing to do with being WOKE! It’s just pushing healthy eating. Being woke is really just about being someone who cares about others regardless of race or religion & abhors racial discrimination and has concerns about the environment & the world we live in. Yes I’m woke and proud of it. I also think that most of you, on reflection are most likely woke as well.
 
No, nothing to do with being WOKE! It’s just pushing healthy eating. Being woke is really just about being someone who cares about others regardless of race or religion & abhors racial discrimination and has concerns about the environment & the world we live in. Yes I’m woke and proud of it. I also think that most of you, on reflection are most likely woke as well.
when will people WAKE up to WOKE. Look in your dictionary for the meaning. "I was asleep and WOKE up at 3am". Stop screwing with the English language.
 

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