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Ritz Crackers Fine: Mom Charged $10 For Not Providing Grain In Lunch

Mom Charged $10 ForProviding Ritz Crackers In Lunch
MIAMI - JULY 1: Ritz crackers are displayed on a store shelf July 1, 2003 in Miami, Florida. Kraft Foods Inc., the nations largest food manufacturer and the maker of Nabisco cookies and crackers, plans to examine the nutrition of its products and take steps to fight obesity and promote health. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)
Joe Raedle via Getty Images
MIAMI - JULY 1: Ritz crackers are displayed on a store shelf July 1, 2003 in Miami, Florida. Kraft Foods Inc., the nations largest food manufacturer and the maker of Nabisco cookies and crackers, plans to examine the nutrition of its products and take steps to fight obesity and promote health. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

Getting the right items into your kid's lunchbox can be stressful enough, without having to worry that you may end up with a fine for your choices.

That's what happened to Kristen Bartkiw of Rossburn, Man., who sent two of her three children to daycare with leftover homemade roast beef and potatoes, carrots, an orange and some milk in December 2012, according to nutrition blog Weighty Matters, which is run by obesity medicine doctor Yoni Freedhoff.

Instead of just an empty lunch bag when her kids got home, Bartkiw also received a $10 fine from the school for missing the "grain" component of what is deemed a healthy lunch by the Manitoba Government's Early Learning and Child Care regulations:

As the note says, each lunch must contain one milk, one meat, one grain and two fruits/vegetables, falling basically in line with the recommended food servings by the Canada Food Guide. Although potatoes are high in carbohydrates, they are not grains according to the Canada Food Guide, which lists bread, bagels, flat breads, cooked rice, bulgur and quinoa, cereal, cooked pasta or couscous in that category.

The reaction from people online has pointed to the high sodium and caloric value of Ritz crackers, the food used to supplement the lack of grains in Bartkiw's children's lunches. As noted by the Winnipeg Sun, about five Ritz crackers have 80 calories, 4.5 g of fat and 150 milligrams of sodium. Children are meant to take in a total of 1,200 milligrams of sodium per day, according to Statistics Canada.

But there is a slight silver lining from this outcry. According to Weighty Matters, the lack of adherence to the school's rules has resulted in a hot lunch program that Bartkiw describes as "great."

So what are the Canadian food sugestions for kids' healthy nutrition? Take a look at the photos below:

Fruits And Vegetables

Canada's Food Guide For Kids

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