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Teh One Who Knocks
04-29-2015, 10:43 AM
Russell Haythorn - 7 News Denver


http://i.imgur.com/IuaJR7Bm.jpg

AURORA, Colo. - A note, sent home with a preschooler, scolded her mother for packing Oreo cookies in her daughter's lunch.

'I don't agree with it at all,' said the mother, Leeza Pearson.

There's no question, 4-year-old Natalee Pearson is an active, happy, healthy little girl.

But last Friday, a teacher at the Children's Academy in Aurora didn't find Natalee's lunch to be entirely healthy. So the school didn't let Natalee eat part of it.

'She said, 'Mommy, I wasn't able to eat my cookies,'" said Leeza Pearson.

The Oreo cookies came back home with Natalee, along with this note:


"Dear Parents, It is very important that all students have a nutritious lunch. This is a public school setting and all children are required to have a fruit, a vegetable, and a healthy snack from home, along with milk. If they have potatoes, the child will also need bread to go along with it. Lunchables, chips, fruit snacks, and peanut butter are not considered to be a healthy snack. This is a very important part of our program and we need everyone's participation."

Leeza Pearson says the lunch also included a sandwich and cheese.

"They took it over the top, to say, 'The kid can't eat it. It was in her lunchbox, but you can't eat it today,'" she said.

7NEWS contacted the director of the private school, but she did not return our calls.

A spokeswoman with Aurora Public Schools did say the school gave Natalee a healthy alternative to the cookies.

APS families can send their children to private schools, like The Children's Academy, under Colorado's preschool option program. Leeza Pearson said her daughter is attending The Children's Academy as an APS student.

'They don't provide lunch for my daughter. I provide lunch,' said Leeza Pearson. 'It's between me and the doctor in terms of what's healthy for her.'

Pearson said she's not a problem parent. Her daughter has attended the school since last fall. Pearson said she just doesn't agree with the school's position and couldn't get an explanation from the school's director.

'She would not talk to us,' said Pearson.

APS said it's not typical for notes like this to go home to parents.

But it's not uncommon for many pre-schools to adopt policies and rules regarding packed lunches because of food allergies and overall commitments to healthy choices.

deebakes
04-29-2015, 01:11 PM
i see the schools point to suggest healthy lunches/snacks, but let the parents decide. its not your job to see that they eat properly, you are supposed to be teaching them things :shrug:

Hal-9000
04-29-2015, 07:05 PM
If they have potatoes, the child will also need bread to go along with it.

good one...If you've packed something high in starch, please send another carbohydrate packed in starch to offset :|

Muddy
04-29-2015, 07:13 PM
peanut butter, not healthy? wtf? Thats in a MRE rations pack..

Hal-9000
04-29-2015, 07:14 PM
compared to what we used to pack...those Oreos would be considered a vegetable in our day :lol: