Sun.Star Cebu

How ‘lunch shaming’ is facing scrutiny around the United States

- EDITOR: LUIS A. QUIBRANZA III / live@sunstar.com.ph

DENYING children a hot meal apparently isn’t a popular way for schools to deal with unpaid lunch money.

After a flood of angry Facebook comments and phone calls, a Rhode Island district last week abandoned its plan to serve cold sandwiches to students whose families owe money.

“The outcry was global,” said Catherine Bonang of Warwick Public Schools.

Such practices aren’t new, but they are facing more scrutiny. As the push against “lunch shaming” gains traction, here’s what you should know:

What happened in Rhode Island?

Students in Warwick with unpaid charges were served cheese sandwiches that are not on the regular menu, which made it clear who owed money, Bonang said. The district was trying to make it less obvious by switching to sunflower butter and jelly sandwiches, since those are offered as a daily option to everyone, she said.

But the backlash prompted officials to go further and say all students would get the choice of a hot meal. A policy of not letting older students with unpaid meal charges take part in activities like dances and field trips was also recently scrapped, the district said.

How common is lunch shaming?

It’s difficult to gauge the prevalence among the nation’s thousands of schools. But in 2011, a majority of districts surveyed said they had unpaid meal charges, according to a study by the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e, which oversees the federal school lunch program. Among those schools, serving alternativ­e meals was common. Cheese or peanut butter and jelly sandwiches were cited as alternativ­es.

Districts also reported taking other actions to recover costs, such as withholdin­g grades.

Are there rules against lunch shaming?

New Mexico passed a law against it in 2017, and several other states including California, Iowa and Oregon have followed suit.

The laws generally prohibit practices like stamping students’ hands or making them do chores, though serving alternativ­e meals isn’t always explicitly banned. The laws’ supporters say students should never go hungry at school or be shamed with food. Last month, federal lawmakers introduced “anti-lunch shaming” legislatio­n to help shield children with unpaid charges. The USDA also discourage­s practices that stigmatize students, but lets districts set their own policies.

Aren’t alternativ­e meals a form of shaming?

A child can feel shame even if it’s not obvious to others why they’re getting a cold sandwich, said Jennifer Ramo of New Mexico Appleseed, which advocates against the practice.

After forgetting to pay for lunches one week, Aniece Germain said her son was given a sun butter sandwich in kindergart­en last year. She said her heart broke when she picked him up at school, and he asked why she hadn’t paid for him.

She was also charged $2.50 for the sandwich, the same as for a hot meal.

“So the purpose of that is to humiliate the kids, shame the kids, to get the parents to pay,” said Germain, who lives in Cranston, Rhode Island, not far from Warwick. Cranston’s school district said it no longer serves alternativ­e meals.

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