Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Bill on free meals for kids sent to Biden

- STEPHANIE LAI AND LINDA QIU

WASHINGTON — The House passed legislatio­n Friday to extend free meals and other food assistance for children, clearing it for President Joe Biden’s signature one week before a series of pandemic-era waivers was set to expire.

The bipartisan bill, which passed the Senate on Thursday by unanimous consent, was a compromise that will prevent children from going hungry, creating a lifeline for families beleaguere­d by inflation and supply chain woes. It was a rare instance of Congress extending a pandemic assistance program, coming as the Biden administra­tion’s requests for additional coronaviru­s aid have stalled amid Republican opposition.

The legislatio­n, the Keep Kids Fed Act, which the House approved on a voice vote, extends meal reimbursem­ents and policies aimed at providing more flexibilit­y for schools and meal operators through the summer and the next school year. The measure extends free meals for all children, which had been scheduled to lapse on June 30, until the end of the summer.

Congress also authorized the Agricultur­e Department during the pandemic to reimburse school districts for those meals at higher rates. The legislatio­n passed Friday reduces those reimbursem­ents — providing school districts with an additional 40-cent reimbursem­ent for lunches and an additional 15-cent reimbursem­ent for breakfasts above baseline levels — but still reflects a higher rate than before the pandemic.

It also extends pandemic-era measures that gave food providers more flexibilit­y, such as allowing meals to be served outside of school cafeterias or brought home by students, and relaxing nutrition standards when healthier food options are unavailabl­e.

The House initially passed a more generous version of the bill that would have extended free meals into the coming school year for any student who qualified for reduced-priced meals, but it was scaled back to revert to previous income requiremen­ts for reduced-price and free meals for the next school year because of Republican opposition in the Senate.

“I’m glad that leaders on both sides of the aisle came together to reach this agreement and avert a hunger cliff which would have left countless of our most vulnerable children and families without access to food this summer and into the school year,” said Rep. Jim McGovern, D-Mass. “Over the summer, hunger gets worse because kids don’t have access to reliable breakfasts and lunches at school.”

Still, some worry that the bill’s late arrival and limited scope will leave schools financiall­y and logistical­ly strapped and many students hungry as families continue to face food price increases and schools struggle to source ingredient­s.

Under the pandemic waivers, roughly 30 million children received a free school lunch in the 2021-22 school year, a spokespers­on for the Agricultur­e Department said.

How many students will receive a free school lunch in the upcoming school year is difficult to predict. Before the pandemic, about 20 million children received a free school lunch and an additional 2 million paid for a reduced-price lunch.

School nutritioni­sts and advocates worry about children whose families make slightly too much to qualify for free meals or whose parents remain unaware of the new guidelines.

“For 2½ years, families haven’t had to fill out an applicatio­n,” said Lisa Davis, senior vice president for the No Kid Hungry campaign, an anti-hunger effort by the nonprofit Share Our Strength. “Now all of a sudden they will, and there’s not a lot of time to communicat­e with them.

“I think what we’ll see when the school year starts,” she added, “is that there are a lot of eligible people who haven’t heard things are changing over.”

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