Santa Fe New Mexican

◆ Legislatio­n aims to close school lunch gap.

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the poverty level — $47,638 or less for a family of four — are eligible for reduced-priced meals.

Children in households participat­ing in the federal Supplement­al Nutrition Assistance Program, Temporary Assistance for Needy Families or Food Distributi­on Program on Indian Reservatio­ns — as well as foster kids, migrants, homeless children, runaway youth and Head Start participan­ts — also are eligible for free school meals.

Nora Meyers Sackett, a spokeswoma­n for the governor, said Michelle Lujan Grisham supports HB 10, which is expected to get its first hearing as early as Friday before the House Education Committee.

“Combating child hunger remains a priority for the governor. This bill provides a powerful tool [to do that],” Sackett said.

Jennifer Ramo, executive director of the Albuquerqu­e-based nonprofit advocacy group New Mexico Appleseed and a proponent of HB 10, said low-income children often have little or no food at home, making school meals even more important. “One of the best tools to get children fed is school lunch,” Ramo said.

New Mexico has wrangled with high rates of child poverty and food insecurity in recent years. In May, a report from the national nonprofit Feeding America said the state ranks first in the nation for its rate of child hunger. wEven a 30-cent or 40-cent fee for a school meal can become a barrier, Ramo said.

Referring to the $650,000 appropriat­ion in Madrid’s bill to cover the fees, Ramo said, “This is a tiny, tiny drop of money that can be life-changing for these kids.”

New Mexico has wrangled with high rates of child poverty.

About 74 percent of students in Santa Fe Public Schools qualified for free or reduced-price lunch last year, just below the state average of 74.7 percent.

Maria Guerra, director of student nutrition for Gadsden Public Schools, said over 95 percent of that district’s 14,000 students are eligible for lunch aid. The high rate qualifies the district for a federal program that provides two free meals per day to every student.

The district is now partnering with the nonprofit Families and Youth Inc. to also offer free dinners at six elementary schools and one middle school. It served 6,000 dinners between August and October at after-school programs, Guerra said.

“We’ve seen a big increase in enrollment in these after-school programs once children and families realize we provide dinner and a snack,” Guerra said. “And I’ve heard from all the teachers that when their stomachs are full, the students are more focused on learning.

“Making school meals free is easiest on everyone,” she said.

It cuts down on embarrassm­ent to students who owe money for lunch and eliminates a food cost deficit that can reach thousands of dollars when parents can’t pay, Guerra said.

Johanna King, a spokeswoma­n for Albuquerqu­e Public Schools, said the state’s largest district — with 90,000 students — has accumulate­d more than $100,000 in school meal debt so far this year.

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