The New Zealand Herald

Knife about to be taken to free school lunch programme

- Ellen O'Dwyer

Job cut proposals at the Ministry of Education are affecting those who work in the school lunch programme, RNZ understand­s.

It is not yet clear how many roles this could include in the Ka Ora Ka Ako programme, but it could involve close to half of the positions in a team which works on the lunch programme and also in the period products programme in schools.

It is understood this team is made up of contractor­s and some staff roles.

The free school lunch programme was introduced in 2019 by the previous Labour Government, and currently offers meals to 230,000 students in about 1000 disadvanta­ged schools.

Associate Education Minister David Seymour has confirmed the programme itself is under review and is likely to be cut in the Budget.

Jobs being disestabli­shed are understood to include nutritioni­sts, those who monitor and evaluate the programme, people who work in regional branches of the team, and who monitor sustainabi­lity and waste.

One person, who RNZ has agreed not to name, works on the school lunch programme at the ministry and was told their role was being considered for redundancy. They had concerns about whether the programme could continue to be effective with the number of jobs being cut.

Another person close to the matter said the team was set to be “decimated”.

Health Aotearoa Coalition cochairman Boyd Swinburn said he had also been contacted by someone working on the programme saying their job was expected to be cut.

Swinburn said ministry staff who oversaw the programme were vital to helping deliver it, and he did not classify them as “back office roles”.

“These people are often characteri­sed as back office in a very derogatory way as if the jobs they do have no value.

“But of course they are incredibly important to the whole programme. I mean, they do all of the contractin­g with the suppliers, they do all the monitoring, all the reporting, they support the schools, they support the suppliers.

“So these are actually really important jobs and I think the whole programme would struggle if there are big cuts with these support people.”

Seymour said he was not involved in the detail of the ministry’s restructur­ing process, but he was confident the programme could deliver the same quality with fewer people.

“We are delivering right across Government with less cost and often fewer people working on it than had been required under the previous Government. So I believe it will have no effect on the quality of what we deliver.”

When pressed how the cuts would affect the programme, Seymour said: “It is possible to get more for the people who are paying the bill, the taxpayers of New Zealand — the people receiving the services — with fewer people in the Ministry of Education.”

The Ministry of Education has declined to provide details of these proposed cuts, and said some staff will be provided with more job cut proposals today.

Meanwhile, according to RNZ’s analysis of public sector job losses to date, smaller agencies are making some of the deepest cuts.

Nearly 2000 jobs have gone or are set to go, according to ministry documents and trade union, the Public Service Associatio­n.

Finance Minister Nicola Willis in December said she wanted to reduce public service spending by $1.5 billion annually and has asked agencies to identify savings of either 6.5 or 7.5 per cent.

 ?? Photo / Facebook ?? Ka Ora Ka Ako healthy meals for school children.
Photo / Facebook Ka Ora Ka Ako healthy meals for school children.

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