Times-Herald (Vallejo)

California moving to pioneer free meals for all students

- By Ali Tadayon EdSource

As students gradually return to classrooms, advocates and lawmakers say it’s more important than ever to provide free meals in schools without burdensome eligibilit­y requiremen­ts, just as California has done during the pandemic.

The “Free School Meals For All” bill, SB 364, introduced last month by East Bay Sen. Nancy Skinner, DBerkeley, would establish a statewide Universal Meal Plan starting in the 20222023 school year. It would guarantee free breakfast and lunch for all California students and eliminate the applicatio­n process that proved a barrier to many families. Though New York City, Chicago and other U.S. cities have created such programs, California would be the first to do it statewide.

“If students come to class hungry, it’s harder to learn,” Skinner said. “There’s a lot of reasons why a child may come to school hungry; they might just not have had time to pack a lunch. Why should we have to go through a whole bureaucrat­ic hassle to get the kid fed when we could just have universal meals?”

Skinner presented the bill Tuesday at the California Senate Standing Committee on Education where it was met with unanimous bipartisan support and no opposition. Representa­tives from the California Teachers Associatio­n, California School Employees Associatio­n, and Service Employees Internatio­nal Union all backed the bill, which will be heard next by the Senate Standing Committee on Human Services.

The issue of food insecurity has been evident for years in Skinner’s Senate district, which includes West Contra Costa Unified serving about 30,000 students in the communitie­s of Richmond, El Cerrito, San Pablo, Pinole, Hercules and El Sobrante, and Oakland Unified, which serves about 50,000 students. More than 65% of students in both districts come from families who qualified for and participat­ed in the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e’s National School Lunch Program, which allows low-income students to obtain free and reduced-price meals. Statewide, 3.9 million students, 63% of California’s student body, participat­ed in the program.

However, Skinner, West Contra Costa Unified Associate Superinten­dent of Business Services Tony Wold and childhood hunger experts believe that the number of families in need of food assistance both in the East Bay and throughout the state is actually much higher. That’s because many families avoid the National School Lunch Program applicatio­n process.

In order to participat­e in the program, families must disclose how much money the family makes, how many people live in the household, their children’s immigratio­n status or if their children are homeless or runaway. Wold said some families fear having that informatio­n on the books, and that students may feel embarrasse­d to receive a free meal while others pay for it.

The result has been a yearly decrease of about 1% in the number of West Contra Costa Unified students who participat­e in the program, Wold said.

“Sometimes the kid just doesn’t want to be seen getting a free lunch, because it’s a status issue for them,” Wold said. “Others, the family just doesn’t think it’s your business what they make or don’t make. There’s a lot of different reasons for it, psychologi­cally.”

Schools in New York City began serving free meals to all students in 2017 after finding that some students would rather go hungry than admit they didn’t have enough money to pay for lunch. The decision followed national outcry over “lunch shaming” — publicly shaming students for unpaid school meal bills, even throwing away their lunches rather than allowing them to eat.

“It removes a lot of stigma when all kids can have the meals available, and you just walk by and grab it,” said Kathy Saile, California director of No Kid Hungry, which fights against childhood hunger. “It also increases participat­ion when you don’t have to worry about your meal card or paying the difference of a reduced price.”

The push for universal school meals isn’t limited to California. The national 50,000-member School Nutrition Associatio­n, representi­ng nutrition services workers, has identified universal school meals as a top legislativ­e priority for 2021. It lobbied Congress earlier this month to create a federal universal school meal program.

Since the pandemic, California districts have distribute­d millions of free “grab-and-go” meals to students without requiring them to fill out the National School Lunch Program applicatio­n thanks to a series of waivers from the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e. The waivers allowed districts to be reimbursed for every meal they distribute­d, not just those served to students signed up for the free and reduced-price lunch program. But those waivers are set to expire at the end of September.

Skinner’s team intends to find away to avoid having to ask families to fill out the National School Lunch Program applicatio­n, but the bill’s current language calls on families to do it anyway. That’s so that the state could collect as much money as possible from the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e to pay for the proposed Universal Meal Plan. If families don’t fill out the applicatio­n, their children would still be entitled to free meals under the Universal Meal Plan. However, fewer low-income families filling out the applicatio­n could result in fewer U.S. Department of Agricultur­e dollars for the state.

California schools can also participat­e in the “community eligibilit­y provision” under the National School Lunch Program, which allows them to offer free meals to all of their students if more than 40% of the student body qualifies.

Palm Springs Unified is one of the districts that qualifies for that provision. Nutrition services director Stephanie Bruce testified at Wednesday’s Senate committee hearing that being able to offer free meals to all students has reduced absenteeis­m, tardiness and hunger-related trips to the nurse’s office.

The applicatio­ns are also crucial for the state’s Local Control Funding Formula, which gives additional state funds to districts based on the number of low-income students, English learners, foster children and homeless youth they serve.

Skinner’s hope is that much of the cost for the Universal Meal Plan would be covered by U.S. Department of Agricultur­e, since the majority of students in the state qualify for free and reduced-price lunch. She also hopes to leverage the buying power that would come with serving so many students to purchase food at a lower cost.

But the federal funding likely won’t be enough to cover the entire cost of a Universal Meal Plan, requiring the state to allocate some funding toward it out of its budget. Skinner’s team didn’t have a prediction yet as to how much that would be.

The bill will also provide grants for districts to cover the costs of purchasing whole or minimally processed food grown in California.

An EdSource editor’s Note: As a special project, EdSource is tracking developmen­ts in the Oakland Unified and West Contra Costa Unified school districts as a way to illustrate some of the challenges facing other urban districts in California. West Contra Costa Unified includes Richmond, El Cerrito and several other East Bay communitie­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States