July 24, 2013
		USDA OKs Greek yogurt for school lunch pilot program
First, Michelle Obama called for healthier school lunches -- and kids complained that the first lady's menus left them hungry. Now, the United States Department of Agriculture has green-lighted a pilot program to serve trendy Greek yogurt in school cafeterias in New York, Idaho, Arizona, and Tennessee. If all goes well this fall, Greek yogurt may became a staple in Washington's $11 billion school lunch program in some 100,000 schools.
In one sense, it's an example of America's growing European  Union-style nanny state -- not to mention crony capitalism and insider  influence. Two of the biggest cheerleaders of Greek yogurt are New York's  Democratic Sens. Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand; and there also are Greek  yogurt's powerful Washington lobbyists, including two former high-ranking USDA  officials. They were hired by Greek yogurt maker Chobani which was founded in  upstate New York by Hamdi  Ulukaya -- a Turkish immigrant with business and  yogurt-making savvy (he's now a billionaire) who knows how to pull the levers of  power to become even richer. Interestingly, Greek yogurt -- perhaps with a  wink from the first lady -- got on the USDA's fast track (eight months from  start to finish) rather than plodding through an approval process that,  according to Washington insiders, can take years for the school lunch program. 
"This is unusual, it happened very fast," Jerry Hagstrom, a  veteran Washington journalist and expert on the USDA, told the New York Daily News, which recently revealed  eyebrow-raising details of the push to get Greek yogurt in the nation's schools,  including through Sen. Schumer's high-pressure lobbying at the  USDA.
                    
"I remember only one thing vaguely similar, involving serving  bison meat on Indian reservations," Hagstrom said.
                        
                        
                    
Chobani and other Greek yogurt makers, for their  part, recently presented the USDA with proposals about what they'd serve,  but the winners have yet to be announced. New York stands to be a big winner,  for it ranks as nation's biggest yogurt producer. Red-state Idaho has a  Chobani plant in Twin Falls, so it also will share in the spoils, thanks in part  to cheerleading from Idaho Sen. Mike Crapo, a Republican. "I commend the USDA  for choosing to implement this pilot program for Greek yogurt in Idaho schools,"  he said. "Greek yogurt is one of the country's  fastest growing industries, and I hope USDA will continue the important process  of making this healthy food option increasingly available to young  Americans."
Well, pork is pork whether it's from Democratic or Republican  lawmakers, right?
Along with this story of crony capitalism, insider influence,  and EU-style edicts concerning what consumers should eat, is whether school kids  will actually like Greek yogurt.
Some observers point out that Greek yogurt has  become  popular among adults -- not kids. Adults like its slightly bitter taste and  fact that it has lower fat and higher levels of protein than regular yogurt. But  kids aren't that health-conscious and prefer treats that are sweet.
Oh well, even if school kids hate Greek yogurt  and feel they're getting porked by the feds (so to speak) there will  nevertheless be winners in this latest episode of Obama-era largess toward  favored industries. Those winners will be lobbyists for Greek yogurt and their  friends in Washington.  




