Raising the Bar for Health
Adrienne Dorf, former manager of the Healthiest Next Generation initiative for the DCYF, said there’s also been a shift in how regulations are viewed.
“It used to be that regulations were called minimum health and safety standards,” she said. “They set a low bar, and when we urged them to raise the bar, we got pushback.”
That’s changed, thanks in part to advocacy work from the health community. Instead of merely accepting minimum standards, some regulatory agencies are doing more, including finding and adopting best practices and meeting national health and safety performance standards that improve child health.
The Coalition points to early care and education centers in Washington state that are going above and beyond the minimum standards to prove to the DCYF that healthy standards implementation is possible.
For example, St. Anne’s Children and Family Center in Spokane, Washington, has had healthy practices for years, and now has a formal wellness policy that prohibits sugary drinks, has water readily accessible throughout the building, and serves vegetables at least twice per day. Center Director Deitra Miller credits her entire Center community for the success of the wellness policy implementation. While there were challenges to making sustainable changes, the policy is now widely accepted and celebrated by the 200+ students, their families, and the entire staff.
Miller also credits local businesses, such as the LINC Foods co-op and farmers who help ensure young children are eating fresh and healthy local foods at an affordable cost. St. Anne’s Chef Karen is able to order fresh produce online from LINC Foods 50-member farmers, such as Urban Eden Farms. Other centers in Spokane, including Head Start and Early Head Start centers, use LINC Foods as well to ensure their kids are eating sustainably grown foods as part of the city’s growing “farm-to-early care and education (ECE)” movement.