The Boston Globe

Unpaid lunch debt swamps schools, nutrition group says

Subsidies fail to offset costs, report shows

- By Laura Reiley

School districts around the country are drowning in students’ lunch debt.

Three months after the federal government stopped providing free school meals to all public school students, some districts are reporting thousands of dollars in unpaid bills. In one district, the unpaid balance for school meals reached as high as $1.7 million.

This is according to a new survey by the School Nutrition Associatio­n, a school food trade group. The organizati­on queried 1,230 school nutrition directors nationwide in November and found that nearly all were concerned about the financial solvency of their meal programs.

Though the report did not disclose the names of the districts polled, it said many directors viewed the reimbursem­ent they get from the federal government to subsidize the meals as insufficie­nt to cover costs incurred because of the debt, inflation, and labor shortages.

“We are experienci­ng cost increases in food, supplies, and labor like we have never seen before, and the meal reimbursem­ent rate is not sufficient to cover the costs,’’ said Katie Wilson, executive director of the Urban School Food Alliance, a nonprofit created by school food service profession­als.

Schools set their own school lunch fees and can decide what to charge paying families. For students who qualify for free meals, the federal government reimburses schools about $2.60 for each breakfast and about $4.50 for each lunch. During the pandemic, the federal government sought to reduce the burden on families by providing breakfast and lunch free of charge to all students regardless of income, reimbursin­g the schools for the full amount. That program expired at the end of September.

Since then, most schools have continued to feed students even when they owe money, leaving them with little recourse to make up for those lost funds.

“We are witnessing large negative balances in schools since free meals have been discontinu­ed,’’ Wilson said, adding that some districts are institutin­g policies where kids with negative balances get alternate, lesser meals.

The divided Congress has balked at making universal free meals permanent.

Many states have sought to take matters into their own hands, passing new laws to pay schools so that all students can receive free breakfast and lunch.

Advocates warn a state-bystate approach creates an inequitabl­e environmen­t for schoolchil­dren around the nation.

“The National School Lunch Program is supposed to be a national program, so a child in Alabama should have the same access to meals as a kid in California,’’ said Crystal FitzSimons, director of school and out-of-school time programs for the nonprofit Food Research & Action Center.

Meal program losses cut into education budgets, limiting funds for teachers, textbooks, and technology. Recognizin­g cost challenges, Congress increased what the federal government reimburses to schools per meal served for this academic year, raising it by 40 cents per lunch and 15 cents per breakfast as part of the bipartisan Keep Kids Fed Act. This is temporary, FitzSimons noted, and could be rescinded next school year.

 ?? SUE PISCHKE/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Debt, inflation, and labor shortages have caused prices of school lunches to soar, according to school districts.
SUE PISCHKE/ASSOCIATED PRESS Debt, inflation, and labor shortages have caused prices of school lunches to soar, according to school districts.

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