For anyone curious about the plan, it can be found
here.
I encourage anyone wanting a really good idea of what the program is and isn't about to go take a read. This program is a program of additions from what I can read, not subtractions. It doesn't talk about banning or restricting anything, but rather, adding choices and accessibility. Personally, I love that approach. Bans, and punitive measures, rarely work when it comes to dietary issues.
As for what you said YukonJack about how parents should feed kids, not schools.... I agree to a degree. The idea of kids eating school food is kind of foreign to most Albertans I know. Our kids take bag lunches with the exception of a program which, every one to two months, gives us the option of buying into a special perogy lunch, a pizza lunch, a sub lunch, etc. But, knowing what my kids tell me of the lunches their friends bring, few get the sort of lunch my kids get. Today they took soup, yogurt, an apple, and a carrot. The day before, a chicken sandwich, cheese, orange, and a yogurt. Most of their friends get McD's brought in once a week, and live off foods like 'Lunchables', and 'Dunkaroos', and Hygaard subs. Education, laziness, I don't know what the main culprit is, but some people obviously would be better off having their kids eating in a nutritionally balanced cafeteria at school.