Times-Herald

Applying lessons learned

- Sen. John Boozman

Ensuring students have access to healthy, nutritious meals at school is a constant challenge in ordinary times. In an era of Covid-19, that challenge could easily seem insurmount­able.

Our school nutrition profession­als refused to back down to the pandemic. They deserve a thank you for all the incredible work they have done over the past year, and continue doing today. Their creativity, tenacity and commitment have ensured children in need have access to healthy food even with the extra difficulti­es brought on by Covid-19.

There are numerous stories, from schools across the country, of dedicated profession­als going above and beyond to get nutritious meals to kids attending school, participat­ing in remote learning or, in many cases, a mix of both. One story from our own backyard really puts the challenge in perspectiv­e.

In the midst of the pandemic, KATV profiled the team at Mayflower Elementary School, highlighti­ng its efforts to meet the needs of students in these unpreceden­ted times by taking extra care and attention to package each individual meal and deliver them to classrooms where most students eat lunch at their desks.

Then there’s the issue of feeding students who are participat­ing remotely, a problem solved by packing up hundreds of meals for pick-up once a week. Every bag includes breakfast and lunch for each school day.

This process has been replicated in a similar manner across Arkansas and the country. As we begin working on a bipartisan bill to reauthoriz­e our child nutrition programs, it’s critical that we listen to those who operate these programs to understand the lessons they have learned during the pandemic.

As Ranking Member of the Senate Agricultur­e Committee and a co-chair of the Senate Hunger Caucus, it is a priority of mine to see a child nutrition reauthoriz­ation bill cross the finish line.

It has been over 10 years since Congress has reauthoriz­ed our child nutrition programs. Without a doubt, some of them need to be modernized. The summer meals program, in particular, needs to be updated as many of the rules date back to the 1960s and are simply unworkable. It is hamstrung by guidelines which dictate a one-size-fits-all solution that requires children to travel to a central location and eat their meals together.

The pandemic has heightened the need for increased flexibilit­y. All options—from off-site, grab-and-go models, to home delivery, to electronic benefits transfer— must be on the table.

Along with modernizin­g the programs themselves, we need to take a look at the federally-imposed meal pattern requiremen­ts. I continue to hear concerns from nutrition profession­als, including the Arkansas School Nutrition Associatio­n, that the increasing­ly restrictiv­e requiremen­ts for milk, sodium and whole grains are unworkable.

As schools face financial strains and a pandemic, the last thing we should add to their burdens is a mandate to implement strict meal pattern requiremen­ts for which products are not available. This is a concern that needs to be addressed in the short term, but it is equally important to find a long-term solution to give schools certainty.

School nutrition profession­als feed kids healthy, nutritious meals each school day. I trust them to know their students and what will work in their schools. We should follow their guidance as we move forward to draft a bipartisan bill to reauthoriz­e our child nutrition programs.

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