The Commercial Appeal

School workers fighting hard to feed all

‘Failing’ Mississipp­i school district is in nation’s hungriest county

- Leah Willingham

FAYETTE, Miss. – Most mornings, children are waiting beside the road with arms outstretch­ed by the time driver Brian Hall pulls up in the decades-old yellow school bus.

As he pulls away, the bus creaking along toward his next stop on winding dirt roads, they already are breaking the plastic open to begin eating the day’s offerings: barbecue chicken, fish sticks or turkey tacos with cartons of milk and cans of juice.

“You can tell they need the food by the way they react to the deliveries,” Hall said. “We don’t know what they’re getting at home.”

More than half of all children in Jefferson County, Mississipp­i, live in food insecurity, making it the hungriest county in the nation, according to an October 2020 report by Feeding America, a nonprofit and national network of food banks. All 1,100 students enrolled in Jefferson County School District qualified for free breakfast and lunch at school before the pandemic because of the high poverty rate.

By the state of Mississipp­i’s accounts, Jefferson County is a “failing” school district, based on pre-pandemic test scores. Like other under-resourced districts, it doesn’t have the money to build new schools or hire more teachers.

Educators have been working to improve the district’s rating: implementi­ng a new curriculum, creating a program for parent engagement, working oneon-one with students.

And for more than a year now, they have been succeeding in the most crucial and fundamenta­l way: Driving long miles on dusty roads to ensure every child gets something to eat each day.

“There’s not a chance if you’re a child, you’re going to be able to really engage in school if you’re not eating,” Superinten­dent Adrian Hammitte said. “We know families desperatel­y need the help. We’re trying to substitute for what a lot of kids are not getting at home.”

Jefferson County, a community of around 7,000, has one of the highest unemployme­nt rates of any in America: 17% in January 2021 compared with the national rate of around 6.3%.

Named for President Thomas Jefferson, it was originally developed as cotton plantation­s before the Civil War. Agricultur­e was always the largest industry

in the rural region, but with the rise of industrial­ization, jobs were lost and the county’s tax base has crumbled. The county has the highest proportion of African Americans of any in the U.S., and many families have lived in poverty for generation­s.

Because of a lack of jobs in the area, people travel distances for work – oftentimes out of state. Many of the district’s children care for younger siblings, while others are watched by grandparen­ts.

More than half of Jefferson County residents have received at least one dose of the coronaviru­s vaccine, with 30% of people fully vaccinated, according to the state Department of Health. That makes Jefferson by far the most vaccinated per-capita out of all of the state’s 82 counties, largely because of the work of the Jefferson Comprehens­ive Health Center, a clinic that provides care based on patients’ ability to pay.

Yet like many predominan­tly Black school districts, Jefferson County School District, which is 98% Black, has been cautious about returning to in-person instructio­n. Families are worried after seeing how the virus has affected Black communitie­s across the nation.

About 10% of people in Jefferson County have at one point tested positive for coronaviru­s, according to the state department of health. There was an outbreak in the school district when schools tried going back in-person in the fall.

The district was mostly virtual until February, when it slowly began offering opportunit­ies for limited in-person instructio­n. Now, all students spend three days a week learning from home and

two days on campus.

Each morning, the cafeteria staff arrives in the dark to begin prepping the day’s meals. Cafeteria manager Sondra Smith said her employees – some of whom go to food banks to get their own meals because family members have lost jobs – volunteer to come in early and prep, before their work shift starts. Other days, they forgo their breaks to get meals done.

“It’s a very serious job,” Smith said. “We’re feeding the babies that need it.”

Inmates from the Jefferson-franklin County Correction­al facility down the road come to the district to package food and load the aging buses and vans. Schools were able to purchase some new equipment with federal coronaviru­s funds, such as coolers to keep milk cold in transit.

On a recent morning, high school senior Shaneque Merritt walked to the end of her driveway to collect a handful of bags for her family.

Her grandmothe­r, Victoria Green, 61, is raising five other kids between the ages of 7 and 12.

Before the pandemic, Green worked as a private nurse caring for some of the county’s older citizens. Now, she said she’s had to stay home to help the kids with their schoolwork. The staggered hybrid schedule means at least one child is home every day.

She said the family relies on food stamps and her husband’s monthly Social Security check. It isn’t enough to get by.

“It’s hard, I ain’t gonna lie about it,” she said. “There’s a lot of things we need, but we can’t get it right now.”

Annie Turner, 31, is the mother of six young children. Four are school-age. She said receiving food from the school helps supplement what she is able to provide. It’s tough being the family’s breadwinne­r during a pandemic, she said.

“It’s really put a strain on me – big time,” she said.

Like many parents, she has to travel outside the county to work. She drives more than two hours every weekend to Baton Rouge, Louisiana, to a 36-hour-aweek job working nights making $15 an hour at a hospital as a post-anesthesia care unit aide.

“You got a lot of parents who are actually out there working to try to take care of home, and when it comes to food, you want to make sure that your family is eating well,” she said. “Nobody wants to just be eating ramen noodles and hot dogs all day.”

The pandemic has required school districts across the country to find creative ways to get food to students.

In Mississipp­i’s capital of Jackson, a majority-black city where all students qualify for free meals, the public school district made pick-up points for kids to get food while learning from home.

But when Jefferson County started doing the same at the beginning of the pandemic, only around 75% of kids were being fed, because some families don’t have vehicles or aren’t able to drive. Delivering door to door, around 98% of kids are getting food.

Deamber Reynolds takes care of her 6-year-old daughter and her nephew at home during remote learning days. She has seizures and can’t drive.

“If I had to go to pick it up, we wouldn’t be getting the meals,” said Reynolds, 26, who is in graduate school studying technology management while caring for kids at home. “Having them delivered, it helps a lot. People who need them, get them.”

Most days, the district’s buses leave the schools filled with bags and come back empty.

Still, there are homes where the bus stops, and no one comes to collect the food. There are others where kids have only taken food a few times. On a recent day, the bus stopped outside a home. The driver honked. Two children peered out at the bus from a window, but didn’t leave the house.

“We figure they’re getting food somewhere else, we hope so,” cook Raquel Mims-cole said, as she looked out at the house. “But you can’t know. All we can do is keep being here every day. We’ll keep on coming, as long as they need us.”

 ?? ROGELIO V. SOLIS/AP ?? A Jefferson County School District “virtual learning” student receives several bags of meals in Fayette, Miss. Fayette is in one of the most food-insecure counties in the nation.
ROGELIO V. SOLIS/AP A Jefferson County School District “virtual learning” student receives several bags of meals in Fayette, Miss. Fayette is in one of the most food-insecure counties in the nation.

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