SMMUSD Profile: Orlando Griego, Director of Food & Nutrition Services

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Orlando Griego, Director of Food and Nutrition Services for the Santa Monica-Malibu Unified School District, serves up healthy meals to students throughout the district.

The Santa Monica-Malibu Unified School District is releasing a series of profiles by the PTA Council to acquaint the community with school district professionals.

By Amy Kahan / PTA Council

Here are just some of the tasty foods that Orlando Griego, Director of Food & Nutrition Services for Santa Monica Malibu Unified School District, offers and serves to the district’s children annually: “11,000 bunches of grapes, 1,750 crowns of broccoli, 573 bunches of beets and 8,400 baskets of strawberries.”

Orlando continues: “4,000 heads of lettuce, 567 heads of cauliflower, 1,750 cucumbers, 5,400 oranges…and that’s just from the Santa Monica Farmers’ Market alone.”

Orlando, who’s been with the district since 2003, expands his list once more, this time citing: “45,300 packages of fresh baby carrots, 955 lbs. of broccoli florets, 191 lbs. of red onion, 143 lbs. of green bell pepper, 1,110 lbs. of celery sticks and 57,702 fresh apples,” that come from Sunrise, the district’s fresh produce company, each year.

Orlando rattles off these numbers in a prompt and efficient way, two words that also help define the man who’s responsible for providing roughly 5,000 breakfasts and lunches daily to the district’s childcare, elementary, middle and high school students. On pizza days, his numbers swell to more than 6,000. “The kids really love pizza” he says, “close behind is brunch-for-lunch and chicken nuggets.” Asked about his personal favorite, Orlando responds: “roasted chicken,” with no hesitation.

Like many at SMMUSD, Orlando faces his share of challenges: he must be creative with a very limited budget, and he has to find a way to balance the nutritional concerns of parents with the eating tastes of their children.

To find this balance, Orlando works closely with the district’s registered dietitian, Dona Richwine, and the department’s Operations Supervisor, Kelly Lancaster. Together they plan meals designed to provide adequate nutrients, address calorie limits and maintain a constant variety of foods. If that isn’t enough, adding to his challenges is the need for all menus to comply with the federal government’s National School Lunch/Breakfast Program regulations, state regulations and the district’s own Wellness Policy.

Orlando’s budget tests his creativity in different ways than his menu planning does. This is partly due to the fact that the Food & Nutrition Services Department is a self-sustaining department, which means that his department receives no money from the district’s General Fund. The entire budget comes from cash received from cafeteria sales and reimbursements from federal and state governments for each free meal or reduced price meal served daily. From all the revenue received, Orlando must purchase food, supplies and equipment, as well as pay the salaries of the 75 Food & Nutrition Services employees. A full priced lunch for elementary is $3.00 and $3.50 for secondary. Fifty per cent of the lunch price goes to salaries and benefits and 15 cents is taken out for the plate and fork. Imagine doing all this with a food cost of $1.35 to $1.60 per child!

In 1997, the Farmer’s Market salad bar became a lunch option in the district. Today, the produce purchased at the Farmers Market, which is all grown sustainably using organic practices, allows Orlando to be quite certain that SMMUSD kids eat healthy lunches. This also lets him take the new USDA “My Plate” tool to new heights. The USDA’s messages of: “Make 1/2 Your Plate Fruits and Vegetables” and “Choose Whole Grains” are easily attainable, either at hot lunch or the salad bar, thanks to the district’s association with the Farmers Market and Orlando’s passion for “preparing healthy food that our kids like to eat.” Knowing that kids like to eat bread, Orlando’s made sure that the majority of breads he serves are whole wheat or whole grain; aware that added trans fats are unhealthy, he’s eliminated them in all the cafeterias; and believing that “fresh is best,” he makes sure that salad bar items are picked only two days prior to serving.

And then there’s the best part of his job, which Orlando says “is being out at the schools.” If you turn up at SAMOHI’s huge kitchen one day, you may catch Orlando making fresh sub sandwiches or working a cash register. If you find yourself at one of the district’s elementary schools, you might find Orlando and his assistant, Kelly, cooking hamburgers and hotdogs. And if you happen to be at JAMS on a Tuesday or Thursday, Orlando may be there, too, because it’s BBQ day and he’s pitching in to help make sure it runs without any glitches.

Orlando is proud to provide leadership to his hard working team of employees. “After all,” he states, “they are responsible for ensuring our young scholars are offered and served nutritious meals everyday. It’s impossible for me to do any of this by myself.”

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