A quite naked plea for corporate welfare here:
Campaigners for organic food said it showed that
children were being given cheaper, lower-quality produce but the
Department of Health insisted yesterday that the pesticide residues
were below the safety threshold and not dangerous.
This
month an evaluation of the School Fruit and Vegetable Scheme (SFVS)
reported that it had encouraged children aged four to six to eat
"significantly more" fruit, especially those living in deprived areas
and that it had helped them to identify healthy eating options.
However,
a report today by the Soil Association, the body that campaigns for
organic farming, suggests that the scheme, which was partly funded by
the National Lottery, has also increased the children’s intake of
pesticides.
"We strongly support the scheme but it
is wrong for a scheme that provides fruit and vegetables to the most
vulnerable in society to source lower quality produce, apparently
containing a higher proportion of pesticides than the fruit and
vegetables available in the shops," said Lord Melchett, its policy
director.
In short, the Government must be forced to buy our higher priced produce.
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