San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

S.F. Unified filling a need with food giveaways

District steps up with prepared meals for students in need: “You will be fed”

- By Jessica Battilana Jessica Battilana is a San Francisco freelance writer and the author of “Repertoire: All the Recipes You Need.” Email: food@sfchronicl­e.com Twitter: @jbattilana

On a recent Wednesday morning, the line outside San Francisco’s Mission High School snaked down Dolores Street, wrapping into the school parking lot. Chalk X’s on the pavement, 6 feet apart, instructed people where to stand to maintain proper social distance. The hundred assembled were there to pick up bags of free meals for their children, provided by the San Francisco Unified School District.

In response to COVID19, the district closed schools on March 13 and has since announced it will not reopen for the remainder of the academic year. For all the turmoil this has created for families, perhaps the gravest threat is food insecurity. The demand is there: The district has increased the number of meals it distribute­d to families from 21,000 the first week of the shutdown to 120,000 last week. In communitie­s throughout the Bay Area and beyond, school nutrition programs have stepped in to fill a significan­t need, quickly shifting their distributi­on models and adjusting their meal offerings to meet demand and provide an ongoing source of wholesome meals to children.

In the weeks prior to the school shutdown, Jennifer LeBarre, executive director of Student Nutrition Services for the district, and her team were working furiously to develop a plan to feed the children who depend on the district for one, two or three meals a day. The number of meals it served last week from 18 distributi­on sites, 120,000, has almost reached the 150,000 it serves total during a normal week of school.

At the start, parents picking up food had to be accompanie­d by a schoolage child. But that red tape was quickly abandoned, and now meals can be picked up by anyone, regardless of whether a child is present.

“The need is there. Food insecurity is already a major issue, and a month into this, many more families are experienci­ng it for the first time. So we are not only feeding SFUSD students, we’re feeding all children,” says LeBarre. “If your kids go to private school, if you are a

parent of a 2yearold who hasn’t started school yet, even if you don’t have children, you will be fed.”

Meals are distribute­d by SFUSD school nutrition employees and volunteers. Children with severe food allergies and those identified by the special education department as having demonstrat­ed need have meals delivered to their homes by a network of volunteers, parents and teachers. On Mondays at school pickup locations around the city, the bags of food for each child are filled with enough breakfasts, lunches and dinners for two days; on Wednesdays, they’re loaded with enough for three days. The meals are prepared by Revolution Foods, the Oakland company that during the school year supplies S.F. Unified and other schools and organizati­ons with breakfasts and lunches. The company added Oakland Unified, West Contra Costa Unified and Modesto City Schools during the coronaviru­s shutdown. The company, founded in 2006, makes and distribute­s kidinspire­d meals that reflect different cultures, meet or exceed national nutrition standards and are fully reimbursab­le by the USDA and the California Department of Education.

The meals feature familiar favorites from the regular lunch menu, which are meant to be eaten for either lunch or dinner. There are small pizzas, refried beanandche­ese burritos, cheeseburg­ers, pupusas and Korean beef bowls. The food is packed on cardboard trays, overwrappe­d in a plastic film and designed to be heated in the oven in its packaging (microwavin­g is also an option). There are vegetable options such as raw broccoli florets, baby carrots, and bowls of black beans and corn. Cheese sticks, shelfstabl­e granola bars, crackers and juice boxes round out the offerings. For breakfast, there are singleserv­e cups of cereal, muffins and apple sauce; milk is provided by Crystal Dairy.

Though the fundamenta­l service provided by Revolution Foods hasn’t changed in response to the pandemic, Revolution Foods CEO Kristin Groos Richmond says her team is “working around the clock” to produce meals, troublesho­ot distributi­on challenges and forge partnershi­ps with organizati­ons beyond school districts, including the YMCA and World Central Kitchen, to provide emergency meals.

Groos Richmond reports that the company hasn’t seen any significan­t shifts to the food supply chain, with one important exception: shelfstabl­e proteins. The bulk of the national supply of items such as canned tuna, shelfstabl­e hummus and jerky sticks was purchased early on by the Federal Emergency Management Agency for its own relief efforts, leaving Revolution scrambling to secure enough to make shelfstabl­e meals for the most vulnerable families that are experienci­ng both food insecurity and homelessne­ss, and are unable to store or heat food.

At Revolution Foods’ Oakland kitchen, safety measures have been ramped up in response to the novel coronaviru­s. Employees have their temperatur­es taken before they enter the facility, receive sick pay if they need

to take leave and are social distancing as much as possible, says Groos Richmond.

At the distributi­on sites, individual­s are served one at a time, and bags containing food are loaded onto a tray that’s then slid across a table for pickup, to ensure contactles­s delivery.

At Mission High, district employees Jorge Mancera and Hannah Smith wear masks, gloves and long plastic aprons to pack and distribute meals.

“It has actually been fun,” says Mancera, who usually works in nutrition services at Galileo High. “I like to see the families, and it’s kind of a rush to get everything packed and ready to distribute in time.”

Lamar Williams, who normally works as a security guard and track coach at Mission High, has been volunteeri­ng at the distributi­on site. “It’s depressing to stay at home,” says Williams. “I like to come out here, see some familiar faces, and help out for a few hours.” Williams tells the people in line to “have a blessed day” as they load up their bags and walk away.

I ask Smith what they do with leftover food at the distributi­on sites. “We don’t have extra food. We have not once had extra food,” she says.

For Paul Harbison, a single father whose children, ages 7 and 12, attend Rooftop Elementary, the meals give him a muchneeded break. Going to the grocery store “is one of the most stressful things I have to do now. I don’t want to bring my kids, but I also don’t want to leave them at home alone for too long,” he says, standing at the end of the Mission High meal distributi­on line. Eighteen minutes later he’s received his bags and is headed home.

In addition to the prepared meals, Harbison, an architectu­ral designer who has seen his work dry up in recent weeks, has taken advantage of the PopUp Food Pantries organized by the San FranciscoM­arin Food Bank at school sites on Tuesdays, where he picked up rice, fruit and vegetables. “I’ll be doing this for the foreseeabl­e future,” he says. “But I can’t wait to go to Trader Joe’s when this is all over.”

The question of when all this will be over weighs heavily on the minds of Groos Richmond and LeBarre, who anticipate that the need for meals will continue in earnest through summer.

“I worry that if the economy opens in a staggered way, fortunate workers will return to higherpaid jobs. But there will be an extended tail of people for whom there is no work to return to, a tail of need we have to address,” says Groos Richmond. The district, led by LeBarre, and Revolution Foods are working on a plan for summer meals.

In normal times, schools offer free, reduced and paid meals based on need and are reimbursed a different amount for each. All of the meals being distribute­d during school closures are reimbursed by the USDA and the California Department of Education at the free rate.

The USDA typically provides funding for the district to provide breakfast and lunch during the summer to families in need, but dinner is not included. As of right now, the USDA has not ensured the necessary funding that would allow the district to continue serving the third meal after the official end of the school year on June 30.

In addition, there are questions about how the district will be able to provide meals over the summer; waivers are currently allowing the district to send food home (rather than serve the meals at schools) but it’s unclear whether the waiver will be extended beyond June 30, a decision that is contingent on whether shelter in place is lifted or extended.

It’s these questions that keep LeBarre, a 20year veteran of Student Nutrition Services, up at night. But she’s committed to providing meals to those who need it all summer long, even if that means securing private funding to cover the cost.

“For those who need food, I want you to know that we are here for you,” LeBarre says.

When we emerge from this crisis, LeBarre hopes it is with increased empathy for those living paycheck to paycheck, as well as respect for essential employees, including school lunch providers. “People consider these jobs to be unskilled labor. But it takes skill to work as a school lunch employee,” LeBarre says. “And it’s these people — my people — who are keeping it all together and feeding kids and families right now. And it’s time to give them their due.”

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 ??  ?? Top: At Mission High School, district employees Jorge Mancera (left) and Hannah Smith get ready to hand bags to recipients. Above, from left: SFUSD employee Jain Cai Zheng packs bags for pickup at the school; Connie Rivera, waiting in line to pick up school meals, hands out flyers for another food bank; Mancera (back to camera) passes meals to Leslie Mejia, 16, a junior at Mission High School.
Top: At Mission High School, district employees Jorge Mancera (left) and Hannah Smith get ready to hand bags to recipients. Above, from left: SFUSD employee Jain Cai Zheng packs bags for pickup at the school; Connie Rivera, waiting in line to pick up school meals, hands out flyers for another food bank; Mancera (back to camera) passes meals to Leslie Mejia, 16, a junior at Mission High School.
 ??  ?? Food bags given away recently at Mission High School included milk, fruit and lunch favorites like pizza and spaghetti and meatballs.
Food bags given away recently at Mission High School included milk, fruit and lunch favorites like pizza and spaghetti and meatballs.
 ?? Photos by Lea Suzuki / The Chronicle ??
Photos by Lea Suzuki / The Chronicle
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