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First lady Michelle Obama announces new fitness initiative in Chicago

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First lady Michelle Obama speaks at an event bringing her "Let's Move" campaign to Chicago Public Schools at McCormick Place on Thursday, February 28, 2013. (Photo by Abel Uribe/Chicago Tribune/MCT)

(MCT) — CHICAGO — First lady Michelle Obama rolled out her latest health and fitness initiative in Chicago on Thursday, just as city heath officials released new data showing one in four of the city’s public school students is obese.

The “Let’s Move! Active Schools” initiative, the second phase of the first lady’s national campaign to fight childhood obesity, will provide grants to 50,000 schools across the country to develop physical education programs over the next five years. The $70 million program, a first of its kind partnership with corporations, will be funded primarily through a $50 million donation from Nike Inc.

“Only one in three kids is active every day,” Obama told the crowd at McCormick Place. “That’s not just bad for their bodies, it’s also bad for their minds, because being less active can actually hurt kids’ academic performance as well.”

Flanked by celebrity athletes, including Olympic gymnast Gabrielle Douglas, tennis star Serena Williams and San Francisco 49er’s quarterback Colin Kaepernick, the first lady joined nearly 6,000 Chicago schoolchildren in a high energy exercise routine as techno music blasted from loudspeakers and red and green strobe lights lit up the convention hall.

Mayor Rahm Emanuel delivered what he called a “10-minute commercial about the city of Chicago,” pointing out its initiatives such as improved bicycle lanes, the restoration of school recess and healthy school lunches — then changed from a business suit into gym clothes and joined in.

Earlier Thursday, the mayor and Chicago Public Schools officials announced the new Healthy CPS Action Plan, a districtwide initiative providing 60 detailed strategies to improve health and wellness of students.

The newly released study from Chicago public health officials shows soaring child obesity rates in the city. The study looked at public and charter school students in kindergarten, 6th grade and 9th grade and found that 24.9 percent were obese.

The highest obesity rate, 29.2 percent, was among sixth-graders, followed by ninth-graders at 25.4 percent and kindergarten students at 20 percent, the study showed.

Nationwide, 17 percent of children and adolescents ages 2 to 19 are obese, according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

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