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TheLevisaLazer.com > Blog > Health > West Virginia is among the first states to ban some synthetic food dyes from school lunches
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West Virginia is among the first states to ban some synthetic food dyes from school lunches

The Rural Blog
Last updated: August 8, 2025 12:11 pm
The Rural Blog
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Friday, August 08, 2025

West Virginia is among the first states to ban some synthetic food dyes from school lunches

Many dyes from nature can replace artificial colors.
(Adobe Stock photo)

West Virginia schools took certain food dyes off the school lunch menu starting on Aug. 1. “West Virginia Gov. Patrick Morrisey signed a sweeping new law in March banning seven artificial dyes from school meals,” reports Jonel Aleccia of The Associated Press. “Other states have enacted similar laws that would strip artificial dyes from school meals, but West Virginia’s action is the first to take effect.”

The brief timeline between March and August sent state and school nutrition directors on a crunch time search to root out any school menu items that “contained any trace of petroleum-based synthetic dyes, including Red 3, Red 40, Yellow 5, Yellow 6, Blue 1, Blue 2 and Green 3,” Aleccia explains. Once those items were removed, directors began working out substitution options that kids would still eat.

Health advocates have pushed to get synthetic dyes out of U.S. food for years, “citing mixed evidence of potential harm,” Aleccia reports. “West Virginia’s ban on synthetic dyes was cheered by Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who has successfully pressured food makers to agree to remove artificial colors from their products.”

Still, banning certain dyes won’t suddenly make Americans healthier. “Nutrition experts agree that removing artificial colors from foods doesn’t address the main drivers of America’s chronic health problems,” Aleccia writes. “Those stem largely from ingredients such as added sugars, sodium and saturated fat.”

Nationally, the push against synthetic dyes is more of a baby step toward better nutrition. FDA Commissioner Marty Makary “has joined Kennedy in the push to get artificial dyes out of food, despite limited proof of health effects,” Aleccia reports. In a recent podcast, Makary called the removal of petroleum-based food dyes “steps in the right direction.”

Just because Jell-O fruit cups and older versions of  Cool Ranch Doritos won’t be served, doesn’t mean school lunches will all turn beige. “Some suppliers had already removed artificial dyes from some school foods, swapping them for products colored with beet juice or turmeric.”

Written by Heather Close Posted at 8/08/2025 11:50:00 AM
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