The Norwalk Hour

Cafeteria worker says she lost job for giving boy free lunch

-

CONCORD, N.H. — A New Hampshire school cafeteria worker's kindness may have got her fired.

Bonnie Kimball tells the Valley News she was terminated March 28 by her employer, a vendor that supplies food to the Mascoma Valley Regional High School in Canaan. It came a day after she gave a student lunch, even though he couldn't pay for it.

Kimball says that when the student's account showed no funds, she quietly told him “‘tell (your) mom you need money,’ ” and provided a lunch. She claims a manager just asked what was on the boy's plate and walked away.

“It was my life for five years. I went and I took care of another family,” Kimball told the newspaper. “You don't just lose a family member, be OK and move on.”

A spokeswoma­n for Manchester-based Cafe Services said in a statement Thursday it “would never authorize an employee to not feed a student or staff member a meal.” The spokeswoma­n would only say an employee “would not be let go because they provided this lunch to a student.”

“Although we are not at liberty to discuss the confidenti­al details regarding an employee's employment or terminatio­n from employment, we can share that the company has policies and procedures in place that are shared with and acknowledg­ed by team members,” Jaime Matheson, the director of human resources, said in a statement. “When establishe­d policies and procedures are not followed corrective action is put in place up to and including terminatio­n.”

The incident comes as schools across the country are struggling to deal with how to address students who can't pay for their lunch. A 2011 survey found that a majority of district had unpaid lunch charges and that most dealt with it by offering students alternativ­es meals.

But even that approach has been controvers­ial. After a flurry of angry Facebook posts, one Rhode Island district was forced to abandon plans to deny a hot meal to students who couldn't pay. Last month, federal lawmakers also introduced “anti-lunch shaming” legislatio­n to protect students with unpaid lunch bills. The USDA also discourage­s practices that stigmatize students, but allows districts to set their own policies.

The Valley News reports that the alleged firing has angered Kimball's co-workers, some of whom quit in protest. Parents at the school also said they were upset by Kimball's sudden departure and demanded she be rehired.

“These guys really took care of our kids. They put our kids first and their focus was really our kids,” said Christina Moodie, whose son attends the high school. “I know Bonnie went above and beyond for the kids.”

The Mascoma Regional School Board voted Tuesday to continue using the company for another year, despite the controvers­y involving Kimball.

“The people working in the school lunch program are employees of Cafe Services, and Cafe Services is responsibl­e for employment decisions regarding those employees,” the district said in a statement. “School district policy is to make healthy nutritious school meals available to every child whether or not the child has sufficient funds to cover the cost of the meal.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States