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Massachusetts to ban school bake sales

State Beacon Published May 7, 2012 Reviewed Jul 1, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
Bake sales will be outlawed from public schools as of Aug. 1.
Departments of Public Health and Education, state officials
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Citation-ready fact
The obesity epidemic affects a third of the state’s 1.5 million students.
1500000 students · students33.33 % · obesity epidemic
Departments of Public Health and Education, state officials
View source ↗

The state of Massachusetts will ban school bake sales beginning this summer, as part of an anti-obesity campaign from the state's Departments of Public Health and Education, reports the Boston Herald:

Bake sales, the calorie-laden standby cash-strapped classrooms, PTAs and booster clubs rely on, will be outlawed from public schools as of Aug. 1 as part of new no-nonsense nutrition standards, forcing fundraisers back to the blackboard to cook up alternative ways to raise money for kids.

At a minimum, the nosh clampdown targets so-called "competitive" foods — those sold or served during the school day in hallways, cafeterias, stores and vending machines outside the regular lunch program, including bake sales, holiday parties and treats dished out to reward academic achievement. But state officials are pushing schools to expand the ban 24/7 to include evening, weekend and community events such as banquets, door-to-door candy sales and football games.

The Departments of Public Health and Education contend clearing tables of even whole milk and white bread is necessary to combat an obesity epidemic affecting a third of the state’s 1.5 million students. But parents argue crudites won’t cut it when the bills come due on athletic equipment and band trips.

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