Western Mail

FREE MEALS PLEDGE

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A PLEDGE to extend free school meals to all secondary schools in Plaid Cymru-led councils has been made by the party.

All primary school pupils are being offered free school meals from September as part of Plaid’s co-operation agreement with Labour in the Senedd and now Plaid wants to go further.

Plaid leader Adam Price says he wants the party to “create a Wales free of hunger and poverty”.

Ahead of the conference, Mr Price said the free school meals pledge “gets rid of dinner money debt and scraps the stigma associated with getting a free lunch”.

A report from the Child Poverty Action Group last year showed 55,000 children living in poverty do not get free school meals in Wales because of strict eligibilit­y rules and comparativ­ely high child poverty rates.

Mr Price said: “Hungry children can’t learn, can’t grow and can’t achieve their true potential.”

He will pledge that Plaid Cymru-led councils “will commit to setting the goal and begin immediatel­y planning to extend universal free school meals to all secondary school pupils within the next five years”.

Mr Price said: “Universal free school meals is only happening because of Plaid Cymru’s co-operative working – together, we are making a difference to the lives of people and communitie­s up and down Wales.

“We are now planning to take the policy further.

“I can announce today that a key part of our offer in the forthcomin­g council election campaign is that Plaid Cymru-led councils will commit to setting the goal and begin immediatel­y planning to extend universal free school meals to all secondary school pupils within the next five years.”

Plaid Cymru leads four of Wales’ 22 councils. The elections are being held in May.

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