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Alan Funt Alan Funt is offline
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Default Lake County (FL) considers 'trash-cams' at school cafeterias

Wow.

Good thing the US is not currently experiencing a crushing recession and
is not trillions of dollars in debt.

Good thing you can afford to install cameras on garbage bins and hire
people to watch them so you can know what you already know - that your
juvenile delinquent brats are not eating their veggies that your tax
dollars are paying for.

Why don't you just have a school program where your brats use their $600
smart phone to take their own picture of what they're throwing away and
e-mail the picture to the school board in return for a 25-cent cash
credit.

Why is the answer with you people aways - MORE CAMERAS.

WE NEED MORE CAMERAS.

WE CAN SOLVE ALL OUR PROBLEMS IF WE SURVEIL OURSELVES WITH MORE CAMERAS.

IN THE AIR OVER OUR HOMES, ON FAECEBOOK, IN THE SCHOOLS - MORE CAMERAS.

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Lake County considers 'trash-cams' at school cafeterias

Federal law requires veggies on menu, but students toss them

Published On: Oct 02 2012

TAVARES, Fla. -

Lake County School Board officials are considering attaching cameras to
school cafeteria trash cans to study what students are tossing after
officials found that most of the vegetables on the school menu end up in
the trash can.

New federal laws require students to take a healthy produce at
lunchtime, but last year in Lake County, students tossed $75,000 worth
of produce in the garbage.

"It's a big issue, and it's very hard to get our hands around it," said
School Board member Todd Howard, who suggested "trash-cams." "They have
to take (the vegetable), and then it ends up in the trash can, and
that's a waste of taxpayer money. It's also not giving students the
nutrition that they need."

Laurel Walsh, whose daughter attends Tavares Elementary School, says
getting kids to eat their fruits and vegetables is not the job of the
respective schools.
?
"I think it starts at home with the parents. If the kids just don't
like it because they've never been given it at home, they're not going
to try something new here," she said.

No decisions have been made on the cameras, but school leaders say they
wouldn't capture students faces, just what they're throwing away.