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Wednesday, December 6, 2006

Selling junk food to raise money for schools

School administrators say soft-drink contracts provide money for needs that otherwise go unfilled, such as band uniforms, student breakfasts before standardized tests, musical equipment and computers. A new analysis of 120 soft drink contracts in 16 states, performed by the health advocacy group Center for Science in the Public Interest, says that schools make, on average, $18 a student per year from such contracts, and that schools get a bigger cut of the profits from fundraisers like wrapping paper or candle sales. Does your child’s school benefit from vending machine sales? How is the money used? Should schools sell junk food to children to raise money for “extras”?

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