LEE COUNTY, FL - The Interagency Working Group on Food Marketed to Children is issuing recommendations for how unhealthy food is marketed to children ages 2 to 17. Companies could voluntarily follow the recommendations or ignore them completely. What do parents think of the recommendations? [Click here for more information or read the report] A walk through the grocery store can be a child's biggest temptation. "They get pretty excited about all the bright colors," said parent Brad Zimmer. "It's documented that children react really well to advertising, especially to television ads," said Diane Holm of the Lee County Health Department. cheap tiffany and co jewelry
That colorful advertising could be taking a toll on the child's waistline. "The obesity epidemic has really started in this generation with very young, young children. Pre-schoolers are overweight," said Holm. That's why the group is issuing recommendations designed to help encourage children to make healthy food choices. "The cost of health care is so enormous that it's something we have to get a handle on any way we can," said Zimmer. Health advocates say it's really up to the parents to make sure their kids get healthy snacks. Adrian Sabatino runs Jump'n Jack's Play Gym in Naples. He says there are already enough government regulations. "Turn off the TV, go outside and play or come here.Just get your child active. You should control what your kids eat in the home instead of worrying about what the government is trying to enact on TV," said Sabatino. Holm says getting rid of the television advertising is not about control, but education – parents should teach their children healthy habits. tiffany necklace
advertisement | your ad here ST. LOUIS -- U.S. food prices may ease later this year now that farmers have planted the second-largest corn crop in nearly seven decades. The size of this year's corn crop will be 92.3 million acres, the U.S. Agriculture Department said Thursday. That's 9 percent larger than the average annual corn crop over the past decade. The only crop bigger in the past 67 years was planted in 2007. Many analysts had worried that wet weather this spring would cut the number of corn acres. But record-high prices are encouraging farmers to use more acres for corn, and less for soybeans and wheat. A greater crop estimate drove corn futures down 30 cents to close at nearly $6.21 per bushel. That's the maximum price change allowed by futures exchanges. Corn rose to a record high of $7.99 per bushel earlier this month. More expensive grain has led to food price increases this year. tiffany mens necklace
That could ultimately make everything from beef to cereal to soft drinks more expensive at the supermarket. For all of 2011, the USDA predicts food prices will rise 3 percent to 4 percent. A huge harvest in August could ultimately slow food inflation. It typically takes six months for changes in commodity prices to affect retail food prices in the U.S. Analysts say consumers could see some relief at the supermarket by early 2012. "All of us who perceived tighter (corn) supplies up to this point, all of us were proven wrong today," said Jason Ward, an analyst with Northstar Commodity in Minneapolis. Industry traders had expected just 90.8 million acres of corn had been planted. Knowing that far more corn is in the pipeline will likely pull down grain prices dramatically this summer, Ward said. Farmers chose to plant corn at the expense of this year's soybean crop.They planted only 75.2 million acres of soybeans, about 3 percent less than last year.
tiffany necklace silver Farmers have a limited supply of good farmland and usually trade one crop for another on their acreage. "It seemed to me there was $100 to $150 per acre more money in the corn than there was in the beans," said Tom Kreutzer, who planted 150 acres of corn on his farm near Wakeeney, Kan. "That's the kind of math that a lot of guys were using." Higher corn prices make soybeans and wheat more expensive because farmers plant less of them. Raised expectations for this fall's corn crop also helped lower soybean prices in trading Thursday. Soybeans fell 29 cents to $12.94 a bushel. A bigger crop doesn't guarantee lower food prices. A drought or flood could limit the size of the harvested crop. Ward said many of the acres planted this spring were on marginal land that won't yield much grain. Many farmers planted during wet weather just because they knew they could get the crops insured. "They have no intention of harvesting them because they were planted in complete mud," Ward said. tiffany necklace white gold
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