Rome News-Tribune

House Democrats add child nutrition to legislativ­e menu

- By Ellyn Ferguson

WASHINGTON — The House Education and Labor Committee is making a late-session push to renew child nutrition programs and incorporat­e changes made to cope with the pandemic, but disagreeme­nts could slow the reauthoriz­ation of a nutrition law that expired in 2015.

Appropriat­ors continue to provide mandatory and discretion­ary funding since the expiration of the previous authorizat­ion, enacted in 2010.

The committee has scheduled a markup for Wednesday at which Democrats and Republican­s are expected to air difference­s about how large a role the federal government should play in setting policies and operating the national school lunch and breakfast program, the Women, Infants and Children supplement­al nutrition program, and other child nutrition programs.

Chairman Robert C. Scott, D-VA., and Civil Rights and Human Services Subcommitt­ee Chair Suzanne Bonamici, D-ore., said the draft bill to be taken up at the markup addresses a basic responsibi­lity to keep children from going hungry.

One potential flash point between the parties is a provision that would change the criteria for a school or school district to qualify for community eligibilit­y status that allows free school meals for all enrolled students. Currently, 40% of students in a school or school district must be poor enough to qualify for free lunches and breakfasts. The draft bill would set the threshold at 25% to qualify for community eligibilit­y.

The House Republican majority in 2016 moved a child nutrition bill through the committee, then known as the Education and the Workforce Committee, that would have raised the threshold for community eligibilit­y

to 60% of students qualifying for free meals.

The Senate Agricultur­e Committee also reported out a bipartisan child nutrition reauthoriz­ation bill that year that made modest changes to policies such as school meal nutrition standards. Neither bill got a floor vote.

Democrats say the expanded school eligibilit­y is needed to feed more children in communitie­s with high poverty rates. Republican­s may see the proposed change as a back-door effort to return to universal free meals that many schools provided under pandemic waivers.

Rep. Virginia Foxx, RN.C., the full committee’s ranking member, hinted at Republican opposition to the expanded eligibilit­y in June when she applauded Senate Republican­s for forcing the removal of language from a bill that would have continued free meals for children who qualified by income for reduced price

school meals. The bill continued flexibilit­y for summer feeding programs for children this summer and increased per meal reimbursem­ent rates to school food providers to address inflation for the 2022-23 school year.

Foxx said removing the provision represente­d a return to pre-pandemic normalcy.

The draft legislatio­n this year also would increase reimbursem­ents for meals served in the schools. If approved,

the changes would take effect after July 1, 2023.

Lawmakers may also spar over a provision in the draft that would make it easier for children to qualify for free or reduced price meals if they are enrolled in Medicaid health care or who would be eligible because they receive adoption assistance, Social Security income or guardiansh­ip aid. The Medicaid eligibilit­y program is currently a pilot program.

The draft bill also would make changes to the Women,

Infants and Children, or WIC, supplement­al nutrition program by expanding eligibilit­y to children until their sixth birthday or the day they start attending fullday kindergart­en, whichever occurs first. The cutoff age now is a child’s fifth birthday or the date they begin full-day kindergart­en.

Anti-hunger advocates and lawmakers have sought the change for several years.

Applicants for WIC or people recertifyi­ng their eligibilit­y for the program could also do so by phone or video appointmen­t under the draft legislatio­n. State agencies would be able to issue benefits electronic­ally. The proposal would make permanent the use of alternativ­es to in-person certificat­ions that were adopted during the height of the pandemic.

The legislatio­n would authorize $90 million per fiscal year to upgrade technology and communicat­ions equipment at WIC clinics.

Brian Dittmeier, public policy senior director at the National WIC Associatio­n, said the Agricultur­e Department’s flexibilit­y in this area made the program more client-friendly and workable.

“Remote certificat­ion and appointmen­t options have upended a nearly decadelong trend of declining child participat­ion, demonstrat­ing that more flexible services can enhance WIC’S reach and amplify WIC’S public health impact,” Dittmeier said in a statement.

The House markup comes just before the August recess, which means any House floor action would occur in the fall, a time of dwindling legislativ­e days in both chambers. The big question still to be answered is whether Congress can find time to finalize reauthoriz­ation.

Senate Agricultur­e Chairwoman Debbie Stabenow, D-mich., and ranking member John Boozman, R-ark., have been in talks for a child nutrition reauthoriz­ation bill but have not released legislatio­n.

 ?? Jon Cherry/getty Images North America/tns ?? A child puts her mask back on after finishing lunch at a socially distanced table in the cafeteria of Medora Elementary School on March 17, 2021 in Louisville, Kentucky.
Jon Cherry/getty Images North America/tns A child puts her mask back on after finishing lunch at a socially distanced table in the cafeteria of Medora Elementary School on March 17, 2021 in Louisville, Kentucky.

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