Sunday Territorian

Fed for 65c a day

CHEAPSKATE CHILDCARE FOOD BUDGETS REVEALED a I feed my dogs more I get day than the b udget

- JULIE CROSS

CHILDCARE centres are feeding children for as little as 65c a day, with kids going hungry, a damning report has revealed.

Some of the types of food children are being served include bread and butter for afternoon tea and plates of cheap “filler” foods such as pasta, with no protein or nutritiona­l value.

One in five directors and cooks who responded to a United Workers Union survey thought the food budget at their centre was not enough, while 60 per cent of cooks said that they have bought food for children in their care out of their own pocket.

In one private Facebook group, where childcare centre cooks vent over their meagre budgets, one fumed: “I feed my dog more a day than the budget I get. If parents knew they’d be appalled”.

Some childcare care directors and cooks confessed they never spend more than $5 a day per child on food, with the average spend just $2.15, which also covered snacks.

Dietitian Bonnie Searle, who was part of a University of Queensland research team observing food served at five childcare centres in Brisbane, said they witnessed children asking for seconds, but there was no food left.

She said sometimes the children did not get what was advertised on the menu, with a hot meal replaced with something completely different, or it was greatly exaggerate­d.

One example was a menu boasting “gourmet sandwiches” that turned out to be white bread with a jam or vegemite filling. In some cases uneaten chopped fruit from morning break, would be brought out for afternoon tea and the banana would be “brown and slimy”.

“A big plate of fruit is not going to keep children full,” Ms Searle said.

“They need some fat and protein. The food groups we did not see enough of were vegetables and meat.”

She said children who don’t get enough food, or the right types of food were not able to regulate their emotions, which impacted their ability to learn.

University of Queensland early childhood education and care Professor Karen Thorpe said her team of researcher­s had been studying food quality at thousands of centres across Australia for many years and found children who needed the highest quality of care were getting the lowest.

She said some children were simply not getting enough food.

“If you are hungry you are not going to learn,” she said.

“If you get poor quality food, you become obese and you are not going to live for as long. The purpose of early education should be to set a child up for life.”

UWU director of early education Helen Gibbons, who released the survey findings in a report called Children Going Hungry, said the amount of money allocated to food budgets revealed by workers was “a disgrace”.

“How can $0.65 possibly be enough to provide adequate nutrition for a developing child?” she said. “Parents in Australia pay some of the highest out-of-pocket costs … yet many centres, especially among for-profit providers, are making a profit while children go hungry.

“Childhood educators work hard to do the impossible; provide healthy nutritious food for the children in their care without enough funds. Now educators are speaking out about how taxpayer funding and parents’ fees are being taken away from food budgets and funnelled into profits.”

 ?? ?? Dietitian Bonnie Searle and Justin Cassidy with sons Elijah and Toby. Picture: Richard Walker
Dietitian Bonnie Searle and Justin Cassidy with sons Elijah and Toby. Picture: Richard Walker

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