Chattanooga Times Free Press

California launches largest free school lunch program in U.S.

- BY JOCELYN GECKER

SAN FRANCISCO — When classrooms in California reopen for the fall term, all 6.2 million public school students will have the option to eat school meals for free, regardless of their family’s income.

The undertakin­g, made possible by an unexpected budget surplus, will be the largest free student lunch program in the country. School officials, lawmakers, anti-hunger organizati­ons and parents are applauding it as a pioneering way to prevent the stigma of accepting free lunches and feed more hungry children.

“This is so historic. It’s beyond life-changing,” said Erin Primer, director of food services for the San Luis Coastal Unified School District on California’s central coast.

Several U.S. cities including New York, Boston and Chicago already offer free school meals for all. But until recently, statewide universal meal programs were considered too costly and unrealisti­c. California became the first state to adopt a universal program late last month, and Maine followed shortly after with a similar plan.

“We’ve completely leveled the playing field when it comes to school food,” Primer said. The extra funding will also allow her to offer tastier, better quality food such as fresh bread, produce and cheese from local producers, she said.

Under federal rules, a family of four must make less than $34,000 a year to qualify for free meals and $48,000 to qualify for reduced-price meals. The caps shift annually but are based on federal poverty measures that don’t take into account the high cost of living and taxes in California.

“So it’s just for the most poor families, and not even all of them because some people failed to sign up or were fearful to sign up,” said Kat Taylor, a philanthro­pist and major funder of the Center for Ecoliterac­y and the TomKat Ranch that backed California’s plan.

About 60% of California students qualify, but experts say the number of children who need food assistance is much higher in a state with vast income inequality. Communitie­s of color are disproport­ionately affected and immigrant communitie­s in particular are fearful of applying because of detailed forms that ask intrusive questions such as their family income, Social Security number and children’s immigratio­n status.

Schools reported a declining percentage of families applying for free and reduced-price meals during the Trump administra­tion, which attempted to tighten immigratio­n policies and public benefits.

Like school officials statewide, Primer has countless tales of children who struggled to pay for school meals or were too ashamed to eat for free. There was the child whose mother called Primer, distraught because she made a few hundred dollars too much to qualify; the father who is in the country illegally and feared that filling out the free meal applicatio­n could get him deported; and constant cases of high schoolers not wanting friends to know they need free food, so they skip eating.

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