USA TODAY US Edition

Teacher raises $30,000 to erase student lunch debt

- Ashley R. Williams Contributi­ng: Kayla Jimenez

Students can’t learn if they’re hungry, a Utah middlescho­ol teacher shared in a nowviral TikTok clip.

Garrett Jones’ six-second video quickly sparked a wave of generosity that would pay off thousands of dollars worth of student lunch debt.

“School lunch should be free,” wrote Jones, a five-year educator of Heber City’s Rocky Mountain Middle School, in the viral clip’s caption.

The seventh- and eighthgrad­e teacher posted the video as a twist on a social media trend that involved people requesting small donations toward personal trips, weddings or dream cars, KSL News reported.

When Jones, a father of two, decided to use the trend for a charitable cause two weeks ago, he had no clue the video would help raise more than $30,000.

“I was blown away,” Jones told USA TODAY. “I was literally expecting, best-case scenario, maybe we’d get a couple hundred bucks.”

The funds will go to canceling outstandin­g lunch fees in the Wasatch County School District, according to Jones.

Taking lunch debt off students’ plates

Students in Jones’ school district were among the 50 million who received free lunches for two years through the federal program that covered the costs during the height of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The program ended last year, which means some students are again forced to face outstandin­g lunch fees in the cafeteria line.

“It’s really not up to them to be able to pay, but it’s them who we have to hand a little slip to take home and say, ‘Here’s your balance,’ which isn’t super fun for them or us,” Jones said.

He has spotted students hanging out in the halls during lunchtime, he shared, adding that his school’s cafeteria staff feeds children regardless of whether they owe money.

“I think for middle schoolers, probably the only thing worse than being hungry is being embarrasse­d,” Jones said. “Being at the front of the line and hearing they have a balance is likely enough to dissuade some of them from even eating at all.”

Aware that some students go as far as skipping lunch to avoid embarrassm­ent, he posted a TikTok video stating he could pay the outstandin­g lunch fees of each student at his school if 2,673 people each sent him $1 via Venmo.

“The last thing a kid should be worrying about is how much money they owe for meals at a place they’re legally obligated to be,” the video’s text read.

The clip has gotten 5 million views. Even more touching than the generosity of strangers were the comments visible only to him as people donated, Jones said.

“So many of them were $1, $2 or $3, and they were like, ‘I really can’t afford to do much more than this, but I was that kid, I know what it’s like to get that slip and to hear that you have a balance,’ ” he said.

‘How we can have a lasting impact’

Jones, who was honored as the Wasatch Education Foundation’s Distinguis­hed Educator of the Year last May, is working with the foundation to cover the approximat­ely $4,000 of outstandin­g lunch fees across the school district.

“Garrett is an example of an educator who is passionate about wholly supporting kids,” said Kimberly Dickerson, a member of the school board and the foundation’s board of directors.

“A hungry child cannot learn to their fullest potential, so for Garrett to realize how important it is to relieve the worry of students carrying a negative lunch balance shows enormous compassion,” Dickerson said in an email.

Jones says he hopes those passionate about funding school lunches will write to their representa­tives.

“That’s how we can have a lasting impact, and there is obviously pretty widespread support,” he said. “We just need to make them hear it.”

 ?? PROVIDED BY GARRETT JONES ?? Garrett Jones, center, a Utah middle school teacher for five years, is helping cover the lunch debt of students in the Wasatch County School District after his social media clip requesting $1 donations went viral.
PROVIDED BY GARRETT JONES Garrett Jones, center, a Utah middle school teacher for five years, is helping cover the lunch debt of students in the Wasatch County School District after his social media clip requesting $1 donations went viral.

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